Monday, August 3, 2009

Wounded Marine Fights VA For Care

Casey Owens said he thinks President Bush owes him an apology after he lost both legs and didn't get the help he needed to heal. I know a lot of people that will respond with the usual, calling him "Bush basher" instead of considering this Marine served the nation, all parts of this nation, would have died for this nation, even for the people who couldn't possibly care less about him.

See, that's the real problem here. I'm surrounded by people like that in every part of my life. They never want to hear the truth.

I addressed an email one of my friends sent slamming President Obama. When I pointed out the difference between the two Presidents, the amount of money budgeted and the progress being made to help our veterans, she said I was "Bush bashing" and that I was wrong about Bush cutting VA funding.

Personally I like her so I didn't want to argue. I figured the point would have been lost because she didn't even know what the facts she looked up meant. She said the VA budget was increased in 2008 but didn't notice that was at the end of his term and also after the Democrats took control over the House and the Senate, thus controlling the committees and sub committees. Here are some other facts they like to avoid.

There were less doctors and nurses working for the VA than there were after the Gulf War but we had two military campaigns producing more wounded everyday.

That Nicholson returned money to congress unspent at the same time suicide alarm bells were screaming to be addressed across the country, but nothing was being done for the troops or our veterans.

That the Republicans in Congress, including their hero McCain, making a point to keep voting against veterans because they doubt their supporters have the ability to look up their voting records or take the time to listen to debates carried by CSPAN. McCain's record on veterans is abysmal. He was against the GI Bill saying it was too generous but when it came time to vote, he was someplace else. He was happy though when President Bush, also against the GI Bill, congratulated McCain on its passing. Top that off with McCain campaigned on solving the overflow of the VA by getting rid of veterans not meeting his standards of being combat veterans. He wanted all non-combat wounded veterans to have cards so they could get private care and stop using the VA. What a guy! That was his answer after he voted against them and kept saying there was not enough money in the budget to fully fund the VA.

They have a history of doing this then claiming they are the veterans best buddies when it comes time to get their votes.

This is not about Bush bashing or Republican bashing, but about truth. That's something that used to matter in this country when people cared enough to find out and the media felt the obligation to inform instead of perform. The troops and our veterans ended up paying the price. The Democrats are no angels in this but they are far better at taking care of the men and women we send while the Republicans are more about spending their time and money on taking care of the contractors instead. I get angry with Democrats in congress because when the troops needed them to really stand up for them, they refused to take to the airwaves across this country and demand something be done. I kept waiting for that to happen after hearing their passionate speeches on the floor of the congress, but they never arrived. The only one coming close was John Edwards when he was talking about homeless veterans.

President Obama, the one some love to hate no matter what he does for the troops or our veterans, paid attention all along. He wanted to be on the Veterans Affairs Committee, when John McCain was not. (Wonder why that is if they were so important to him? Did anyone ask him?) Obama managed to pay attention to the PTSD rates and the fact so many were taking their own lives. He paid attention so much so that he went to the Montana National Guard to take a look at their program. I knew about it because this is what I do all day long everyday so I've investigated most of the program out there. Obama was running his campaign and had a lot of other things to take care of but quietly he took a serious look at their program and promised to support it. Had he not cared, he wouldn't have had a clue how good it was. This was at the same time McCain was telling veterans that PTSD was not that big of a deal, more media hype and his wife Cindy said that McCain didn't have PTSD because of his strength and training. Wonder how well that went off with the four generals that came out publicly admitting they needed help to heal too?

But the game goes on and the Right go after the Left and visa versa with the troops and our veterans stuck in the middle, waiting for help. Did any of these people stop to think that the troops didn't make us wait when we said they should go? So why should they and their families suffer for lack of care just because they got wounded doing what we asked them to do, sent them to do and paid for them to do? Can we finally, once and for all stop the political game at least when it comes to taking care of them and be honest?

Wounded Marine Fights VA For Care
"Shrugged Off" by Veterans Administration After Failed Surgeries, Wounded Vet Forced to Seek Help on His Own
(CBS) Casey Owens wasn't expected to live after he lost both legs in Iraq. But he made it out of a military vehicle alive and to Bethesda Naval Hospital where CBS News national security correspondent David Martin first met him in October of 2004.

"I don't remember anything, but I know that it was a mine," Owens said.

Everyone would agree the U.S. government owes Casey Owens the best possible medical care. No one who hears his story could say he got it.

"I don't know why I'm just depressed, crying a lot and feeling down, just feeling hopeless," Owens said.

He said that to the latest doctor he turned to in his desperate search for the help he was not getting from the Veterans Administration.

"Dealing with the VA and being held up and not getting the care that I feel I wanted or treatments that I see fit," Owens said. "That's a very discouraging thing for me because I did my part and their part is to help heal us and they failed me."

All he ever wanted to be was a Marine. Even after he was wounded he donned his dress blues for President Bush's second inaugural. But the amputation on his right leg kept failing and the VA told him he would need a fourth operation to repair the stump.

"What they offered me was the same surgery that had failed three times before," Owens said.

Each surgery meant more of his right leg had to be amputated.

"I didn't have much more of my leg to give," Owens said.

He wanted a different procedure.

"So I did research on my own and found the doctor which took six months of approval to get," Owens recalled.

His mother says he spent six months with a raw stump just.

"He was in excruciating pain," said Janna Dunkle, Owens' mother. "He's sitting, laying on a bed, watching TV or staring at walls."

Finally he got the operation and, he says, a personal apology from President Bush for the delay. He was up on two legs but still searching for treatment of the wound you can't see: the brain injury.
read more here and for video
Wounded Marine Fights VA For Care

Antidepressant use doubles in U.S., study finds

Antidepressant use doubles in U.S., study finds
1 in 10 are taking medication to improve mood, fewer going to talk therapy
By Maggie Fox

updated 4:44 p.m. ET, Mon., Aug 3, 2009
WASHINGTON - Use of antidepressant drugs in the United States doubled between 1996 and 2005, probably because of a mix of factors, researchers reported on Monday.

About 6 percent of people were prescribed an antidepressant in 1996 — 13 million people. This rose to more than 10 percent or 27 million people by 2005, the researchers found.

"Significant increases in antidepressant use were evident across all sociodemographic groups examined, except African Americans," Dr. Mark Olfson of Columbia University in New York and Steven Marcus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia wrote in the Archives of General Psychiatry.
read more here
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32274077/ns/health-mental_health/

At least 26 hurt as airliner hits turbulence

Whenever I fly I keep my seatbelt on,,,,please do the same. You never know when you'll wish you did.


At least 26 hurt as airliner hits turbulence
Story Highlights
Airliner hits turbulence, is forced to divert to Miami, Florida
At least 26 people hurt, four of them seriously
Jet had been en route from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Houston, Texas

(CNN) -- Severe turbulence shook a Continental Airlines flight Monday, injuring dozens of passengers and forcing the aircraft to divert to Miami, Florida, according to the airline and a fire official.


There were 168 passengers and 11 crew members on Flight 128, which was heading from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Houston, Texas, according to a statement from Continental Airlines.

"I've never seen turbulence like that, so I really thought we wouldn't make it," passenger Giovani Loss told CNN affiliate WSVN-TV. Loss, who is originally from Brazil, said he is a lawyer in the United States and frequently travels between the two countries.
read more here
At least 26 hurt as airliner hits turbulence

2 toddler sisters drown in new family home pool

Toddlers Drown In Argyle Forest Pool

POSTED: Saturday, August 1, 2009
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Two young sisters died Saturday morning after being found in a back yard pool of an Argyle Forest home, according to the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office.

Homicide investigators said the parents told them the two girls -- 18-month old Gloria Arias Ysabel and 2-year-old Veronica Arias Ysabel -- had just eaten breakfast at their home in the 8100 block of Niska Trail.

Detectives said the older girl let herself outside through a French door and headed toward the pool.

Authorities said the family had just moved into the house Friday and had not had a chance to put up a safety fence.
read more here
Toddlers Drown In Argyle Forest Pool
linked from CNN

Big pay boost sought for badly injured vets

Big pay boost sought for badly injured vets

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Monday Aug 3, 2009 12:39:25 EDT

Severely disabled veterans who need virtually full-time assistance carrying out routine tasks such as bathing, dressing and eating would receive up to $1,410 more a month under a bipartisan bill introduced July 30 by members of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

Under the bill, 100 percent disabled veterans qualifying for the highest rate of special compensation because they need aid and attendance would receive up to $8,642 a month.

The bill, HR 3407, has three other key provisions:
read more here
Big pay boost sought for badly injured vets

Skydiving and swimming claim lives of two soldiers

Purple Heart recipient drowns in S.C. lake
The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Aug 3, 2009 12:39:27 EDT

ANDERSON, S.C. — A National Guard soldier who served two tours of duty in Afghanistan has drowned in a lake along the Georgia-South Carolina border.

Multiple media outlets report that 28-year-old Brad Daniel Seawright’s body was recovered Sunday morning by divers searching Lake Russell.
read more here
Purple Heart recipient drowns in S.C. lake
Soldier killed in Va. skydiving incident

The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Aug 3, 2009 9:38:28 EDT

WEST POINT, Va. — State police have identified the body of a man killed in a skydiving accident Saturday.

Command Sgt. Major Harry Parrish, 53, of Fort Meade, Md., was found Sunday morning near Middle Peninsula Regional Airport, not far from the town of West Point, about 40 miles east of Richmond.
read more here
Soldier killed in Va. skydiving incident

Tragedy becomes 'a blessing' for disabled Vietnam Vet

Tragedy becomes 'a blessing'
By Elizabeth Richardson

The Times-Herald

While many families were gearing up for Christmas on Dec. 23, 2008, Leon Dyes -- a 61-year-old disabled Vietnam veteran -- was about to face tragedy.

Dyes lived at 62 Lone Oak Road near Grantville. In the early morning hours of Dec. 23, an electrical fire erupted, burning his residence to the ground.

"Thankfully, none of my family was home at the time," said Dyes.

Dyes' son, daughter-in-law and young grandson had been staying with him at the time. On Dec. 23, they were out of town celebrating Christmas while Dyes was staying in LaGrange.

Thanks to the generosity of others, however, Dyes was recently able to move into his reconstructed house and turn what was once viewed a tragedy into "a blessing."

Dyes lost all of his possessions in the fire, as well as two dogs, one that belonged to him and one that was his son's.
read more here
Tragedy becomes a blessing

In a second, lives changed forever

A 2 year old girl died while at a birthday party. Another 1 year old died because his father made a mistake with a car. A man is charged after road rage and a couple on a motorcycle will never be the same. Three different stories, seconds out of lives and no one involved in any of them will ever be the same. This is how trauma can alter everything we think, we believe and what we expect out of ourselves. These three stories were on Tampa Times this morning.





Brooksville girl, 2, drowns during birthday party
Times staff
Posted: Aug 02, 2009 11:13 AM


SPRING HILL — A 2-year-old Brooksville girl attending a birthday party wandered into a neighbor's pool and drowned Saturday afternoon, according to the Pasco County Sheriff's Office.

Shailyn Marie Shaw of 965 Candlelight Blvd., Apt. 46, Brooksville, was among about 12 children attending the party at 8180 Pagoda Drive. The children were playing on an inflatable ride in the backyard as adults watched. click link for more




1-year-old dies when father accidentally hits him with car
By Kim Wilmath, Times Staff Writer
Posted: Aug 03, 2009 06:32 AM

BRADENTON — A 1-year-old died Saturday night when his father accidentally hit him with his car in front of the family's apartment.

Troopers say the father, Miguel A. Aragon-Castro, 32, went outside to start his car at about 11 p.m. at the Manatee Woods Apartment complex. He went inside to get his two sons. But the car was apparently in first gear when he took out the clutch, and it lunged forward, pinning the younger Miguel Aragon-Figueroa to the outside wall of the apartment. He died.



Traffic incident erupts into gunfire at Tarpon Springs gas station
By Brant James, Times Staff Writer
Posted: Aug 03, 2009 10:48 AM

TARPON SPRINGS — A road rage incident escalated to attempted murder on Sunday when a man fired a handgun at two people he bumped from behind on U.S. 19, according to Bay News 9.

David Bowman, 34, is charged with attempted first-degree murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, carrying a concealed weapon, using a firearm while under the influence, simple battery and domestic battery from an incident earlier in the evening. He is being held in Pinellas County Jail in lieu of $30,750 bail.

Tarpon Springs police said Bowman, driving a white Oldsmobile, bumped a motorcycle carrying Pantelis Mastrovasi and Nichole Hill from behind around 8 p.m., prompting an argument that continued into a nearby Circle K parking lot. Police say Bowman then fired a shot, shattering a gas station window, before fleeing.

A twist on the Alzheimer's fight

A twist on the Alzheimer's fight
Mary Newport, a Spring Hill doctor, said ketones — a kind of superfuel for brain cells — had an immediate effect on her husband, Steve, who has early onset Alzheimer’s disease. "He said it was like someone had turned on a lightbulb," Mary Newport said. Others are taking notice, too, as ketones are drawing interest as a possible treatment for Alzheimer's disease.

TV Shows Trauma and Mercy


Trauma

Executive producer Peter Berg delivers "Trauma," the first high-octane medical drama series to live exclusively in the field where the real action is. Like an adrenaline shot to the heart, "Trauma" is an intense, action-packed look at one of the most dangerous medical professions in the world: first responder paramedics. When emergencies occur, the trauma team from San Francisco General is first on the scene, traveling by land, by sea or by air to reach their victims in time. From the heights of the city's Transamerica Pyramid to the depths of the San Francisco Bay, these heroes must face the most extreme conditions to save lives -- and give meaning to their own existence in the process.

Source: NBC



Mercy - NBC TV Show - Mercy Seasons, Spoilers, Cast, Pics


NBC's "Mercy," a new medical drama with a unique point of view, portrays the lives of the staff at Mercy Hospital as seen through the eyes of those who know it best—its nurses.

Nurse Veronica Callahan (Taylor Schilling, "Dark Matter") returns to Mercy from a military tour in Iraq—and she knows more about medicine than all of the residents combined on NBC's "Mercy." Together with fellow nurses Sonia Jimenez (Jamie Lee Kirchner, "Rescue Me") and Chloe Payne (Michelle Trachtenberg, "Gossip Girl"), Callahan navigates through the daily traumas and social landmines of life and love both inside the hospital and out in the real world on NBC's "Mercy."

The cast of NBC's "Mercy" also includes: James Tupper ("Men in Trees") as Dr. Chris Sands, a new doctor at the hospital who complicates Veronica's life; Diego Klattenhoff ("Supernatural") as Mike Callahan, Veronica's husband; and Guillermo Diaz ("Weeds") as Nurse Angel Lopez.

NBC's "Mercy" is a Universal Media Studios/Berman Braun production. Joining writer/executive producers Liz Heldens (NBC's "Friday Night Lights") and Gretchen Berg & Aaron Harberts ("Pushing Daisies," "Pepper Dennis") are executive producers Gail Berman and Lloyd Braun. Emmy Award winner Adam Bernstein (NBC's "30 Rock," "Rescue Me") is the director for the pilot of NBC's "Mercy."
TV Shows Trauma and Mercy

It's really odd to finally see TV shows coming out addressing trauma after all these years, but it's wonderful they are finally being done.

Quiet heroes we depend on everyday to take care of us when parts of our life beyond our control spiral into chaos. Car accidents can change our lives in a second. Natural disasters strike leaving us in total confusion wondering where we're supposed to live, find clothes, food, how we are supposed to put our lives back together again. Fires wipe out everything we thought we valued, needed to make us happy and obliterated sentimental reminders of our lives captured in pictures lost forever.

We tend to not think about these people we need when traumatic events happen but we're sure glad they show up when they do.

Firefighters, emergency responders, police officers and Chaplains show up when they are needed the most then return into the background of our lives. It never dawns on us to wonder how they do it, how they face all these events, risk their own lives for the sake of strangers, then go back to their own lives without asking anything in return except a simple thank you and their paycheck, because they were "just doing their jobs" for the rest of us.

They go back home after working to save us, risking their lives to do it, then have to take out the trash, do the laundry, go food shopping, deal with kid's homework, dust furniture and vacuum the rugs. They deal with the usual mundane problems and family relationships all the while they are remembering they just saved a life, wondering why simple events in life can take on so much importance to the people they love the most. Someone died in their arms a little while ago but they have to deal with an argument over who was supposed to unload the dishwasher. They saved the life of a child but have to go home and tell their own kid to clean their room.

We see them everyday but never really notice any of them until we need them. We never think about their own lives once we are done needing them.

These TV shows may make us think more about them while reminding us of the trauma they face daily. Mercy will show us what it's like to be sent into combat then have to come back home living like the rest of us but being oh so much more than we could ever dream of.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Seminole jail trainee shot by deputies after corrections officer killed

Seminole jail trainee shot by deputies after corrections officer killed

Gary Taylor

Sentinel Staff Writer

3:07 PM EDT, August 2, 2009


A Seminole County Sheriff's Office trainee, suspected of fatally shooting his female companion, was shot and seriously injured this morning by a deputy from that agency.

Jeff L. Thomas, 45, is in critical condition at Orlando Regional Medical Center, where he was airlifted after the shooting in Geneva, Seminole County sheriff's Capt. Dennis Lemma said.

Lemma identified the dead woman as Melanie Lee, 37, a sergeant with the state Department of Corrections, working at the Central Florida Reception Center near Orlando.
read more here
Corrections officer killed

Homeless Marine gave millions away


Richard Walters, a homeless man who lived in Phoenix, died two years ago. And he left behind a surprise: a $4 million estate. Courtesy Rita Belle



He just gave up all of the material things that we think we have to have. You know, I don't know how we gauge happiness. What's happy for you might not be happy for me. I never heard him complain.



- Rita Belle


Homeless Man Leaves Behind Surprise: $4 Million
July 27, 2009
Every day on NPR, listeners hear funding credits — or, in other words, very short, simple commercials.

A few weeks ago, a new one made it to air: "Support for NPR comes from the estate of Richard Leroy Walters, whose life was enriched by NPR, and whose bequest seeks to encourage others to discover public radio."

NPR's Robert Siegel wondered who Walters was. So Siegel Googled him.

An article in the online newsletter of a Catholic mission in Phoenix revealed that Walters died two years ago at the age of 76. He left an estate worth about $4 million. Along with the money he left for NPR, Walters also left money for the mission.

But something distinguished Walters from any number of solvent, well-to-do Americans with seven-figure estates: He was homeless.

Walters was a retired engineer from AlliedSignal Corp.; an honors graduate of Purdue with a master's degree; and a Marine. Walters never married, didn't have children and was estranged from his brother. But he wasn't friendless.
read more here
Homeless Man Leaves Behind Surprise
linked from AOL News

Acknowledging a POW’s sacrifice, eligible for Purple Heart

Acknowledging a POW’s sacrifice
Decades after their deaths, they are eligible for Purple Heart
By Brian MacQuarrie
Globe Staff / August 2, 2009

EPPING, N.H. - The World War II mess kit still gleams when the sun strikes its aluminum, a treasured family keepsake that bears hundreds of tiny markings chiseled in secret in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp.

The etchings form a cross, the letters R.I.P., and the date, Dec. 28, 1942: the day when an Epping farmboy, Private Joseph Norman St. Laurent, died in the Philippines after surviving the Bataan Death March, the hell of a prison ship, and a scavenger’s diet of worms, grubs, cats, and monkeys.

If St. Laurent had died in combat, he would have been awarded a Purple Heart, a presidential honor to acknowledge the sacrifices of those killed or wounded while serving with the military. But because he perished in captivity, St. Laurent and 12,000 other US veterans who died in prison camps in World War II never received that recognition.

Now, more than six decades later, the Defense Department has expanded its criteria for the medal to include any POW who died in captivity after the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. As a result, in the first ceremony of its kind in the nation, the next-of-kin of many of the 61 prisoners from New Hampshire who died during World War II and the Korean War will gather at the state veterans cemetery Aug. 8 to honor their long-deceased loved ones.
read more here
Decades after their deaths, they are eligible for Purple Heart

Hundreds of babies dropped off roof in India

Hundreds of babies dropped off roof in India

By NIRMALA GEORGE, Associated Press
Watch the story NEW DELHI (AP) — Rights activists lashed out Friday at local officials who allowed hundreds of infants to be dropped from the roof of a mosque in western India in the belief that the fall — which ends when the babies are caught in a bedsheet — would ensure good health and prosperity for their families.

The ritual at the Baba Umer Durga, a Muslim shrine, is believed to have been followed for nearly 700 years, and each year hundreds of people, both Hindus and Muslims, take part in the ritual.

Local officials told television news stations there had been no reports of injuries.

The infants, mostly under two years old, were dangled Thursday from the roof of the shrine near Sholapur, about 280 miles south of Mumbai, before being dropped about 50 feet onto a bedsheet held aloft by parents and other believers.

Television channels showed the babies screaming as they were shaken in the air before being dropped.
read more here
http://www.komonews.com/news/national/52209737.html

Woman's search for brother in Pinellas Park leads to ashes

Woman's search for brother in Pinellas Park leads to ashes
By Andrew Meacham, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Saturday, August 1, 2009
PINELLAS PARK — The ashes lay in a white wooden urn, on a shelf in a locked room at the Anderson-McQueen Cremation Tribute Center. A sticky-backed, computer-generated label identified the remains: Brown, Steven. DOB 6/20/52.

The urn had sat on the shelf for about four weeks, next to the labeled remains of others. As the main repository in Pinellas County for unclaimed remains, it represents a kind of mezzanine level between a body's discovery and its dispensation.

If no family came forward to claim Brown's ashes in the next three months, they would be dumped in the Gulf of Mexico.

But on Tuesday, a key fit into the lock. An Anderson-McQueen employee retrieved Mr. Brown's urn and handed it to a courier.

On the other end, someone was waiting.
read more here
http://www.tampabay.com/news/obituaries/article1023804.ece

Wounded Afghanistan Vet to sue Ministry of Defense

August 2, 2009

'My life is ruined and MoD has deserted me'
Steven Swinford
Lance-Corporal Ryan Knight, 23, was badly injured in Helmand Province and now plans to sue the minstry for negligence

A SOLDIER who was offered less than £14,500 compensation for being crippled by a Taliban bomb that killed his two best friends is planning to sue the Ministry of Defence.

Lance-Corporal Ryan Knight, 23, was left with a shattered pelvis after his Land Rover hit two mines in Helmand province, Afghanistan, in September 2007. Today he struggles to walk unaided and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Knight, a combat medic, decided to speak out for the first time after The Sunday Times highlighted the inequity of the armed forces compensation scheme last weekend.

His case will intensify the pressure for an overhaul of the scheme. Last week the government announced it was bringing forward a review, but ignored calls by the former prime minister Sir John Major and the Royal British Legion (RBL) for it to be conducted by an independent panel.
read more here
My life is ruined and MoD has deserted me

Benning lieutenant killed in motorcycle wreck

Benning lieutenant killed in motorcycle wreck

The Associated Press
Posted : Sunday Aug 2, 2009 14:51:51 EDT

SMITH’S STATION, Ala. — A Phenix City man has been killed in a motorcycle crash in Smith’s Station.

Lee County Coroner Bill Harris says Joshua Adam Picard was killed when his motorcycle crossed the center line and collided with a small SUV Friday night.

Picard was a Army lieutenant and was stationed at Fort Benning, Ga. Picard lived less than two miles from the site of the accident. Harris said Picard was ejected from his 2002 Harley-Davidson Sportster and landed in a swampy area near the road.
Benning lieutenant killed in motorcycle wreck

In Ranks of Heroes, Finding the Fakes

I don't know if these people will ever understand how many other people they are hurting. Worse is that I don't even know if they care at all.

Because of these fakes and frauds, it makes it all the more harder on the real heroes. They not only had to prove themselves in combat, they had to prove themselves with claims to the VA, to veterans organizations and now, they have to prove it all over again. A data base would be very helpful with this however, that is, as long as what it put in is right and all paperwork errors have been found and fixed.

I don't want to bore you with the story of my husband all over again, so the short version is, his award for a Bronze Star had the wrong social security number typed in. This caused a cluster of accusations, his VA claim to be denied and a lot of doubt. We had a newspaper clipping his mother kept from a local paper announcing the award. We had all the paper work with all the official seals and signatures. What we didn't have was the right social security number. That was pretty hard on him to have to prove it all over again, but when I was put in contact with a general's office, all the paperwork supported the truth, it was corrected and his claim was finally approved. How many others did this happen to? How many others didn't keep all their paperwork after Vietnam? What if my husband tossed his paperwork in the trash the way he wanted to over 30 years ago? We'd have no proof of anything even though he was telling the truth. We have the fact his mother raised him to be a pack rat the way she was with saving papers.

Too many others are not so lucky.

The only way a massive data base could ever be a good thing is if they went through everyone's files to make sure all the pieces of paper in the file belonged to them and not someone else. I'm sure somewhere there is a veteran with papers that belong to someone else but because the social security number came up it was attached to someone else's name. Can they do that? Can they go through every piece of paper for every service man or woman before they even attempt to do it? I doubt it. No one has that kind of time.

We can't even trust some of the data bases we use. Most of them have a disclaimer saying their information is not complete. With the Medal of Honor, it is easy to have an accurate data base since so few really received the award. The lower the award, the more recipients of it and it gets harder to find all the information. It would be so much easier on the veterans if they didn't have to go through any of this unless there was a technicality but because of the frauds wanting to use what they did not earn, it makes it all the more difficult for them. It is a betrayal, a theft and should be treated like a crime, which it is but somehow I doubt all the frauds out there have been found. While they wanted publicity for what they stole, they should get publicity for it when they have been found to be lying. For the others with possible mistakes on their records, their claims should be treated as if it is possible and taken seriously. Knowing a fraud that got away with it for a time does not make up for a real veteran suffering for a mistake he did not make. What is justice in this case and how do we arrive at it as soon as possible?

This article points out that the Internet is very helpful in all of this but no site can have every single piece of information no matter how good they are at it. It takes diligence from the rest of us.

If you ever talk to someone claiming to be a veteran with awards, do some checking to see if they are telling the truth. You never know when you can help catch a fraud or help a veteran with no clue errors were made in their case.

In Ranks of Heroes, Finding the Fakes

By IAN URBINA
Published: August 1, 2009

Last August, the Texas Department of Transportation started asking applicants for more documentation after discovering that at least 11 of the 67 Legion of Merit license plates on the roads had been issued to people who never earned the medal.

Last September, the House of Representatives passed a bill naming a post office in Las Vegas after a World War II veteran who, it later turned out, had lied when he claimed he had been awarded a Silver Star. The legislation was rescinded.

In May, one of the most prominent veterans’ advocates in Colorado was detained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation after it was discovered that his story about heroic service in Iraq and severe injuries from a roadside bomb was an elaborate hoax.

Military imposters are nothing new. But the problem has grown or at least become more obvious as charlatans are easily able to find fake military documents, medals and uniforms on auction Web sites.

Last month, The Marine Corps Times found 40 erroneous profiles in this year’s Marine Corps Association Directory, including false claims of 16 Medals of Honor, 16 Navy Crosses and 8 Silver Stars.

read more here

In Ranks of Heroes, Finding the Fakes

Michael Musto just became a hero


Michael Musto just became a hero to me because he was on MSNBC talking about the Wedding video and this latest video being great for advertising music. He said that record companies are hurting and videos drive sales of CD's. He's right.




So how does this make him a hero to me. My videos! No, my videos will never come close to hitting the kind of hits videos like this one did. Mine are geared to PTSD and veterans, providing understanding and support. I've taken over half my life and crunched down what I know into videos lasting under half an hour, most lasting under 10 minutes. I use mostly old songs to help deliver the message that hope lives on no matter how bad things seem right now.

The videos I created took a long time to put together and a small fortune to buy the CD's searching for the right song to go along with the video. Aside from the educational purposes, these videos also end up being free advertising for the group and the record company. YouTube and the record companies decided that they didn't want their music used on videos, but only on selected videos, not all of them.

This is what one of the messages looked like

Video Disabled

A copyright owner has claimed it owns some or all of the audio content in your video Hero After War With PTSD. The audio content identified in your video is I'll Stand By You by Pretenders. We regret to inform you that your video has been blocked from playback due to a music rights issue.


It didn't matter that this song was used with permission. I emailed the Pretenders and let them know about the music. I was told that Chrissie Hynde would feel honored to be able to help the veterans with this song once I explained what the video was for.

It happened with Toby Keith. I used a couple of his songs on When War Comes Home Part Two. Again, another pull from YouTube, I fought it and the release was given by the music company. It was too late. The music was muted so that people could still watch the video. By the time I received the release, I couldn't get the music to play again, so I deleted it, tried to upload it again but received a message saying the song was in violation of copyright. That's when I had enough.

Ever since I pulled my videos off YouTube, they have not been able to help as many people. They are now on Great Americans, which does not receive as much traffic. It breaks my heart that this is happening especially when I go into YouTube and find the same music I use on someone else's video, but the song is playing loud and clear.

Michael Musto is right on the mark when he said it's free advertising. People asked me about the songs I used so they could go out and buy the CD. Since, as I said, I use old songs, this drives demand for songs that had been forgotten. Most of the songs stopped getting air time years ago unless they occasionally pop up on the oldies stations. Some of the songs I used received no air time at all, buried in a CD and would not have had any publicity at all otherwise but truly touching songs.

One of the other videos I did, The Hardest Times You Could Imagine, was for women veterans. The song by Skylark was stuck in my head. I couldn't find the music anywhere, so I emailed the agent. After months of working with the agent, the group and the record company, I received the music file and support of Skylark and EMI plus the man who wrote the lyrics, Dave Richardson. He was touched by what I created with his words.
This is part of the email he wrote.

Valley Hennell has been forwarding the details of your contact with her to me, and last night I watched the "Hardest Times" video. I am honoured that the lyrics I wrote so long ago are still being used to bless others in a manner such as you describe with these women - may the Lord bless them abundantly for everything they endure in serving their country. And may He bless you as well, Chaplain Kathie, for all you do in your service to Him and to your country.......


The song, was Wildflower very popular in the 70's but hardly ever heard on the radio. Think of a song thirty years old helping women veterans heal from what was asked of them. What is really amazing about these videos is that they are touching even the newer veterans.

The artists care about our veterans and they want to give back. Each video I create, I am prepared to pull if the artist does not want their music to be used. So far that has not happened. I had to pull them because of software!

YouTube should set up a way for educational videos to not be trapped in their software searching for copyright music that does not break the rules. They not only provide support, education and help for the veterans, but they also offer artists and record companies a new way of reaching people that may have never heard the song without it. I really wish they would do this or actually either make sure that if they want to stop people from using music they do to everyone or allow them to be used at least as free publicity for the songs. People work hard putting these videos together and we don't get paid for any of the work we do. You'd think that would penetrate the record executives heads so they would be more than happy to allow all their music to be used but they never think of it that way.

Maybe with the exposure of the Wedding and Divorce videos, this will change but at what price for hurting troops, veterans and their families? No matter what I wrote in all these years, it did not have the same affect on the veterans as these videos. They are being used all over the country to help our veterans heal. Therapist are using them working with veterans for heaven's sake! Last year I received an award from the IFOC for my work. One of the videos, PTSD Not God's Judgment is being used to help police officers and firefighters heal from PTSD. Think of how many other people these videos could be helping if YouTube would stop the nonsense. Maybe they will take the advice Michael Musto just gave and give video creators a break.

Capt. Michael "Scott" Speicher remains found after 18 years

Remains found of officer shot down in '91 Gulf War
The remains of the first American shot down in the 1991 Persian Gulf War have been identified, according to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The announcement ends more than 18 years of speculation about whether U.S. Navy Capt. Michael "Scott" Speicher may have survived the crash and been held captive, or died in captivity in the ensuing years. full story