Wife of Robert Bales, soldier accused in Afghan massacre, speaks out
July 2, 2012
CBS News
The wife of U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the soldier accused of leaving his southern Afghanistan base and murdering 16 unarmed civilians, believes her husband is innocent.
Kari Bales said she's in touch with her husband, but has not asked him about what happened.
"I just don't need to ask him," she said Monday on "CBS This Morning." "I know my husband, and it's not a question I really need to ask. I know him. I know what he's capable of and not capable of, so I don't need to ask the question."
When asked what life would be like if her husband were to be found guilty, Bales said, "At this point I haven't gotten that far. I truly believe that my husband did not do this. I really just want the facts to come out through the fair trial."
read more here
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Monday, July 2, 2012
Psychologists question Army resilience program
If I said I told you so, it would do no good for all the men and women suffering since 2008 because of this. No one wanted to listen!
This is the comment I left on Army Times for this.
This is the comment I left on Army Times for this.
Wounded Times · Editor, Publisher and Videographer at Wounded Times Blog I have been against this "program" since 2008 but it did little good to be right when our troops came home and suffered for taking this training. This "training" was geared toward rape victims and not combat troops. I am tired of them feeling they are responsible for ending up with PTSD "because they didn't train right" or because the DOD told them they were mentally weak and needed to train their brains! What took so long for the rest of the mental health community to respond to this?
Psychologists question Army resilience program
By Patricia Kime
Staff writer
Army Times
Posted : Monday Jul 2, 201
Army Comprehensive Soldier Fitness is a $125 million program that seeks to make troops as psychologically fit as possible.
But a group of psychologists says there’s no proof that the program — or similar resilience-building efforts in the other services — works.
Worse, say members of the Coalition for an Ethical Psychology, these programs could undermine coping mechanisms developed by troops who already successfully handle stress.
TELL US
Have you gone through a resilience training program? Military Times would like to hear your views of that training — positive or negative. Email staff writer Patricia Kime at pkime@militarytimes.com.
Created in 2008 to address alarming trends in soldier behavior, such as rising suicides, alcohol and drug abuse, and behavioral health problems, CSF is based on the teachings of Martin Seligman, a University of Pennsylvania professor and proponent of positive psychology. He says an optimistic outlook can affect all aspects of life and ward off anxiety and depression.
The training, and the program’s annual measurement test, the Global Assessment Tool, is mandatory for all soldiers. Since 2009, 8,000 officers and enlisted personnel have attended master resilience courses. They in turn teach CSF at the unit level.
read more here
VA NEWS EMAILS spam
UPDATE July 3, 2012
All List Serve Subscribers,
We have corrected a glitch in the settings for the subscriber list that allowed individuals to reply to the entire list. We apologize for the confusion and the concern this error has caused for those of you on the subscriber list.
In the last few days, subscribers wishing to be removed from the list serve replied to the original message they received regarding news releases. Unbeknownst to them, when they clicked on the reply button, the list serve address was entered in the “to” line of the message. When they clicked on send, their message was sent to the entire subscriber list. Subsequent replies often repeated the process.
We have adjusted our process to preclude this from happening in the future. This e-mail is being sent with the address in the “Bcc” line so replies will only be received at this address. We have also asked our automation personnel to re-set the list serve setting to prevent a repeat of this error.
If you wish to be removed from the subscriber list, please go to the VA website link below and follow the instructions.
Thank you for your patience and we apologize for the inconvenience.
VA Public Affairs
VA NEWS - L @ LIST SERV. VA. GOV
If you get an email from this address, just delete it. I made the mistake of opening an email this morning and the emails keep coming in. They seem to be attached to a press release about Louisville Replacement Hospital. Unless you want to waste most of your day, don't reply to it,,,,don't even open it!
88 percent of veterans drop out of school during their first year
It is not that they were out of education for so long. I'm proof of that. Not as a veteran but as a 51 year old going back to college for Digital Media. I finished before I turned 53. It wasn't easy and I had to work harder than students in their 20's but I managed to finish with a 3.1 GPA.
I talked to a lot of student/veterans and they thought that it was the way they learn that was changed by the military culture more than anything else. The disconnect between the "civilian" world and them was secondary.
I talked to a lot of student/veterans and they thought that it was the way they learn that was changed by the military culture more than anything else. The disconnect between the "civilian" world and them was secondary.
Thousands of veterans failing in latest battlefield: college
By Bill Briggs
Among the approximately 800,000 military veterans now attending U.S. colleges, an estimated 88 percent drop out of school during their first year and only 3 percent graduate, according a report forwarded by the University of Colorado Denver, citing the analysis by U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education and Labor and Pensions.
During a pair of six-month stints in and around Fallujah, Iraq – then a fiercely volatile city – Navy corpsman Lucas Velasquez came to know about life. And death.
From late 2005 through early 2007, not long after nearly 100 U.S. troops and more than 1,350 insurgents were killed in Fallujah during Operation Phantom Fury, Velasquez routinely rendered emergency aid to wounded Marines while ducking bullets, rocket-propelled grenades and IED blasts. In uniform, Velasquez was smart and quick, adept at practicing field medicine literally while under the gun.
In 2007, after retiring from the Navy, Velasquez, then 23, enrolled at Columbus State University in western Georgia. He promptly failed four of his first six classes.
read more here
Media hype on veterans committing crimes
This is something that needs to be sent to every single reporter looking for a headline.
The only problem with this is they won't read it because it would take away their power to grab a "top of the fold" position.
"Data from the Department of Justice indicates that the homicide offender rate in the civilian population during that same period varied between 25 and 28 homicides per 100,000 young American males – implying that veterans might actually be less likely than their non-veteran, age-group peers to commit a violent homicide."
The only problem with this is they won't read it because it would take away their power to grab a "top of the fold" position.
As Attitudes Shift on P.T.S.D, Media Slow to Remove Stigma
By MIKE HAYNIE
New York Times
July 2, 2012
In 1999, President Bill Clinton convened the first White House Summit on Mental Health. The aim of the conference and the public campaign that followed was, in part, to educate the media on the moral and ethical imperative related to dispelling the stigma associated with mental illness. In a radio address to announce the conference, Mr. Clinton said, “Mental illness is nothing to be ashamed of, but stigma and bias shame us all.”
In recent years, the Department of Defense has made unprecedented progress toward eliminating the stigma associated with post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues affecting service members. This cultural shift within the military is a sea change, as more and more of our service members are seeking and receiving the support they need and deserve from a grateful nation. In the face of that progress, it’s unfortunate that some in the media continue to perpetuate a stigma linking military service to mental illness and violence.
This is seen in news articles throughout the country, with some referring to veterans as “ticking time bombs.” By describing vets as “time bombs” who are highly trained in “guerrilla warfare,” media outlets prove far too careless with regard to providing societal context for isolated acts of violence committed by people who sometimes happen to be veterans.
Reporting has been biased toward paper-selling sensationalism that perpetuates the stigma of a dangerous combat veteran akin to Rambo, invading our neighborhoods and homes. Consider the media coverage of the case of Itzcoatl Ocampo, who has been charged with the murders of several homeless men in California. Some news outlets went as far as to identify him as a former Marine before even mentioning his name. Others were sure to immediately identify him as an Iraq war veteran, and then described how the victims were tracked in a meticulous manner, blatantly attempting to portray Mr. Ocampo as if he believed he was still on mission. Mr. Ocampo has even been called an “Iraq war veteran” and a “monster” in the same paragraph, connecting the two.
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