Friday, January 11, 2013

Brave Mom had a gun and knew how to use it

First thought on this is BRAVO for this brave Mom and even more kudos for knowing how to hit what she was shooting at. She hit the intruder 5 times with a hand gun. The second thing is owning a gun to defend yourself and your home is not an issue. No one, including non gun owners,  have a problem with that at all. Hardly no one has a problem with hunters or sportsmen. The issue everyone is talking about are assault weapons.

This Mom is the kind of person I've been talking about. She had it and knew how to use it. That is a responsible gun owner.
Gun rights groups say Georgia home invasion proves their point
By Rich Phillips
CNN
January 11, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Last week, Melinda Herman shot an intruder in her Georgia home
She had learned to shoot only two weeks before
Her story has gained the attention of gun rights groups

Loganville, Georgia (CNN) -- This is not a movie. There's no dramatic music in the background. A happy ending, far from a guarantee.

The concern in Donnie Herman's voice was clear as day. So was his stress. With two telephones to his ear, he listened to his wife, Melinda, as she fled into an attic of their Loganville home. With her: Her two 9-year-old children and a loaded .38 revolver.

In the house: An intruder with a crowbar.

On another line was the 911 operator Donnie Herman had called for help. Herman's words to his wife, as he sat helplessly, an hour away from the home, were recorded.

"Stay in the attic," he instructed her, calmly.

"He's in the bedroom," she told him. He repeated the words to the 911 operator. "Shh. Relax," Herman said, trying to calm his wife.

Then he instructed her to do what was fast becoming a realistic possibility.

"Melinda -- if he opens up the door, you shoot him! You understand?"

What happened next has made the Hermans the new faces of the right to bear arms.

Melinda Herman fired a six-shot revolver at the intruder, hitting him five times, in his torso and in his face. Surprisingly, he managed to flee.
read more here

Army failure to screen Afghan workers found to risk US troops

Army failure to screen Afghan workers found to risk US troops
By TONY CAPACCIO
Bloomberg News
Published: January 11, 2013

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Army failed to ensure that Afghan translators were properly screened at the start of the Obama administration's troop surge in Afghanistan, endangering soldiers they worked with, according to the Pentagon's inspector general.

Only 656, or 15 percent, of 4,310 Afghan nationals hired by Columbus, Ohio-based Mission Essential Personnel under a $1.46 billion contract received full counter-intelligence screening in 2009 and 2010, according to a Dec. 7 audit labeled "For Official Use Only."

President Barack Obama increased U.S. troops levels in Afghanistan by 51,000 during 2009 and 2010. The inspector general began an investigation after a linguist hired by Mission Essential Personnel killed two U.S. Army special forces officers and wounded an aide, all of them unarmed, in January 2010.
read more here

Former Staff Sgt. Clinton Romesha to receive Medal of Honor

Hero of COP Keating battle to receive MoH
Army Times
By Michelle Tan
Staff writer
Posted : Friday Jan 11, 2013

A former staff sergeant who helped repel one of the largest, most vicious battles against U.S. forces in Afghanistan will receive the Medal of Honor, the White House announced Friday.

Clinton L. Romesha, 31, will be the fourth living service member to receive the nation’s highest award for valor for actions in Afghanistan or Iraq. Seven other service members have posthumously been awarded the Medal of Honor for their actions in those wars.

Romesha will be awarded Feb. 11 at the White House.

Romesha was a section leader in B Troop, 3rd Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division during the Oct. 3, 2009, attack on Combat Outpost Keating in eastern Afghanistan.

Eight American soldiers were killed and two dozen others wounded in the battle as the troop-sized element fought against an overwhelming enemy force that launched a brazen attack to overrun the COP.

A RARE HONOR

With the announcement of the Medal of Honor for former Staff Sgt. Clinton Romesha, 11 service members — seven of them soldiers — have received the nation’s highest award for valor for actions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The first seven were awarded posthumously.
Spc. Ross McGinnis, Sgt. 1st Class Paul Smith, Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Monsoor and Marine Cpl. Jason Dunham were honored posthumously for their actions in Iraq.
Staff Sgt. Robert Miller, Sgt. 1st Class Jared Monti and Navy Lt. Michael Murphy were honored posthumously for their actions in Afghanistan.
Former Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta is the first living recipient of the Medal of Honor from these wars. Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry and Marine Sgt. Dakota Meyer also received the Medal of Honor. All three men were honored for their actions in Afghanistan.
read more here

Veterans for Common Sense list of things they do

For all the hard work Veterans for Common Sense has done for our veterans, reading about all of it just made me very, very sad. For all they did, the bad numbers went up. Claim backlog, up. Veterans committing suicide have gone up. Military suicides are up. The good news is that more veterans are seeking help for PTSD. Now think about what all of these numbers they list would have been like if they did not fight for veterans.

VCS vs VA
Update

On Monday, January 7, 2013, we lost our bid for the Supreme Court to hear our appeal so no Veteran waits for care or benefits, especially for mental healthcare. Since our landmark lawsuit was filed in July 2007, Veterans for Common Sense generated hundreds of pro-Veteran news articles, more than twenty appearances before Congress, a few trips to the White House, and several productive meetings with top VA leaders in Washington, DC.

Formed in 2002 by Gulf War Veterans raising concerns about a second invasion of Iraq, VCS is a non-profit based in Washington, DC. One of our top concerns raised in March 2003 was a lack of preparedness by VA to handle a tidal wave of new patients and claims due to the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars. We were right. VA failed to plan.

So far, VA has treated more than 834,000 new, first-time Iraq and Afghanistan War Veteran patients. Among those are 445,000 diagnosed with mental health conditions by VA professionals. VA also received more than 750,000 disability claims from recent war veterans. Only half of the PTSD claims are approved by VA. Although that number is low, the percentage has improved substantially since VA published new PTSD regulations in 2010.

Unfortunately, after 11 years of renewed war in Asia, VA still has no plan to make sure our Veterans don't wait for care and benefits. The current wars placed an unprecedented set of new strains on VA, and VA is still catching up with new resources, even as the Iraq and Afghanistan wars wind down.

We are disappointed the Supreme Court did not hear our case. Yet our effort was not in vain, as we exposed many severe problems at VA, and we offered many pragmatic solutions, several of which were adopted. Our suit was joined by Veterans United for Truth, the Vietnam Veterans of America, the National Veterans Legal Services Program, and the American Legion. We thank them for their support.

This update has two sections: VCS Lawsuit Accomplishments, and VA’s Continuing Crisis.

First, Our VCS Lawsuit Accomplishments

Thanks to the efforts of so many volunteers and the help of the law firm Morrison / Foerster in San Francisco, our landmark case prompted many progressive reforms for VA that are improving the lives of Veterans. Although we lost at the Supreme Court, our VCS lawsuit, along with advocacy of other organizations, reporters, legislators, and volunteers, prompted VA and/or Congress take action on several fronts, including the following:

VA Actions

• Suicide Prevention in 2007. In response to our lawsuit, in 2007 VA set up a suicide prevention hotline, saving 25,000 Veterans so far, out of 800,000+ calls and texts placed by distraught Veterans to VA. This is our best accomplishment. Our many thanks to the thousands of current and new mental healthcare providers making a significant difference at VA and in the lives of our Veterans.

• Suicide Prevention in 2012. In August 2012, President Obama increased Veteran suicide prevention funding 50 percent, again, as a result of our unique lawsuit. Unfortunately, thousands of the new VA positions remain vacant, and we hope VA fills them soon as a top priority.

• Suicide Prevention Coordinators. VA hired suicide prevention coordinators for each facility. VA now proactively screens Veterans for suicide risk. This means VA is finally treating mental health conditions as nearly as equal as physical conditions. Let's hope this positive trend continues.

• Appointments. VA issued a first-ever policy where Veterans get mental health appointments in 14 days. Veterans in need of emergency care are now seen right away. Although in 2012 U.S. Senators found VA isn't living up to the standard in all cases, at least VA now has a goal and collects more data on this serious problem.

• PTSD. In January 2009, VCS petitioned VA to rewrite PTSD regulations to reduce the burden on veterans filing claims. In response to our petition, VA issued new PTSD regulations in July 2010. This helps hundreds of thousands of new war Veterans, plus hundreds of thousands from prior wars, obtain VA disability benefits and the free mental healthcare that comes with it.

• TBI. VA issued new TBI regulations in 2012, again, after VCS testified before Congress and raised the issue at meetings in Washington. This helps hundreds of thousands of Veterans obtain VA healthcare and disability benefits for conditions associated with traumatic brain injury.

• Claim Forms. In March 2010, VCS held a press conference called "Fix VA," with Chairman Bob Filner, head of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee, where we highlighted the 26-page form required for veterans to file a claim with VA. In response, VA developed a six page claim form, replacing the unreasonable 26-page form. This new form helps hundreds of thousands of Veterans a year. VCS successfully argued that the long form was an unfair burden on Veterans with TBI and PTSD.

• Suicide Suits. For individual veterans who already completed suicide, our VCS case highlighted the issue and paved the way for their families win their individual cases. Most families of Veterans improperly turned away by VA received out-of-court settlements from VA.

• Suicide Condolence Letters. After a VCS meeting with White House officials in 2011, President Barack Obama began sending condolence letters to families of Veterans who completed suicide in the war zone. With a stroke of a pen, stigma was significantly reduced.

• Lifetime Electronic Records. For discharging service members, DoD and VA will have a seamless, single computerized medical record. This addresses the issues of claims and medical care delayed or denied based on lost military paper records. Although not complete, much progress was made. The sooner this is finished, the more VA can rely on computers instead of paper.

• Computers. VBA has launched the "Veterans Benefits Management System," with the goal of computerizing veterans claims. This should end the current paper-based system, thus ending issues such as shredded and lost claim folders. Although we have reservations on how this is implemented (VBMS slowed to a crawl in December and there is no contingency in the event of failure), the goal of expediting claims is a good idea.

Congressional Actions

• Advocacy. VCS testified before Congress in support of increased funding, and VA's budget soared from $100 billion to $140 billion in the past four years. That helps all Veterans.

• Five Years of Free VA Care. VCS met with then-Senators Obama, Clinton, Bond, Snowe, Collins, and others starting in 2006 to press for free medical care for returning veterans to be extended to five years. Congress finally enacted this extension. This helps 2.5 million Veterans deployed overseas since 9/11, plus all future deployed Veterans.

• In 2010, Congress exempted VA from the "fiscal cliff." Veterans can thank then-Speaker Pelosi for removing VA from the austerity programs proposed by the Tea Party and Republicans in order to preserve tax cuts for the rich. Veterans can rest assured their medical care and disability benefits will continue during these turbulent and unproductive times in Congress.

• In 2011, VCS exposed U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann's Tea Party plan to cut billions of dollars from VA spending on healthcare and disability benefits in order to preserve Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy. After VCS shared Bachmann's plan with the New York Times and newspapers in her home state of Minnesota, she withdrew her outrageous plan.

• Congressional hearings forced VA to make embarrassing admissions such as the Ira Katz e-mails. His e-mails revealed VA’s negligent, disgraceful, and adversarial actions towards Veterans by concealing the suicide statistics. Our supporters in Austin remember the outrage among Veterans and families at the suggestion by a VA psychologist supervisor in Texas that VA avoid PTSD diagnoses due to budget and staffing constraints.

Second, VA’s Continuing Crises

VA remains mired in several crises.

Veterans for Common Sense intends to continue fighting to reform VA so that no veteran waits for VA healthcare or benefits.

We are deeply disappointed the Supreme Court did not hear the urgent plea of suicidal Veterans who currently face delays of months, and often years, seeking VA assistance. No Veteran should ever wait for quality healthcare and disability benefits for physical and mental health conditions.

Although significant improvements were made in some areas within VA, many at the prompting of VCS, the nation’s second largest department remains in deep crisis due to decades of underfunding and a lack of significant Congressional oversight of VA’s $140 billion per year budget. For example, did you know that the Republicans and Democrats only have one professional staffer each at the House Veterans' Affairs Committee's Subcommittee on Disability and Memorial Affairs who performs oversight of VBA's budget of $75 billion per year?

VA’s own statistics provide the greatest indictment of an agency needing reform:

• A shocking 18 Veterans commit suicide every day. This information is from 2006. VA has not released any new information, even though VA promised to do so several times in the past six years. The revelation of this grim fact was possible only due to our VCS lawsuit that forced VA to release e-mails and reports on suicide.

• More than 18,000 Veterans contact VA for suicide prevention each month. The good news is the 810,000 contacts Veterans made with VA's suicide prevention hotline since August 2007. VA has rescued more than 25,000. Imagine how much worse the situation would be if not for dedicated, professional VA staff helping veterans 24/7.

• Last year, the families of nearly 20,000 Veterans were paid disability benefits after the Veterans died. That's a shocking disgrace that so many veterans died while waiting on VA claims.

• More than 1.1 million Veterans still await VA disability claim decisions. VA’s goal is to process all claims within 125 days with an error rate of two percent. However, VA's Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) continues failing:

- 900,000 cases wait an average of nine months for a new or re-opened claim decision, up from 634,000 claims waiting five months for a decision in July 2007. - 250,000 cases wait four more years for an appealed claim decision, up from 160,000 appeals in July 2007.

- VBA’s Aspire reported a 14 percent VBA error rate in 2012. Since VBA's Aspire error rate is new, there is no comparison from 2007.

- VA’s Office of the Inspector General reported a 30 percent VBA error rate in 2012.

These error rate reports for each VBA Regional Office generated by VA's OIG began under the Obama Administration in 2009. Note: There has been a significant improvement in PTSD claim errors, and that is attributed by VA's OIG to VA's new PTSD regulations implemented in 2010.

• VA did not fully implement the Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention Act.

Conclusion and Next Steps

The bottom line is that VA continues making substantial improvements, many prompted by the VCS lawsuit, news coverage, and Congressional action. However, VA still has a long way to go so that no Veteran is improperly delayed or denied earned healthcare and benefits. In addition to VA's notorious claim processing disaster, and VA's lack of publicly available suicide research and statistics, VA's other major scandal not addressed by the VCS lawsuit is VA's continuing failure to provide healthcare and disability benefits for Gulf War, Afghanistan War, and Iraq War Veterans who are sick and disabled due to toxic exposures.

With the Iraq War nearly over (about 1,500 troops remain), and with plans to reduce troops in Afghanistan (about 60,000 remain), our attention must focus on reforming VA over the long-term. Demand for care and benefits will continue increasing for decades among the current generation of war Veterans, with an estimated cost of $1 trillion over the next 40 years. And we must also care for all prior Veterans of peace and war who use VA.

Our warmest thank you to our foundation sponsors, donors, staff, volunteers, and supporters for your loyal assistance during the past six years as we embarked on a bold legal effort to improve Veterans' lives by reforming a beleaguered VA. We prompted VA to improve, and VA saved many lives that otherwise may have been lost due to undiagnosed and untreated mental health conditions.

As always, thank you for supporting Veterans for Common Sense.

P.S. VCS is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization and your contributions are tax-deductible.

We need your support to keep up our work

Former Marines share dramatically different stances on gun violence

It is a good thing to read this. What exactly do they think the words "well regulated" mean?

Former Marines share dramatically different stances on gun violence
By Christina Zdanowicz
CNN
January 10, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Former Marine says he will not register his guns even if a federal law is passed
Marine's open letter goes viral online; draws fiery responses from CNN commenters
Another former Marine responds to Joshua Boston's letter with a countering view
CNN asks both men the same questions to explain their opposing views

(CNN) -- "No ma'am ... I will not register my weapons."

These passionate words from a former Marine sparked an insatiable conversation on CNN.com.

Since Joshua Boston posted an open letter to U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-California, dismissing stricter gun control, on CNN iReport, his commentary has received more than 1 million views, almost 30,000 comments and even a response from Feinstein's office.

But one response stood out from the rest -- a reaction from another former Marine addressed directly to Boston. Nicolas DiOrio called Boston's letter an "embarrassment to those who've served."

The two views on gun control were as different as the photos adorning the letters, Boston wielding a firearm and DiOrio pointing a video camera.

Prompted by the firestorm of discussion the two have sparked, we interviewed both men with the same set of questions to further explain their opposing views on gun control.
read more here


I own a house so I have property I want to defend and right now the threat to my property are moles. Can I go out and buy land mines to get rid of them? Nope. There are regulations on what I can and cannot do.

I am also a total klutz, which is one of the reasons I do not drive a motorcycle but love to ride on the back of my husband's Harley. I don't want to hurt anyone else because I am not good at something. For the same reason, I don't want a gun in my hands. I am not capable of shooting straight and I don't want to worry about aiming at something but hit something or someone else. I know my own limits.

Unfortunately, too many others do not know theirs.

While it is easy to assume you can hit what you aim at and will be able to hit a person instead of a paper target, do you really know for sure if you can? Are you really that good at it? What if you hit someone with a stray bullet? So many questions and not enough people asking them. The question gnawing at me right now is arming teachers with handguns to go against assault weapons. Does this make sense to anyone? Really?

No one has explained why they should have the right to own an assault weapon. No one has explained why they should have the right to walk into a gun show and buy whatever they want to have with no background check. No one has explained why they have the right to buy as many bullets and fill ammunition clips with whatever they want without even having to prove they are a license gun owner in the first place. Yep, they can order bullets online. They are easier to get than the guns even though the gun itself cannot kill without bullets.

The NRA wants the conversation simplified so they get more money for making the gun manufactures richer making sure you're afraid. If they give you time to think without fear, you won't need them anymore.

The cops on our streets that have to deal with these shootings said that if there were more guns involved in an assault, they wouldn't have time to figure out if you were the "good guy" with the gun the NRA talked about or the "bad guy with a gun" because all they have time to do is blink, see a gun and fire. They know people are being shot and someone is shooting, so that makes you a target too.

Still, in all of this, assault weapons should be in the hands of the people trained to use them. SWAT and the Military including the National Guards that used to be called Militia.