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Bush Admin. Gives Vets the Shaft

By Conn Hallinan, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted November 14, 2006.


A growing number of ill-prepared and under-funded clinics are tasked with caring for our nation's vets, and Bush is turning a blind eye.
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"War is hell," Union General William Tecumseh Sherman famously said 14 years after the end of the bloodiest conflict in U.S. history. "It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation."

Clearly the U.S. Civil War is not on the reading list of psychiatrist Sally Satel, a scholar at the right-wing American Enterprise Institute (AEI). Indeed, Satel sees war less as hell than as a golden opportunity for veteran lay-abouts to milk the government by " overpathologizing the psychic pain of war."

Satel, whom the AEI trots out anytime the Bush administration needs cover for cutting veteran services and benefits, says the problem for former soldiers is not Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). "The real trouble for vets," she writes, is that "once a patient receives a monthly check based on his psychiatric diagnosis, his motivation to hold a job wanes." Her solution? "Don't offer disability benefits too quickly."

The commentary makes an interesting contrast to a powerful piece in the October 2006 issue of the California Nurses Association's magazine Registered Nurse titled "The Battle at Home" by Caitlin Fischer and Diana Reiss. They found that "in veterans' hospitals across the country -- and in a growing number of ill-prepared, under-funded psych and primary care clinics as well -- Registered Nurses ... are treating soldiers ... and picking up the pieces of a tattered army."

According to the authors, RNs across the country "have witnessed the guilt, rage, emotional numbness, and tormented flashbacks of GIs just back from Iraq and Afghanistan," as well as older vets from previous wars, "whose half-century-old trauma have been 'triggered' by the images of Iraq."

How many soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan will eventually fall victim to PTSD is not clear, although a U.S. Defense Department study in 2006 found that one in six returnees suffer from depression or stress disorders, and 35 percent have sought counseling for emotional difficulties. The Veterans Administration (VA) treated 20,638 Iraq vets for PTSD in just the first quarter of 2006 and is currently processing a backlog of 400,000 cases.

Out of 700,000 soldiers who served in the 1991 Gulf War, 118,000 are suffering from chronic fatigue, headaches, muscle spasms, joint pains, anxiety, memory loss, and balance problems, and 40 percent receive disability pay. Gulf vets are also twice as likely to develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's Disease) and between two and three times more likely to have children with birth defects.

The Ills of War

Modern battlefields are toxic nightmares, filled with depleted uranium ammunition, exotic explosives, and deadly cluster bomblets. The soldiers are shot up with experimental vaccines that can have dangerous side effects from additives like squalene. In short, soldiers are not only under fire, they are assaulted by their own weapons systems and medical procedures.

Satel need have no worries about the VA rushing to hand out cash to veteran couch potatoes. According to Fischer and Reiss, "A returning vet must wait an average of 165 days for a VA decision on initial disability benefits. An appeal can take up to three years."

Reserve and National Guard troops -- who make up between 40 and 50 percent of the frontline troops in Iraq and Afghanistan -- have a particular problem, because their military medical insurance benefits only cover conditions diagnosed in the first 100 days. PTSD sometimes takes years, even decades to kick in.

When they do complain, vets can expect that their ailments will be dismissed or their cause stonewalled.

When Gulf War vets complained about the symptoms which have come to be called "Gulf War Syndrome," the Pentagon told them it was in their heads, in spite of studies by the British Medical Journal and the U.S. Center for Disease Control that showed the returnees were suffering illnesses at 12 times the rate of non-Gulf vets.


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Conn Hallinan is a Foreign Policy In Focus columnist.

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It's Easy At a Think Tank
Posted by: NoPCZone on Nov 14, 2006 1:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's easy to sit on your a*s up in a plush beltway office complex, knowing that you and none of your kids will ever have to face an I.E.D., the delayed health effects of depleted uranium, a lifetime of paraplegia/quadraplegia or the mental distress of PTSD. It's even easier to pimp BS like this knowing that not only will you have an accountability for it, but you can push the cost off on future generations.

There are three wars going on involving Americans, the first two, Iraq and Afghanistan, are well known. The other affects both of them and the society as a whole. It's a class war that is going on as we become a more stratified society.

The elites live in gated communities, go to private schools, get in the elite colleges by legacy or contribution, have the inside track on contracts, appointments and jobs through networking (the modern name for the good old boy network) and protect an increasing amount of their income and wealth from taxes. Their kids also don't join the Army.

The rest live outside the gate, in communities struggling with increasing costs and declining taxes. Their kids go to public schools that are in steady decline relative to the rest of the world. They assume massive debt to pay for higher ed, housing and sometimes the basics. Their pay doesn't track inflation, the relative value decline in the dollar, or the growth of the national economy. Every year sees an erosion in their work benefits and community provided services. All of their pay and assets are directly exposed to taxation, which increases every year, even as the real value of their pay and benefits decline.

The myth of America is that most of us are Middle Class. Someone lives in those trailer parks and section 8 housing tracts. Decisions made during the 1970's and 1980's are coming to home to roost. The middle class, once the bulk of our population, is getting squeezed out of existence. Their kids, and the poor, join the Army.

The DLC democrats and the NeoCon Republicans have one thing in common: they don't give a damn about working people and the poor and they aren't interested in starting now. They have theirs, they have the rules gamed in their favor and have clamored into the top 20%. Things are great for them and they try really hard not to think about you unless it's election season.

They don't want to take care of disabled Vets, the elderly or the poor- it might make the next round of tax cuts for the wealthy impossible. They don't care about the public schools because their kids don't go there. They don't care about workplace safety or organizational rights because they are salaried and professionally exempt from the company policies that rule everyone else. They don't care how high public University tuition goes, because their kid is won't be going to a state University.

They will put a 'Support The Troops' sticker on their car, but don't do anything to really support them. They don't have any skin in the game and don't intend to. They couldn't give a damn if the vets come home to live in a cardboard box in the street , eating dog food. It's the plain and simple truth. You and I both know it.

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» Start writing the screenplays Posted by: eddie torres
» I hear you Posted by: Lector
» Well put NoPCZone! Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: It's Easy At a Think Tank Posted by: mkeeling@jam.rr.com
Silly Sally Satel
Posted by: Tom Degan on Nov 14, 2006 3:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, Sally Satel accuses the soldiers returning from this obscenity that the Bush Mob is committing in Iraq of "over pathologizing the psychic pain of war". I love it! Where did they find this hideous bitch? Please someone tell me! Are there more like her? Does she even have a pulse? Where the fuck do they find these assholes???

It's so much fun mining through the mountains apon mountains of unintentional humor that these fools have provided us these six, long years. When the movie is finally made about the Bush White House, it's going to be a comedy - a black comedy - but a comedy, none-the-less. Where will it all end? It just doesn't get as silly as this, does it, kiddies? I remember during the campaign of 2000, Don Imus begging his audience, "Please vote for this guy [Bush], I'm begging you"! The idea being that the I-man's job of making the nation laugh every morning would be that much easier with so mind-numbing an incompetant and comical figure as George W. Bush sitting in the oval office. Were you to ask him, I'm sure he would admit that his job, since 20 January 2001, has been a breeze.

On a more serious note, Do you remember all of the victims of Gulf War Syndrome sixteen years ago? That conflict only laste a couple of months. The medical victims of the Iraq War will end up being a major calamity for the VA, count on it. To even think about underfunding it at this time is nothing short of insane. But then again, insanity has been one of the trademarks of this disgusting administration, hasn't it?

Pray for peace.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: Silly Sally Satel Posted by: mdruss42
» RE: Silly Sally Satel Posted by: mkeeling@jam.rr.com
» RE: Silly Sally Satel Posted by: Tom Degan
I can't decide which makes me angrier
Posted by: Lizmv on Nov 14, 2006 3:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That the current administration will send or young men and women off to war while undermining their support system or that this story is not front page news in every newpaper in the US.

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blind
Posted by: rsaxto on Nov 14, 2006 3:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both of Bush's eyes are blind as are those of Cheney and Rumsfeld. If they had treated veterans decently they might still have a Republican congress. We need to impeach these guys for crimes against Americans, Afghanis and Iraqis. If we do not we can expect more crimes in the future that might even be worse than the horrors of Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq combined. Do Americans never learn from the past and present that war is simply crimes against all of us?

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» Not if Nancy Pelosi can help it Posted by: WhuThe?!?
Veteran Health Card
Posted by: Uncle Crabby on Nov 14, 2006 3:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why don't vets get a health card that allows them to walk into any healthcare facility anywhere, get the services they need and we get billed for it?

If we taxed investors at the same rate as Americans that actually work, that bill could be easily absorbed.

TAX REFORM!!!!!

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» Good Idea! Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» Amen! Posted by: WhuThe?!?
THIS COMBAT VET SAYS SHAME ON DUMBYA AND THE GOP!
Posted by: kc10ken on Nov 14, 2006 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a combat Vet who did 3 tours in the middle east I can attest to the fact that our benefits have been repeatedly cut by this human shitwave masquerading as an administration.

Lots of lip service to military audiences but when the camera's are off they're cutting our budget by over $28 BILLIION dollars. They are closing over 50 VA medical centers, including Walter Reed, at a time when returning wounded US soldiers from Iraq (23,500 so far) and we Vets need them the most. We are even forced to pay premiums for our prescriptions now when 3 years ago they were free. Some returning wounded soldiers from Iraq have to wait 8 months for a doctors appointment because the VA is so horribly short staffed. Last year, the VA was forced to go begging, hat in hand, to Congress for an emergency $1.5 billion dollar appropriation just to keep the doors open because the VA was bankrupt due to budget cuts. All these reprehensible cuts done while handing out TRILLIONS in tax cuts to the wealthy of America and corporate America.

SHAME ON THEM!

We voted these bastards out....great! Now take care of our nations Veterans America!

Thanks!

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The best thing a vet can do is die
Posted by: vangogh69 on Nov 14, 2006 8:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The best thing for a soldier to do, really, is die on the battlefield because once they return home, their perceived "sacrifices" are criticized, their ailments denied, and they are left on their own to figure out what it was all for. As someone who has seen vets of not only Vietnam but World War II die poor, homeless, and/or broken, it angers me that so many are all "gung-ho" about sending soldiers off to war yet reluctant to help them out, once they get back. And oh, the psychic trauma these people have is, to put it mildly, beyond the powers of the federally funded health system (the VA) to handle.

Same ole same ole.

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What?...Me care?
Posted by: monkeywrench on Nov 14, 2006 9:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember when Kanye West said, "Bush doesn't care about black people"? C'mon, folks, get with the program: Bush doesn't care about ANY people, with the possible exception of his rich friends – which he just may be using as well. I know that it's hard to believe that someone who could attain the office of President could be mentally unhinged and devoid of humanity, but believe it; he proves these lamentable facts by his very actions. And let's not forget the real President, Dick Cheney. . .no humanity there, either.

Some pair we have allowed to be selected to the highest offices in the land; the current presidential cycle will be remembered as the most shameful in America's history – and it is our fault.

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» RE: What?...Me care? Posted by: mkeeling@jam.rr.com
sickofsleaze
Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com on Nov 14, 2006 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This sorry excuse for an administration are all chicken-livered draft dodgers living high on their government perks and their blood money made from the Iraq adventure, they could care less about the vets except when they need a photo op

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Vets-Educate the Young!
Posted by: mite on Nov 14, 2006 10:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is the Standing Military Constitutional? No!!!!
While our media refuse to focus on what is important- our men and women dying in country and at home, first responders of 911 (NYPD, NYFD, EMT's, National Guard, Etc) and our citizens of Katrina, and other disasters, our Congress still collects it paycheck and kick-backs.
If our men and women keep enlisting on lies, our country Elites will keep making Billions from death. You see; it is not about freedom it's about "Money and Power." Read history people- in our history of 230 years did you know we have had either war, police action, or been in someones country stealing their resources for the Elite's, for 208 times. Get it through your brains Poor Men fight the Rich man's War.
Our Congress could stop this if they were not making billions themselves; military funding is controlled by Congress not the President. Every 2 years Congress must vote on money for the military.
If we look at this 911 lie, thinks about the Billions that could of went to the men and women vets and the poor of this great nation. Do you still think this is a war against terror, the only terrorism is against the people of the nations being ripped-off by these Elites of the world.
Hows this; did you knoe that 84 different counties lost loved ones from the act of treason on 911. Did you know the person who controls the money for the families of 911 makes $300,000 a year.
NoPCZone, good comment I see you do your homework and have been there like me.

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TIME FOR SOME CORPORATE AID
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 14, 2006 2:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Re: Bechtel, GE, Halliburton and the other winners in this war. Any and all profits beyond the cost of ACTUAL work completed should be paid to a fund for Iraq veterans and their widows and children. We'll be needing some auditors. Simply put, they will reutrn to their country, all the money that they stole. It's not complicated. Not typical government thinking, but not a bad idea. Thanks, ANNA

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VA and National Health Scheme
Posted by: TagsNOLA on Nov 14, 2006 3:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do not believe underfunding of the VA is a standalone issue. As reported in Alternet not long ago, Democrat Pres Candidate John Kerry was quoted in the runup to the 2004 genl election as opposing another govt program to fund guaranteed universal health care, "because" (in his words) "there is no political support for it." This was said in spite of an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll of voting-age citizens showing over 60% support for it, *even if it meant higher taxes to pay for it*. Mr. Kerry was not lying. The wants and needs of a majority of voters does not constitute "political support." Meaningful "political support" is whatever K Street lobbyists and their clients want, not what we the people want.
I do not propose shutdown of VA Hospitals. But they should be converted to specialized institutions that handle *only* service connected problems not properly handled in Hospitals or clinics caring for members of the genl population.
We the public need leadership to mobilize us to *lobby* (I really don't know if that's the right word when you're referring to we among the unwashed) for an overhaul of the medical and pharmacalogical system in this country to provide cradle to grave universal health care. Study of the Icelandic model might be worthwhile.
We could start with public-funded med schools with free tuition, but with strings attached once med students graduated, but with *no* student loan debts. We should have as our physicians and other health care professionals people who want to be healers in our community; not just people who want to get filthy rich. Physicians should, of course, make an above average salary, but not anything astronomical. On the other hand, there should be enough trained and qualified physicians that they could work sane hours and still have time for family and home life as well as a professional life. There should be no private med or dental practices any more. Hospitals and clinics should be incorporated into a natnl health care system. (Call me "Socialist" all you want. I don't care.)
I live in New Orleans. But I've spent a lot of time in Houston since last Aug tending to a close family member with a prolonged illness. While I was here, I went to the triage unit at the Houston VA hospital for my own healthcare issue. I had been a patient at the VA Hospital in New Orleans but that facility has been downgraded to an outpatient clinic only because of Hurricane Katrina. So, as long as I was here in Houston anyway, I just went to the VA Hospital here. When I checked in at the triage desk the clerk punched up my computerized record from New Olreans, even though I had theretofor *never* been a patient at the Houston VA facility.
Come on folks, this is a no-brainer. Why can't we have that kind of system for *every* citizen, not just for us vets?
There are a lot more citizens than most establishment media admit who want this. We just need some kind of effective leadership to mobilize the population so we can demand our elected officials to make it happen.
Doctors King, Abernathy, etc. had a much tougher row to hoe and yet, they managed to mobilize people and capture the public imagination such that the most egregious examples of segregation were overturned. Their work is not yet done, but in terms of civil rights for African Americans, the America of 2006 is a lot different from that of 1956.
I do not suppose that a political battle over universal health care (without absurdly long waiting lists for treatment) can happen overnight. Perhaps many of us alive today will not live to see full fruition of such mobilization. But wouldn't it be grand if, when we go to face our maker, we as citizens in the baby boomer generation had done something meaningful before we died to enure that generations coming up behind us might take quality universal health care for granted? Just my 2 bits worth.
TagsNOLA

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Soldiers are Nothing but Cannon Fodder
Posted by: sofla100 on Nov 14, 2006 6:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For GW Bush and company, soldiers are nothing but lower class Americans and are basically "trailor trash" to fight wars for domination and control of foreign lands. Like the Roman Legions of old, the American soldier today is disposable, it is only accomplishment of "the mission" counts. When he or she can no longer "accomplish the mission" he or she will be delegated to the trash heap. What a pity, some of the poor brainwashed souls called soldiers actually think they are fighting for freedom or something worthwhile. They are nothing more then cannon fodder, despised by the wealthy elites and politicians for whom they toil.

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Let's not forget the biggest fraud that is their hero "The Gipper"
Posted by: FURonnie on Nov 14, 2006 6:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Have we all forgot the biggest liar and spin doctor Ronnie Raygun? I lived in California during that idiots term and what a joke he was. He raised sales taxes, & income tax turned the mentally ill on the streets, trashed the state unversity, expanded the state employment more than any other Gov before or since. I'm gald that son of a bitch is dead. My only wish he is not still living in agonizing pain. Then there's that clone of E.T. he was married to what a bitch the only good she ever did was go against Dubya on stem cell. Have we all forgot the hosing the Bush family did to the american taxpayer during the S&L scandal?

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Here's an idea!
Posted by: magistre on Nov 14, 2006 9:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To prove their worth the new Democrat Congress should pass a bill that would move the presidential office to Bagdad in the middle of whatever is the most bloodthirsty part of town. If George W. Bush is so fervent in his backing of his war let him prove it.

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Silly Sally Satel
Posted by: dougo on Nov 15, 2006 1:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Read Sally's delusion here at Slate http://www.slate.com/id/2148541 Growing up I had a friend who's father was stricken with PTSD. Harold was a brilliant artist. He painted and drew portraits and landscapes. He dreamed of being a cartoon artist and had many sketches of characters. Other work was tortured and frightening looking to me as a teen. Much like The Scream by Edvard Munch. He worked for a time as an advertising artist but couldn't hold a job due to his re visitations of WWII and his injuries in said war. Harold bore the scares of war on his body and in his mind. His had a massive scar from a Japanese machine gun, front to back, from his right shoulder to the left side of his waist. This healed over time but his mind continued to suffer the ravages of war for over fifty years until his death in the VA hospital in Columbus Ohio. I remember a dinner I had with them once. Everyone was sitting at the table eating, perfectly happy, and all of a sudden Harold's spoon flew out of his hand and hit Keith, my friend in the head. Keith said: What the hell did you do that for Dad? "Damn Jap shot it out of my hand" was the answer. The next day the police were there to take Harold to the VA hospital. This was not an easy task as he would fight them until they could get a straight jacket on him to restrain him. At times he even did the near impossible and ripped his way out of the jacket with the fear and rage of war going on in his mind. Scenes like this happened many times over the years with Harold. It impacted their whole family in their lives also. Delinquency, petty crimes and poverty.It continues for them today.That's right Sally. It's all in their head.

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