Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Servicewoman Feels Betrayed by Military After Sexual Assault

Former Air Force Servicewoman Feels Betrayed by Military After Sexual Assault
PBS
BY: CINDY HUANG
May 23, 2013

Former Airman 1st Class Jessica Hinves' career in the Air Force was cut short after suffering from PTSD stemming from an assault by a fellow airman. This is her story. See the full report of sexual assault in the military on Thursday's PBS NewsHour.

Jessica Hinves grew up in a military family. Her first stepfather was a Marine. Her current stepfather is in the Army. Her uncle did three tours in Vietnam. When she was growing up, her grandfather, an Air Force mechanic, took her to see Delta planes on the tarmac. Even her babysitter was a former Air Force commander.

"Since my childhood they taught me every citizen should serve if you could, it's your duty. So I grew up hearing that." Hinves said.

When she turned 25, she left her job at a vineyard in east Texas and acted on her sense of duty to serve. She joined the Air Force. She had every intention of having a lifelong military career.

"It was very clear this is your job. This is what you do. You do it well, you train in it. You go up in rank, and you retire in 20 years," said Hinves. "To me it was so easy. It was so doable. I loved it."
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Pizza delivery Guinness Record from Chicago to Afghanistan

Pizza Delivery to Afghanistan Troops Sets Guinness Record
ABC News
Susanna Kim
May 22, 2013

A pizza mission to U.S. military service members in Afghanistan has made the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest pizza delivery.

Pizza 4 Patriots, a 501(c)3 registered non-profit based in Illinois, has been sending pizzas to military service members abroad for the last five years.

Last summer, Pizza 4 Patriots and shipping company DHL organized their biggest delivery yet: 30,000 pizzas to service members in Kandahar, Bagram and Camp Bastion in Afghanistan in celebration of Independence Day. The delivery began June 21, 2012. DHL donated its services and loaded the pizza shipments at a service center in Chicago.
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Saving our warriors from themselves

Saving our warriors from themselves
Suicides have risen among active military personnel and veterans. It's vital that officials reach out.
By The Times editorial board
May 27, 2013

As the nation marks Memorial Day, here is a statistic that offers sobering insight into the lives of the military men and women who have, over the decades, sacrificed so much for so many: Last year, 349 active servicemen and women committed suicide, more than the number who died in battle and the highest number in a decade of war.

The incidence of suicide has also risen among veterans. A report released in February by the Department of Veterans Affairs estimated that 22 veterans committed suicide in this country each day in 2010. That's slightly higher than in 1999, when the estimate was that 20 veterans a day committed suicide.

For the departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs, this is a grim epidemic that has eluded easy or obvious fixes. Experts say the first step toward preventing suicide is knowing who does it, how they do it and why. The military does a good job of collecting those statistics. Since 2008, the Department of Defense has issued an annual Suicide Event Report that lists in meticulous detail the number of suicides and attempted suicides and the circumstances surrounding the deaths.
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There still is a war at hand

There still is a war at hand
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
May 28, 2013

This morning reading True meaning of Memorial Day stressed at ceremony by Chantal Lovell right after reading about another veteran committing suicide it seemed so fitting what a keynote speaker for Memorial Day service had to say.
An unusually rainy Memorial Day made for somber remembrance at the Veterans Home of California at Yountville, where a few hundred gathered Monday morning to remember America’s war dead.

The annual ceremony was held just outside the gates of the home’s decorated cemetery, where more than 5,500 veterans are buried including many who served in the Civil War, the war which led to the designation of what is now known as Memorial Day.

Similar ceremonies were held throughout the Napa Valley, including one at Veterans Memorial Park in American Canyon. There, keynote speaker retired Army Sgt. Jeremy Profitt asked everyone to remember service men and women who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury, and the increasing number of suicides in the military.

“There still is a war at hand. This war has claimed many lives,” Profitt said, “with no Medal of Honor, Purple Heart or Silver Star given to these great sacrifices.”

“With headlines reading: ‘Suicide claims more U.S. military lives than the Afghanistan War,’ (and) ‘Suicides outpacing the war deaths of today’s troops’ ... I’m talking about the war of mental health,” Profitt, the son of American Canyon Troop Support founder Sindy Biederman, said.
There are no medals for these scared by battle war fighters even though they carry their wounds for the rest of their lives. There is no term for ex-veteran. Sure there are titles like ex-POW but a veteran is a veteran for the rest of their lives. They never return to being a civilian as they were before.

When they come home they need help but more they need the damage done to them undone. They are told before they go fight our battles they can "train their brains" and become resilient. That message is received as they are weak if they end up with PTSD and didn't train right. Whatever else the military tells them, is blocked out after they hear that. Telling them they should ask for help afterwards means to them they have to admit they are mentally weak, yet the DOD pushed this type of approach harder. With over 900 prevention programs producing more and more suicides, it is obvious to the rest of us this approach is doing more harm than good, yet they spend billions a year. What makes this worse is, they fail to see what they have done to the men and women they claim to want to help.

Other than honorable discharges are still happening even though clearly most of them are dealing with self medicating because of PTSD. If they can't admit they need help then they seek whatever means possible to numb themselves. Even when they do seek help most of the medications they are given cause more problems than they had before.

During Vietnam they stenciled "front toward enemy."

The M18A1 Claymore mine has a horizontally convex green plastic case (inert training versions are blue). The shape was developed through experimentation to deliver the optimum distribution of fragments at 50 m (55 yd) range. The case has the words "Front Toward Enemy" embossed on the front of the mine.
While it was something that should have been obvious, the DOD thought it was a good idea to remind the troops. The truth is, the DOD didn't do the same thing when it came to their weapons to fight PTSD. Every program they came up with should have come with a warning. Reenforcing the stigma is the biggest enemy they face.

Sergeant Brad Farmer lost his battle with PTSD

Mother of Golden veteran wants more suicide prevention
Colorado 9 News
May 27, 2013
written by:
Dave Delozier

On May 22, Sergeant Brad Farmer lost his battle with the psychological wounds of war when he took his own life. He was 30 years old.
GOLDEN - When Sergeant Brad Farmer entered the United States Army he received extensive training to prepare him for combat in Iraq. When he was discharged after two tours of duty in Iraq, his mother says he wasn't as equally prepared to return to civilian life.

"They have boot camp going in [to the army]. They don't have a return boot camp," Kathy Farmer said.

The Brad Farmer who returned from Iraq struggled to deal with the memories of war. His mother says she immediately noticed a difference in her son, but he chose to deal with the problems alone.

"When he first came home and we suggested that he get help he denied that he needed it," Kathy Farmer said.

"I knew he was suffering," said Jonathan Pomeroy, a friend and fellow member of the 82nd Airborne Division.

Pomeroy and Farmer served both tours of duty in Iraq together.
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