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War on Iraq

Life Will Never Return to Normal for an Injured Vet Like Tomas Young

By Liliana Segura, AlterNet. Posted May 1, 2008.


Phil Donahue's documentary Body of War offers a chilling view of how the lies that led us to war changed the life of one Iraq veteran.
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In the opening minutes of Body of War, we find a 25-year-old man struggling to put on his pants. He is wiry and tattooed, sitting shirtless on his bed, his thick eyebrows furrowed in concentration. His face is weathered beyond its years. He works to get one leg into his jeans, then the other, moves on to his sneakers and finally, his wheelchair.

Three years after this scene was filmed, paralyzed Iraq war veteran Tomas Young admits that dealing with his personal day-to-day challenges on camera took some getting used to. But "eventually it dawned on me that the more graphic and in-depth [the documentary] got into my life, the more people would see the consequences and ramifications of making an impetuous decision." The decision he refers to is the U.S. government's rush to invade Iraq in 2003; from the opening moments to the end, Body of War interweaves scenes from Tomas' life as he learns to live with his paralysis with C-SPAN footage of the October 2002 congressional vote that is responsible for it. As senator after senator parrots the lies of George W. Bush in a drumbeat for war, a sick sense of dramatic irony sets in. We all know how the vote will play out. But few could imagine what it means to be Tomas Young, one of the tens of thousands of veterans who have returned from Iraq with life-altering injuries after being betrayed by the government they enlisted to serve. Tomas Young feels that betrayal acutely. He lives with the consequences every day.

Tomas joined the army right after 9/11. As he tells it, he saw President George W. Bush standing atop World Trade Center rubble on TV and knew he wanted to help hunt down Osama bin Laden. He called his local recruiter on Sept. 13. "I joined to go to war with Afghanistan and with al-Qaeda," he tells me over the phone, from Kansas City, Mo., his hometown. But when it came time to deploy, he was not sent to help smoke out the "evil-doers" from their caves as Bush swore to do. Instead, he found himself in Sadr City, Iraq, questioning the premise for the war. ("When the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, we didn't go and attack China," he says.) And, in 2004, he did not see any terrorists, nor did he fire a single shot. ("All I saw were women and children running away from gunfire.") Less than a week after arriving in Sadr City, on April 4, 2004, Tomas was riding in an unarmored Humvee with no covering when he was shot, hit just above his left collarbone. "All of a sudden my body just went completely numb," he recalls. He was paralyzed from the chest down.

Tomas spent nearly three months being shuttled between hospitals, ending up at Walter Reed Medical Center in April 2004. Reeling from his injury and hopped up on painkillers, it was there that he first encountered former talk show host and producer Phil Donahue -- who'd recently lost his MSNBC program because, as a leaked memo would eventually reveal, he was "a difficult public face for NBC in a time of war." The young, paralyzed veteran made a profound impression on Donahue. "Every time I look at Tomas, I think about the president. 'Bring it on,'" he tells me in a phone interview from his home in New York. "There he was, 24 years old, lying in bed, in the prime of life … This is what we call catastrophic. This is a hugely consequential injury." Tomas' condition, Donahue decided, was exactly what Americans needed to see to truly understand the human costs of the what he calls "the most sanitized war of my lifetime."

The struggle of recovery

Body of War is anything but sanitized. "The movie was filmed during the first two years of my injury, which is the roughest recovery time," Tomas explains -- and it shows. When we first meet his wife-to-be, Brie, she's at the computer, on an Internet message board, looking for advice on Tomas' "bowel problems." Their wedding is approaching, and they're concerned about him having an accident while he is in his tux. It's just one of the ways his body fails him. He relies on "puke pans" for his morning nausea and, in part thanks to the catheter he wears, his frequent urination leads to constant urinary tract infections. And then, of course, as Tomas puts it, there's "a great big erection sidebar," i.e. the problem of erectile dysfunction.

When his wedding day arrives, on a rainy afternoon in August 2005, the couple looks young and happy. He is wearing black Converse All-Stars. Walking down the aisle after declaring their vows, Brie's dress gets caught in his wheelchair. "Damn your big dress," he laughs.


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See more stories tagged with: tomas young, robert byrd, bush administration, phil donahue, body of war, ivaw

Liliana Segura is an associate editor and staff writer at AlterNet.

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View:
You need fixing
Posted by: GPFrank on May 1, 2008 3:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I opened three headlines but nothing underneath.
Did you fall under the bed?

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Nothing
Posted by: andrushka on May 1, 2008 3:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Big vacuum, emptiness! Lots of clicks and...no article! Something wrong???????

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» RE: Nothing Posted by: willymack
tomas young blogs on billboard.com
Posted by: kamcguffin on May 1, 2008 5:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
link just isn't cooperating. His blog is Audiocracy '08. It comes up on my browser as http://billboard.blogs.com/politics

The documentary is excellent, but anything that is about reality isn't widely watched here in the U.S. Thanks for putting up this article as the film is released around the country. It's helps so many in so many ways.

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Recognizing the costs of war
Posted by: taxidriver on May 1, 2008 6:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's striking to me that "alternative" web sites and "progressive" blogs are the best sources for the true costs of the "War on Terror." Others just want to wave the flag, support the troops with magnetic ribbons, and "win" (whatever that means) the war at any cost, including the cost of devastated lives and families, both here and in Iraq and elsewhere.

It's truly astonishing how the war is no longer front-page news in most papers. Stories of more dead and wounded Americans are buried on page six, and only briefly mentioned on TV, if at all.

I better stop here, before somebody calls me "bitter."

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» RE: ecognizing the costs of war Posted by: goldenlin
Where's the outrage?
Posted by: HughScott on May 1, 2008 9:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Four years ago in my self-published book, George Dub-ya Bush, THE PHONY FIGHTER PILOT, I wrote the following about Iraq:

Like Vietnam, Gulf War 2 is being fought mainly by kids from low-income families. So-called “volunteers,” they joined the military to escape poverty, only to lose their lives and limbs while sons of rich Republicans sit smugly at home watching the action on Fox News―elitist little pricks sipping Classic Cokes and munching buttered popcorn as less fortunate citizens their age are getting killed and wounded in Iraq, the whole time wishing to hell they’d never volunteered in the first place.

Given an opportunity to update the PFP manuscript, I wouldn't be so hard on "rich Republicans." This time I would include in the indifferent category most Americans -- Republicans, Democrats and independents.

The lack of organized outrage against Bush 43's illegal war is absolutely stunning. Small wonder that Tomas was angry about the rest of the country tuning out Iraq. We should be ashamed of ourselves!

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

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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American Troops
Posted by: Litt_Wmn on May 1, 2008 9:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please do not join up to occupy and brutalize innocent people who are no threat to you. They don't want you in their country. You are not serving America by going to Iraq; you are serving the imperialist interests of the rich.
Because you want money for college, don't try to obtain it by joining the army; you will be part of a hated occupying force in a foreign land. And if you have been fooled into going to Iraq, at least express your regret for the crimes you have committed while there, else you are just as complicit in the imperialist project as your commanders.
SUPPORT THE TROOPS WHO REFUSE TO FIGHT!

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» RE: American Troops Posted by: Doubtom
Iraqi Suffering
Posted by: Litt_Wmn on May 1, 2008 9:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where is the movie that articulates the voices of suffering Iraqis who have lost everything through no fault of their own? Where are the bereaved, the maimed, the widows and the orphans created by the American army in Iraq? Why is there no film documenting what THEY have to say? Must the stories of the oppressed always be silenced by the dominant culture?

Great are the crimes of this country, not least of all the callous indifference of its people towards fellow human beings. Americans have no feeling, no sympahty for others. A million dead Iraqis count for nothing in our eyes. One can only hope that someday justice will be done and this country and its people will understand what it means to treat those who are "different" as less than human.

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» RE: Iraqi Suffering Posted by: Doubtom
I have visited Veterans hospitals
Posted by: Ellie1 on May 1, 2008 9:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and seen Mr. Donahue's movie. Every Repuke should be required to do both before they vote for McCain, and they should be required to send their first born to serve in this debacle. It is very difficult to see these men with missing limbs etc.-and for what. Bush and his biological and political family should each be required to donate personal funds and a part of their bodies for every wounded or killed American they have mutilitated or murdered. I hope when this monster is out of office, he and his group are put on trial and imprisoned or executed (I won't say which one I prefer).

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The kid next door
Posted by: willymack on May 1, 2008 12:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My next-door neighbor came over the other day. She was overwraught with worry because her son had declared his intention to join the Marine Corps after he graduated from high school. Since we're both Navy veterans, we know something about the Marines, and the fact that her son had a good chance of finding himself in Iraq or Afghanistan. We also knew full well that teenagers would rather listen to beautiful lies from strangers than to the TRUTH from those who love and care about them. I agreed to talk to her son. While walking there, I wondered how to begin. When I walked inside the house, Shay had an expression of "damn, here comes a long, boring lecture" on his face. I noticed he had a knit cap on, so I asked "What's with the cap? Trying to hide a bald spot?" This got a smile from him, and a posible opening. I asked if he'd taken the ASVAB tests. He replied in the affirmative. I then asked if he had a printout, and if he did, could I see it. Yes to both questions. His scores were good-very good. I then asked if he'd seen any other recruiters besides the Marine. No. I then stated to Shay that I could read his mind, going on to say that he went to the recruiter's office where the man, resplendent in his dress blues, and bedecked with ribbons put his huge arm around him and said "Shay, darlin'; have ye been given a thought to our last discussion?" Shay said, "Maybe", to which Gunny Sweeny said "Sit, lad an' I'll show ye some movies, an' let ye play some video games". Shay looked at me, eyes wide with surprise, telling me all I wanted to know. I then told him his ASVAB scores were good enough to get him into ANY armed force and get schooling in any technical training he asked for, and if he was that set on putting on a uniform, he should check out the Navy, the Coast Guard, and the Air Force, in that order, but NOT the Army. He asked why, and I said "Because your mother and I want you to outlive us; that's why. I also told him to get and watch the movie "Forrest Gump" and remember what Forrest's mother told him (stupid is as stupid does). I hope I got through to him.

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Know your owner, know him well, and don't believe anything he tells you. Ever.
Posted by: DaBear on May 1, 2008 1:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Their injuries are largely invisible. "We have less than 5 percent of the Americans fighting this war," Tomas says. That the rest of the country is mostly tuned out angers him. "They don't have a personal stake in it. They don't have a son or a daughter of a husband or wife to worry about."

Maybe it's where I live, but I see four guys on my street everyday when I take the kids to school. There are six more who aren't in wheelchairs or missing limbs but I hear them screamin' in the middle of the night two doors down and behind our building when I'm working late. That's as "personal" as I want it to be, god dammit.

Every time I hear them, every time one of 'em wheels off chasing my daughter's stray soccer ball, I can't barely keep from crying, not with pity, not with shame but with pure unmitigated hatred for that rich fucker and his peers who did this to them. I finally told one of the guys about this sensation. He nodded. He knows that feeling well and I'd say a shitload more than what I feel.

These boys, because they are only boys still, like Tomas are true warriors, not soldiers. They also know they made a mistake by 'upping after "the Towers" because it took their warriorhood and soldierized them, turned them into shadow-warrior energy. And they've paid dearly for that soldiering. As they've gotten their hearts back, they wonder what they can do with that healthy warrior energy. I will repeat it until my dying breath, at the very least you can join IVAW.

Loyalty and family are two values the owning class knows nothing about. When they say they do, it means something very shockingly different than when we lowers mention them.

When I saw this fuckin' awesome gut-wrenching film, all I could think about was, this country needs a fucking revolution, an armed, violent revolt against the owning class who have caused us every harm and given us utterly NO benefit. Sitting an hour ago with "Gus" downstairs, I realize that violence may not be all that helpful, and that urge in me might be something else working around, but something, something has to be done about this and sitting around trying to scrape by isn't gonna cut it anymore.

Owning classers, mind your ass. The host body is gettin' mighty pissed off and they know where you live.

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The anti-war movement
Posted by: Cindyf on May 1, 2008 2:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't just think about it. Do something. Strip PBS of its documentary GM.

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Joining to defend America
Posted by: Litt_Wmn on May 1, 2008 5:46 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tomas Young: Joining to hunt terrorists in Afghanistan was not the right choice. The terrorists were Saudi, not Afghan. The Bush family had close ties to the Bin Laden family. The Taliban came here to this country and were treated as honored guests. Your going to Afghanistan, a poor country, with your superior firepower and revengeful attitude, would have meant the slaughter of many civilians. Did you not think it necessary to reflect a little before going off on a war of aggression? Was it not necessary to look into U.S. history, into the crimes of your own government? Did you pause to think how many innocent lives could be lost as a result of your action in joining up? By going there, you made yourself a participant in war crimes.

It is unfortunate that you were wounded, but you still owe the people of Iraq and Afghanistan an apology for barging into their country, gun in hand, when you were neither wanted nor invited. The fact of your being so greivously wounded is tragic, but it does not negate your responsibility for the actions you took.

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