Monday, June 8, 2009

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.
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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

Roy Brooks Mason Jr. thought of others till the end



They never fail to amaze me. This veteran of combat, this soldier of our nation, was so despondent, left so hopeless by PTSD, that he thought suicide was the only way out of the pain. Yet even with all that inside of him, he called authorities ahead of time so that children would not be traumatized by his body on the side of the road. How much longer are we willing to lose people like him?

Friend: Soldier who killed himself on West Cliff unable to control his aggression after two tours in Iraq
By Cathy Kelly
Posted: 06/07/2009 01:30:28 AM PDT


SANTA CRUZ -- A solider who shot himself on West Cliff Drive recently had become unable to control the aggression he felt after serving two tours in Iraq, a friend said.

Roy Brooks Mason, Jr., 28, of Fairfield, was an Army infantryman who had received several medals and once planned to be a career Army officer, said Jay Johnson of Rocklin, a friend of Mason's since childhood.

But his combat experiences changed him and his plans.

Johnson said Mason was due to retire in July, after suffering injuries in two explosions and undergoing treatment for post traumatic stress disorder. Military officials, however, would not confirm Mason was to be discharged.

But Mason would not make it to July.

On May 19, he was reported missing from Fort Carson, Colo. Johnson said Mason rented a car and ended up in Capitola two days later, a place he had loved when he spent a vacation there as a child, Johnson said.

The next day, Mason called emergency dispatchers from a call box on West Cliff Drive near Stockton Avenue in Santa Cruz, saying a dead body could be found in a car parked there. He asked that the scene be cleaned before any children saw it, officials said.
go here for more
Soldier who killed himself on West Cliff

Confederate flag vs American flag all over again in Homestead FL

If they think this is a way to honor all parts of our history, then fine, but they better find a lot of Native Americans to add their fight against US forces as well as going all the way back to the Revolutionary War and the loyalist that tried to kill the Patriots. It was not just the Civil War that pitted American against American in battle. So why have it that way now?

The Civil war put American against American. Both sides had ancestors fighting and dying for what they believed in this nation divided. Since there are no living Civil War veterans, perhaps the parade to have Confederate descendants in is Memorial Day instead of Veterans Day. After all, this is the one day out of the year that is just for our nation's veterans, in other words, living veterans of a united nation, all serving together, no matter what their ancestors believed in or side they took. Veterans come from all over the nation, every city and town as Americans and this day, this one day, should honor that to honor them.

Amid Confederate flag flap, veterans aim to save Homestead Veterans Day Parade
By TANIA VALDEMORO
tvaldemoro@MiamiHerald.com
The Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 121 has marched in the annual Veterans Day Parade in Homestead for at least a dozen years.

They hope to march this November, too, and that parade organizers can find a solution to resolve the controversy that erupted over a group of Confederate descendants marching with a battle flag for the first time in 2008.

''We don't want the parade to be canceled,'' said Dennis Magno, a member of the Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 121.

Since the Homestead/Florida City Chamber of Commerce leaders voted unanimously to disband the parade after the controversy erupted, veterans and residents have been calling the chamber to oppose canceling the parade, said Jerome Williams, the chamber president.

On Thursday morning, officials from the chamber's military affairs committee unanimously voted to defer making any decisions on continuing or disbanding the popular 47-year-old event.
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Veterans aim to save Homestead Veterans Day Parade

Parents rammed cars into burning day care

Parents rammed cars into burning day care
Story Highlights
Neighbors describe panic, horror as parents try to rescue kids from burning building

One door was padlocked shut and children couldn't get to high windows, officials say

At least 41 children die in fire; dozens more in hospitals in Mexico and U.S.

Cause of fire still unknown; investigators say it didn't start inside day care



HERMOSILLO, Mexico (CNN) -- Parents of the children trapped in a burning Mexican day care center rammed their vehicles into the building to try to free the trapped children, witnesses told CNN.


Relatives cry Saturday at the funeral for one of the children killed at a day care fire in Hermosillo, Mexico.


Neighbors described parents arriving at the day care center completely desperate, seeing it engulfed in flames and knowing there was no way to get the children out, CNN's Thelma Gutierrez reported from the scene. They say they could hear the cries of the children and the screams of their parents.

The building had two doors, but one was padlocked shut, officials said. Windows were too high for the children to reach.
go here for more
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/06/07/mexico.day.care.fire/index.html

American Legion looking for donations for homeless vets

American Legion looking for donations for homeless vets
amanda nalley • democrat staff writer • June 7, 2009


Paper towels. A lamp to read by. A welcome mat at the front door. Soap. Most people take these household items for granted. For 57 homeless vets, they represent what is to come: A future off the streets. They are the simple things that make a house a home.

American Legion Post 13 is collecting items from laundry detergent to bathroom rugs to fill 13 four-bedroom units that will house 52 homeless veterans.

“You are sleeping under the bridge at I-10. What do you have? Nothing but the clothes on your back,” said Bob James of Post 13. “We are very passionate about helping veterans. We are the begging arm.”


Items needed:
Kitchen: bakeware, cookware, colanders, measuring cups, cooking utensils, toasters, can openers, coffee makers, 8-place dinner sets, 8-piece glassware sets, 4-piece coffee cup sets, 4-8 piece flatware sets, pot holders, sponges, paper towels and holders, dish soap, drainers, tea pitchers.

Bath: Toilet paper, shower curtain and hooks, bath mat, bathroom sets (soap holder, cup, toothbrush holder), soap, shampoo, conditioner, toothpaste, deoderant, shaving cream. Bathroom dish sets (soap holder, cup, toothbrush holder)

Other: Towels, cleaning supplies, brooms, mops, trash cans, lamps, coasters, decorative items, computers/printers, televisions, welcome mats, rugs, bedding, laundry detergent and fabric softener.

go here for more

American Legion looking for donations for homeless vets

Mentally tough and wounded heart

by
Chaplain Kathie
Mentally tough and wounded heart? Can the two exist together? Absolutely and they prove it everyday. Their buddies come before they do. The mission comes before they do. It all comes before the pain they have inside.

Stop and think about something. War is about killing the enemy they are sent to fight when they cannot get them to simply surrender and they are trying to kill the other side just as much. With death all a part of war, what would stop them from just walking past the wounded if it was all just a matter of fact in war? What would stop them from just leaving the dead where they fall and walking away? What stops them is their heart. These are their brothers and sisters. They've been adopted into a military family when they come into their unit and they know they can trust their buddies with their lives, trust the fact they will make sure they get home again, one way or another. They also know that they may have to do it for one of them.

They have courage enough to train to use the weapons used in war all the while knowing the other side is also preparing. They have the determination inside of them to withstand endless hours of pushing their bodies to the limits of endurance. They come to terms with the fact they will have to leave their parents, spouses, kids and friends for a year or more, existing on emails and care packages to stay connected to them. Physically trained and mentally prepared to do what their country asks them to do, they go. There is no weak mind in them. They have a committed mind and that requires strength to do it and the courage to face the chance of not making it home alive.

When their "family" is wounded, they risk their own lives to help them, rescue them or collect their bodies. No matter how much they grieve, they push on and keep going for the sake of the others. Mentally tough? You bet they are. I don't know about you, but honestly, I'd be the first to ask to go home. It took me years to understand what is in them that enables them to do what they do.

We know they are bright because they learn how to fight and brave at the same time because they are willing to risk their lives to fight. We know they have courage because they are able to risk their lives to save the lives of their friends and for the sake of whatever the leaders of this nation ask of them. So how can it be that anyone associated Post Traumatic Stress with being mentally weak? What is all this nonsense about? Where does it come from?

The vast majority of the men and women serving, just as those serving in past conflicts, finished what was asked of them, setting aside the pain that was already inside of them. Maybe I should stress the word "pain" because pain does not live in the part of the brain that runs intellect, courage or determination. It lives in the part of the brain that controls emotions and there emotional pain beats. Call it that heart or call it the soul, call it whatever you want, but each and everyone of us have different levels of emotions. Different levels of caring, sympathy and empathy just as each of us have limits on what we are able to do. For them, they have all the above but what they are able to do even with the pain inside, is remarkable.

They don't stop the battle so they can go talk to their boss and ask to go home sick. They finish what they are doing because lives depend on them. Is that weak minded?

No matter how drained they are, they push on. No matter how much nightmares rob them of rest, they get up and do what is asked of them. Is any of that from the weak minded?

They go without sleep, without regular meals, endure heat and other hard weather conditions, without any of the creature comforts the rest of us take for granted. There were no umbrellas in Vietnam with monsoon rains and no air conditioners in the jungle. There were no rubber pants to walk around rivers, streams and rice fields. No air mattresses to lay down on instead of the earth. Just as there are harsh living conditions in Afghanistan and Iraq today, they still go on. Is any of that possible with a weak mind?

I just did a post on military police called the Spartans. Spartans Living the Soldier Creed It's about what is posted right here and what is inside of these men and women. If you can't understand the difference between what comes from being strong of mind and wounded in "heart" then I think you have the problem you want to turn around on them. Apparently your mind is just not strong enough to learn and see this wound for what it is.

There was a time when they were the ones to feel ashamed but that was in a time and place when we just didn't know any better. Yet when you look at history, you see that even without knowing what caused this, there was compassion for the wounded. Yes there were some blaming the wounded but even with them pointing fingers, there were those who had the an understanding that it very well could have been them stuck by it. We ran out of excuses a long time ago just as information removed any thoughts of the world being flat, information has left behind the uninformed being as ignorant as the flat earthers thinking they're going to fall off the planet. Now we know that anyone attacking those wounded by the trauma they live thru are the weak minded ones and unable to learn or feel anything for the wounded. Must really suck to be them! I'd rather spend time with PTSD veterans than waste a second on people just too dumb or lazy to learn anything about them. They used to call PTSD Soldier's Heart. I guess you have to know a soldier's heart by using your own one first.

Spartans Living the soldier's creed

Living by the Soldier's Creed
Multi-National Division Baghdad
Story by Staff Sgt. Peter Ford
Date: 06.06.2009
Posted: 06.06.2009 02:21

BAGHDAD — I will never quit. I will never leave a fallen comrade.

All Army Soldiers are required to know the Soldier's Creed, but the Soldiers of 591st Military Police Company "Spartans," 93rd MP Battalion, 8th MP Brigade not only know it, they live by it. They always place the mission first.

The Spartans, a police transition team that advises Iraqi police, received a distress call over the radio as they prepared to go home after a long day at al-Awad Police Station, June 3. A Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected vehicle had rolled over into a ravine less than three miles away. Without hesitation, the Spartans went to the aid of their fellow Soldiers.
go here for more
http://www.dvidshub.net/?script=news/news_show.php&id=34630

VVA National President: DOD needs to declassify Agent Orange Documents

VVA National President calls for a declassification of all DOD info

on Agent Orange Exposure

VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA

IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 2, 2009

No. 09-13

Contact:

Mokie Porter
301-996-0901

Vietnam Veterans of America: Crying Need to Deal with Agent Orange
Problems Here in America

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - "Vietnam Veterans of America applauds the conclusions and recommendations of a Ford Foundation-funded report issued today by the National Organization on Disabilities on the effects of Agent Orange in Vietnam," said John Rowan, VVA National President. "While VVA feels compassion for the many adults and children injured and made ill by exposure to Agent Orange and the many other toxins used in Vietnam during the war there, it is now time to fully deal with the same effects on Americans who served in Vietnam and other areas that were also contaminated. The effects of these toxins on the children, grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren must similarly be addressed."
go here for more
http://www.veteranstoday.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=7193

PTSD:The Battle Beneath: The Camouflage Continues

Mental health help for returning veterans
Saturday, June 06, 2009
By JOE GREEN jgreen@sjnewsco.com
VINELAND - In 1996, Eric Arauz was found to be untreatable. The verdict came inside a maximum security Veterans Administration (VA) ward.

No hope for a man who had served in Operation Desert Shield in the Navy and was diagnosed with Bipolar 1 and alcohol and drug addiction. It may have occurred to him then that he, like his father, would die a homeless veteran.

But 13 years later, he's receiving the Golden Bell Leadership Award from the Mental Health Association of New Jersey.

Arauz sat on an expert panel Friday at the Veterans Memorial Home discussing efforts to help veterans with mental illness and addiction, as he has, as a guest on Good Morning America.

The event, titled "The Battle Beneath: The Camouflage Continues," was organized by the Southwest Council, Inc. (SWC), a non-profit that offers services to people with substance abuse problems.

The SWC serves Cumberland, Salem and Gloucester counties. Friday's discussions focused in part on ways to extend mental health and addiction services to military veterans who suffer from a host of disorders.

Arauz founded Arauz Inspirational Enterprises (AIE), which offers motivational speeches and consulting to those suffering from the same types of afflictions he did.

"If I represent anything, it's that it was the best efforts of others that helped me, not my best efforts," he said on Friday, after panel discussions.
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Mental health help for returning veterans

Educational movie aims to help soldiers with PTSD

Educational movie aims to help soldiers with PTSD
June 6th, 2009 @ 8:30pm
SALT LAKE COUNTY -- Some realistic scenes from Afghanistan were re-created at Camp Williams Saturday morning for a short movie being made as an educational tool.

The Utah Department of Veterans Affairs is putting together a video about the signs of post traumatic stress disorder. Many soldiers suffer from the disorder when they return home from war but few get help for it.

Often, the simplest event can trigger a response, such as a car broken down on the side of the road. A former soldier can take it as a possible ambush.

The military wants to start paying better attention to these types of issues.

The department's Darin Farr said, "A lot of guys are afraid to come forward because they don't want to be perceived as a head case or that they've got problems or issues. This is a legitimate issue they are dealing with, and they need help. It's not going to go away on its own."

The department says the video should be completed sometime next month and will be available to soldiers who want a copy.
go here for video
http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=6736264

PTSD On Trail:Sgt. Nicholas Horner and the wound he spread

by
Chaplain Kathie

It is very easy to think of only the obvious. A man killed an innocent person and wounded another. Of this, the family does not dispute the accusations. While it's easy to limit your thinking, it will not prevent another tragedy from happening. Can we prevent all that may come? No, not any more than we can prevent all of the suicides that may come, but when we try, when we try to look beyond the obvious, we save some. That's what Sgt. Horner's family is trying to do.

Sgt. Horner had already sought help for PTSD, but he was sent back into combat with prescriptions instead of being kept out of danger while he was treated for PTSD. His family says he tried to commit suicide three times, yet he was not sent to the hospital for an extended stay to treat him properly. This could have been predicted when the military decided they would send back PTSD wounded with prescription drugs and weapons.

These are just some of the stories I was posting on over the last few years. They are on my other blog, Screaming in an Empty Room, showing clearly the problem was already being report on in 2006, but the practice continued with deadly results.




American Chronicle: US troops in Iraq taking drugs to cope with ...Medications may temporarily help our troops cope enough to return to Iraq and continue combat operations. Drugs may put a chemical band-aid on our damaged ...
ASHP News: Army Pharmacists' Roles Increase with Mass Rotation ...The maneuver is the first "full change out" of troops in Iraq and the fifth ... Tripler pharmacists had to special order medications for some reserve and ...
SignOnSanDiego.com > News > Military -- Some troops headed ba...Some troops headed back to Iraq are mentally ill ... nationwide are heading back to Iraq with a cache of antidepressant and anti-anxiety medications.
The Iraq War--On Drugs -- In These TimesThe issues around mental health and medication are exacerbated for the more than 378000 troops who have served multiple tours to Iraq and Afghanistan. ...
Army sent mentally ill troops to IraqMore than two dozen suicides by US troops in Iraq, and hundreds of ... "Now we follow all the FDA guidelines for using this medication," Winkenwerder said. ...
Some troops headed back to Iraq are mentally ill - RINF ...... questions that would arise from sending draftees back to War on medications.” ... Now word comes that “mentally ill” troops are being sent back to Iraq.
Policies on mentally troubled troops questioned - baltimoresun.comThe number of troops taking psychiatric drugs remains a military mystery. ... only limited records on medications prescribed for service members in Iraq.
US soldiers: Iraq massacre not exceptionHowever, on May 20 US group Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) issued a statement ... Then they throw medication at you. You can take Prozac, or Xanax . .
Ask Our DoctorsSince then, the total number of cases of skin leishmaniasis among American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan has risen to more than 500.
Injured US troops in Iraq treated with deadly narcotic...but, don ....Title: Injured US troops in Iraq treated with deadly narcotic...but, don't worry, ... The patient therefore never received the medication from the patch.
Political Affairs Magazine - Wounded Soldiers "Recycled" ...In the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan multiple deployments are ... that has cost the lives of over 2500 US troops and over 75000 wounded – whose scars ...
Political Affairs Magazine - Wounded Soldiers "Recycled" ...The policy of both allowing mentally ill troops to fall through holes in the ... In the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan multiple deployments are almost ...
Courant InvestigationShe went over there with a year's supply of the medication and made a suicide ... "Thank you Hartford Courant reporters for, again, bringing this to light,
Mentally Unfit, Forced to FightPotent Mixture: Zoloft & A Rifle The Hartford Courant, May 16, ... Kiley insisted that troops receiving medications are afforded a balance of care,
Daily Kos: UPDATED: DOD Served by Sen. Boxer, GAO, Hartford CourantAt the time, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported that the DOD was reinserting troops back into the battlefield while prescribed anti-anxiety medications.
Some of the best reporting came out of the Hartford Courant, and then there were the reports from the GAO


Mentally Unfit, Forced To Fight
By LISA CHEDEKEL And MATTHEW KAUFFMAN
The Hartford Courant
May 14, 2006

The U.S. military is sending troops with serious psychological problems into Iraq and is keeping soldiers in combat even after superiors have been alerted to suicide warnings and other signs of mental illness, a Courant investigation has found.Despite a congressional order that the military assess the mental health of all deploying troops, fewer than 1 in 300 service members see a mental health professional before shipping out.Once at war, some unstable troops are kept on the front lines while on potent antidepressants and anti-anxiety drugs, with little or no counseling or medical monitoring.
And some troops who developed post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in Iraq are being sent back to the war zone, increasing the risk to their mental health.These practices, which have received little public scrutiny and in some cases violate the military's own policies, have helped to fuel an increase in the suicide rate among troops serving in Iraq, which reached an all-time high in 2005 when 22 soldiers killed themselves - accounting for nearly one in five of all Army non-combat deaths.

The Courant's investigation found that at least 11 service members who committed suicide in Iraq in 2004 and 2005 were kept on duty despite exhibiting signs of significant psychological distress. In at least seven of the cases, superiors were aware of the problems, military investigative records and interviews with families indicate.http://www.courant.com/news/specials/hc-mental1a.artmay14,0,6150281.story

Mentally Unfit, Forced To Fight - Still Suffering, But Redeployed
by LISA CHEDEKEL, The Hartford Courant
May 17th, 2006

They have post-traumatic stress and other combat-related disorders. So what are they doing back in battle?Eight months ago, Staff Sgt. Bryce Syverson was damaged goods, so unsteady that doctors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center wouldn't let him wear socks or a belt.Syverson, 27, had landed in the psychiatric unit at Walter Reed after a breakdown that doctors traced to his 15-month tour in Iraq as a gunner on a Bradley tank. He was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, and was put on a suicide watch and antidepressants, according to his family.Today, Syverson is back in the combat zone, part of a quick-reaction force in Kuwait that could be summoned to Iraq at any time.http://www.mfso.org/article.php?id=606

A look at claims blending with some of the other factors in the neglect.

From the GAO
May 28, 1996"Over 700,000 men and women served in Southwest Asia during the Persian Gulf War. Some of these veterans began experiencing symptoms--such as fatigue, weight loss, and skin conditions--that could not be diagnosed or associated with a specific illness or disease. In 1994. the Congress enacted legislation allowing the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to pay compensation benefits to veterans for Persian Gulf related disabilities caused by undiagnosed illnesses. As of July 1995, VA had denied almost 95 percent of the 4,144 claims it had processed for Persian Gulf veterans claiming such disabilities."http://www.gao.gov/archive/1996/he96112.pdf

Date: Friday, January 24, 2003 9:21 PMWritten by: Terry Higgins
Now 700,000 vets are on appeal taking on average 6 to 10 years to process a claim. All the VA has to do is keep up the good work and you will have perpetual adjudication with no merits of a claim ruled on, just the incompetent by choice errors by the VA being recycled for the entire life of the veteran.According to the National Veterans Organization Inc. A VA study called Compensation and pension performance summary states "the average time to process an original claim for compensation is 139 days. If that claim is not adjudicated in the veterans favor and he appeals the decision to the board of Veteran Appeals, it takes an average of 533 days for the claim to be heard by the BVA. According to this report, an average of 38.4 % of all claims submitted to the BVA are remanded back to the regional office for further development or action. The same report reveals that it takes an average of 496 days for that same claim to be dealt with once it has been returned to the regional office. This means that on average it takes a total of 1,160 days for a veteran to receive a final decision before he can appeal his claim to the court of veterans appeals. If the veteran appeals the decision to the court. He can expect to wait another 3 to 5 years to get the final decision from the court".According to the 6th judicial conference held by the Court of Veterans claims. 99% of the CVC remands are for VA error.http://www.v-r-a.org/docs/VAfoe2.htm

From the GAO
June 9, 2005
A 2004 thesis prepared by the director of a state department of veteran's affairs evaluated state-by-state variances in the percentage of veterans receiving disability benefits and the percentage of veterans rated at different degrees of service-connected disability. The thesis noted that in 2001 the nationwide percentage of total veterans receiving disability compensation was 10.2 percent, with a low of 6.3 for Illinois and a high of 15.9 for Alaska.https://www.1888932-2946.ws/vetscommission/e-documentmanager/gallery/Documents/June_2005/OIGStatement_Staley_6-9-05.pdf




What you may think as obvious depends entirely what it is you actually know. I've been tracking everything about PTSD since 1982. In 2005 I started posting on it on Blog Spot, after years of posting on AOL. Obvious to me is that they knew what was coming but just didn't care. If anyone is responsible for the outcome of sending these men and women back into combat already wounded by PTSD, it's the military commanders deciding to do it.

Was Sgt. Horner responsible for the shootings? In a way no. There have been many trials and the outcome has been they were not responsible at the time they occurred. If they put him on trail without informing the jury about the wound he carried back home and rest of the facts regarding this dangerous practice the military was willing to do, then justice will never be served. It won't be served for the families or the victims. What is more maddening is that it won't be served unless there is such a public outcry to take care of these men and women, veterans of combat so scared, it is predictable they will continue to commit crimes, commit suicide and end up suffering needlessly.

PTSD is not a criminal predictor but it is a predictor of suffering. Some suffer from mild PTSD and others suffer so severely they lose themselves in the pain they carry. Face it. They were taught to kill and risk their lives. Conditioned to fight. They were also told that if they conditioned their mind to be "tough" and ended up with PTSD, it was their fault. Take a look at the program called Battlemind and see how it begins. This is the message they were given. Then there was the attitude of the commanders attacking those who dared step forward asking for help.

There really appalling aspect in all of this is we knew what we needed to know by 1978. There were 70 veterans centers already open and 500,000 already diagnosed with PTSD. None of this should come as a surprise to anyone. It is all the untold price paid by those who serve but a price paid just the same. They paid when they suffered, when they ended up losing their jobs, their families and their families paid. They paid when they ended up reaching for alcohol and drugs to kill the pain they carried and victims of crimes in order to obtain them. They paid when they drove drunk and so did their victims. They paid when they committed suicide and so did their families. They paid when they ended up homeless on the very streets they risked their lives for right back home in American cities and towns.

No they are not all criminals, druggies or alcoholics any more than they are all cut from the same cloth. The only things they have in common is the wound they carry and the way they are betrayed by the rest of us when we judge them instead of helping them. When we read about stories like Sgt. Horner and his victims without ever once stopping to think about what we did to him.


Accused killer’s family hopes tragedy draws attention to PTSD

By JIM PENNA
For The Tribune-Democrat

They know most people see a monster, not a son – a beast, not a brother.

But when Karen Horner and her family think of accused murderer Nicholas Horner, they remember the man they love.

Horner, 28, is in prison, charged with killing two people and wounding a third during the robbery of an Altoona sandwich shop on April 6.

His mother understands better than most what the families of 19-year-old Scott Garlick and 64-year-old Raymond Williams are going through, as well as the anguish of Michelle Petty, who was critically injured.

Karen Horner has family ties to a state trooper who was slain in the line of duty in 2002. She recalls weeping and wondering: “What kind of animal could have done this?”

Now, as her own son faces prosecution on double murder charges, Karen and her family have come forward. They say they are not making excuses for the accused, but believe the tragedy should spotlight Nick Horner’s military service and his diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD.


“They gave (Nick) a box full of pills, seven or eight bottles of different drugs so he could cope,” Dan Horner, father of the accused, said. “The military doctor wanted to keep him in the states for at least a month. They sent him back (to Iraq) right away anyhow, and when he got there he was reprimanded for having the drugs.


Family members said Nick Horner tried to kill himself three times prior to the Altoona shootings. They said he had become moody and short-tempered, living in a daze.

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Accused killers family hopes tragedy draws attention to PTSD