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Health & Wellness

Half of Vets Suffering Brain and Mind Injuries Go Untreated, But Pentagon Pretends Nothing's Going on

By Penny Coleman, AlterNet. Posted April 29, 2008.


An activist travels to the DoD's annual suicide prevention conference, only to find the military brass living in a parallel universe.
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The silverbacks are grooming and posturing at the microphones.

Cammo and khaki, wall to wall. Bob Ireland, an Air Force psychiatrist and consultant to the Air Force Surgeon General, welcomes the audience to the Department of Defense's sixth annual Suicide Prevention Conference and makes jokes about how suicide prevention has been the DoD's bastard child, homeless and parentless.

In January 2008, the child nobody wanted finally managed to find a home. The Defense Center of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury assumed responsibility for an issue and an injury that the military has hidden and denied for generations.

It's been left up to Lt. Col. Steven Pflanz, the senior psychiatry policy analyst for the Air Force surgeon general, to report on the mental healthcare practices that have been developed for those on active duty. Kerry Knox, director of the VA's Center for Excellence on Suicide Prevention, was scheduled to share with him these introductory remarks, but is not in attendance. Apologies are made, but no one mentions how obviously difficult it would be for her to get into the self-congratulatory HOOAH! spirit of this conference when her boss just got busted big time for hiding VA suicide statistics, not just to the media but to Congress as well.

"Shh!" Ira Katz, the VA's mental health director, coyly began an email to the agency's chief communications director -- and inconveniently made public just this week. "Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among the veterans we see in our medical facilities. Is this something we should (carefully) address ourselves in some sort of release before someone stumbles on it?"

Ach, Katz, you little schemer.

In another email, he acknowledged that an average of 18 war veterans manage to kill themselves each day -- five of whom were under VA care at the time.

OK, Katz is toast. Democrats are already calling for him to resign, which seems rather mild considering how many lives were damaged by his attempts at damage control. But do the math: That's 12,000 veterans a year -- VA patients -- trying to kill themselves. On top of that, of the 6,570 who on average succeed each year, 1,825 of them are also patients at the VA. How is possible not to mention that kind of news at a conference on military suicides?

This must have been a challenging week for the conference organizers. How to deal with the Katz e-mails and the new RAND Corporation report, which is devastating in its description of DoD and VA failures. And the RAND report can't be blown off as the ravings of a bunch of leftists with an anti war agenda; RAND conducts research and analysis for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, the Unified Commands, the defense agencies, the Department of the Navy, and the U.S. intelligence community.

The report revealed that nearly 20 percent of military service members who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan -- that's 300,000 men and women -- have symptoms of post-traumatic stress or major depression. Of those, only slightly more than half have sought VA treatment. Soldiers say that hesitation to seek help arises from fear that it will harm their careers.

But word gets around. Even among those who do seek help, RAND estimates that only about half receive treatment their researchers consider "minimally adequate." So why bother.

The study also estimates that about 320,000 service members may have experienced a traumatic brain injury during deployment, but that just 43 percent reported ever being evaluated by a physician for that injury, despite DoD's policy that every soldier returning from Iraq be screened.


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See more stories tagged with: ptsd, suicides, pentagon, mental health

Penny Coleman is the widow of a Vietnam Veteran who took his own life after coming home. Her latest book, Flashback: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Suicide and the Lessons of War, was released on Memorial Day, 2006. Her website is Flashback.

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They are all trying to get promoted
Posted by: StoneRiley on Apr 29, 2008 3:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They are all trying to get promoted. They are licking the boots of authority. This is more disgusting than I can possibly say.

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The Impact Is More Wide Ranging Than Anyone Will Admit
Posted by: Fathoms on Apr 29, 2008 3:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This phenomenon isn't limited to cadre and recently separated veterans. From personal experience I can tell you that even veterans who have been separated from the military in excess of 25 years despair at what we're seeing today. The VA won't even look at us for a nosebleed and are dropping us from the VA rolls as fast as they can.

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» Tell the young ones Posted by: meetmeineleusis
» RE: Tell the young ones Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Tell the young ones Posted by: peacefullaim
Corporate State
Posted by: talkville on Apr 29, 2008 4:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those who walk in the upper and mid-reaches of the hallowed halls of the Pentagon are well settled into comfortable and very "productive" relationships with various Suppliers and other Interests in exploiting that good old Public Well. More likely than not, they have the contacts and connections that will ease that Painful Time of Unemployment after they leave "Public Service".

Why on earth would these kinds of individuals want to worry about such things as The Fodder; they're nothing but Grist for the Mill, a Mill that is yielding un-believably profitable "Grain" for these Reapers of Grim. They're set for life and will exit to enjoy the Fruits of their Labors. After all, that vast number of troops and privates just didn't have The Right Stuff" to rise in the ranks and achieve that so successful position that they occupy. It's their own fault for not having the talent, the skill and excellence required to meet the Expectations of these Benevolent Fathers and got themselves shot, injured and killed and maimed.

Whatever School has trained and raised and educated all these "leaders" of ours could only have taught one course: Zealotry, Self-Interest and the Limitless Value of Ignorance. Probably a very exclusive Private Charter School. The text-book they studied was probably titled: "How to Feign Sanity and Influence People".

Newt Gingrich got his wish in spades: he wanted to 'tear it all down (the Federal Government) and start from scratch', as I overheard him say on a C-Span Interview a couple of years or so ago. The corrosion and corruption, started drop by drop with Reagan, has risen to immerse all branches, departments and agencies of the United States Government.

And again the tendencies all show pointing towards a historical and tedious truism. Time will go by, they'll all go home happy and sassy, there will perhaps be a couple of Sacrificial Goats, and the 'facts on the ground' will remain for those incoming and succeeding generations to address the situation. Sad fact is that over-all the People will accept it, perhaps grudgingly, but in the end accept it, and just get on with the business of living in their Present.

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» RE: Corporate State Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Corporate State Posted by: talkville
» RE: Corporate State Posted by: Lauren
» RE: Corporate State Posted by: talkville
» RE: Corporate State Posted by: Bob Graham Las Vegas
I'd love to blame it on the neocons - and I will, but...
Posted by: photon's feather on Apr 29, 2008 5:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
these cruds can be blamed 'only' for what has gone on since, roughly, Reagan.

This problem predates Reagan, even predates Vietnam - or Korea.

A retired marine friend introduced me to an old film, 'Captain Newman, M.D.'

A Hollywood approach to the topic, with all the failings that that implies; but it does illustrate the military's attitude and treatment of those with 'battle fatigue' and the psychiatrist that heads the psych unit(on an air force base here in the southwestern US), and who has to fight continually on behalf of his patients.

It has a few scenes that are difficult to watch, including one suicide. (Brutal, even lacking blood and gore.) Thankfully, the filmmakers put in some comic relief.

Side note: Old movie and classic TV buffs who've never seen the film will have quite a time picking out individual members of the cast - some of them rather surprising.

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Remember who the homeless are
Posted by: bdcroan on Apr 29, 2008 6:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unfortunately, people are quick to condemn these soldiers who have suffered from "shock and awe" when they see them homeless on the street, unemployed, and underachieving. Brain changes occur not just from physcial trauma, but also mental trauma. I understand the military used to shoot those soldiers back in the old days to cure them.

I am still asking how people voted for a drunken draft dodger that was ever so eager to put everyone else in harm's way. War is always a dumb idea where old men send young men to die, and corporations line their pockets from the spoils.

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US Senate Committee On Armed Services
Posted by: gazooks on Apr 29, 2008 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here again is the membership of individuals with the prospect of expediting necessary improvement and conducting oversight.

I've personally received written response only from Sen. Webb, but I encourage all to contact as many as frequently as possible to correct this travesty.

US Senate Committee On Armed Services
228 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
(202)224-3871

FULL COMMITTEE MEMBERS

DEMOCRATS

Carl Levin (Michigan)
Chairman

Edward M. Kennedy (Massachusetts)
Robert C. Byrd (West Virginia)
Joseph I. Lieberman (Connecticut)
Jack Reed (Rhode Island)
Daniel K. Akaka (Hawaii)
Bill Nelson (Florida)
E. Benjamin Nelson (Nebraska)
Evan Bayh (Indiana)
Hillary Rodham Clinton (New York)
Mark L. Pryor (Arkansas)
Jim Webb (Virginia)
Claire McCaskill (Missouri)

REPUBLICANS
John McCain (Arizona)
Ranking Member

John W. Warner (Virginia)
James M. Inhofe (Oklahoma)
Jeff Sessions (Alabama)
Susan M. Collins (Maine)
Saxby Chambliss (Georgia)
Lindsey O. Graham (South Carolina)
Elizabeth Dole (North Carolina)
John Cornyn (Texas)
John Thune (South Dakota)
Mel Martinez (Florida)
Roger F. Wicker (Mississippi)

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Disposable
Posted by: Southern Gal on Apr 29, 2008 7:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Clearly our Pentagon and military branches see the common soldiers as disposable entities in their war profiteering. If we could publicize and get that message across to prospective recruits, that they have no value other than their lives sacrificed in the many wars we wage, they might not enlist. There appears to be a disconnect between the concept of the voluntary army and having the troops to maintain our many wars that the Pentagon and Whitehouse wage. Thus we have stop loss policies and we wear these people out, mentally and physically. As the economy tanks and jobs disappear - Give me your poor, your hungry masses, your prisoners and your psychopaths could be the new recruiting message for the armed services.

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» RE: Disposable Posted by: Lauren
But mistreatment of injured vets...
Posted by: Marlena on Apr 29, 2008 7:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is so typical of a Fascist government, who sent them out to "make the world safe for..." and doesn't want to be reminded of the dead and broken bodies, which show that "we" are not the invincible superman the overlords and their wholly controlled civil religion say "we" are. It may have started before Rayguns, but with him, it's gotten steadily worse, til we now have, in the US, Benito Mussolini's perfect "fascism ought better be called corporatism" state. And then we are expecting the mind set that got us into these messes are going to get us out? Isn't doing the same things over and over and expecting different results insane? But most of the worlds governments do exactly that?? But then "we" keep voting for and supporting them, so aren't a lot of "us" insane too?? Oh well..the planet did just fine without us for billions of years, it can do just fine with out us for billions of years

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Vietnam era vets can look at this more Objectively.
Posted by: peacekeepertwo on Apr 29, 2008 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes many of these problems caused by war, can probably be traced back to the Revolutionary war. Why are we taking so long, to consider doing something About It? While we are thinking about doing something this, Consider How many of these vets will force a Police Officer to kill them? how many of these Vets, who have been trained, to prefer the Use of violance to resolve Conflict, Will Kill their wife or child, just to get them to shut-up? we we have a ticking time Bomb here.

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What else would you expect from yellow-belly Republicans?
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 29, 2008 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
During the Vietnam War, so-called hawks Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz and Scooter Libby (all PNAC members) dodged the draft and NEVER served in the U.S. military.

George W. Bush was just as spineless. In his case, to avoid service in Vietnam, he leapfrogged hundreds of applicants into the Texas Air National Guard, pulled strings again to enter USAF flight school, quit flying 30 months before his sworn Guard tour was up, refused to take his annual pilot physical and went AWOL.

Since leaderhip starts at the top -- i.e. the White House -- why should we be surprised that a bunch of cowards like Bush 43 would treat war veterans so shamefully?

---------------------------------

Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam vet, ex-USAF pilot, lifelong registered Republican, Obama supporter and the editor of www.PhonyFighterPilot.com -- the only website about George W. Bush that presents irrefutable, smoking-gun proof of White House corruption.

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VA Debated PR Plan on Vets' Suicides
Posted by: fanny666 on Apr 29, 2008 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
VA Debated PR Plan on Vets' Suicides

Some e-mails between Ira Katz, the VA’s mental health director, and Ev Chasen, the agency’s chief communications director have surfaced:

“VA’s own data demonstrate 4-5 suicides per day among those who receive care from us... Shh! Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among the veterans we see in our medical facilities. Is this something we should (carefully) address ourselves in some sort of release before someone stumbles on it?”

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The INVISIBLE
Posted by: 2cynical on Apr 29, 2008 9:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The majority of the homeless people that Raygun refused to see or acknowledge when his 40 vehicle entourage moved around the country trying to convince us that prosperity was just around the corner,were the damaged and broken men of my generations quagmire-"the Nam".Forty years later I watch other vets come home with "the thousand yard stare" and become the latest of The INVISIBLE,who face the neglect of our "leaders",the VA,and an economy which not only offers no jobs,but little hope,and homelessness,the recurring lot of so many,too often leads to what too many feel is the only way out:suicide.We seem to learn very slowly during and after these wars of choice,and all too often forget the lessons too quickly.Shame on us as a people.

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Of Course Soldiers Coming Back from Iraq Want to Die!
Posted by: sofla100 on Apr 29, 2008 9:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like Vietnam before her, Iraq is another fiasco and another prime example of American policy failure. With an overbloated military ready to do the Presidents bidding and project American policy to "secure strategic objectives," our young men and women find themselves, once again, fighting another popular insurgency and on the wrong side. Haven't we all seen this before? When can the days of Empire finally end? When can it be understood you don't secure the peace with fighting wars and killing people? That Iraq has turned brutal, much more brutal then is now reported in the corporate controlled press, should be no surprise. As America loses she becomes increasingly desperate, and American forces, sequestered behind barbed wire and tall walls, try to survive while local populations shoot mortar rounds into their compounds. With this insurgency, not knowing who is a "good guy" or a "bad guy," you have to shoot first and ask questions later. Inevitably, the faces of the women and children, and the men that you have killed, come back to haunt you when the day is over. When will this nightmare end? When will we realize we cannot own and control the world? That many veterans come home from this and want to die, want to kill themselves, should be no surprise. No surprise at all.

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Maimed and killed for a foriegn land
Posted by: Reader11722 on Apr 29, 2008 11:23 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These soldiers die for zionism. Only Israel benefits from these endless Middle East wars. Iraq is the beginning. As we commit war-crimes in Baghdad, the US gov't commits treason at home by opening mail, eliminating habeas corpus, using the judiciary to steal private lands, banning books like America Deceived (book) from Amazon and Wikipedia, conducting warrantless wiretaps and engaging in illegal wars on behalf of AIPAC's 'money-men'. Soon, another US false-flag operation will occur (sinking of an Aircraft Carrier by Mossad) and the US will invade Iran.. Then we'll invade Syria, then Saudi Arabia, then Lebanon (again) then ....

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Of all the heartless
Posted by: willymack on Apr 29, 2008 11:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sadistic, cowardly, and evil regimes we've been inflicted with, this one is, by far, the WORST. Just look at the rogues' gallery supposedly looking after our best interests. Valliant warriors, every one of them. Prezdint AWOL, vee pee "other prioririte", and a cast of of freaks and moral degenerates hitler or stalin would have been proud of. They care as much about the welfare of our armed forces as they do a road-killed squirrel. To make things worse, they know they can replace our fallen brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, husbands and wives with those from a huge and growing reservoir of jobless and clueless youth, wanting nothing more out of life than to make a living and become productive members of society. The crimes of this hideous regime are almost beyond comprehension, yet there are SILL those who think that more of the same will produce a good result, and will vote for McCain because he's not female or black, and will continue on with bush's actions and policies. This may be the TRUE horror, a large group of stupid, ignorant zeros with the power of the vote.

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» RE: Of all the heartless Posted by: Lauren
So you mean to tell me...
Posted by: warriornation on Apr 29, 2008 12:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that the Iraq war and the war in Afghanistan aren't perfect?? But...but...Fox News keeps saying the war is great. MSNBC and CNN sure don't complain about the war. Bush's press secretary and Betrayus..oh, I mean Petraus say the surge is so spectacular? You can't be inferring that all of this a lie can you?

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» RE: So you mean to tell me... Posted by: photon's feather
here's a vet who does well
Posted by: bluepilgrim on Apr 29, 2008 1:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
John McCain gets a disability pension, tax free, of $58,358.

http://www.latimes.com/news/
politics/la-na-pension22apr22,1,6562984.story

http://tiny.cc/Vg6wm

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» Wow. Thanks for that. Posted by: fanny666
The cannot admit the truth...
Posted by: Marshalldoc on Apr 29, 2008 3:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If ever clinical denial was described by example, it's here.

Clearly, it's impossible for those most responsible for ordering & planning combat operations to admit that it is the very activity with which they occupy themselves that's responsible for the most extreme act of rejection those responsible for following those orders & plans can make.

To admit the simple (and intuitively obvious to the most casual observer) fact that repetitive exposure to unremitting combat with no defined end point and, in fact, a set of constantly receding 'goal posts' (extended deployments & 'stop-loss'), progressive difficulty in maintaining appropriate (read 'safe') troop levels and functional equipment (leaving aside the entire question of the morality of the invasion & occupation which, for thinking people is no small issue) is sufficient to produce major depression in a significant number of otherwise adequate personalities, would, in a single act, de-legitimize their entire Iraq adventure.

So, rather than admit to the 800 lb gorilla in the corner, they focus on what they are willing to recognize that doesn't force them to resign or rebel en-masse.

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Some Toll Frees For the Switchboard For Congress.....
Posted by: Turiye on Apr 29, 2008 10:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...just ask operator to Xfer you to whatever Rep. or Senator you need. I keep them because we all know these days so many of us can't afford toll calls or wasted minutes:

800-828-0498_____866-338-1015
800-459-1887_____866-340-9281
800-614-2803_____877-851-6437

Please, use them, emails are not responded to for at least 90 days, if at all.

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Alternet, Please Fix My Name, 1 year I have requested. S/B TURKIYE....
Posted by: Turiye on Apr 29, 2008 11:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
N/E

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This breaks my heart, but it's not new.
Posted by: Marmann on Apr 30, 2008 12:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember growing up with an abusive, alcoholic father who, at times, I hated and always feared. I could expect that every Christmas Eve, he would go out and get drunk, and someone (my mother and/or me) would get hurt when he came home. I grew up traumatized and thought he was the meanest person on the earth.

He had a lot of operations on the little finger of his hand. The operations never "took," though he kept trying.

I knew he was a paratrooper in the Army during World War II. (When I was about five years old, I accidently found his parachute once and tried to jump off the roof with it; fortunately, Mom found me in time.)

I was just 29 when my mother died in 1982. I have no brothers or sisters, so Dad and I were left with each other. I tried to be his "buddy" and would accompany him to some of the various bars he visited, since that was the only way I could have a relationship with him.

Once, we were out together at a bar on Christmas Eve day. He got pretty drunk and then just broke down in tears -- something I never saw this angry, strong, powerful man do before in my life -- something I never thought he was even capable of doing.

Between sobs and slurred speech, I was able to discover that the reason for the disfigurement of his little finger was the result of being shot during the Battle of the Bulge -- on CHRISTMAS EVE!

Although I could never condone what he did to Mom and me, I began to understand -- at least a little bit -- the rage he felt on Christmas Eve, and although I didn't understand completely, I knew that although his finger was injured on Christmas Eve, the most traumatic injury he received was to his soul.

My father died of a stroke in 1989. I feel thankful that I was able to reconcile and begin to understand the torture he felt before he died.

I had a boyfriend for five years (the love of my life) who was a Vietnam vet. He had PTSD and was on full disability from the VA. He and I had a mutual friend, also on full disability from the VA. These two men received enough free pills (Valium and Serax both simultaneously) to kill two elephants. Our friend tried on multiple occasions to commit suicide, using these pills.

He finally succeeded and is no longer with us.

My boyfriend and I broke up seven years ago. My thoughts are often with him, and I hope he is okay. I'll never stop loving him.

Throughout time, before the discovery of PTSD, the invisible scars on the souls of these veterans often would only manifest themselves in negative ways. It's been labeled "battle fatigue" or "shell shock" or "posttraumatic stress disorder." It doesn't matter what you call it; it's basically all the same, and it's a very, VERY real disabling disease to many soldiers.

I've often wondered what it must be like for our soldiers in Afghanistan and especially in Iraq, for whom every day is 9/11, who literally don't know if the next step they take may be their last. President Bush has worked these brave soldiers like mules and then discards them like soiled paper towels if/when they return home, often after multiple tours of duty, without the R&R to which they are entitled.

These soldiers are your children, your parents, your neighbors, your friends and sometimes your spouses/significant others. Their illness doesn't only affect them; it affects every person they encounter.

How lonely and tortured must a soul feel that it has no choice but to resort to suicide?

And why doesn't our government treat these soldiers both medically and humanely if/when they are fortunate enough to return home in one visible piece?

Just because there are minimal or no visible injuries on the outside doesn't mean there isn't a sometimes deadly illness brewing on the inside.

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So much for the
Posted by: Quannah on Apr 30, 2008 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Republic mantra of "Support Our Troops!"

They should all be ashamed.

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