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War on Iraq

Iraq Reservists Face a 'Perfect Storm' of Post-Traumatic Stress

By Stacy Bannerman, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted March 15, 2007.


Soldiers who have served in Iraq are killing themselves at higher rates than in any other war in which such data have been tracked. To understand why, just look at the system.
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The sole aspect of the Iraq war upon which Americans are united is the need to provide post-deployment mental health care for our soldiers. The good news is that no one wants to abandon the veterans coming back from Iraq as happened with far too many Vietnam veterans. The bad news is that we already have. Nowhere is that more apparent than within National Guard and Army Reserve soldiers, who typically go from combat to cul-de-sac in 48 hours.

Active-duty troops are required to participate in post-combat mental health care sessions for the first three months of their reentry, but the Department of Defense has a 90-day "hands-off" policy pertaining to National Guard soldiers and Army reservists. After serving some of the longest tours in Iraq, they undergo a few days of out-processing, which includes a brief mental health screening. Desperate to get home, National Guard soldiers and Army reservists will say anything that will enable them to leave. When they are released -- without support or services -- they scatter across states, and generally don't report at their first post-deployment training drill for three months or more.

The separation from other soldiers creates a feeling of isolation at a time when support and connection with others who are going through the same emotional adjustments is critical.

Like most National Guard soldiers, my husband didn't receive a comprehensive mental health evaluation until eight months after he returned from a yearlong tour at the most-attacked base in Iraq. Nearly a year after his exam, in August of 2006, he was notified of the outcome: Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides free healthcare services to veterans for a period of two years beginning on the date of their separation from active military service. By the time my husband was informed of his diagnosis and advised to get treatment, he had approximately six months remaining to access care. But the waiting list is long, and time is running out for him and for tens of thousands just like him.

The clock has already stopped for hundreds of National Guard soldiers and Army reservists who returned from Iraq suffering from PTSD that was either undiagnosed by the military, or the VA refused/delayed treatment. Pentagon statistics reveal that the suicide rate for U.S. troops who have served in Iraq is double what it was in peacetime.

Soldiers who have served -- or are serving -- in Iraq are killing themselves at higher percentages than in any other war where such figures have been tracked. According to a report recently released by the Defense Manpower Data Center, suicide accounted for over 25 percent of all noncombat Army deaths in Iraq in 2006. One of the reasons for "the higher suicide rate in Iraq [is] the higher percentage of reserve troops," said military analyst James F. Dunnigan.

Despite the high risk factor, many soldiers who seek treatment are not receiving urgent care. "When he went to the VA, they didn't have room to treat him that day," said the mother of Jason Cooper, an Army reservist in the Iraq war. Jason hung himself four months after coming back to Iowa. He was 23, a year older than Army reservist Josh Omvig and Marine reservist Jeffrey Lucey, who also committed suicide after the VA's failure to care. As did National Guardsmen Doug Barber, Tim Bowman, Staff Sgt. Jeffrey Jerome Sloss, and far too many others who have ended their lives rather than live them with the psychological equivalent of a sucking chest wound.

A "Perfect Storm" for PTSD

Post-traumatic Stress Disorder is the result of subtle biological changes in the brain chemistry as a response to severe stress, which alters the way the brain stores memories. During a particularly intense episode, the body releases massive amounts of adrenaline, and the physiological alterations associated with the intense emotional reaction create memories that disrupt normal life.


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See more stories tagged with: iraq, vets, ptsd

Stacy Bannerman is the author of "When the War Came Home: The Inside Story of Reservists and the Families They Leave Behind" (Continuum Publishing, 2006), and an analyst for Foreign Policy In Focus. She is the director of Operation Occupation and can be contacted at www.stacybannerman.com.

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Bush also under much stress lately...
Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon on Mar 15, 2007 12:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Drunken Bush Hurls Vile Insult At Wife"
By Wayne Madsen
3-14-2007

Our White House Press Corps sources report further disturbing news about President Bush. Our sources have witnessed a clearly inebriated Bush approaching members of the press corps and making rude comments, including one particularly crude remark about First Lady Laura Bush. In that case, Bush, nodding toward Laura, called her a "cunt." While Bush's drinking is no secret to the White House press contingent, that particular comment was reportedly the worst they have heard uttered by Bush. Our sources also report that Laura Bush's stays at the White House are less frequent and that her overnight trips to the Mayflower Hotel often coincide with the president's drunken binges.

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» O..K.. Posted by: Rolomax
» RE: O..K.. I Love It Posted by: rwa
» RE: O..K.. I Love It Posted by: Habaro
» Well.... Posted by: CatDad
Bring 'em back in squads
Posted by: Rolomax on Mar 15, 2007 1:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems they should be brought back in squads, after the group of squadmates has trained their replacements.

As soon as they get back to US soil, they should be put up in barracks for a week or two, so that they can remain together and 'cool-down' among friends. Give them a room where they can all sleep nearby, and give 'em a phone with speakerphone, so that they can all hear each other calling their families.

During this time, they could be debriefed and given time to acclimate back into society with their closest squadmates nearby, and they'd be able to help each other during their toughest few days back without needing a gun nearby.

This seems like common sense to me.

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» RE: Bring 'em back in squads Posted by: Romanster
» tough response. Posted by: Rolomax
» RE: tough response. Posted by: armybrat8
AFTERMATH
Posted by: Tom Degan on Mar 15, 2007 1:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The war in Iraq will be going on for the rest of our lives. Even after the last IED is detonated, after the last bullet is fired, we will be dealing with the physical and mental health care for these ailing victims of George W. Bus's stupidity and Dick Cheney's greed until the last surviving veteran of this stupid fucking was has breathed his or her final breath.

Just a little note: the last Civil War vet died in 1959 - that was the year after I was born!

And let us not forget that we will have probably a quarter of a million walking time bombs who will be returning into society with serious pchcological issues to contend with. Of this you may be absolutely certain: some of the victims of the war in Iraq haven't even been born yet. This is going to go on for decades, folks.

Dick Cheney is going to be dead any day now; such is the man's precarious physical condition - sadly, he'll avoid justice. But George W. Bush will die in federal prison. I'm as sure of that as I am my own name.

Tom Degan. Nice to meet'cha!
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» proper link to THE RANT Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: AFTERMATH Posted by: Rolomax
» this iraq vetern agrees. Posted by: greggwyck
» Here's something promising. Posted by: Rolomax
» RE: AFTERMATH Posted by: jjz999
» RE: AFTERMATH Posted by: paschn
A lot worse than Watergate
Posted by: HughScott on Mar 15, 2007 5:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a registered Republican who voted for Nixon, then watched in disgust his fall from grace during the Watergate scandal, that was tea time compared to the ongoing betrayal of America by President Bush.

Consider the following transgressions, deceptions and outright lies:

So-called Iraqi WMDs.
"Immediate" threats.
Yellow-cake uranium.
Aluminum tubes.
Mobile biological weapons labs.
Ties to Al Qaeda.
A 9/11 connection.
The Valerie Plame/CIA leak case.
Secret overseas prisons.
Torture.
Warrantless wiretaps of United States citizens.
Phony Al Qaeda plots.
False claims that the America is safer now from terrorism than before 9/11.
Concealing the real cost of Gulf War 2.
Understating Iraqi civilian casualties.
Embellishing U.S. successes in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Misrepresenting the only wartime tax cut in American history.
Economically betraying senior citizens, the middle class and working poor .
Downplaying global warming.
Claiming wounded GIs got the best treatment possible at Walter Reed.
Preventing the coffins of returning GIs from being seen by the public.
Hiding injured Iraq veterans from the press after landing stateside.
Declassifying intelligence information for political purposes.
Firing U.S. attorneys for the same reason.

Add to the list the falsified White House biography I found on a U.S. State Department in 2004 and reported to the Boston Globe. Impressed, it ran the story the next morning, on 02/28/04, under the headline, "Bush Bio on Web Inflates Guard Service," and gave me credit as the source.

For details about George W.'s phony military history -- the Rosetta Stone of Oval Office corruption -- visit my investigative website, www.King-George.biz

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» RE: A lot worse than Watergate Posted by: SheltyLuv
» RE: A lot worse than Watergate Posted by: disc golf
» stolen election. Posted by: greggwyck
» RE: stolen election. Posted by: HughScott
» old willy pete. Posted by: greggwyck
Molested by our Uncle. D'oh!
Posted by: LMNOP on Mar 15, 2007 7:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America is in complete denial about what it is: one long, loud, stinking, steaming pile of lies: "We Support The Troops". Yeah, and the tooth fairy puts money under your pillow.

Nothing is what it says it is. Department of Defense? It attacks. Department of Justice? The Attorney General advocates torture and warrantless wiretaps. Department of Health and Human Services? Forbidden to negotiate drug prices for seniors on Medicare Part D. And on and on and on and on it goes.

So guess what, veterans? The liars lied again, this time to you. You were used just like everybody else (Congress, the tax payers) to make a few rich Americans even wealthier, just used more and worse.

But they're not just liars. They're back-stabbing liars as you will discover! For your efforts, America's warmest regards and gratitude await you: rat droppings, dead cockroaches and cuts in veteran's benefits.

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Impeach Bush and Cheney....drunken bastards!
Posted by: kgs1947 on Mar 15, 2007 8:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both of them are sick men! Both of them need to be impeached and sent to rehab for alcoholism and/or being sociopaths! Someone needs to stop them before they do more violent damage to the household(s) of this nation! Have we not had enough of Domestic Violence in this Country! Must be all simply continue to shut up and take it! THIS IS TRULY A SICK COUNTRY!

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» 01-20-09 Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon
» RE: 01-20-09 so we have a date. Posted by: greggwyck
That's Better, AlterNoids
Posted by: hbw on Mar 15, 2007 8:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, fellow AlterNet commenters, for not resurrecting that tired accusation previously hurled at the Bannermans: "What did you expect? He volunteered to go." Last time I saw some doofus contribute that gem, I nearly spewed my yerba maté all over my monitor.

This article shows that Ms. Bannerman has done some serious research into a problem that affects her family and community, along with thousands of other families and communities. I hope that the information she gathers gets leveraged into policy.

Of course, here in the States, it is not just our veterans who are suffering from PTSD. It is found in disadvantaged neighborhoods across the country, especially among children exposed to violence, at rates that only a coordinated Federal program could possibly address. These children and youth need caring intervention. The soldiers and Marines whom the government has sent into hell itself need and deserve that care immediately upon returning, for as long as it takes to make them whole again.

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» Yerba maté! Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon
» they said ptsd is a myth. Posted by: greggwyck
» Think about it... Posted by: Aufklaerung_Baboon
Flat learning curve???
Posted by: badkitty on Mar 15, 2007 10:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Our lives are at stake, and we really can't afford this county's flat learning curve."

Actually, Stacy, it's an illegal war. What we can't afford is our military's flat learning curve. Our soldiers should have refused to serve in this illegal war and should refuse any future deployment. Some of us thought that "Sergeant Sweet Bear" had no business going to Iraq.

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» you cant ask that of us. Posted by: greggwyck
we need to standardize the treatment from the from the first shot.
Posted by: greggwyck on Mar 15, 2007 11:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
my name is gregg wyckoff and i am a vetern of the iraq war. i was there when OIF kicked off for the push to baghdad. i have seen combat, i have been wounded and i cant get any health care. i have also been diagnoced with post tramatic stress disorder (ptsd). i was a corpsman ( medic) for the marine corps.
the system has failed us all. yet again i hear of another killing him self because of what we had to do in iraq. the problem is in the system and how the troops will eventually snap under pressure. we should not only fund the reservest or national guard. it should help anyone with disabilities, if you see combat you need help. now i know your reading this and think you are strong enough to get threw somthing like that. but i wasnt why should we even offer help to thouse who volentered. because we did volenter. because we went while you stayed home and watched tv, got on with your lives.
i am not saying we are better than thouse who didnt serve. we are all equal. but if we can offer bank hostages psych consol after a hold up. we should be able to do the same thing to veterns who were in harms way. when a cop kills some one in the line of duty they are given 2 weeks vacation and a psych evualation and can extend their "vacation" up to 18 months.
when the military go in to combat it is not uncommon to have several days in a row of conflict and never given any help. when a cop only has to pull the triger once and its vacation time for them. but the military are not given this option why not. when you kill day after day after day and burnt bodies litter the landscape. what makes the lawenforcement more important that a marine or sailor or soldier or airman.
we all have had to kill but no one seem's to think that we need care. when the care is already give to the higher class of "law enforcement" is it right. removal from combat opperation and have the rear move forward to replace thouse who need treatment.
put higher ranking individuals in combat not just the e-1 to e-5. all enlisted armed and in harms way. all officers must go to theatre opperations. but sending us back for multipule tours when. thousands of e-7's and e-8's and e-9's have never been to iraq or theatre opperations. sure they will use the chain of command to protect themself's. when we pull 3 or 4 tours.
when we kill and bleed on foreign soil, we need help. i need help. by denieing us support the system has failed us all. we all know some one who has served. they are not you enemy but you friend and brother. when a roofer falls off a roof and breaks their back. they recieve disability right away but when i broke leg all i got was a brace to keep it in place no cast, no opperation to fix it. now i find it hard to walk. my quality of life has deminished and will never be the same. but if an cop breaks his leg in the line of duty you can guarentee that cop's on vacation and gets disability. not our military, patch'em back up and put them in the front lines as long as it's not you. am i right or can we as americans help our brother's and sister's out and give them a hand up. i am not just complaining about the system i am looking for ideas to improve the broken cluster fu@k. now it is up to you to be our voice. we protected all of you. we can no longer make a good fight. for we fight with weapons and you fight with words. it is your word to your senators and congressmen and continuing bonbardment to bush to fix our health care. any other american citizen would recieve care. we just want the same. our military the new second class citizen.

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It only took three articles to get the message out...
Posted by: djnoll on Mar 15, 2007 12:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mrs. Bannerman, you are to be commended for continuing to educate the public on the problems facing our returning soldiers. I wish there was more that could be done to help them and more that could be done to prevent them ever having to go where they are being sent - Hell on Earth.

One of the posts here indicated that they thought Bush and Cheney were sociopaths, and the sad fact is that they are really not sociopaths. They are mentally ill, yes, by any sane standard, but we are no longer a sane nation. We are a nation plagued by fear - a fear that is fed by BushCo and the media. These lunatics are acting in a predictable manner for their psycho-pathologies (anti-social personality disorder and borderline personality disorder). The easy way to describe it is this:

an animal who feels that a specific place is their territory mark the territory as their own (BushCo and attacks on Constitution).

This animal then drives out any threat to that control or weakens it (senidng the National Guard and Reservists to Iraq and then not treating them when they return, leaving them weakened).

However, as some point in time, this animal will face challenges to its power within the territory (BushCo and Congress today), but because it has effectively neutralized any real efforts, nothing actually happens, and the challenger retreats to live as subservient to the alpha animal.

But, finally, the animal is faced with a true predator to claim its territory (the next election cycle for President), and then this animal is cornered.

Such an animal is more dangerous than any living thing on Earth, especially if that animal is sick or wounded (the losses in 2006).

It is then that this animal sheds any semblance of reason and will attack and kill the predator (THE AMERICAN PEOPLE!)

Make no mistake, America, this president and his associates have no intention of ever leaving this White House. As one poster put it - memorize the 2nd Amendment and arm yourselves to protect your homes, your families, and your communities. We may have elections in 2008, but I can almost guarantee you that whoever is elected will never be allowed to take the Oath of Office which this madman has forgotten as just another lie to serve his purpose.

Mrs. Bannerman, I hope your husband gets the help he needs soon, because I also hope that he will be ready to stand with the people of this nation when the time comes. He and his fellow National Guardsmen may be our only line of defense. If not, he is ripe for Blackwater or some other mercenary group for recruitment, and you must not let that happen under any circumstance, or you will lose him forever to this disease and this madman.

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» how to help stop the war. Posted by: greggwyck
Beyond anti-social personalities and borderline personality disorders
Posted by: Basenjis on Mar 15, 2007 12:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Google in "Ponerology." Very interesting explanation for the common personality disorder for an entire White House staff.

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The more vets die from whatever cause...
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Mar 15, 2007 4:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... the less the government has to pay. It's as simple as that. If they're too screwed up to fight anymore, then they're useless, so get rid of them any way possible. Death is a simple, cheap, permanent solution.

Ian

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PTSD IS NOT NEW
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Mar 15, 2007 4:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is new is that no one cares. I recently found a book written in 1945 about soldiers returning from war written by high ranking officers. The first feeling I got was, this sounds familiar, the second was the compassionate way that the men discussed the problems and how they treated the men. It was a more enlightened age and the toughest of them were decent and felt a responsibility to care for those who had fought for their country. We owe them. Thanks, ANNA

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Escalating Atrocities in an Unwinnable War
Posted by: sofla100 on Mar 15, 2007 6:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have already seen stories about American soldiers and marines committing rape and murder in Iraq. Other soldiers report being told by commanders to "kill all Iraqi men of military age." Not knowing who the enemy is in an unwinnable war, it all adds up to a recipe for escalating atrocities and massive PTSD. As American soldiers must more and more commit the unthinkable - torturing locals for "information" about insurgents, shooting children along with "insurgents" iin firefights, and "looking the other way" while America's puppet government commits even worse atrocities, is it any surprise PTSD rates are sky high? Just like Vietnam, America is now destroying Iraq, and its people, in order to "save it." So, these young people, so idealistic when they went to Iraq, end of committing unspeakable evil that will bother them for the rest of their lives, and end up battered and broken and abandoned. They only went to war to protect the profits of Haliburton and Chevron, and an American empire looking to spread its power and influence. And, when this all happens and they find this all out, is it any surprise so many get "PTSD," and that so many want to give up on life?

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America the brave - America the invertebraes skeleton
Posted by: kekenidika on Mar 16, 2007 8:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an Aussie in my mindless youth, I had the opportunity to go to America twice ... but both times I tore up the tickets given me - I did not know why then, but now after a lifetime of reading of the cowardice of the American people, I now understand why.

You denigrate the French as cowards, but without their assistance, you would still be a British penal colony, you abuse almost every ally you have, Americans have been at war constantly since the end of your own civil war, You have murdered and committed genocide against your own Indian Nation, You have invaded and annexed the Philippines after the murder of more than 600,000 men women and children, You have annexed Hawaii and deposed the ruler there for the common greed of the American people.

Almost the entire time since your own independence, your political system has been abused by corruption and now to your everlasting shame, you have re-elected a military deserter, a craven dyslexic coward as your leader, supported by another thief, whose only saving grace is that he shot a lawyer and defended by another who disposes of prosecutors.... AND of course that religious leader who has advocated assassination against Chavas, while at the same time Giuliani, grovels after his money and oil...

You have invaded - and lost wars against, but still hold blockades against Cuba, a country who actually has a far better education and medical record than America - and got your arses whipped in Vietnam - you have invaded, bombed, subverted, how many countries? Blustered and lied to how many peoples? Abused the rights of how many countries? When have you ever paid your dues to the United Nations? When have you ever abided by the wishes of the United Nations? You use the practice of "rendition" against many captives of your illegal wars, yet cry foul when citizens of your own corrupted nation are afforded the same treatment, yet how many of your own citizens are "guests" in one of the fastest growing building boom in America - The prison system....?

You are, as a nation, are almost universally despised and disliked by the majority of South American people (except those who are as corrupted as America itself) and even here in Australia, there are many here like myself who really prefer not to speak with yanks, until they prove themselves and believe me, even though we are usually friendly, we always suspect that we also will be stabbed in the back after you have bled us dry, you plunder and purloin almost every idea then claim it as your own - but then again, that is the American way is it not?

And before you snap too hard back on my words - I also think that our own grovelling, sycophantic perverted leaders are taking us down the path of American perdition - we both need someone to perform the Herculean task of cleaning the stables

I have several very close friends, who just happen to be yanks (and Southerners from Texas), but in the main I despise you all for your cowardice, your lack of courage to revolt against the corruption that has destroyed a beautiful country, so I am so thankful for those (unknown at the time) misgivings that made me tear up those invitations and tickets!

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Damages to The USA, Iraq, World
Posted by: bob t on Mar 18, 2007 11:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
BushCo and his allies Big Realigion(Popes, Catholic Church; white evangelical fundies, Neocons, Big Corporatocracy
!. This GWOT will not end for a very long time if ever. They provoked the entire world into GWOT, just like John Bolton provoked Sadam into as he tried to move toward rapproachment with the US/UN/World.
2.It takes the average veterans family three generations before the damage they have endured waers off.
3. Damage to our vets damages the national psyche.
4. How long will it take for 'we the people' to learn to trust the SCOTUS, the POTUS and the COTUS again, if ever. Until that occurs the Fabric of Our Society will be damaged, and probably forever because we may never regain any trust for our institutions. At my age of 63 I will never trust our gov't ever again.
5. I have been radicalised and scandalised by BushCo/Republican Party, present and previous Popes and Catholic Church. They can't stop/won't stop pedophile priests and their sexual slavery of children/teenagers. Total hypocrasy and they tell others how to behave via force aka stripping us of our rights/freedoms.
5. Completely successful use of wedge issues to win by 'divide and conquer' strategy which has divided America into at least to different factions and actually many more than just two different factions.
America now is a badly damaged country and yet the Popes and the Catholic Church, my church, barely, will not stop.
6. Destroying our trust in our military.
7. Creating/causing so many damaged vets and their entire families. Millions of us have not gotten over the Vietnam war yet and now we have Iraqnam.
So many things, all so horribly WRONG. And we all have the Catholic Church to thank for this. Same as Hitler and the Nazi Party, WWII, Holocaust and now we have Catholicism supporting the Republican Party. How can one religion be so wrong, so defective and two times, the Nazi Party then and the Republican Party now. St. Malachy predicted the end of the Papacy, can't come soon enough for me. How can the Catholic Church sacrifice America.
Signed, Barely a Catholic anymore.

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