Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Spc. Kenneth Jacobs death a year ago and tragedy goes on


Soldier from Holly Springs dies
Wednesday, June 25, 2008

HOLLY SPRINGS (WTVD) -- The Army is investigating the death of a Schofield Barracks soldier from North Carolina found dead on base earlier this week.

Spc. Kenneth Jacobs, a 22-year-old from Holly Springs, N.C., was found unconscious and not breathing Monday.

Paramedics tried to revive him but were unsuccessful and declared him dead at the scene.
Jacobs was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team. He moved to Hawaii in 2006. He returned in October from a deployment to Iraq.
http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=news/local&id=6228338

I receive a lot of emails, heart tugging emails, and once in a while the sender is begging for help. They feel they are out of hope and out of help. This is one of them. I was asked to post this and I'm doing it praying someone out there can help this widow get the justice denied her husband.

Huffing deaths are not suicide. They are doing it to seek relief. Spc. Jacobs was put on Zoloft and we all know there are problems with this. You can't give them medication this strong and simply hope for the best without any kind of therapy. Yet when Spc. Jacobs was found dead in the barracks, that was the end of it. There were no more follow up stories of yet one more non-combat death not counted. Not one more headline grabbing story of a young soldier's death following PTSD and not treated properly. Above all of this no story of the young widow and her children left behind with no income, no death insurance and no help from the military under survivors benefits. Read her story and if you can help her, contact me and I'll give you her contact information. There has to be help for her out there somewhere. My God! Do we really support the troops and honor military families or don't we?

I’m writing to you to tell you about my husband, SPC. Kenneth Robert Jacobs who passed away on June 23rd 2008.



Ken graduated basic training from Ft. Benning GA , in August 2006 and was stationed at Schoffield Barracks in Hawaii. The unit that he was assigned to was already in Iraq and he joined them there in Nov. 2006. Ken’s duties in Iraq included house to house searches, guard duty, tower duty, and gunner on Humvees. During Ken’s 1 year deployment his hummer had been hit by 4 IED’s. He never complained about being there and said he knew they were helping the Iraqi people. Ken was the only one in his unit that received The Leader of The Pack award twice while deployed.



His deployment ended in Nov. 2007 and Ken said they all had to have a physical and debriefing before they could come home. He said they were told how to answer any questions asked, if they wanted to go home right away and not to stay for more evaluation. They were told that nightmares were normal and would go away in time, and not to mention anything they had to do over there to anyone. He was also told “anyone who had been hit with an IED go stand in that line” which he did. Then they were all asked as a group “who wants more testing done?” and no one raised their hands. Ken said he “didn’t want to look like a loser in front of the other guys” so he didn’t raise his hand.



Because Ken had answered all of the questions “correctly” he got to come home on leave for 4 weeks. After his leave him and I flew back to Hawaii and got married. Myself and my 3 year old daughter moved to Hawaii in Feb. 2008.

At this time I noticed that Ken became very angry easily. His drinking was out of control and he would have terrible nightmares, thrashing around in bed. We were getting into terrible fights and one night the MP’s were called. Ken had to see a Psychiatrist and told him about some of the things he had to do and things he saw in Iraq . The doctor told him “No wonder you’re messed up!” This doctor diagnosed him with PTSD and put him on Zoloft. I believe this was in March of 2008. After this he really wasn’t getting any better. In May of 2008 I was out on the porch and heard Ken yelling at my 3 year old to go out the window. He was screaming “Go! Go! Go!” Then fell to the floor and started to have some type of seizure. When it was over, he got up and sat in a chair and started typing on the computer. I asked Kenny “What just happen?” and he didn’t remember any of it. I told him he needed go back to the doctor. He went back to the doctor and told him what happen and he increased his Zoloft.

That’s it! No counseling for him or I to understand what was going on, nothing.

The two of us were still fighting horribly and after another blowout he decided to spend the night at the barracks with his buddies on June 22, 2008. Ken went to his detail the next morning and we made up. We had an OBGYN appointment that morning, because I was 4 months pregnant, and Ken was going to meet me there. He asked his friend if he could take a nap in his room until the appointment and his friend said yes. That was around 9:00am. His friend came back to his room at 1:00pm and found Kenny lying in bed not moving. He rolled him over to find Ken had passed away in his sleep.



Because Ken was found alone in the room there was a criminal investigation. They determined there was no foul play and ruled his death accidental. The initial autopsy report did not show anything so all of Ken’s reports and test were sent to DC to be analyzed to determine cause of death. After waiting for 4 months the doctor who wrote the autopsy report said there were no drugs or alcohol in Ken’s system. They also didn’t find any Zoloft which I knew he took every day. The only thing they could find was a trace of difluoroethane which is a common ingredient in “dust-off” So in his opinion, this was probably Ken’s cause of death.



The investigators did find one can of dust-off in the room behind the T.V. on the opposite side of the room where Ken was found. According to the National Institute on Drug abuse the key danger of inhalant abuse is Sudden Sniffing Death Syndrome. This is when a huffer dies within seconds of taking a hit of the inhalant, usually from heart failure. Since the only can of dust-off was found on the other side of the room on a shelf behind a T.V, wouldn’t this cause of death be unlikely? I may never know how my husband died, and nothing will bring him back. But I do know the Army did not provide him or I with counseling for his diagnosed PTSD. He was given medication and told that would solve all of his problems. Ken was scheduled for deployment again in Nov. 2008



Why isn’t there a program in place for these soldiers to get the help they need when returning home from deployment? Why are these kids given a choice to get counseling, and make it seem like punishment, or an embarrassment? Scheduled counseling should be mandatory when a soldier is put on any anti-depressant or antipsychotic medication. More intense screening should be done to determine brain injury for soldiers who had been hit with IED’s. Sgt. Sipes (kens team leader) told me that “one of the IED’s that they hit was so bad that Kenny was bleeding from his ears. He and Ken were taken to a Med Aide station to be observed for 48 hours but no tests were done.

He said Ken was never the same after that. He was always the comic relief guy, he said. Ken would make light of any situation they were in, and always had a smile on his face. He told me after that day his personality changed. He kept to himself and the sgt. knew that there was something wrong with him. They came home shortly after that. Sgt. Sipes was one of the soldiers who found Ken that terrible day and tried to revive him.



My husband was 21 years old. He left behind a wife, stepdaughter, mother, 2 younger brothers, sister, grandparents, many friends, and a son who he will never get to see.

Please don’t let this happen to another soldier, or family. Better screening of Traumatic Brain Injuries and mandatory counseling for returning solders’ who are prescribed anti depressants or anti psychotic medication should be our governments’ top priority.



Because of the autopsy determination myself and my children have been denied the VA's DIC benefits. My husband had not changed his beneficiary from his mother to me after our marriage of which he was supposed to be counseled on and never was after our marriage. My mother in-law has received the insurance money. She does not help me out. I am on SSI and live with my mother, daughter, son, brother, sister and nephew. Why am I and my family being punished for what the military has "determined" to be my husband’s cause of death? Why didn't my husband receive the help he needed instead of the medications handed out like candy. If my husband had been receiving help for his diagnosed PTSD this would never have happened. Now, I am without my husband. My children without a father. How are families of soldiers that commit suicide awarded the benefits and not mine? Isn’t it time the military supported it's soldiers and their families? Please help me to receive the DIC benefits that my husband's family deserves for his service to our country.



It is time the military stands behind its families of the soldiers that have served our country. Death should not be discriminated and families should not suffer any more then they have. If a soldier gives up and commits suicide the family is taken care of. These families have a right to know that if what the servicemen and women are asked to do and if what they have seen affects them mentally, their service to our country is forgotten and the surviving family’s will also be forgotten.



We have also been in contact with Mrs.XXXXX. Her husband passed away days after Kenny from the same circumstances. She was told before she received the death certificate that the cause of death would need to be changed in order for her to receive her benefits (which read the same on my husband’s certificate). She did so before applying and has received the benefits. We were not told this. Also, her husband did not receive the help he also deserved to prevent his death from happening. We are not alone and unfortunately unless mandatory counseling is given to these soldiers no mater the rank, there will be more of us. Please help us with our fight for our survivor benefits, to reclassify my husband’s death, and to enforce counseling for these soldiers to prevent this from happening. My husband did not die from huffing, an overdose or suicide. My husband’s death was clearly service related and he never came home from Iraq.

How can this be ignored?



Sincerely,

Chriscedia D. Jacobs

Two shot at Holocaust Memorial Museum

Two shot at Holocaust Memorial Museum
Two people have been shot at the entrance of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, emergency officers said. A private security guard and another person were wounded, according to officials of the D.C. police and fire department. full story

UPDATE
Guard killed during shooting at Holocaust museum
Story Highlights
Stephen Tyrone Johns died "heroically in the line of duty," museum says
Suspect is 88-year-old white supremacist, law enforcement officials say

Man with "long gun" entered museum, fired at guard, police spokesman says

Security guard and shooter were wounded in exchange of gunfire, police say
go here
Guard killed during shooting at Holocaust museum

NAMI Montana executive director Mat Kuntz nominated to All Stars

Sent from member of NAMI

Here is a chance to help raise both NAMI’s profile and public awareness of the mental health needs of veterans-- in PEOPLE magazine.

NAMI Montana executive director Mat Kuntz, who is featured in the latest NAMI Advocate cover story www.nami.org/obama has been nominated to be one of PEOPLE Magazine’s “All-Stars Among Us,” representing Americans who have gone “above and beyond to serve their community.”

Earlier this year, he was selected to ride President’s Obama’s inaugural train as an “ordinary American” who has done “extraordinary things,” through advocacy for veterans.

Nominees for PEOPLE’s “All-Stars Among Us” are grouped under the names of major league baseball teams. The top vote-getter for each team will be honored at the MLB 2009 All-Star Game, July 13-15, in St. Louis. The person with the most votes overall will be featured in PEOPLE Magazine. To cast your ballot:

Visit the PEOPLE All-Star Web site.
Select the Pittsburgh Pirates emblem
Vote for Matt.

It’s that simple. Please spread the word to your networks. Each person can also vote up to 25 times in multiple visits (Yes, it’s allowed). Balloting ends on June 24. Mattt may be a long-shot, but someone has to win!

Note to Pentagon:PTSD? It's only human stupid!

by Chaplain Kathie

Are they out of their minds? The answer to treating PTSD is right in front of them but they can't see it. They are trying to alter the way humans process traumatic events by trying to numb them!

If they spend all this time trying to "short-circuit the brain’s stress response" then the see the answer to treating it. The part of the brain they see changed is where emotions live. ( I happen to think that is where the soul lives but that's beside the point for now.) Stress response is primeval, fight or flight. When it comes to the men and women (remember they are humans) there are different reactions considering who is involved in the life threatening situation. If it is just them, in split milliseconds their own survival is considered. Safer to fight or safer to run? If other people are involved, that's a totally different story because that comes from compassion, empathy, sensitivity, pick the word, it all involves the core of the person.

Do they think that Medal of Honor, Silver Star, Bronze Star veterans acted simply out of wanting to kill the enemy? Hell no! They acted with bravery to save the lives of their comrades. Read the accounts of the Medal of Honor recipients. Most of them were wounded yet somehow managed to still get up and save the lives of others either by manning weapons to obliterate the enemy before they managed to kill more of their "brothers" or despite the enemy, ran to save the lives of others. That not only required the courage to act it required the emotional connection to inspire it.

Read this,

Criterion A: stressor

The person has been exposed to a traumatic event in which both of the following have been present:

1. The person has experienced, witnessed, or been confronted with an event or events that involve actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of oneself or others.

2. The person's response involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror. Note: in children, it may be expressed instead by disorganized or agitated behavior.

Criterion B: intrusive recollection

The traumatic event is persistently re-experienced in at least one of the following ways:

1. Recurrent and intrusive distressing recollections of the event, including images, thoughts, or perceptions. Note: in young children, repetitive play may occur in which themes or aspects of the trauma are expressed.

2. Recurrent distressing dreams of the event. Note: in children, there may be frightening dreams without recognizable content

3. Acting or feeling as if the traumatic event were recurring (includes a sense of reliving the experience, illusions, hallucinations, and dissociative flashback episodes, including those that occur upon awakening or when intoxicated). Note: in children, trauma-specific reenactment may occur.

4. Intense psychological distress at exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event.

5. Physiologic reactivity upon exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event

http://www.ncptsd.va.gov/ncmain/ncdocs/fact_shts/fs_dsm_iv_tr.html%3C/


This explains how combat veterans have higher levels of PTSD simply because of the exposures to traumatic events. It also explains how police officers, firefighters and emergency responders become wounded by PTSD. While the rest of us can become wounded by PTSD from one event, think about the countless times they are involved with traumatic events piled on each other. Get a better idea now? Apparently the military can't grasp it.

If PTSD were all about just the person alone, then the criteria for diagnosing PTSD would not include "or to others" and when they are interviewing the GI they would not even consider them if they worked in a motor pool recovering the vehicles the trauma happened in. After all, there was no danger to them and they did not witness the event on anyone else. They simply witnessed the aftermath of it in the vehicle itself. It's a lot different than picking up body parts on the scene but they can manage to understand how dealing with it far away from the danger itself can wound them emotionally.

Numbing them will eliminate the thing that keeps them going in order to save the lives of others. Why do they enter into the military in the first place? Do they ever think of that? Sure some will join in order to be killing machines. They are the type that is disconnected from what makes us human and they are pretty much selfish "bastards" not giving a crap about anyone else. However the vast majority are out to save and willing to kill in order to do that. Why can't they get this part? What is the basis of this wanting to save lives of their countrymen? Obvious, isn't it? Compassion!

If they play around looking for a drug to kill off the same emotions that cause them to serve in the first place what will they have?

Next is the danger of some of the drugs they are already using. Read this part.

POTENTIAL HARMS
A detailed recounting of a traumatic experience may cause further distress to the patient and is not advisable unless a provider has been trained and is able to support the patient through this experience.

Pharmacological Adverse Effects

Note: See Table 4 of Module 1 – Treatment Interventions for PTSD – for detailed list of drug adverse effects and cautions.

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) (fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline, fluvoxamine, citalopram): nausea, headache, sexual dysfunction, hyponatremia/syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (SIADH), serotonin syndrome
Tricyclic antidepressants (imipramine, amitriptyline, desipramine, nortriptyline, protriptyline, clomipramine): anticholinergic effects, orthostatic hypotension, increased heart rate, ventricular arrhythmias
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (phenelzine, tranylcypromine): hypertensive crisis with drug/tyramine interactions, bradycardia, orthostatic hypotension, insomnia
Sympatholytics: propranolol – hypotension, bronchospasm, bradycardia; prazosin – first dose syncope
Novel antidepressants: trazodone and nefazodone – sedation, rare priapism; venlafaxine – hypertension in patients with preexisting hypertension; nefazodone – hepatoxicity
Anticonvulsants: carbamazepine – leukopenia, SIADH, drowsiness, ataxia; gabapentin – sedation, ataxia; lamotrigine - Stevens-Johnson syndrome, fatigue; topiramate – secondary angle closure glaucoma, sedation, dizziness, ataxia; valproate – nausea/vomiting, sedation, ataxia, thrombocytopenia
Benzodiazepines (clonazepam, lorazepam, alprazolam, diazepam): sedation, memory impairment, ataxia, dependence
Typical antipsychotics (chlorpromazine, haloperidol, thioridazine): sedation, orthostatic hypotension (with chlorpromazine and thorazine), akathisia, dystonia, drug-induced parkinsonism, tardive dyskinesia , neuroleptic malignant syndrome, QTc changes
Atypical antipsychotics (olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone): sedation, weight gain, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, akathisia (at high doses), drug-induced parkinsonism, especially with doses >6 mg/d
Non-benzodiazepine hypnotics (zaleplon, zolpidem): sedation, ataxia, rebound insomnia
Non-benzodiazepine anti-anxiety (buspirone): nausea, headache
http://www.guideline.gov/summary/summary.aspx?ss=15&doc_id=5187#s26



Do they go for the obvious? No, they have to complicate all of it by not doing the obvious. Taking into account that the aftermath of traumatic events has been the same since man began to kill other men, (See Cain and Able) there has been a price to pay for it. That price comes from the part of each of us making us humans instead of animals able to eat their own. The drugs they are already using have consequences just as the chemical potions they are trying to come up with to prevent PTSD will have consequences. What they can't seem to see is the answer to how to treat it is staring them right in the face.

Talk therapy works because they are able to tell someone about it and get a response telling them they are not an animal but a human grieving for the loss of friends or the pain of others they had something to do with causing. It lets them come to terms their own live was in danger. What they miss in all of this is turning around what they were told before they faced all of it. They are told that they can train their brains, prepare it to be mentally tough to endure what they were being sent to do. The problem with this is it tells them if they end up being sensitive humans wounded by PTSD after, it's their own damn fault. This has to be undone. They need to see the courage they had in the first place and that it required them to have the compassion in the first place to step up and do it. In other words, without the compassion they wouldn't have had the courage.

They need to understand how human PTSD is. It strikes all mortals from all walks of life. It thrives on the human emotions wounded by abnormal events out of their control, be it from being attacked by another person in commission of a crime or by an enemy trying to kill them. Be it from natural disasters or the obliteration of warfare. Be it from a cop on the street in a shoot out or a soldier in Iraq shooting it out on a street. An emergency responder in Florida or a combat medic in Fallujah.

The Pentagon is great with coming up with weapons but lousy on understanding the men and women using those weapons.

This is what caused me to post all of this.


Pentagon Investigates Pill-Popping PTSD Prevention
Wired News - USA
By Katie Drummond June 9, 2009 6:43 pm Categories: Army and Marines, DarpaWatch

As many as 300,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans may have suffered from PTSD or depression at some point, and the military has already spent millions on treatment for returning troops - everything from “samurai meditation” to at-home computerized counselors. Now the Pentagon’s advanced research arm is hoping that a combination of neuroscience, psychology, and creative pill-popping can stop battlefield stress before it even starts.

Darpa is hosting a one-day information session to solicit proposals for “Enabling Stress Resistance” among troops. They’re hoping to harness advances in molecular biology (the science of cell-to-cell interaction) and neuroscience that would short-circuit the brain’s stress response. Using animals as test subjects, Darpa first wants a precise understanding of how stress targets and damages the brain.
click link for more


This is yet one more problem they did not fix because they have been wasting time trying to get them to stop being human.

Psychiatr News June 16, 2006
Volume 41, Number 12, page 5
© 2006 American Psychiatric Association

Government News

Military Blamed for Inadequate Referrals for PTSD Assessment
Aaron Levin
The Department of Defense cannot assure that returning troops who need referrals for posttraumatic stress disorder are receiving them.

Only 1 of 5 of troops returning from Iraq or Afghanistan and found at risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was referred for further mental health evaluations, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

In response, Department of Defense (DoD) medical officials said they will make criteria for referral more explicit but said that the report understates the number of soldiers who had access to care.

The report was mandated by Congress as part of the National Defense Reauthorization Act of 2005.

"This is about screening, not treatment," said Cynthia Bascetta, M.A., M.P.H., director of health care for the GAO. "We're not even at the stage of knowing whether they were treated."

The report analyzed information culled from the standard forms filled out by members of the armed services as they returned from the two theaters of war. These Post Deployment Health Assessment (PDHA) forms ask about physical and psychosocial health. They include four questions intended to determine risk for PTSD. Three or four positive responses to these questions indicate a higher risk of developing the disorder. After completing the forms, service members discuss their responses with a health care professional, who may be a physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant.

The GAO examined computerized data on 178,664 troops and found that 9,145 (5 percent) were at risk for PTSD, but only 2,029 (22 percent) had been referred to mental health specialists.

http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/41/12/5



When I was a child, at the age of 13, my father took me to the Pentagon. As I walked around seeing the sea of uniforms and medals, I thought they had to have been the smartest, bravest people in this country. Now I am not a child and while I still think they are brave, they certainly are not the smartest people. They stopped thinking like humans.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Pennsylvania Trooper, kidnapper die in mountain highway shootout


Trooper, kidnapper die in mountain highway shootout

By Associated Press SWIFTWATER, Pa. (AP) - A man who kidnapped his 9-year-old son in northeastern Pennsylvania led police on a 40-mile chase that ended in a crash and an exchange of gunfire that killed him and a state trooper, state police said Monday. Another trooper was wounded, but the boy was not shot.

The chase Sunday night began outside Easton in the Pocono Mountains and ended just east of Tobyhanna when the suspect crashed his car, according to Pocono Mountain Regional Police Chief Harry Lewis. He said the suspect and police then traded gunfire.

The 31-year-old suspect, whose name was not released, died at the scene, state police said.

Trooper Joshua Miller, 34, was taken to Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, where he died of his gunshot wounds, police said. His colleague, 35-year-old Robert Lombardo, was listed in satisfactory condition at Community Medical Center in Scranton.

go here for more

Holy Ground Homeless Shelter saved because people cared

Of all the posts I put up to share, I take great joy in posting this kind of story to warm your heart, renew your belief if the human spirit and the compassion people can find within their own hearts. These people stepping up to help this wonderful woman are remarkable. They were not rich. Far from it. One donated $5.00 and another sold her things at a yard sale to find the extra money to give. Even in these hard times, people think of others first. Other people will look at the suffering that goes on in this world and ask, "Where is God" because so many suffer. They do not understand that God sends the answer to prayers when we hear His call and fulfill the need. How can anyone look at such acts of compassion and still wonder?


Outpouring of donations saves Holy Ground from eviction
By Camille C. Spencer, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Tuesday, June 9, 2009


HUDSON — An unemployed woman gave $5. Another woman sold her belongings at a yard sale and donated the $200 profit. Churches pitched in, too.

As word spread that Holy Ground Homeless Shelter was facing eviction, scores of people dropped by the county's only all-inclusive homeless shelter to give whatever they could to keep the doors open.

By Monday, their generosity saved the day.
go here for more
http://www.tampabay.com/news/humaninterest/article1008339.ece

Africanized bees hamper St. Pete firefighters

Bees hamper St. Pete firefighters

40,000 Africanized bees, electrified fence hamper St. Pete firefighters
Stephanie Hayes, Times Staff Writer
Posted: Jun 09, 2009 11:23 AM

The fire broke out at Robert Porter's one-story wood frame home at 1661 29th Ave. N around 9:30 a.m. A gas and water heater on Porter's back porch was too close to an empty book case and boxes, said St. Petersburg Fire Rescue Lt. Joel Granata. It erupted in flames, destroying the porch and spreading fire into the house through the back.

The fire burned down a TECO electric line on the back of the house, which fell and electrified a chain link fence in the back yard.

The Africanized bees burst from the hive, 8-feet tall and 30 inches wide nestled in the front of Porter's house. Capt. Bernie Williams told his firefighters with bee allergies to get back. That's when he felt the sting on his right shin.
click link for more

Army closing some wounded soldier units

Army closing some wounded soldier units
Army closing some wounded soldier units
By KRISTIN M. HALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The Army is closing three special units for wounded and ill soldiers and downsizing others, including one at Fort Campbell, after tightening the selection process last year.

The warrior transition units were created in 2007 to address reports of substandard care for wounded soldiers. But the number of soldiers in these 36 units has dropped from a high of more than 12,000 last June to about 9,500 currently.

The Army announced last month three units at installations in Kansas and Alabama will close. Units that will be downsized are at posts in Kansas, Georgia, Washington and the Fort Campbell installation on the Tennessee-Kentucky border. Two units in Virginia will merge.

Commanders say the decrease is because the Army last year imposed stricter screening procedures for admitting wounded, ill and injured soldiers into the units.

Previously, the Army automatically sent any ill or injured soldier who needed more than six months of recovery to a warrior transition unit. The soldiers were assigned officers and enlisted leaders to manage their medical care and they were assisted by medical staff who helped them through recovery and rehabilitation.

click link for more

DID VIETNAM VETS GET SICKER IN THE 1990s?

The answer is,,,NO. They did not "get sicker" they just finally found out what was going on inside of them and the reason for it. Before this time, most were like the older veterans of WWI, WWII and Korea, just like the generations before them suffered all the same. Had some of them been helped to heal when PTSD was at mild or low levels, they would not have ended up suffering and most would have been able to work until they retired at a normal age. The problem was there was too much time between the onset of PTSD and the time they were treated because PTSD kept claiming more and more of "them" in the process. Untreated PTSD allowed the entry way for the secondary stressors to strike. This ended up sending mild PTSD into PTSD on steroids.

Thru the late 70's and into the 80's reports were beginning to raise the awareness but it was not until the 90's when PTSD was discussed more in the media and by service organizations. In other words, the message finally began to get thru. Do any of these researchers ever read the publications the people that already researched all of this already did?

DID VIETNAM VETS GET SICKER IN THE 1990s?
The veterans disability compensation (VDC) program, which provides a monthly stipend to disabled veterans, is the third largest American disability insurance program. Since the late 1990s, VDC growth has been driven primarily by an increase in claims from Vietnam veterans. Researchers at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) attempt to solve the problem of selection bias that's inherent in comparisons of outcomes between veterans and non-veterans by using the draft lottery and 2000 U.S. Decennial Census data.
go here for more
http://www.ncpa.org/sub/dpd/index.php?Article_ID=18067


UPDATE

This was found in an article on homeless veterans. I think it really adds to what we're seeing today but is also a predictor of what we'll face if we allow the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans to go untreated for PTSD. It doesn't cure itself if they are allowed to just bury it.

David Boling, a tall, softspoken 62-year-old, served in Vietnam from 1969–74. He worked as a welder and a machinist for many years but retired after injuring his back in 1997. He’s staying at the Glisan

Street Shelter while he waits to move into an apartment in Vancouver.
Boling says he’s had post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues since returning from the war, but they became especially acute after he stopped working.

“I buried it for 30 years,” he says. “It is coming back on me… it just came back in the last two years, all those memories.” Boling is now on medication for bipolar disorder and sees a VA counselor for his PTSD.

Burroughs says many veterans find their situation changing as they age. They may retire, lose a spouse to death or divorce, or watch their children move out. With fewer distractions and a weaker support network, emotional trauma can seep to the surface.
go here for more

Veterans arriving on the streets not who you think
by Mara Grunbaum

Younger soldiers under stress more likely to get help

Younger soldiers under stress more likely to get help
By Teri Weaver, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Tuesday, June 9, 2009
MADAIN, Iraq — Spc. Richard Wahl is married with two kids and a baby due in August.

When his wife developed a serious condition a few weeks ago, the young couple weren’t sure what to do. The crisis came down to geography.

"I was here," he said. "And she was there."

Wahl, 20, of the 1st Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment is on his first tour in Iraq.

About half of the battalion has deployed previously, some, multiple times. For the most part, those soldiers are dealing with this tour fairly well, said the battalion chaplain, Capt. Mike Smith.

But the soldiers who more often seek help are younger, privates or corporals, who are experiencing Iraq for the first time, said Lt. Col. Avery Davis, the chief of physical medicine at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital. He is attached to the battalion for a year as its primary doctor.

These younger soldiers, some still teenagers, are experiencing their first serious relationships, their first serious jobs and their first time away from home — all in a war zone. That mix can turn into anger, lethargy or something more dangerous if left alone, Smith and Davis said.

click link for more

Veterans start service as sheriff's officers

Veterans start service as sheriff's officers
Philadelphia Inquirer - Philadelphia,PA,USA
By Edward Colimore

Inquirer Staff Writer

Lou Tomassone of Atco has vivid memories of his service as a turret gunner in a cavalry unit in Tikrit, hometown of Saddam Hussein. The 24-year-old former Army specialist once escorted an Iraqi police chief through town when a bomb blew up, spraying his turret with shrapnel and miraculously missing him.

Sean Smith of Runnemede recalls coming under fire in Fallujah, guarding prisoners and teaching Iraqis how to police their country. The 22-year-old, who was in the Marines, showed the recruits how to conduct house raids and patrol the streets.

Louise Bazelak of Barrington remembers taking cover as insurgent mortar rounds fell into her camp at Balad. The 33-year-old former Air Force staff sergeant and F-16 aircraft mechanic still kept the planes flying.

After years in the military, Tomassone, Smith, and Bazelak now have changed uniforms and begun service of a different kind - in their own community.

The three were among 14 military veterans sworn in as Camden County sheriff's officers yesterday during a ceremony to mark the opening of the Camden Veterans Administration Outpatient Clinic adjacent to Cooper University Hospital.

The 12 men and two women were immediately marched to Camden City Hall to undergo processing. Another Iraq veteran was in Marine reservist training yesterday and will be sworn in later, officials said.


Police departments across the country typically have a high percentage of veterans, he said.

"They have discipline and are used to stress," Billingham said. "In the Middle East, they were also used to confrontation, used to dealing with innocent people in crisis."
click link for more

I couldn't agree more!

Navy vets seek Agent Orange compensation

Navy vets seek Agent Orange compensation
Tampabay.com - St. Petersburg,FL,USA
By William R. Levesque, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Tuesday, June 9, 2009


A bill in Congress provides a seemingly straightforward answer to a question that has vexed tens of thousands of Americans who served in the U.S. military.

Who is a Vietnam veteran?

The answer is vitally important to Navy personnel who served in Vietnam's territorial waters. For now, the Department of Veterans Affairs' definition of a Vietnam veteran does not include these men and women.

Legislation introduced in the House would change that, clearing the way for Navy veterans to get disability payments and free health care for ailments linked to the herbicide Agent Orange, from type II diabetes to a variety of cancers.

At stake: $3 billion in benefits.

The VA says the pool of veterans who would become eligible for benefits under the bill is 800,000, a number critics accuse the VA of exaggerating to inflate costs that may scare Congress. click link for more


Woe,,,,wait a second here,,,,did I just read what I think I read? The VA has been accused of trying to scare congress with the numbers of veterans this could add to the system? Did this really happen? Is is possible? If it is then that would explain WHY THE HELL THERE ARE SO MANY PROBLEMS IN THE VA! The VA is not a free ride. It was paid for the day Marines, soldiers, sailors an airmen stopped serving and became veterans. What part of this exactly didn't they understand? They already paid the price and it was not their responsibility to make sure that the congress at the time of funding the services they provided did not include any compensation and medical care that was produced as an outcome of the wars they funded and the means they paid for to fight it.

VIETNAM WAR STATISTICS IN UNIFORM AND IN COUNTRY
Vietnam Vets: 9.7% of their generation.
9,087,000 military personnel served on active duty during the Vietnam Era (Aug. 5, 1964-May 7, 1975).
8,744,000 GIs were on active duty during the war (Aug 5, 1964 - March 28, 1973).
3,403,100 (Including 514,300 offshore) personnel served in the Southeast Asia Theater (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, flight crews based in Thailand, and sailors in adjacent South China Sea waters).
2,594,000 personnel served within the borders of South Vietnam (Jan. 1, 1965 - March 28, 1973)
Another 50,000 men served in Vietnam between 1960 and 1964.
Of the 2.6 million, between 1 - 1.6 million (40 - 60%) either fought in combat, provided close support or were at least fairly regularly exposed to enemy attack.
7,484 women (6,250 or 83.5% were nurses) served in Vietnam.
Peak troop strength in Vietnam: 543,482 (April 30, 1968)


If they did not plan for the wounded bodies coming back, not plan for the wounded by PTSD or plan for the illnesses they would in turn cause from vaccines and chemicals they deployed with them, then they shouldn't have sent them at all. These are after all the same people able to think about spending money for bullets and bombs and then finding the funding to buy more bullets and bombs to use. They found the way to get draftees and enlistments clothed and fed. They found a way for everything they wanted except for what they just didn't want to face. The wounded and the veterans they would have to take care of and provide for. This, this very obligation they owed to them is now seen as some kind of threat to them?

The congressmen come and go, political parties take control and lose control, but just as they still have a duty to do because they chose to seek the office, this obligation of their's is still their's and the rest of the nation no matter how many years pass. When they dishonor the services of any branch they sent, they dishonor all of them. Congress paid for Agent Orange and congress has to pay for the results Agent Orange caused for all the veterans injured by it.

PTSD:Bridgeport to Baghdad: Citizen Again

Bridgeport to Baghdad: Citizen Again
Jeremy Harrison, a sergeant in the 459th experienced post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after returning from Iraq.
By Chip Hitchcock

June 8, 2009 · One West Virginia veteran of the Iraq War struggled to cope with post-traumatic stress disorder, and now helps other veterans live with their memories of war.

On a rainy afternoon five years ago, the 459th Reserve Engineering Company’s buses pulled into the armory in Bridgeport, West Virginia. They were returning from a year in Iraq.

On one bus, a soldier called out, “Welcome Home, Gentlemen! Can I get a Hoo-Ah?”

The other soldiers responded with the Army yell: “Hoo-ah!”

Minutes later they spilled out onto the parking lot, to be embraced by family and friends.

In the years since, that scene has been repeated for almost every West Virginia National Guard and Reserve unit. Afterwards, the soldiers face the challenges of adjusting to home.

Every combat veteran has a different reaction to the trauma of war. Those reactions may dramatically affect their civilian life.

In 2007, a Department of Defense Task Force found that three to four months after returning home, one-third of regular Army soldiers were experiencing mental health issues.

The figure is even higher -- one-half -- for National Guard and Reservists.
go here for more
http://www.wvpubcast.org/newsarticle.aspx?id=9954

The lament of the warrior

by
Chaplain Kathie

If you listen carefully, you can still hear the sound of ancient drums beating in the night. The lament of the warrior pounded to the ears of Great Spirit seeking relief for all they witnessed that day. Ancient warriors in combat, face to face with the enemies of their people did not rest there as the dead were laying on the earth. As they walked looking for their brothers to reclaim them, laying by their side were the bodies of the enemy forces. Suddenly they were not some target to kill while they were seeking to kill them in return. They were just humans like them. They were fighting for what they believed in just as much as the ancients that fought against them. They had families, passions, laughed and cried and the human price paid was not forgotten. In battle the enemy were evil creatures that had to be slain but in death, they were once again just other humans unlucky that day to have fallen by the sword. They carried away the loss of their friends and the loss of the lives of the enemies that day. They needed to mourn for all and for themselves for what they had seen that day in battle.

Read any account of ancient warfare and see what we now call PTSD. The trauma after combat has not changed in the centuries man has fought against man and will not likely change until man goes to war no more. Different years, different explanations, different words used to describe this human wound after different wars by different means. Stone weapons replaced by swords, replaced by bow and arrow, replaced by rifle, replace by cannon and on and on it went. The end result by any means was the same. The wounded had to be found among the dead and among their dead were the dead of their enemies. Momentary lapses of why they fought allowed them to see the enemy looking the same as their friends. Aside from the clothing, they all looked the same. For seconds their minds acknowledged the loss of all life gone that day.

Today the drum beats of the ancients still pounds in the nights of those who experienced the other side of peace and we call it Post Traumatic Stress. This literally means After Wound. Trauma is Greek for the wound. The ancients acknowledged the loss of other humans and the need to recover from the horrors they lived thru. We however with our vast knowledge and technological achievements refuse to face the human aspect. We see ourselves as smarter, more able to adapt, push on, get over it. We think we are mentally more developed than they were. What we fail to see is that we are just as human as the ancients were. The wounded are just as wounded but we are able to save more than they could. The dead however are just as dead and they lay side by side, enemies in life but the same in death.

If the military were really serious about addressing this wounded spirit they would allow all the lives lost that day to be mourned and acknowledged. They would do as the ancients did and have cleansing ceremonies before they walked away for rest. They would pray for the lives of the enemies they had to take that day and for relief from the pain they felt inside. They would acknowledge the innocents lost because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. They would face the human inside of them instead of only the warrior they trained to be.

To this day I mourn the loss of my husband's nephew. His name was Steven. I called him Andy in the book I wrote because his death was too recent to the writing of it. Steven was the same age as my husband when they were both in Vietnam. He came home and fell apart, fell into what he used to cope with in Vietnam, heroin. Steven had seen some horrific things but the one thing standing out in his mind the most was tying his boot.

The VC had a habit of playing around with bombs the US forces had placed the day before. Steven and his men were supposed to go out and check to see if they were moved. Having done that for what he thought was successfully, his unit began to move. Two of his friends were ahead of him when he stooped down to retie his boot. They had gotten just far enough ahead with the trigger was snapped and the bomb blew up. Two of his friends died that day and he blamed himself but more, he regretted he was not right by the side of his friends when it happened and was still alive to live with it. No matter what happened before that day or after that day, no matter what heroics he was performing, that was the day that would claim the rest of his life.

He was not allowed to grieve, there was too much more to do. There were too many more days ahead when other lives were at risk and they were supposed to be tough enough to just get over it and move on from there. He was not allowed to face the fact a part of him remained there on that road right next to the friends he lost.

He came home still using heroin to kill off feeling because all the good feelings had died there on that road. He ended up in jail after a drug deal had gone bad. After he got out, he was able to clean himself up and began to find reason to seek help to heal. He got a job, then another and another. He found a girlfriend after and then another and another, until he found someone that was able to break thru to him and he began to heal. He went to the VA, finally had a claim approved for PTSD and the shrapnel still embedded in him. He was alive again but barely.

No matter what I said, tried to say or how much I listened, he looked at me as if I wasn't there. After all, many years younger than he was and not a "brother" he couldn't understand how I could possibly know anything. I could never manage to find the right way to reach him. Years of trying and I failed, just as I had failed for too many years with my own husband to get him to hear me. It had taken me from 1982 to 1990 to get him to go for help. It didn't matter that I was able to get others to go for help to heal to him. He didn't want to know anything I had to say but over all those years he was listening while pretending not to. In 93 I managed to get him to go to a Veterans center and then finally to the VA. Yet Steven had built such a tough wall around his spirit that I couldn't even crack it and neither could his doctors.

After Steven's claim was approved and he was feeling a bit better about being alive, he sent for his records. He was also feeling pain in his back. The VA was sending him for an MRI to see what was going on, but his girlfriend stopped it knowing the MRI could have moved the shrapnel littering his body and killed him. This he took as an attack against him by the VA. Then came the last straw. The Army responded to his records request by telling him his unit never existed. He wondered how that could be true when they approved his claim, he had the shrapnel in his body and his friends died. A little while later, he left his girlfriend because he had reached for his comforter of the past, heroin, and she couldn't take it anymore. He went to his dealer, bought enough to kill ten men, checked himself into a motel room, locked the door and finally in his mind, caught back up to his friends on the road that day and joined them.

His brother called us early the next morning. Another life claimed by Vietnam that would not appear on The Wall in Washington or be remembered as a price paid. To this very day, I wonder what I could have said that would have broken thru to him even though sometimes there are no words to be found. This all goes into what I do because I know they are all worth whatever I can put into this, whatever I can do or say, whatever information I can share and if there is one life I can save, it's all worth it.

The drums of the warriors lamenting the loss of humans they fought with and fought against are beating still in the night but they are now joined by this new generation of warriors, still all so human, still all so wounded and neglected as humans. They do not know the things they need to know to heal the wound they carry inside of them.

They cannot see the courage they showed when the mission and their friends were all that mattered and their own pain they carried that day was pushed back until it was all over. Steven finished the job he was given even with the pain he carried in his spirit after he tied his boot that day. He carried on no matter how much pain and guilt he felt. He was honorably discharged but the pain he felt was never offered to the Great Spirit to be cleansed from him just as the warriors of today are not allowed to offer their's in the same night as the same day they went into battle with other humans.

Monday, June 8, 2009

The Never Ending Battle of VA Claims

Normally when the American Legion Magazine comes, there isn't much interesting in it for me. Most of what's usually in it, I've read it all before online. This month, probably for the first time, I am really suggesting you get your hands on a copy of this. There is a report on the backlog of claims. While this numbers are not news to me or you because you read this blog, there are some very compelling stories in it. It's "The Never Ending Battle" by Ken Olsen. He did a great job, pulled in the reporting done by Dana Priest and Anne Hull regarding the deploring conditions at Walter Reed and then took off from there. Vietnam veterans, Gulf War veterans, Afghanistan veterans, Iraq veterans and Korean veterans and yes, even WWII veterans all suffering in the backlog of the claims we know the numbers of, but too often, never hear more than the numbers. These are people! They have wounds to be taken care of, promises to be kept to them, bills to pay they could pay if they could work and could also pay if the VA would honorably process their claims and figure out a way of doing it right the first time.

The problem is, these problems go back so far and the veterans have been feeling betrayed by the same country they would still risk their lives for. The article ends like this "The best solution, the Legion's Smithson says, "is to fix the entire VA claims adjudication system. Piecemeal does not work." This is the first of a three part series. There are charts, numbers, but more, stories of the men and women we keep saying we support. Well? Do we really? Or is it a slogan? How can we say we support them if we allow all of this to be done to them?

TRADITIONAL VETERANS ORGANIZTIONS: "SOFT ON VET ABUSE - CORRUPTION"

Special Report: VETERANS TODAY CALLS TRADITIONAL VETERANS ORGANIZTIONS: "SOFT ON VET ABUSE - CORRUPTION"
65 YEARS OF HISTORY TELLS IT ALL

CORRUPTION, COVERUPS WHILE THE PARADES AND AWARD CEREMONIES GO ON

By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER (Chairman Editorial Board Veterans Today)

We are a motley group here at Veterans Today. Between our board and writers, we include 3 diplomats, about 2000% rated disability, members of Congress, convicted felons, Gold Star moms, one Federal Reserve manager.....former priests, some of the highest security clearances possible and a top medical staff with two nurses having graduate degrees, one a retired Army officer.

Our agenda is presenting the unvarnished truth when others won't, serving our veterans, causing as much trouble as possible, having fun when we can and supporting the security of the United States through honest support of our military and a rational foreign policy, which sometimes advocates peace over war, as though we were rational people.

Between us, we belong to a hundred organizations and every political party, from the American Legion and Special Forces Association to the National Prayer Breakfasts, and every retiree group for officers, enlisted, Navy, Marines, Army, Air Force and Coast Guard.

Where we agree with each other is that, when the health, safety and welfare of veterans and our military is a childish game to our government and "some" organizations, it isn't a joke to us. Though we may ride motorcycles to funerals or march in parades, we separate fellowship from duty. If duty requires taking a stand, we will do that. Those that don't take a stand have forgotten the meaning of duty.

Today's aging veteran population is from Vietnam. For years, we have watched our numbers diminish from PTSD suicide, Agent Orange cancer and "Darwin" episodes. I speak of what I know and what I have seen.

40 years ago, VA hospitals were filthy hellholes where veterans were abused and neglected, dying by the thousands. Service organizations were at every hospital, advising the VA and observing it all. Nary a word was said in support of Vietnam veterans.

40 years later, thousands of sick vets, cancer, PTSD, diabetes, are fighting for medical treatment and fair disability compensation. They are still having their documents shredded, their Comp and Pension physicals mishandled, their claims outright denied for no reason and not a word is said.
go here for more
http://veteranstoday.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=7204

Military kids at Fort Hood share hardships

Children of Conflict
Since 9/11, more than a million kids have had a parent deployed. Their childhoods often go with them.


By Jessica Ramirez NEWSWEEK
Published Jun 6, 2009
From the magazine issue dated Jun 15, 2009

The Harding girls have their own name for the local Applebee's—"the bad-news place." The last two times their father was sent to Iraq, he took his young daughters there and broke it to them as gently as he knew how, over a sampler platter and soft drinks. "I just tell them, 'Here's what's going on in the world, and this is what I have to go do'," says Sgt. First Class Sean Harding. Since the Army doesn't say just when a deployment is supposed to end, he offers his best guess with a three-month margin of error: "?'If everything goes right, I'll be back sometime within these 90 days'." He says other things, too. He tells the girls that they have to help their mother take care of the house and each other, that he may not come back, and that if he doesn't, each daughter will get a last letter from him. He won't discuss the contents, but in essence the letters would give his final wishes and try to say how much he loves them. "We all started crying," says Courtney, 14. "Nobody wanted to hear that he might not come back."

Of the troops deployed since 9/11, roughly 890,000 have been parents. Their children know firsthand the sadness and worry that the Harding girls live with every time their father is in Iraq. Repeated 12- to 15-month deployments are an ordeal not only for the troops, but also for their families. In effect, an essential piece of those kids' lives has been sent off to war, although the children themselves haven't volunteered for anything. The personal sacrifices of military kids can go unnoticed amid the grown-ups' struggles, in part because the scars they may sustain aren't necessarily the visible kind. But they are real and long-lasting, and they are not diminished by the fact that levels of violence in Iraq have dropped or that U.S. troops are no longer taking the lead on combat operations there.
go here for more
http://www.newsweek.com/id/200864

City Hall in Anderson surveillance cam catches ghost

Surveillance cam catches ghost

City Hall in Anderson, South Carolina is abuzz about something eerie. Employees at a business center say they've seen a ghost -- and they can prove it.


Veterans lament low number of Central Florida D-Day events

Veterans lament low number of Central Florida D-Day events
By Eloísa Ruano González Sentinel Staff Writer
June 7, 2009

Queen Elizabeth wasn't the only person disheartened about the 65th anniversary of the World War II D-Day landings after she initially wasn't invited to join President Barack Obama and French President Nicolas Sarkozy for a commemoration at the Normandy beaches.

Veterans in Central Florida were more disappointed when little was done Saturday to remember the thousands of U.S. troops who died during the massive Allied invasion. With the exception of a two-day celebration at the DeLand airport that kicked off Saturday, special events were absent throughout the region.

While some residents — many who served in other wars — planned to hang American flags to honor the soldiers, other people swarmed shopping centers and malls with little knowledge of the event that happened more than half a century ago.

"Veterans find that very disturbing," Cmdr. Thomas Roberts of the Winter Park American Legion said. "It was the greatest invasion that took place ... thousands died."
go here for more
Veterans lament low number of Central Florida D-Day events

Maj. Gen. Vincent Boles honors WWII Slave Soldiers in Orlando

Slave soldiers honored, called 'national treasures'
Story Highlights
For first time in history, Army recognizes soldiers held as slaves in Nazi Germany

Maj. Gen. Vincent Boles presented six Berga survivors with flags flown over Pentagon

350 soldiers held at Berg an der Elster; "It was a slave labor camp," general says

"These men were abused and put under some of the most horrific conditions"



By Wayne Drash
CNN


ORLANDO, Florida (CNN) -- Hobbled with age, weathered with time, the World War II veterans stood at attention. One by one, a two-star general delivered flags flown over the Pentagon in their honor. He looked them in their eyes and snapped his right hand in salute.


"National treasures," Maj. Gen. Vincent Boles said Saturday evening.

It marked the first time in history the U.S. Army recognized 350 soldiers held as slaves inside Nazi Germany. The men were beaten, starved and forced to work in tunnels at Berga an der Elster where the Nazi government had a hidden V-2 rocket factory. Berga was a subcamp of the notorious concentration camp Buchenwald.

"These men were abused and put under some of the most horrific conditions," the general told a private gathering of Berga survivors. "It wasn't a prison camp. It was a slave labor camp."

No ranking Army official had ever uttered the words "slave labor camp" in reference to the men's captivity at Berga. Boles knew the gravity of his statement -- that he was setting the historical record straight after 64 years.
go here for more
http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/06/08/berga.recognition/index.html

2,500 motorcyclists ride for VA center

2,500 motorcyclists ride for VA center
By JENNIFER FITCH
June 7, 2009
waynesboro@herald-mail.com
GREENCASTLE, Pa. — Greencastle residents tailgated and set up folding chairs on the sidewalk for the 19th annual Operation God Bless America motorcycle ride, which attracted 2,500 motorcyclists in support of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Martinsburg, W.Va.

Don Gordon of Mercersburg, Pa., has ridden in the massive line of motorcycles every year since 1991. He said he rides in memory of his late uncle, who was unable to use veterans resources during an illness because his military records were lost.

“It’s a gathering of like-minded people for a worthy cause. The more money raised and people that are aware of these issues, the better chance they have of getting the resources they need,” said Gordon, who rode a Harley-Davidson Softail.

Approximately $62,000 was raised Sunday, according to steering committee member Mary Ann Davenport.

go here for more
http://www.herald-mail.com/?cmd=displaystory&story_id=224549&format=html

Gun rule is hurting veterans

First, no, President Obama does not want to take away your rights to have a gun. He was a Constitutional Professor after all and believes in the what the Founding Fathers laid down. This ruling came down before he was President and has done more harm to PTSD veterans than protecting them.

After presentations to veterans I have a question and answer session. This is the most asked question of all. It is preventing them from getting help for PTSD from the VA because they are afraid they will have to give up their guns. Imagine a combat veteran depending on his weapon for his life while deployed into combat, then telling them they are no longer responsible enough to have a fire arm. Some of them also need their guns because they are in law enforcement. Did anyone think of them?

PTSD comes in different levels and when you have a veteran that is no treat to himself or others, add this concern into the mix, no matter how the wording in this bill went, you have a huge problem. Would you rather have a PTSD with a gun getting help or a PTSD veteran with a gun, getting no help? Easy answer on this one.

This issue needs to be fixed and fast. It was not a wise move even though it sounded that way. It's kept veteran from getting help.

Senator Coburn was in a fight over this on the Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention Act, which did make changes in the way the VA responded. Here is part of the fight he had.

Coburn Cites Defense of the 2nd Amendment
The junior senator of Oklahoma has taken on a new cause however, quite possibly his most controversial of all. United States Senators are allowed to place a hold on legislation thus blocking it from coming to the floor if they have serious reservations about such legislation. Tom Coburn has had a hold on the Joshua Omvig Veterans Suicide Prevention Act of 2006 for nearly six months now. The bill is meant to dramatically increase funding to prevent what has been proven to be the sky rocketing suicide rate among veterans of both those who have served in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. Now Coburn objects to the bill because it mandates that veterans receive a mental health screen when they come back from duty. Apparently Coburn is afraid that the gun rights of veterans will be trampled upon if they admit to owning a firearm during the health screening.

Coburn Cites Defense of the 2nd Amendment


Now you know what is behind all of this. The words our elected use should always be thought of very carefully to know if what they think they are saying will help or hurt. In this case, it ended up hurting the veterans they wanted to help.

Gun Rights Lobby Prepares To Weigh In On Sotomayor
By Greg Vadala, CQ Staff
With congressional Democrats divided on gun issues and the Obama administration steering clear of the topic, gun rights advocates have bagged new legislative trophies this year and are taking aim at additional targets.

The National Rifle Association (NRA) and Gun Owners of America have an ambitious to-do list. They are preparing to:

•Weigh in on Obama’s nomination of federal appellate court Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court.

•Advance a proposal by Sen. Richard M. Burr , R-N.C., to ensure that veterans are not wrongfully denied the right to bear arms.



On the legislative front, both groups support Burr’s legislation (S 669) on veterans’ gun rights. Under current law, the Department of Veterans Affairs is required to report to the FBI’s criminal background-check database — the system firearms dealers use to determine who can buy guns — any information on veterans determined to be mentally “defective” and unable to manage their own finances. Burr’s bill, co-sponsored by Jim Webb , D-Va., would prohibit the VA from sending the names of those veterans to the database unless a judicial authority rules them a danger to themselves or others.

The Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, on which Burr is ranking member, approved the measure in May. Burr is looking to attach it to another piece of legislation because Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , D-Nev., is otherwise unlikely to bring it to the floor.

go here for more

http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?docID=news-000003136873

Hey Milwaukee Vietnam Vet needs "brothers" to step up

This Vietnam vet has been in a fight for his life and his wife has been ready to do whatever she can for him, but they need your help. He has to go for an appeal hearing in Milwaukee from Phoenix. His wife asked for prayers but that's what you're for. Listen to God calling you to answer this plea from a brother in need and the wife who loves him enough to fight for him. They are ready to sleep in their car to make the trip they cannot afford and she is in pain already.


Vietnam Veteran Needs your prayers please
OFF TOPICS -
Posted by Gypsy on June 8, 2009


I bring this humble request to those of you who understand the phlight of our service men and women of so many "conflicts and police actions" - the ones that no one had the guts to call a "War"....

SEVEN long years ago, Jimmy and I started a journey by applying for his service connected combat disability benefits. YES seven long years ago - it has been in one stage of appeal or another since day one it seems.

In the beginning "they" (the powerful little boys and girls who hide in cubicles in the Veterans Admin Regional offices) said - why yes Mr Soldier - you have 20% hearing loss - we'll give that one to you and yes we agree you do have Type II Diabetes, and yes we agree you do have PTSD - however - since you were never STATIONED in Vietnam - you weren't there so your duty there can't possibly count. Your military personnel records say that you weren't there. So no service connection for you - sorry.....

So we spent nearly a year - getting together the records THEY said didn't exist - and proved he was in Vietnam, that he was shot down over Cambodia, that he did receive lots of the stressors that are "necessary" for a Veteran to get his PTSD benefits granted - one such piece of evidence - how about his Vietnam Combat Service Ribbon with TWO bronze stars - denoting each tour there.... oh that one isn't enough is it? Okay so lets add that his unit was the only one during the Easter Offensive to get the Presidential Unit Citation w/ "V" (for Valor) in a combat situation??? Will that one work for you idiots in your cute little cubicles that weren't even born until 1980 something - do you even KNOW where Vietnam is?

So we got another letter back - okay so we have to give them both to you - but we will do so at the absolute lowest ratings possible. Now that "we" have thrown you a few crumbs will you please go away and leave us alone?

Well hell no we aren't going away... and so it all began. Now on Wednesday June 17th at 1030 am we finally have our day in court - before the Board of Appeals for the Veterans Appeal.

My beloved Veteran has been treated for and is still under psychiatric care of an entire team of PTSD specialists - and has been for the past seven years. These past two weeks (since we got notified that the hearing was on June 17th) my hubby has been off the charts with every negative emotion one can imagine. He even thought about calling it quits and saying - "NO let's not do this" and I said - OH NO! Not only NO but HELL NO. 87% of the combat veterans who apply for service connected disability for PTSD either give up or stop fighting after they get a pitence from the VA. Usually it is because they do not have the where-with-all or fortitude any more to continue to fight a government establishment they have long since quit believing in.

I asked him to please - please - put aside all of his reservations (asked him to TRUST me one more time) and take this to the final play in the game. After all - can't win the game if you walk away with the ball in your hand. Like I told him - it's like the lottery - can't win if you don't play. If we don't "play" THEY win. Then you will have gone through all of this for nothing! You will never forgive yourself and you will wonder until the day you die - what if....

So reluctantly he is going with me (if he doesn't show then they toss the case)......we will be leaving on a shoe string and a prayer on Saturday to drive to Milwaukee from Phoenix - because they set the hearing in Milwaukee. click link for the rest

PTSD on Trial:Joseph Brian Odom

Veteran from Cocoa gets 5 years in prison
FLORIDA TODAY • June 8, 2009


MELBOURNE — An Afghanistan War veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder was sentenced today to five years in prison, avoiding a lengthy incarceration that resulted from an armed confrontation with police after officers said he shot at his wife.

Joseph Brian Odom, 31, of Cocoa, faced up to 35 years in prison had he gone to trial and was convicted of the three felony charges against him, aggravated assault with a firearm, aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer with a firearm and shooting into and occupied dwelling.


Family members said “the system failed him,” by not giving him the treatment he needs for the PTSD. They said that at the time he was on anti-depressant medication.


click link for more

Not so cut and dry is it? After you must have read the post I put up with reports going back three years addressing the fact they were handed medication and then sent on their way without help to heal. Handing them pills is just not good enough. Never has been and never will be. Why are they still doing it? When will they understand what is required to really help them heal? How many more cases of avoidable situations will place the lives of others in danger, including law enforcement, while these veterans suffer instead of being helped?

Veterans picnic sets new record

Veterans picnic sets new record
Towanda Daily Review - Towanda,PA,USA

BY JAMES LOEWENSTEIN
Staff Writer
Published: Monday, June 8, 2009 6:02 AM EDT
SHESHEQUIN TOWNSHIP — In South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. James A. Clark of Elmira, N.Y., was approaching a helicopter that had landed in order to retrieve mail, when an enemy mortar round exploded.

Clark was knocked unconscious, and then spent a month being treated for his injuries on a hospital ship. He received a Purple Heart and has been disabled since then.

Clark was one of more than 3,500 people who attended the 21st Annual Bradford County Veterans Appreciation Day picnic Sunday at Hornbrook County Park in Sheshequin Township.

“It’s a great thing that Bradford County does for its veterans,” Clark said of the picnic, which provides a free picnic lunch and free T-shirt or hat for the veterans who attend it.

The picnic brings a message to veterans that “what we did was worth it,” which is not the message that many veterans of the Vietnam and Iraq wars received when they returned to the United States, according to Iraq War veteran Timothy Chapman of Towanda.

Chapman said that when he returned to the United States, a young boy at the airport wanted to shake the hands of Chapman and other returning troops.

But the boy’s mother pulled him away, saying, “You don’t talk to those murderers!” according to Chapman.

Two members of the Bradford County Veterans Appreciation Day Committee said there was a record attendance at the picnic this year. click link for more


There is also a picnic coming up on June 14th in MN

June 14 picnic to honor all local Vietnam veterans
Albert Lea Tribune - Albert Lea,MN,USA Published Monday, June 8, 2009

Vietnam vets and Vietnam-era veterans from around the region are invited to attend Vietnam Veterans Recognition Day on Sunday afternoon, June 14, for a free picnic social. The fifth annual barbecue picnic, sponsored by the Vietnam Veterans of America, Chapter 790, will be held this year at Swensrud Park in Northwood, Iowa. Located along the riverfront, there is close parking, lots of shade trees. There will be a variety of foods, but mainly the day focuses on the camaraderie among fellow Vietnam veterans. June 14 is also known and celebrated as Flag Day.
click link for more information

PTSD Vietnam vet living in shed waiting for VA Claim

Army veteran, living in a shed, waits for help from the VA
Waco Tribune Herald - Waco,TX,USA

By Regina Dennis Tribune-Herald staff writer

Monday, June 08, 2009

Jerry Pole would like to take a warm bath, lay in a comfortable bed and eat a hot meal cooked on a stove.

His current living quarters do not allow for such conveniences. The 57-year-old Army veteran has been living for the past two years in a rented storage shed on an acre of land his girlfriend owns on the outskirts of Bellmead.

Pole is unable to work and takes 13 medications to treat post-traumatic stress disorder and a nervous condition he said was caused by his Army service, which includes a year in Vietnam.

There’s no room for a kitchen or bathroom in the shed, or even space for a refrigerator. A used love seat serves as his bed and takes most of the space.

Pole bathes in a tub behind the shed, using cold water from a hose hooked up to a utility line on the property. The same hose is used to rinse dishes in a makeshift sink in the front yard. Near the “sink,” Pole dug a pit in the front yard and placed a wire grate over the opening, creating a grill to cook food.

“It’s not the best condition to be in, but I’m still thankful for what I do have,” Pole said. “I know it could be a lot worse. I could be living under a bridge with no shelter at all.”

click link for more

Veterans score one more undo of Bush policy

I received this from a member of NAMI
VA Reopening Health Care Enrollment to Thousands of Veterans
On June 15, The Department of Veterans Affairs is poised to welcome nearly 270,000 more Veterans back into medical centers and clinics across the country by expanding enrollment.

Under a new regulation, VA will enroll Veterans whose income exceeds current means-tested thresholds by up to 10 percent. These Veterans were excluded from VA medical care limits were imposed in 2003 on Veterans with no service-connected disabilities. There is no income limit for Veterans with service-connected disabilities. (see my comment below on this)

Veterans who have applied for VA health care at any point in 2009 will have their applications reconsidered under the new formula. Those who applied before 2009, but were rejected due to income, must reapply. VA will contact eligible Veterans through a direct-mail campaign, Veterans Service Organizations, and a national and regional marketing campaign.

Information about enrollment and an income and assets calculator is available at www.va.gov/healtheligibility.

The calculator provides a format in which Veterans enter their household income, number of dependents, and zip codes to see if they qualify for VA health care currently or under the change effective June 15. In addition to applying online, Veterans may also contact VA’s Health Benefits Service Center at 1-877-222 VETS (1-877-222-8387).

Each VA Medical Center across the country has an enrollment coordinator available to provide Veterans information about this program.


Notice the date this rule was in place? It was 2003 under President Bush. This is one more step in the direction to undo some of the damage done to this nation's veterans.

As for the comment about "service connected" not being charged, that all depends on if they have a VA rating and approved claim. Otherwise, the term "service connected" does not apply unless the VA approves the claim. This is one more thing that Congress needs to undo. In the 90's a rules change allowed the VA to collect for any "non-service connected treatment" if the veteran had income. This rule changed allowed the VA to collect for treatment on any real service connected disability if the claim had not been approved. Considering the huge backlog of claims, this is doing a lot more harm to veterans than anything else. Those claims in the pile are from veteran seeking treatment and compensation for what happened in service and they are being charged for the treatments.

Stephen Colbert gets scalped in Iraq

Stephen Colbert high-fives a serviceman after submitting to a military-style haircut in Iraq on Sunday.

In Iraq, Colbert gets military haircut to show his solidarity
Story Highlights
Stephen Colbert tapes first of four shows he'll produce in Iraq this week

Comedian tells guest, the imposing Gen. Ray Odierno, it's like "interviewing Shrek"

At President Obama's taped orders, Odierno cuts Colbert's hair to wild cheering

Sunday show to be televised on the Comedy Central network Monday night

From Jomana Karadsheh
CNN

CAMP VICTORY, Iraq -- Stephen Colbert left no doubt about his solidarity with American troops when he taped the first of four Comedy Central shows he'll produce in Iraq this week.

Colbert, wearing a business suit made of the same camouflaged material used for soldiers' desert uniforms, submitted to a regulation military haircut as hundreds of U.S. troops cheered wildly Sunday.

The comedian, who satirizes conservative TV pundits on his "Colbert Report," began his "Operation Iraqi Stephen: Going Commando" USO tour Sunday in the Baghdad headquarters of the U.S.-led military coalition in Iraq.

"It must be nice in Iraq, because some of you keep coming back again and again," Colbert said, joking about the multiple tour many troops have had in Iraq since the 2003 invasion. Some troops had accumulated enough frequent flyer miles to earn them a free ticket to Afghanistan, he joked.
go here for more
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/06/07/colbert.iraq/index.html

Army cracks down as drug, alcohol cases rise

Army cracks down as drug, alcohol cases rise
By Gina Cavallaro - Staff writer
Posted : Monday Jun 8, 2009 5:32:09 EDT

Drug and alcohol abuse in the ranks is on the rise, and Army officials say commanders are largely to blame for failing to take control of the situation.

Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Chiarelli issued commanders across the service a message directing them to do a better job of getting offenders into treatment or separated from the Army.

Chiarelli is leading an Army-wide crackdown on violations and placed renewed emphasis on reporting requirements. That could mean increased inspections of barracks rooms and more visits by leaders to soldiers’ off-post homes to make cursory evaluations of their living conditions.



Soldiers can expect stricter disciplinary action for positive urine analysis results and a possible wave of separations for soldiers who have a pattern of substance abuse after receiving help, Army leaders said. The requirement to randomly test 16 percent of a company’s soldiers each month and as directed by commanders will remain unchanged.

Col. Tom James, 3rd ID chief of staff, cited the case of a master sergeant who had an incident involving alcohol. A look into his record revealed he had no previous offenses, but had deployed three times and gone through nine roadside bomb incidents. They said they got him the help he needed.

click link for the rest

This is not a bad thing. It's good they are paying attention and getting them into help.

Marine's widow creates clothing for Wounded Warriors

Marine's widow creates clothing for Wounded Warriors
By CAROLYN CLICK
The (Columbia) State
Published Monday, June 8, 2009

When Lt. Col. Albert P. Barry died of brain cancer in 2007, he was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery and eulogized in the Congressional Record as a "true American Patriot" and a man "unselfish in service."

Even on his deathbed after battling a relentless and devastating cancer known as glioblastoma, the retired 71-year-old Marine wanted to give back.

In true military fashion, he gave his wife, Liz Taylor-Barry, the assignment.

And so BarryBasics was born.

The soft cotton-blend clothing pieces are part of Taylor-Barry's new line of "modular medical apparel," meant to reduce discomfort for critical care patients.

With a chest snap opening for monitors and tubing, side and front snap openings, and removable sleeves, Barry hopes to alleviate the suffering of recovering soldiers. She calls her effort the Wounded Warrior project.

"The whole idea was to give the patient dignity and comfort," she said.
go here for more
http://www.islandpacket.com/news/local/story/868654.html

Military Deception, Made Easier by a Reluctance to Ask Questions

How does this happen? How does a fake veteran gain so much attention and power but real veterans have a hard time getting any attention at all? Please, don't tell me it's a compelling story they tell, because I've read about more impressive real veterans, wounded in service to this nation and then moving mountains to help other real veterans. So how did he do it? How did he get enough attention to lie in the first place?

A Military Deception, Made Easier by a Reluctance to Ask Questions
New York Times - United States

DENVER — The thick-muscled man with close-cropped hair who called himself Rick Duncan seemed right out of central casting as a prop for a Democratic candidate running against Bush administration policies last fall.

A former Marine Corps captain who suffered brain trauma from a roadside bomb in Iraq and was at the Pentagon during the Sept. 11 attacks. An advocate for veterans rights who opposed the war. An Annapolis graduate who was proudly gay. With his gold-plated credentials, he commanded the respect and attention of not just politicians, but also police chiefs, reporters and veterans advocates for the better part of two years.

Yet, except for his first name, virtually none of his story was true. In reality, he was Richard G. Strandlof, a charismatic drifter with a history of mental illness and petty crimes who had moved from Montana to Nevada to Colorado, assuming different names and identities along the way.
click link for more

Kentucky National Guardsman killed in crash


Kentucky soldier dies in crash
WKYT - Lexington Kentucky

A Kentucky soldier is dead after a high-speed crash. He was just recently welcomed home after spending a year in Afghanistan.

24-year old Daniel Westfall died in a crash this early morning along US 27 in Harrison County.

Police say he lost control of his car and slid through a field, flipping several times before coming to rest about a quarter-mile from the road.

Westfall was deployed with the 201st Engineer Battalion which just returned from Afghanistan in March.

Sunday night friends and family are remembered his service to his country. A memorial service for Westfall will take place on Tuesday in Cynthiana. His funeral will be Wednesday in West Virginia.

click link above for video report

What happened to Spc. Jarrett Griemel?

Army investigates La Porte soldier’s death

08:25 PM CDT on Sunday, June 7, 2009

By Kevin Reece / 11 News

LA PORTE -- A home on Mission Road in La Porte is draped in American flags and adorned with yellow ribbons tied to symbolize the hope for a safe and speedy return home. As dozens gathered Sunday afternoon at the family home of Army Specialist Jarrett Griemel, that hope was lost.

The 20-year-old died June 3 in Afghanistan under mysterious circumstances. His family says he was found face down in his barracks at Forward Operating Base Gardez bleeding from his nose and ears. The Army is investigating but will only say he died of injuries suffered from a non-combat related incident.
go here for more
Army investigates La Porte soldiers death

For troubled vets, a hard road to healing

This article mentions how a Chaplain did not address suicide. This is very troubling. Considering how many suicides there are with the troops and veterans, it should be out in the open. Many are dealing with the fact someone they knew committed suicide.

There was a time when discussion of PTSD was taboo. Anyone talking about it was verbally assaulted by the uniformed and opinionated never once considering how PTSD strikes and does not come from within. They blamed the wounded.

Now, even while most people are finally becoming aware of what this wound is, they are eliminating part of it from the discussion. Suicide comes from hopelessness. If a Chaplain will not discuss it, then they are assisting in keeping it all in the shadows.

If we do not face this aspect, then there will be nothing done to prevent it. We need to be talking about all of what comes with PTSD, from what happens in the wounded, to their families and yes, even suicide. We don't know if they are seeking this as an answer or it is based on what they themselves do not understand. We don't know if it is because help given to them is too little or irresponsible or just too limited.

There have been too many reports of soldiers and veterans committing suicide after they have sought help and have been provided with therapy and medication. What was missing? What didn't work? Are they still doing what does not work? If no one is talking about it or researching it, then the chances are, they are still unknowingly causing more harm than help. Was part of the problem the family was uninformed? Were they getting all they needed to know? Did they receive the support they needed up to and including their own therapy?

The more reports I read, the more questions I have about what is really going on and who is asking the right questions.

Monica Yant Kinney: For troubled vets, a hard road to healing
By Monica Yant Kinney

Inquirer Columnist

Two weeks ago, the Army took the extraordinary step of briefly suspending operations at Kentucky's Fort Campbell so officials could focus on the mental-health needs of soldiers there after 11 confirmed soldier suicides this year.

Earlier in May, a communications specialist near the end of his third tour of duty in Iraq allegedly gunned down five fellow troops at a combat stress clinic in Baghdad.

Nationwide, Army suicides have reached record highs, from 67 in 2004 to 143 in 2008. In January, 24 soldiers took their own lives - more than the 16 combat deaths that month.

With each new tragedy, John Musewicz worries more about the stress and stigma suffered by soldiers fighting the war on terror. Ignoring the pain allows it to fester, said Musewicz, a Vietnam vet and a therapist running a new Council for Relationships program for soldiers and their families.

Operation Home and Healing offers counseling at any of the council's 14 locations in Pennsylvania and South Jersey. Help can even be had for free if that's what it takes to persuade the proud, reluctant community to step forward.
go here for more
For troubled vets, a hard road to healing

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Bike Rally raises funds for Fisher House

News 14 24 Hour Local News TOP STORIES Bike rally raises ...
Bike rally raises thousands for wounded veterans home News 14

As members of the military and their families are stationed around the world and must often travel great distances for specialized medical care, the Fisher House Foundation donates the homes which enable family members to be close in their most stressful times

Master Sgt. Chuck Barden back from his 8th deployment in ten years was among the bikers riding for a cause, helping the wounded and their families have it a little bit easier. Carolina News 13 has the video report on this. They were riding for Fisher House.
Bike rally for wounded raises thousands

The Battle Over the Battle of Fallujah

Mr. Tamte, who are you fooling? $20 million was not about honoring them but about making money. Excuse me but if you wanted to honor them and make people understand what it was like, then you'd be closer to it doing it the way Ken Burns does it, not by turning it into a video game. I have no doubt you care about them but it seems you spent a lot of time and money for your own sake and not their's or the family members of the fallen. What do you think $20 million could have done for any of the organizations trying to care for them because they didn't play a game, they lived thru it? What do you think that kind of money could have done for the families of the fallen or for the wounded? I'm sure you and your employees could have found a lot better way of honoring them than to do this.

The Battle Over the Battle of Fallujah
A videogame so real it hurts.

By Dan Ephron NEWSWEEK
Published Jun 6, 2009
From the magazine issue dated Jun 15, 2009


Peter Tamte was months away from completing his dream project—turning the largest urban battle of the Iraq War into a videogame—when it all seemed to fall apart. The 75 employees of one of his companies, Atomic Games, had worked on the endeavor for nearly four years. They'd toiled to make Six Days in Fallujah as realistic as possible, weaving in real war footage and interviews with Marines who had fought there. But now relatives of dead Marines were angry, and the game's distributor and partial underwriter had pulled out of Tamte's project. On May 26, he got on the phone to Tracy Miller, whose son was killed by a sniper in Fallujah, and tried to win her over by arguing that the game honors the Marines. Miller listened politely, but remained skeptical. "By making it something people play for fun, they are trivializing the battle," she told NEWSWEEK.

Tamte is not above triviality. A second company he runs, Destineer, makes games with titles like Indy 500 and Fantasy Aquarium. But the 41-year-old executive says he's now attempting something more serious: a documentary-style reconstruction that will be so true to the original battle, gamers will almost feel what it was like to fight in Fallujah in November 2004. At his studio in Raleigh, N.C., Tamte has been helped by dozens of Fallujah vets who have advised him on the smallest details, from the look of the town to the operation of the weapons. And he's staked the fate of his company on the success of the $20 million project. "If for some reason it doesn't work, we'll have to think about making some very significant changes to the studio," he says.
go here for more
http://www.newsweek.com/id/200861?GT1=43002