Monday, December 26, 2011

7 People Shot Dead In Texas Home

Christmas Shooting: 7 People Shot Dead In Texas Home, Motive Unclear By DANNY ROBBINS 12/26/11

GRAPEVINE, Texas -- Investigators believe that seven people who were found dead Christmas Day were cleaning up holiday wrapping paper when they were shot inside a suburban Fort Worth apartment, but a motive remains unclear.

All of the victims appeared to be related, and Grapevine police said they believe the shooter was among the dead. Investigators were meticulously searching the apartment, along with three vehicles parked outside, and didn't expect to finish until dawn on Monday.

"It appears they had just celebrated Christmas. They had opened their gifts," Grapevine Police Sgt. Robert Eberling said, adding that the apartment was decorated for the holiday, including a tree. read more here

Some veterans reluctant to use VA


Study: Some veterans reluctant to use VA

Published: Dec. 26, 2011

MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 26 (UPI) -- The Department of Veterans Affairs is the largest healthcare provider to U.S. veterans, but many are reluctant to use its services, researchers say.

Rachel Widome of the Center for Chronic Disease Outcomes Research at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center said since the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan began, 51 percent of eligible Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans have sought care through the VA.


read more here

Gunman Opens Fire on NATO Troops in Afghanistan

Gunman Opens Fire on NATO Troops in Afghanistan December 26, 2011 Associated Press by Slobodan Lekic

KABUL, Afghanistan -- A gunman wearing an Afghan army uniform opened fire on coalition troops in western Afghanistan, military authorities said Monday. An official said several NATO troops were wounded in the shooting and the gunman was killed.

NATO and Afghan authorities were investigating the shooting, which took place Saturday at an outpost in Bala Boluk district, about 340 miles (700 kilometers) west of Kabul, said Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi.

A NATO statement said there were no fatalities among alliance soldiers, adding that it was its policy not to comment on other casualties. An official who asked not to be named because the investigation is ongoing said several coalition troops were wounded in the shooting. He said the man who opened fire was later killed by the NATO troops.

If the probe confirms the gunman was a soldier, the shooting would be the latest in a series of attacks by Afghans against coalition partners. Those shootings have raised fears of Taliban infiltration as NATO speeds up the training of Afghan security forces.

The expansion of the army and police is a critical element in NATO's exit strategy from Afghanistan. read more here

The $125-million Comprehensive Soldier Fitness Failure

There was a time when I would read something like this and just shake my head. Now I start to yell at my computer. The evidence is in. It has been in since 2008. This so called program does not work. Aside from this, there was Battlemind, which basically "trained" the troops to think they could toughen their minds and if they didn't, it was their fault, they were weak. Unintentionally, that was the message they got out of the program. This is just a repeat of it.
The evidence is, the suicide rate, attempted suicide rate and the calls to the Suicide Prevention Hotline. With all the reports from the DOD there is also the numbers coming out of the VA. With these reports as bad as they are, aware people are even more saddened thinking about the numbers of servicemen and women not counted in either report. They are discharged, so not the military's problem anymore and they haven't been able to get a service connected disability from the VA, so the VA doesn't count them.
The good thing is that the reporter, Kim Murphy, pointed out that there are experts saying this does not work. I trust the experts I've been learning from for almost 30 years. There are many "programs" that do work but somehow this one got the blessing and funding no matter what the results have been.
Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program aims to equip troops mentally Brig. Gen. Rhonda Cornum of Gulf War fame has been deployed to lead the military's new program to prepare soldiers for the psychic trauma of war and its aftermath. By Kim Murphy, Los Angeles Times December 26, 2011
Reporting from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.— Brig. Gen. Rhonda Cornum found out what combat stress was in the back of a pickup during the first Gulf War in 1991 when one of her Iraqi captors unzipped her flight suit and, as she lay there with two broken arms and an injured eye, sexually assaulted her.
The reed-thin Army physician, whose Black Hawk helicopter had been shot down, became a symbol of everything America was worried about in sending women to war. Her successful return home — sane and not that much the worse for her ordeal — became a powerful argument for the irrelevance of gender in conditions of indiscriminate violence.
The $125-million Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program requires soldiers to undergo the kind of mental pre-deployment tests and training that they have always had to undergo physically. Already, more than 1.1 million have had the mental assessments.
read more here
When you grow up in a family where everyone has a PhD from the school of "talk it to death" it is hard to let anything brew.  Too many times I faced death starting with an alcoholic father who liked to beat up my oldest brother and cause general trauma on a daily basis.  He stopped drinking when I was 13 but the damage was done.  Done to my brothers and my Mom but somehow I was able to just forgive him.  I was changed by growing up the way I did but I didn't end up with PTSD.

When I was 4, I took off from my brothers and headed up the "big kids" slide at the drive-in movie.  I wasn't supposed to go up it on my own but I had a hard time following rules or understanding why my Mom had them.  At the top, I was afraid to go down.  The kid behind me didn't want to wait, so he pushed me.  I went over the side, falling head first on the concrete.  My skull was cracked and I ended up with Traumatic Brain Injury, but no one knew what it was at the time.  It was not until years later research came out about head trauma.  I had a speech impediment and was afraid of heights for many years into adulthood but no PTSD.

I had a serious car accident.  I could have been killed.  As a mater of fact, I thought I was going to die, so I let go of the wheel, covered my face, because I knew my Mom would be furious if she couldn't have an open casket for the Greek funeral.  My parents picked me up at the hospital, drove to where the car was, made me look at it, and then, they did the best thing they could have done.  They made me drive home. I was afraid of that highway for a long time, but no PTSD.

My ex-husband of a year and a half, came home from work one night and decided it was a good idea to  start beating me.  He came close to killing me but our landlord started pounding on the door and called the police.  He snapped out of whatever possessed him and was in shock.  I was afraid every time someone raised their hand for a while after that, but no PTSD.


After my daughter was born, I didn't feel right.  I was tired all the time.  She was my first, so I thought the way I felt was normal.  8 months after, I couldn't get up out of bed.  My husband, the one I'm still married to, got me to the doctor and I had a fever of 104.  By the time I got to the hospital it was 105.  To tell the truth, I was so miserable, I wanted to die and even prayed for it until I thought about my baby and wanted to live. It turned out that a bladder infection after she was born never cleared up and I became septic. My doctor said he had never seen a bacteria count that high on a live patient. Again, no PTSD.

All these years later, I couldn't understand why I didn't have PTSD since I am a very sensitive person.  It just didn't make sense until I started to go through training for crisis intervention.  Then it all made sense.  Talking about it, making things "normal" enough to talk about with people I trusted made all the difference in the world.  The other big factor was my faith.  Being able to forgive the people who hurt me allowed me to move past what they did.  Being able to forgive myself, helped me to forgive everything.

My fears are gone for the most part.  I drive on highways, but avoid them when I can.  I fly when I have to without fear taking control, but it took a lot of flights to be able to say that.  I still avoid rides at amusement parks that are high off the ground because to me, they are still not much fun.

When it seems as if everyone around you is walking away fine from what is taking control over you, you don't want to admit it.  You may feel less than they are.  Less tough than they are.  For me, I had a strong mind already, just like the men and women in the military, so getting their minds tough is a waste of time since you can't get more tougher than being able to do what they do.  The thing that works is being able to talk about it with someone you trust and a strong faith the way it should be.

Thinking that God did it to you can destroy that connection, no matter what faith you practice.  Believing God saved you spares you all the questions you have running around your head.  You can move past "why me" faster.  Understanding what trauma does to a human, helps you to forgive what it is doing to you so you don't feel as if you have to suffer with it, hide it or deny it.  For me there is no doubt that I escaped PTSD because of the support I received and the faith I held onto.  Neither one was perfect.

There were times when I blamed God but those times didn't last long.  There were times when someone in my family said the wrong thing, but I knew they loved me anyway.  There were time when I just wanted to be left alone but my friends wouldn't let me be alone.  All in all, this is how you avoid PTSD or heal from what trauma does to you faster.  One more thing is, understand that no one is ever the same after trauma.  It changes everyone even if they don't end up with PTSD.


If you needed any more evidence, here is another report from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, the same base Brig. Gen. Rhonda Cornum is from. There have been too many reports from here that have not been positive. Keep in mind that this approach has been around for a long time and what they are doing is not new.
A military base 'on the brink' The toll of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars is catching up with the Washington state communities near Joint Base Lewis-McChord in the form of suicides, slayings and more.
At Joint Base Lewis-McChord, described by the independent military newspaper Stars and Stripes last year as "the most troubled base in the military," all of these factors have crystallized into what some see as a community-wide crisis. A local veterans group calls it a "base on the brink."
By Kim Murphy, Los Angeles Times December 26, 2011 Reporting from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.— Mary Coghill Kirkland said she asked her son, 21-year-old Army Spc. Derrick Kirkland, what was wrong as soon as he came back from his first deployment to Iraq in 2008.
He had a ready answer: "Mom, I'm a murderer."
He told her how his team had kicked in the door of an Iraqi house and quickly shot a man inside. With the man lying wounded on the floor, "my son got ordered by his sergeant to stand on his chest to make him bleed out faster," Kirkland said. "He said, 'We've got to move, and he's got to die before we move.'"
Not long after, Derrick told her, he had fallen asleep on guard duty, awakening as a car was driving through his checkpoint. He yelled for it to stop, but the family in the car spoke no English. "So my son shot up the car," she said.
Summing up her son's mental state after that deployment, Kirkland said: "What's a nice word for saying that he was completely [messed] up?"
Kirkland relates the remaining years of her son's life as if reading a script: He was depressed by his wife's request for a divorce. On a second deployment in Iraq, he was caught putting a gun in his mouth and evacuated on suicide watch to Germany. There, he tried to overdose on pills. He was flown back to his home base here in Washington state. After a brief psychiatric evaluation, he was left alone in his room. He hanged himself with a cord in his closet.
Apparently worried that no one would notice, Spc. Kirkland left a note on the door of the locker in his room. "In the closet, dead," it said. read more here

Sunday, December 25, 2011

At war's end coming home is only the beginning

War's end: The battle rages on
Article by: GREGORY ROBERTS
December 24, 2011

Gregory Roberts was an infantry staff sergeant with A Company 2/136 Infantry 1st Brigade Combat Team 34th Infantry Division. He served in Iraq from March 2006 to July 2007 and in Bosnia from September 2003 to April 2004. He lives in Lakeville and is a student at Northwestern College of Chiropractic. This essay is adapted from testimony he delivered Dec. 19 to a joint legislative committee on veterans.
The only difference, now that we're home, is that it's taking place on the inside.

The thing they didn't tell you is that coming home is the most difficult part of deploying to a combat zone.

Month after month, the thing that kept your chin up was the thought of home.

When all the stories have been told and retold 10 times over, the one thing every Joe will talk about are plans of what he's going to do when he gets home.

Buy a new truck. Go back to school. Call that one girl.

Home is painstakingly polished over and over again. And when you get there, you are let down.

Coming home isn't the answer to your pain and suffering, your troubles. Coming home is only the beginning.

But they don't tell you that.

You have a week stateside before being released back to your former life -- a life that is relatively the same compared to how different you have become. But you don't realize how much you have changed.

You are no longer the same person.

Things you once enjoyed, you no longer do. Things you once found antagonizing aren't worth the effort to complain about.

And the pettiness of the average person, with their insignificant problems, pisses you right off.

It doesn't take long before you realize you are a space alien on earth. Nobody "gets" you, except your buddies with whom you served.
read more here

Veterans find N.C. residency requirements hinder higher education efforts



Veterans find N.C. residency requirements hinder higher education efforts
Sun Dec 25, 2011
By Paul Woolverton
Staff writer
Staff photo by James Robinson
Johnny N. Allen retired from a 30-year career with the Coast Guard and moved to North Carolina in August. Allen wants to attend Fayetteville State University on the GI Bill to get a degree to become a middle-school math teacher, but he's taking classes at an online school until he's lived here long enough to qualify for in-state tuition.

Military veterans who want to attend college in North Carolina are encountering a roadblock to their plans to further their education: the state's residency laws combined with new restrictions in the GI Bill.

The GI Bill is intended to provide former military personnel with scholarships to get their college degrees. But in August, the GI Bill was changed. It no longer pays out-of-state tuition rates at public universities and community colleges, said Mark Waple, a lawyer who represents the Student Veterans Advocacy Group of North Carolina.

Veterans who haven't become North Carolina residents must make up the difference between the in-state tuition rate and the much higher out-of-state rate until the state accepts them as in-state students.

In North Carolina, that takes a year of living here as a North Carolina resident.

According to data that Waple gathered, about 420 student veterans in the state's 16-campus university system are affected by the change in the GI Bill and the residency restriction.
read more here

Community comes together for wounded Marine and his family

Special Christmas for wounded marine’s family
By Paul Kandarian
Globe Correspondent
December 25, 2011


Marine Lance Corporal Nicholas J. Eufrazio of Plymouth will celebrate Christmas today, with his family by his side, at the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital in Tampa, where he is being treated for traumatic brain injury as the result of a grenade attack on Nov. 21, 2010, in Afghanistan.

Employees at Jordan Hospital in Plymouth where his father, Mark Eufrazio, has worked as a plumber for the past 13 years, raised thousands of dollars in recent weeks to help the family make the trip.

“Within a couple of weeks, they raised something like $9,000,’’ Mark Eufrazio said. “We didn’t expect anything like that; people just joined together to help us get to our son during Christmas. It’s really something to see so many people who care.’’

He said Jordan Hospital workers are always raising money for causes for colleagues and those outside the hospital, because “it’s true to their heart. They just want to help people.’’

A group of volunteers started organizing events to raise money to help the Eufrazio family. Physicians Ronald Bardawill and Paul Vigna of Plymouth Pathology Associates donated an iPad2 to be raffled off, and Plymouth firefighter Robert MacKinnon kicked in a surf casting rod and reel. Employees made gift baskets, area businesses donated items for raffles, and Plymouth South High School, which Nicholas Eufrazio attended and where he played football, sold raffle tickets.
read more here

Marine, Disabled Vietnam Veteran, beaten to death in Philippines

Marine Beaten to Death at Home in Philippines
Published December 25, 2011 | NewsCore

TAGAYTAY CITY, THE PHILIPPINES – A retired U.S. Marine was found beaten to death at his home in The Philippines on Christmas Day, GMA News reported.

The victim was identified as James Thomas Kakara, 61, a U.S. war veteran whose left leg was amputated. He was attacked at his home near Tagaytay City in the northern Cavite province, police said Sunday.

Kakara's body was found in his swimming pool, and police said he was beaten with a lead pipe in the Christmas Eve attack.
read more here

How Mom’s Letter Paved Way for Young Man’s Visit With President

Dec 25, 2011 8:00am
How Mom’s Letter Paved Way for Young Man’s Visit With President

A young man whose mother wrote a letter to President Obama is now scheduled to meet with the president.

Jeremy Carr, 23, has Down syndrome. Carr volunteered with his mother, a Vietnam War veteran, at a road clean-up event in the spring staged by Chapter 862 of the Vietnam Veterans of America. It was one of several veterans volunteer events in which Carr has taken part.

Throughout the morning of the clean-up, he never asked to take a break, didn’t stop to talk about his beloved Pittsburgh Steelers, or his favorite WWE star John Cena, his mother said. He didn’t even ask for anything to eat or drink. He asked his mother only one thing several times during the day, “Mom, will President Barack Obama be proud of me for helping the soldiers?”
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Do not be afraid to hire a veteran

Fear comes from the unknown. Good things can come out of the thing we fear the most. Today is Christmas and we hear the story of how Christ was born. Beginning with the angels trying to calm the nerves as a strange star appeared,

Luke 2:10
New International Version (NIV)
10 But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people.

and then they knew there was nothing to be afraid of. Something good was happening but if the angels didn't reassure them, they may have run away.

The odds of hiring a veteran with PTSD are one out of three. The odds of regretting you did are just about zilch. Why? For starters you have to understand the truth in numbers. With two million veterans coming from from Iraq and Afghanistan, how many of them are causing trouble? Few. How many non-veterans are getting into trouble? More. The thing is, you fear what you don't understand. Good things come out of hiring veterans.

First, the tax break your company gets. Then you have someone not afraid to work hard, put in long hours, think fast on their feet plus able to work as a team on whatever you give them to do. They show up ready to work, without whining and they are grateful to have a job where they don't have to worry about being blown up by a bomb. They are the best type of employee you could ask for. Just as Uncle Sam.

An average person can walk in off the street, appear to be just right for the job, then you discover something horrible happened in their past that has a hold on them. PTSD can hit anyone after a traumatic event, like a car accident or as a victim of a crime. You have no clue when you interview them but it never dawns on you to ask them simply because you've known other people changed by events in their lives but you are not afraid of them. Well, you don't have to fear a veteran any more than you have to fear someone else.

Most need help to heal from where they've been and a good place to start is to give them a job to do. Make them feel needed. Give them a chance to make a living and take care of their families.

PTSD is nothing to be afraid of and I speak of this with experience. I've been married to one with PTSD for 27 years and he's one of the nicest guys you'd ever meet. He came home from Vietnam and worked in construction, for a cable company and then as a public employee. He was on that job for 18 years and was one of the first they'd call in for round the clock snow removal. This is with PTSD. No one ever regretted hiring him.

They have to prove themselves the way any other employee does. So why the hesitation when you can really show you appreciate the fact they were willing to go where few dare and suffer hardships few are willing to do for a job the government hired them to do?


After military service, younger veterans are trained, tested and JOBLESS
By CHRIS CHURCHILL, Business writer
Published 01:35 p.m., Saturday, December 24, 2011

One hundred and ten soldiers from the Fredericksburg-based Company A, 116th Brigade Special Troops Battalion return from deployment in Iraq to the armory building in Fredericksburg, Va. on Sunday, Dec. 18, 2011. (AP Photo/The Free Lance-Star, Reza A. Marvashti)

Natesha Lovell left for Iraq in 2004, the sole woman in her U.S. Army Reserve deployment. She returned safely, but life sincethen hasn't been easy.

The former supply sergeant has been unemployed since 2008, and now finds herself without a home. She crashes at a friend's place in Clifton Park.

Lovell is one of many returning service members who have struggled to find work since returning from overseas. In fact, the unemployment rate among younger veterans is far higher than for their counterparts who didn't serve in the military.

And with a million troops, according to a White House estimate, expected to return home from Iraq and Afghanistan by 2016, veteran unemployment is a problem that is threatening to become a crisis — especially in an economy that is still failing to create work for the millions of Americans who are already jobless.

"A lot of younger soldiers have never held civilian employment," said retired Command Sgt. Maj. Robert Van Pelt of the New York National Guard. "They've never gone out and had to find a job."

According to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate among veterans overall — 7.4 percent in November — is actually below the 8.2 percent rate of overall joblessness, a testament, in part, to veterans' ability to keep work once they have it.

But for veterans from ages 18 to 24, usually looking for a toehold in the labor market, the unemployment rate is a staggering 37.9 percent — more than double the rate for non-veterans in the age group, according to data compiled by the Institute for Veterans and Military Families at Syracuse University.
read more here