Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Homeless veterans worth less than 2 minutes to CNN

Veterans Living on the Street: CNN Reports

By homelessalliance CNN did a short story on Homeless Veterans in Washington, DC, highlighting that post traumatic stress disorder is a contributing factor to homelessness and almost 2000 Iraq War veterans around the country are homeless (according to the ...The Homeless Alliance of WNY - http://homelessalliance.wordpress.com

The video report was 1:59. 2,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans already living on the streets across America joining the older veterans who found no place to call home and all CNN could do was devote less than two minutes to this important issue. At least they did report on that much anyway.

Spc. James Fair wounded in Iraq, protected at home by donation

Here's a story we don't come across too often but it raises and important issue the wounded do need to think about. Aside from a great human interest story of Tyco making this donation thru Homes For Our Troops, the wounded face additional dangers just living at home. It would be great if we were all aware of this.

Rapid Response Home Fire Sprinkler System Protects Iraq War Veteran
July 2, 2008

In an effort to raise awareness about the importance of installing home fire sprinkler systems and to honor America’s service men and women, Tyco Fire & Building Products donated a Rapid Response Home Fire Sprinkler System to a house built in Ross Township, Pa., for veteran Spc. James Fair by Homes for Our Troops.

Homes for Our Troops provides new or renovated homes that are specially adapted for severely wounded military service members at no cost to veterans and their immediate families.

James Fair suffered life-altering injuries in Fallujah, Iraq, in November 2003 while stringing barbed wire around an ammunition supply point. He stepped onto a makeshift enemy bomb, causing an immediate explosion. He lost his hands and sight in both eyes. Shrapnel also severely injured his right leg and caused a traumatic brain injury.

“For soldiers like James Fair, who have been injured so severely, the challenges are great -- especially in regard to house fires where residents have just minutes to safely escape their homes,” said Darren Palmieri, product manager at TFBP. “James deserves to live in a home that is designed to meet his needs and keep his family safe should a fire occur. We are proud that Rapid Response can now protect a courageous young soldier who has selflessly protected our country.”
go here for more
http://www.secprodonline.com/articles/64877/

Homeless veterans face new battle for survival

Homeless veterans face new battle for survival
Story Highlights
More veterans are facing a new enemy on the nation's streets
Veterans make up almost a quarter of homeless population
Homeless rate among veterans expected to rise

By Mike Mount
CNN

(CNN) -- "I can't find the right words to describe when you are homeless," says Iraq war veteran Joseph Jacobo. "You see the end of your life right there. What am I going to do, what am I going to eat?"


War trauma sends many veterans to the streets where they beg for survival.

Jacobo is one of an increasing number of veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who come home to life on the street. The Department of Veterans Affairs is fighting to find them homes.

Veterans make up almost a quarter of the homeless population in the United States. The government says there are as many as 200,000 homeless veterans; the majority served in the Vietnam War. Some served in Korea or even World War II. About 2,000 served in Iraq or Afghanistan.

The VA and several nongovernmental organizations have created programs that address the special needs of today's veterans returning from war. In addition to treating physical and mental injuries, there are career centers and counseling programs. But the VA still expects the homeless rate among the nation's newest veterans to rise because of the violent nature of combat seen in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Officials say many more Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer post-traumatic stress disorder than veterans of previous wars. The government says PTSD is one of the leading causes of homelessness among veterans.

"They come back, and they are having night trauma, they are having difficulty sleeping. They are feeling alienated," says Peter Dougherty, the director of homeless programs for the VA.

The VA says 70 percent of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan saw some form of combat, either through firefights, rocket attacks or the most common strikes on troops -- roadside bomb attacks on their vehicles.


That is three times the rate of combat experienced by Vietnam veterans, according to the VA.

"Because we are convinced, and we know that the earlier the intervention happens, particularly when it is related to PTSD, the better the prognosis is for recovery," Dougherty says.

go here for more
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/07/02/homeless.veterans/index.html
Witness slams 'nightmares' of Army medical system
VA blasted over veterans suicides
Vietnam Vets: Helping Iraq War Trauma



Peter Dougherty knows what he's talking about. So does every other expert who has honestly been working on this since Vietnam veterans came home. There were 1.6 million Vietnam veterans considered to have come from the hot zones of combat despite over a million more considered to have been in relatively safe zones. Out of the 1.6 million, the result was 500,000 diagnosed with PTSD by 1978 according to a study funded by the Disabled American Veterans. By 1986 117,000 committed suicide. Over 300,000 ended up homeless. Thousands of them ended up in prison. As bad as those figures were there were another 148,000 seeking help for PTSD for the first time between 2006-2008 in 18 months alone. This does not include the veterans being diagnosed in between all those years.

For the most of them it was a matter of not knowing what PTSD was. They knew there was something wrong with them but very few knew it's name or the fact there was a treatment for it. It was not until the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan produced news reports of the newest generation of PTSD wounded they began to receive the information through increased outreach efforts. Even many Gulf War veterans were not aware of PTSD.

With a homeless veterans count of these new veterans already at 2,000, studies placing the PTSD wounded at 300,000 along with another 320,000 TBI wounded, we should all be in emergency mode to address this head on. We are not even close to being ready.

The worst part of all of this is that the fact remains as soon as PTSD is treated it stops getting worse. When family members are aware of PTSD, they have a great chance of staying together and coping with the wound affecting the entire family. They also have an opportunity to take a proactive role in being an advocate for their spouse. When it involves the National Guard and Reservists, this is even more important to provide the emotional support they need to seek treatment. This is not happening at the rate it needs to be happening all over the nation.

While National Guard forces are taking a pro-active role developing their own videos like Picking Up the Pieces, the rest of the units are not. We are still receiving reports unit commanders are discouraging their troops from seeking help and still regarding PTSD as a fake illness. All this at a time when they could be saving the lives of their men instead of jeopardizing their lives needlessly along with their families.
Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos

Schofield Soldier in 18 hour standoff ends peacefully

Royal Kunia Standoff Ends Peacefully
Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
July 01, 2008 11:10 AM


UPDATE 5: The wife of a soldier involved in an 18-hour standoff in Royal Kunia says he was being treated for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

No one was hurt and he was taken into police custody this morning.

Moments after residents were given the all clear, right after 11 this morning, the Red Cross closed a shelter some stayed in at nearby Hoaeae Community Park.

Police will give another briefing at 1 p.m.

We'll have much more on the incident throughout the day and later on our evening newscasts.

Military officials have confirmed the man is an active duty Schofield soldier from the 25th infantry.
go here for more
http://kgmb9.com/main/content/view/7825/40/

Group Needs Information for VA Investigation


Group Needs Information for VA Investigation
by: Brandon Friedman
Wed Jul 02, 2008 at 02:55:47 AM EDT
This has gotten pushed by the wayside with all the Clark uproar, but Disability Rights Advocates is working on another investigation of the VA. If you can help them out, please contact them directly. The intro is here, and the full letter they've sent is below the fold.

Disability Rights Advocates is conducting an investigation of the accessibility of VA hospitals and clinics. We would like to hear from you about your experiences at these facilities. If you have a mobility disability, a vision disability, a hearing disability, and/or Traumatic Brain Injury, you are entitled to full access and reasonable accommodations, whether or not your disability is service connected. We want to know if these accommodations are being provided. Please contact us at va.access@gdblegal.com and we can set up a time to talk with you about your experiences.
click above for more

Veteran Suicide Rates Highlight Heroes' Tough Battle at Home

Veteran Suicide Rates Highlight Heroes' Tough Battle at Home

Lee Hill Kavanaugh


The Kansas City Star

Jul 01, 2008

June 29, 2008 - Cara Davis knew her husband was still at war.

In the night, he would yell out his name — Dwayne D. Davis! — followed by his rank and serial number. He'd shout that he would never be taken hostage. Four times he tried to choke her because, in his nightmares, she was al-Qaida.

She knew what she had to do.

As gently as she could, she told him: I think maybe you have that disease, that post-traumatic stress thing. I think maybe you need some help.

"We talked about it," she recalled. He had never told his buddies. "He said he was afraid if he did, the other soldiers would call him a coward."

Finally, the pain was too much.

In December, a year after he got out of the Army, he asked for help. He spent 30 minutes talking with a psychology intern at a Veterans Affairs hospital. He told how he felt edgy and had trouble sleeping. He told about his rage and depression, his fatigue, his difficulty with crowds. He told about keeping a gun under his pillow and carrying a blade everywhere he went.

He had cleared the first hurdle, taken the first step.

But he never took a second.

Instead, two days after his 30th birthday, the Raytown native and Army veteran of four tours of war — two in Iraq, one in Afghanistan, one in Kosovo — became part of a grim litany of veteran suicide statistics.

Each day, 18 veterans kill themselves, according to the latest estimate from the Department of Veterans Affairs. No firm numbers are available, such as breakdowns of veterans' suicides by the decade in which they served. There's no unified nationwide system to track veterans' deaths.

But 18 suicides each day translate to more than 6,500 deaths a year — and 21 percent of all U.S. suicides. Veterans make up about 8 percent of the U.S. population.

Now, with the fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq lasting longer than World War II, the number of troops returning home with some form of mental illnesses is increasing.

On April 22, Sgt. Davis came home after an 80-hour week in an Oklahoma oil field. He'd had car trouble. In a rage, he grabbed a rifle and shot out the windshield of his wife's car outside their Elk City, Okla., home. Then he asked where his handgun was. She had hidden it earlier.

When she looked into her husband's normally crystal-blue eyes, she shuddered. They "just looked black," she said. She ran outside and hid in the backyard bushes. Before police arrived, she heard one shot.

And knew.

Her husband had killed himself.
go here for more
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/10547

Veterans United for Truth Responds to Court Ruling

Editorial Column: Veterans United for Truth Responds to Court Ruling

Bob Handy


Veterans United for Truth

Jul 01, 2008

July 1, 2008 - Recently Federal District Judge Samuel Conti decided in the class action lawsuit in which we (Veterans United For Truth and Veterans for Common Sense) were plaintiffs, that the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) was failing in many cases in providing mental health services to returning veterans. Unfortunately he also decided that he did not have jurisdiction at his level to compel changes in the VA’s procedures.

While we are disappointed with Judge Conti's decision that he lacked jurisdiction, and do not agree that we did not prove the “systemic” nature of these problems, this outcome is far from being all bad. We knew that it was a crap shoot going in, but we were sure that he had the necessary jurisdiction. We also knew that no matter how he decided, the case would most likely end up before the Supreme Court. Of course we had hoped to be defending Judge Conti's decision against an appeal by the DVA; now we will be appealing his decision in the Ninth Circuit.

When we started out, we knew that we were in it for the long haul. We won round one, just by getting the case heard in federal court, since the DVA and the Department of Justice both attempted multiple times to have us disqualified as plaintiffs, and denied that the federal court had any right even to examine DVA procedures and policies..

We lost part of round two. It may be a setback, but it succeeded in large part since Judge Conti’s ruling expressed agreement with much of our complaint. Additionally The DVA has been exposed not only to the Congress, but also to the national and international media, who have stepped up their reporting on the shoddy treatment that the VA has been providing to returning veterans, and to the repeated delay and denial of service by the DVA..

America’s veterans will be forever in the debt of Morrison & Foerster and Disability Rights Advocates, the two law firms that took on the DVA pro bono.
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/10553

Brave New Foundation steps In Their Boots for the troops

From Jim Miller
and the Brave New Foundation team


Over the past several months, as we gathered our staff and began to meet the men and women who have served, we knew that it would be a privilege to be able to share the stories of these servicemembers and their families so that the other 99% of the US population can better understand what is happening to our troops when they return from war.

We wanted to do something different than our usual short videos with this project, so we developed an idea for a LIVE internet-based show and decided to call it In Their Boots to let the audience know they would be hearing the information from the servicemembers' points of view.
The show premieres today, Wednesday July 2nd, at 4pm Pacific/5 Mountain/6 Central/7 Eastern at www.intheirboots.com. The stories are riveting and the show will be broadcast LIVE. You will have the opportunity to hear the stories from these servicemembers, learn about organizations that are helping, and find out how you can help as well.

The show will be broadcast from our brand new studio (it was a beauty parlor just 2 months ago), not quite finished since we are still doing some fundraising, but looking pretty good. Since it is LIVE, we invite you all to join the discussion and become part of webcast history by asking our interview guest a question, live, "on the air."

We are proud of what we have put together and we hope that you all tune in to see this. Please let us know what you think of it as well. And if you miss any part of the episode, be sure to check it out on our site: www.intheirboots.com. We plan on producing a new episode every Wednesday, live at 4pm Pacific.

Caring for Wounded Warriors Act, S. 2921

Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Approves Caring for Wounded Warrior Act Provisions
Published by admin at 8:25 pm under Brain Injury Law, Recent TBI News
On Thursday, the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee approved provisions contained in S. 2921, The Caring for Wounded Warriors Act, S. 2921. BIAA has strongly supported and endorsed this legislation, and several recommendations made by BIAA during the legislative drafting process were incorporated into the bill.
Provisions in the legislation, which was recently introduced by Sen. Clinton (D-NY), would strengthen supports for family caregivers of returning servicemembers with TBI. Specifically, provisions would require two pilot programs to be implemented through the Department of Veterans Affairs, improving the resources available to those caring for returning servicemembers with TBI.

click above for more

Many veterans finding difficulty finding work

Many finding difficulty finding work
07/01/2008, 9:47 am
Andrea Zelinski, sng3@springnet1.com, 217-525-8207
Tyler Carroll uses what he learned in the military every day.
Carroll, a 27-year-old Afghanistan veteran from Rock Island, spent five months carrying out missions like taking control of airfields and capturing top terrorist lieutenants.

Now he's securing crime scenes and arresting troublemakers as a police officer in Burlington, Iowa.

Carroll came home from Afghanistan in 2002 knowing exactly where he wanted to take his career. But many veterans aren't immediately following through after they come home from war, according to a report the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs published in September.

Those who try often have trouble finding quality work.

Here's what the Department of Veterans Affairs found:

18 percent of recently separated servicemen and women are unemployed.
One in four who land a job make less than $10.50 an hour or $21,840 a year.
Those with four-year college degrees earned $9,500 less than their civilian counterparts.


Amidst the already grim look of the U.S. and state economy, job prospects for Iraq War veterans are slimming as many struggle to relate their unique war experience to well-paying jobs, according to the study.

go here for more
http://mywebtimes.com/archives/ottawa/display.php?id=362577

Did Nicholson's departure from VA really matter?

From 2007 and not much has changed but this is an important voice that should be re-heard. I get Google Alerts so this must have come from someone hitting on this piece from last year before Peake replaced Nicholson.

Changing of the Guard
Does VA Secretary Jim Nicholson's departure matter to the men and women fighting the Iraq war? A veteran's view.
By David Botti Newsweek Web Exclusive
Jul 19, 2007
Botti, a former Marine Corps reservist, served as a rifleman in Iraq in 2003. He is now a freelance writer in New York.
On my first trip to a Veterans Affairs hospital for a post-deployment evaluation after returning from Iraq, the doctor said he didn't have time to screen me. He asked a nurse to do it instead.
Halfway through the interview, she suggested I change one of my answers, or I would be spending all day waiting to speak with doctors in the psych department.

I walked out as soon as the evaluation was over, and I never went back. If Ineeded help, I wasn't going to get it there.
It seems little has changed between then and now, except perhaps for the severity of soldiers' injuries inflicted by a more adept and resourceful enemy.

Nicholson's announcement on Tuesday that he would resign as Secretary of Veterans Affairs came as a surprise to most. The political spin storm still managed to get off the ground in no time. Illinois Sen. Barack Obama released a statement saying Nicholson left the VA worse than he found it. White House Press Secretary Tony Snow said the president was grateful forMr. Nicholson's service.

It seemed that those with the most to say were the least affected.

This was in 2004, six months before James Nicholson inherited a Department of Veterans Affairs already strained by the nearly two-year-old war. As a Marine among the first wave of veterans to return from Iraq, I simply figured it was going to take a little while longer for the VA to get its wartime footing.
go here for more
http://www.newsweek.com/id/32946/page/1

Hood CSM: Army tired, undermanned but resolute

When I post about what is going on in Iraq, this is part of what I have a huge problem with. The soldiers are still willing to do their duty no matter how they are treated. They are still willing to lay down their lives no matter what happens at the top of the food chain.

Hood CSM: Army tired, undermanned but resolute

The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 5:59:56 EDT

KILLEEN, Texas — A three-decade Army veteran called a “steel spine” by the defense secretary says he and most other soldiers would prefer never to deploy and fight again because they are tired, undermanned and under-equipped.

“We, the Army, have been rode hard and put up wet,” said Command Sgt. Maj. Neil L. Ciotola, Fort Hood’s senior noncommissioned officer. “We’re catching ourselves coming and going. ... In all honesty, ladies and gentlemen, I and the majority of us in uniform, and those that repeatedly support us are tired.”

Ciotola spoke at the Central Texas-Fort Hood Chapter of the Association of the United States Army where he was given an award for leadership Monday night.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/07/ap_hood_csm_070108/





When it was clear they were sent into Iraq, into the "quagmire" as predicted by Dick Cheney in the 90's when he played the role of Secretary of Defense, they were willing to go and give the administration a chance to prove themselves. They failed and the troops were left to fend for themselves. Given no grandiose plans to accomplish the mission they were sent on, given no back up with diplomatic warfare to engage the Iraqi people to participate, they still did their duty.

When it was clear the claims that Iraq was not a threat to us, they switched mode from fighting against into fighting for the Iraqi people. The Iraqi people however decided they wanted to fight against the troops. Fracture by sectarian inclinations instead of nationalism, old hatred and hunger for revenge, they then turned on each other while trying to kill the troops in their spare time.

When commanders decided that they would pay the people to stop fighting the troops, it seemed to work but no one knows what will happen when soon the money stops flowing from the US and the Iraqi government has not decided they will pay these militias instead.

When pressure was put on the administration to change the plans, yet excuses and demands to continue staying the course, prevented any kind of resolution of the occupation. Yet the troops still were willing to do their duty.

When they came home wounded and were neglected by the system never addressed to take care of their wounds, they were still willing to serve. When no one in Washington was paying attention to their suffering, they were still willing to serve. When the Army study on redeployments proved the fact they would increase the risk of PTSD by 50%, yet they did them anyway, the troops were still willing to do their duty.

Throughout all of these years, these men and women, no matter what was done to them and not done for them, they were still willing to serve. Yet instead of this nation stepping up to force the administration to pay attention to these men and women, they either decided that they would support the administration no matter what, or just ignore it entirely.

We cannot stop the occupation of Iraq anymore than we can accomplish the mission in Afghanistan, the forgotten occupation that should have been the top report since 2001, but what we can do today is make sure they are taken care of. We can make sure they get the rest between deployments that is necessary. We can make sure the National Guard and Reservists do not suffer financially for their lost incomes. We can make sure that when they come home wounded, they are treated with the dignity and respect they have all earned.

The Secretaries of the VA have regarded them as if they do not matter for far too long. James Peake will indicate that the administration has been moving mountains to address PTSD one day and the next he's dismissing the suffering as if they really don't matter. We can make sure that we do not ignore what they claim they are doing and demand proof of it.

While Battlemind, the program they are claiming is all so important, the facts prove the program does not work. If it worked there would not be an increase in the suicides and attempted suicides. Is anyone demanding proof to show how Battlemind is really performing? The media has been reporting on the claims of accomplishments as well as the devastating consequences but none of them have managed to put the two together. Are they paying attention enough? It's doubtful when we pick up a newspaper one day about more suicides one day and the next the administration is being patted on the back for something they claim is happening. We can make sure the media does their job reporting facts instead of just what they are told by people without proof.

There are things we can do for the sake of the troops even if we cannot bring them home. We can bring them home to a nation that actually lives up to being grateful for their willingness to serve no matter what the administration is putting them through. We cannot go on ignoring them. We all want them home as soon as possible but what are we doing to them between now and then and what are we expecting them to come home to?

Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Oakley cares for kids orphaned by plane crash

Oakley cares for kids orphaned by plane crash
Tyche Hendricks,Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writers

Tuesday, July 1, 2008
(06-30) 19:02 PDT Oakley - -- The east Contra Costa County town of Oakley was in mourning Monday for two couples deeply woven into the fabric of the community who died in a single-engine plane crash Saturday near Las Vegas, leaving seven children orphaned.

A U.S. flag flew at half-staff outside City Hall, and black ribbons festooned the "City of Oakley" signs there. The electronic sign board at the town's civic center read: "Our deepest sympathies to the families of Erik & Tanya Nunn and Craig & Michele Wilson."

Nowhere was the grieving greater - or the community response stronger - than in the well-kept subdivision where the two families lived less than a block apart, on Susie Street and Kali Court.

Cars clogged the driveways of both homes along with children's bikes and scooters, and a steady stream of friends and neighbors came and went. The parents and siblings of all four victims had settled in to care for the three Wilson children and the four Nunn kids.

Anne Marie Montes, who lives across from the Wilsons and around the corner from the Nunns, sat stunned on her front stoop. All the families in the neighborhood moved in together when their homes were built about five years ago, she said. The parents visit frequently, and the children play constantly.

click post title for more


How to help
Donations can be made to:
-- The Nunn Children Trust and Wilson Children Trust at Bank of the West, 2195 Main St., Oakley, CA 94561 or call (925) 625-2211.
-- The Children of Craig Wilson Trust Fund, the BART Police Officers Association, P.O. Box 12688, Oakland, CA 94604 or call (510) 464-7182.
E-mail Tyche Hendricks at thendricks@sfchronicle.com.

Corps: Marine who died at Africa base wasn't hazed

Corps: Marine who died at Africa base wasn't hazed
By GENE JOHNSON
The Associated Press
Tuesday, July 1, 2008; 5:16 PM

SEATTLE -- A Marine was not being hazed or abused when he collapsed and died on a base in Africa, but his superiors broke rules when they had him exercise as punishment for slightly injuring another Marine, a commander concluded.

Lance Cpl. Dustin Canham chose to do push-ups and other exercises to avoid having a black mark on his record and his death March 23 was due solely to a heart condition, said Lt. Gen. Samuel T. Helland, commander of U.S. Marine Corps Forces Central Command, in a summary provided to Canham's father.

The Naval Criminal Investigative Service is investigating Canham's death separately, but the Marine report includes some statements other Marines made to NCIS.

Canham, 21, of Lake Stevens, Wash., and a Marine private had been playing catch with a rock that day at the U.S. base in Djibouti, according to the documents. The private told investigators he looked away just before Canham threw the rock, which hit him in the mouth. It chipped his tooth, but the injury did not require medical attention.
click post title for more

Peake still doesn't get it on PTSD

VA SECRETARY PEAKE MINIMIZES PTSD AND MARGINALIZES
VETS WITH DISORDER -- Peake: "It doesn't mean you have
a disorder that is going to be longstanding..." and "...it is not
just a federal responsibility, it is a national responsibility."

VA Secretary James Peake

Although the following article's headline is about VA Secretary Peake's reaction to the New G.I. Bill...the real story of importance is his comments about PTSD.

Peake, very well-trained in public relations, is using what we call the "M&M" strategy, "minimize & marginalize."

When you "M&M" a situation, you try to make a problem appear smaller that it really is (minimize), and then you try to show that those with the problem are really alright because the problem is being taken care of (marginalize).

In the article below, Peake minimized PTSD by saying, "It doesn't mean you have a disorder that is going to be longstanding and problematic for the rest of your life..." The message here is that PTSD is not debilitating...and many Americans will believe this.

He then marginalized PTSD vets by saying, "...it is not just a federal responsibility, it is a national responsibility." This statement was made in reference to private providers stepping in to help PTSD vets because the VA can't handle the load. The message here is, "It's OK. They are being taken care of." But, Peake is wrong. It IS a federal responsibility. When Peake makes it a national responsibility, he turns PTSD veterans into welfare cases, needing to rely on the sympathy of the public instead of the care that the VA should be providing.

A veteran wrote me recently and said, "Peake doesn't have a clue." Wrong! He knows exactly what he's doing. He's trying to sell his "minimize & marginalize" program to the American people.

I hope they see this for what it is...just another way for the government to avoid their responsibility to veterans who come home from war with the unseen wound of PTSD.

For more about veterans and PTSD, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here... http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=ptsd&op=and
Story here... http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0628/p25s34-usmb.html
Story here on VA Watchdog
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/nf08/nfJUN08/nf062808-1.htm


Can anyone in this country wonder why there has been so many problems with our veterans getting the help they need for PTSD with an attitude like this?