Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Canadian Court links soldier's MS to post-traumatic stress


Troy Fleece For The National Post
The Federal Court ruled Dennis Patterson should receive a military pension for the multiple sclerosis he claims was caused by post-traumatic stress he suffered in the military.



Court links soldier's MS to post-traumatic stress
Veteran should receive pension for illness: ruling

Tom Blackwell, National Post
Published: Tuesday, September 08, 2009


A recent court ruling has raised unusual new concerns about the post-traumatic stress that afflicts a growing number of Canadian soldiers, concluding that such anxiety may have helped cause multiple sclerosis in an air force veteran.

The Federal Court said a review board should reconsider granting Dennis Patterson -- who flew missions to such hot spots as Bosnia, Somalia and Rwanda -- a pension for his MS, given the possible link to on-the-job stress. Such pensions are meant for injuries or diseases triggered by military duty, much like the benefits awarded by civilian workers' compensation boards address workplace injury.

Multiple sclerosis is usually considered a chronic illness and the neurological disorder's exact causes remain somewhat of a mystery, but experts say stress can at least spark individual attacks or make symptoms seem more intense.

In Mr. Patterson's case, the "uncontradicted" medical evidence was that post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) actually prompted or exacerbated the MS, Justice Russel Zinn of the Federal Court ruled recently.
read more here
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=1970275

Son in Fight of Alexis Arguello's Life

Son in Fight of Alexis Arguello's Life
Posted Aug 31, 2009 6:00AM By Lisa Olson (RSS feed)

Filed Under: FanHouse Exclusive


More than eight weeks have passed since boxing legend Alexis Arguello allegedly shot himself in the chest with a 9mm pistol. It was a suicide, declared Nicaraguan government officials, and they closed the case almost as quickly as they shut his casket.

But in an exclusive interview with FanHouse, Alexis Arguello, Jr., the son of the Hall of Fame great, says he plans to fight the government's findings and prove that his father was the victim of foul play.

"This was not a suicide. My dad had been through so much in his life, but he did not kill himself," the younger Arguello (pictured above in the black shirt) says. "My dad had been through three failed marriages, alcoholism, crack, the worst things someone could go through. But he would not do this."
read more here
Son in Fight of Alexis Arguello Life

Demand surges for critical skills

Demand surges for critical skills
By STEPHEN LOSEY
September 07, 2009
Over the next three years, the Veterans Affairs Department will need to hire tens of thousands of additional doctors, nurses and other medical specialists to help soldiers wounded and traumatized in war.
At the Homeland Security Department, stepped-up enforcement of immigration laws will require hundreds of new attorneys to help prosecute cases.
And at the State Department, a growing presence overseas will require thousands of new Foreign Service officers, many of whom will have to speak Arabic, Chinese and Farsi.
Those and other expanding missions across the government — combined with the loss of large numbers of employees expected to retire in coming years — mean agencies will have to hire 273,000 employees to fill critical jobs over the next three years, according to a study released last week by the Partnership for Public Service. Medical, security, law enforcement, legal and administrative jobs will be some of the most in-demand positions, the study said.
read more here
http://www.federaltimes.com/index.php?S=4265824

Florida GOP chair to let his children watch Obama speech

Florida GOP chair to let his children watch Obama speech
By Zack Stein @ September 7, 2009
From ABC News

The most outspoken opponent to President Obama's speech to schoolchildren no longer objects to the address.


Last week, Jim Greer issued a statement accusing the president of trying to "indoctrinate America's children to his socialist agenda." Now that he's read what the president plans to say, the Florida GOP chairman says he'll let his own kids watch.

"It's a good speech," Greer said. "It encourages kids to stay in school and the importance of education."

Greer says he has no regrets about what he said last week, criticizing lesson plans that called for teachers to ask how students can "help" the president.
read more here
http://wdbo.com/localnews/2009/09/florida-gop-chair-to-let-his-c.html

Monday, September 7, 2009

Teen from Windermere FL with Sept. 11 monument dream

Sept. 11 Steel Forms Heart of Far-Flung Memorials


By MICHAEL WILSON
Published: September 6, 2009

When Jeff Cox, a 15-year-old candidate for the rank of Eagle Scout in Windermere, Fla., approached the small town’s mayor with park improvement ideas to help earn a badge, the mayor informed him that those projects were already covered.

“He came back and said, ‘Would the town like a memorial if I can get World Trade Center steel?’ ” Mayor Gary Bruhn said. “I was stunned. I said, ‘Son, the town would be elated to have something like that.’ He said, ‘I think I need the town’s support. I don’t think they’re going to just give it to me.’”

No, they would not — but close. As the anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, approaches on Friday, pieces of the World Trade Center rubble from that day have never been more accessible. A new campaign is under way to speed up the process and increase the volume of giving away pieces of steel big and small from the debris.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the steel, will invite police and fire departments and mayors and other leaders of cities and towns throughout the country to ask for pieces for memorials. The Port Authority has filled about 25 requests in the last year, and has about a dozen more pending. In recent weeks, trucks have hauled twisted steel columns that weigh hundreds of pounds to York, Pa., and Westerville, Ohio. A smaller piece was shipped to the Air Defense offices of the United States Air Force in Rome, N.Y.
read more here
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/07/nyregion/07steel.html?_r=1&ref=nyregion

AARP scolds Ginny Brown-Waite for 'misstatements' on health care reforms

AARP scolds Ginny Brown-Waite for 'misstatements' on health care reforms
By John Frank, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Sunday, September 6, 2009


BROOKSVILLE — The AARP has sent a scathing letter to U.S. Rep. Ginny Brown-Waite, criticizing her for promoting mistruths in the debate over health care reform.

"On such a critical issues, there should be little or no room for misstatements … that frighten vulnerable older Floridians or cloud this important debate with misconceptions," wrote Lori Parham, the Florida director for the 40 million-member advocacy group.

The three-page letter, faxed to Brown-Waite's office Tuesday, first thanked her for "putting principle ahead of partisanship" when she corrected myths about end-of-life counseling in an August interview with an Orlando radio station.

But it then proceeded to scold the Brooksville Republican for misrepresenting numerous elements of House Bill 3200 in a flier labeled "Ginny's Prescription," which was distributed at her August town hall meeting on health care. Brown-Waite voted against the bill as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, which drafted the legislation.

The congresswoman's flier warns of spending cuts to Medicare and Medicare Advantage and invokes the concept of rationing, a persistent, yet misstated, scare tactic employed by opponents.
read more here
AARP scolds Ginny Brown-Waite






Veterans Issues



2007-2008 In 2007-2008 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave Representative Brown-Waite a grade of B.

2006 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 66 percent in 2006.

2006 In 2006 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave Representative Brown-Waite a grade of C.

2006 Representative Brown-Waite sponsored or co-sponsored 86 percent of the legislation favored by the The Retired Enlisted Association in 2006.

2005 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 0 percent in 2005.

2004 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 0 percent in 2004.

2004 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the The Retired Enlisted Association 33 percent in 2004.

2003-2004 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the Vietnam Veterans of America 50 percent in 2003-2004.

2003 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the American Veterans 100 percent in 2003.

2003 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 50 percent in 2003.

2003 Representative Brown-Waite supported the interests of the The American Legion 80 percent in 2003.
Veterans Issues

Orlando soldier Sgt. Randy M. Haney killed in Afghanistan


Sgt. Randy M. Haney, of Orlando, was killed in Afghanistan on September 6, 2009. (U.S. Department of Defense / September 7, 2009)


Orlando soldier Sgt. Randy M. Haney killed in Afghanistan
Susan Jacobson

Sentinel Staff Writer
An Orlando soldier has been killed in the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. Department of Defense announced today.

Sgt. Randy M. Haney, 27, died Sunday in Nangarhar of wounds suffered when his unit was attacked with small arms and rocket-propelled grenade fire.

He was assigned to the 2nd Special Troops Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Carson, Colo., as a military police officer.

read more hereOrlando soldier Sgt. Randy M. Haney killed in Afghanistan

Deadly Infection Almost Destroys Woman's Face

You need to take infections seriously. I am prone to sinus infections. It got to the point whenever I caught a cold, I was ready to make an appointment for the infection I knew would surely follow. Naturally my body decided to play a dirty trick on me and decided that it would no long attack the same part of my sinuses. It decided to hide behind my eyes.

One morning I was shocked when I felt a pop and then my eyes went out of control widely moving all over to the point when I was sure I had just had a stroke. It was impossible to get up out of bed until it settled down enough. I called the doctor and after tests, he told me it was an infection behind my eyes.

Do not put off going to get medical care if you have an infection. Take this lesson from this woman and what happened to her seriously.

Deadly Infection Almost Destroys Woman's Face
By Ashley Neglia

If treated early, a routine sinus infection may cause uncomfortable pressure, nasal congestion and often makes a patient feel generally miserable. For the most part, however, sinus infections don't leave people near-death, unless, of course, you happen to be Sue Carlisle.

It was October 2006, and Carlisle was suffering from the symptoms of a sinus infection. The 49-year-old had experienced similar infections in the past and assumed that the steroids she had been previously prescribed would be enough to get her back on her feet. However, when she went to the doctor, the diagnosis was more dire than she ever imagined. Carlisle's face was infected with mucormycosis, a rare and deadly infection that can affect the sinuses, brain or lungs, reports ABC News.

Click below to watch an interview with Sue Carlisle.
Video courtesy of ABC News.
go here for more and video
Deadly Infection Almost Destroys Womans Face

Soldier dies for health insurance in Afghanistan

Spc. Gregory J. Missman was killed in Afghansitan on July 8, 2009. He had already been in the military and went to work for a private company but was let go of. He was worried about health insurance for his family. With little prospect of finding a job, he re-enlisted to provide for his family. He was killed a month later. Does anyone want to add this to their side of the debate?

Killed after 1 month in combat 2:18
An Ohio man who joined the Army to get heatlh insurance dies in combat. CNN's Jim Acosta reports.


If video is not working here is the link, check back later
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/politics/2009/09/07/acosta.soldier.sacrifice.cnn

Orlando Interfaith effort brings students to aid of homeless

As a Chaplain, as an American, as a resident of the area, this story is a true blessing and shows what people can do when they come together for the greater good.

Interfaith effort brings students to aid of homeless

By Jeff Kunerth

Sentinel Staff Writer

10:18 p.m. EDT, September 6, 2009


Inside the front door of the Masjid Al-Haq mosque on Orlando's Central Boulevard were shoes, dozens and dozens of shoes, removed by the visitors inside. Running shoes, dress shoes, sandals, high heels, flip-flops, Skechers, Nikes and Adidas.

Who could tell which were Christian shoes and which were Muslim shoes and which were Jewish shoes?

In the back room of the mosque was another group of shoes, laid out in orderly rows on a silver tarp. Dress shoes, running shoes, flip-flops, high heels, sandals and children's shoes.

Who could tell which shoes would fit the feet of the homeless men, women and children waiting in line outside on Terry Street?

On Sunday morning, the categories by which people are divided -- homeless, homeowner, working, unemployed, Muslim, Jew, evangelical -- did not matter.

It didn't matter to the members of the Muslim Student Association, the Hillel UCF Jewish organization or the youth group from Northland, A Church Distributed, who participated in the interfaith event to help the homeless.

"It's a true testament against all the stereotypes. We all want to better ourselves and better other people's lives," said Nadine Abu-Jubara, 21, a Muslim graduate of the University of Central Florida.

And it didn't matter to the people in need standing in line outside the mosque for the food, toiletries, socks and shoes. It didn't matter to the woman in gold high-tops and the Baby Girl tank top, or the guy on the bike with a garbage bag for a seat, or tall, lean Tony Pearce, who was homeless himself not too long ago.

"I think it's beautiful. It's really beautiful that all these denominations can come together and do something," said Pearce, 57.
read more here
Interfaith effort brings students to aid of homeless

Picher Oklahoma toxic town

NBC explores 'toxic town'; residents paid to pack and leave

Picher, Oklahoma. Twenty-five years from now, few will even remember it existed.
Surrounded on all sides by toxic mining gravel, its residents plagued by cancer and birth defects, the very ground that once supported busy roads crumbling under-foot, the U.S. government four years ago began buying residents out of their homes, if only they'd go elsewhere.

Soon, the town's electricity will be disconnected, leaving a mere few stragglers behind in what was once a picture of the American dream.

NBC correspondent Janet Shamlain visited recently and explored the town, taking time to speak with one of its final holdouts.

The story is a tragic example of how a lack of care for one's environment can literally destroy a place and the lives of many who inhabit it.

-- Stephen C. Webster

This video is from NBC News, broadcast Sunday, Sept 6, 2009.
go here for video
NBC explores toxic town

US Army seeks to stem suicides

US Army seeks to stem suicides

By Jane O'Brien
Washington DC



Half a million soldiers are being asked to take part in the biggest ever investigation into the number of suicides in the US armed forces.

Last year, 143 soldiers killed themselves and there were 113 suicides in the other armed services - the highest number since records began 30 years ago.

Already this year there have been more than 100 reported suicides among soldiers on active duty.

During the study, set to take three years, new recruits will be asked for personal information that will be used for psychological assessments.

Researchers will also interview serving soldiers. Some will be asked to provide saliva and blood samples to try to establish whether there is a genetic reason why some people are more likely than others to take their own lives.
read more here
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8227931.stm

Thousands help raise funds for wounded warriors

This is a good story about showing up to support the men and women we now call "Veteran" and well worth the read. What I want to point out is what a Vietnam Vet had to say about how glad he is "these kids are getting this."


Jim Reistroffer was sent to Vietnam. It cannot be more clear than that. He was sent. He did not say, "Hey why don't we go to Vietnam and fight a war." The nation decided that. While the rest of the people back home fought over the justification of it, his life was on the line. When you read how he was assigned to be a "clerk typist" that was the way it was in Vietnam. You had a job to do to support the structure and that was what your MOS, Military Occupational Specialty. That job could take a few hours a day to perform. The rest of the time, you were with everyone else, doing sweeps, pulling bunker guard duty and whatever else it took to stay alive. Imagine an occupation when part of your job is staying alive if you think you have a hard job to do. Adds a little stress. Doesn't it? Add in bombs and people trying to kill you and your friends. You never knew who was the enemy and who were your supporters among the locals.

Then imagine coming home and the same thing is going on. Instead of dodging bombs and bullets, you had to dodge the memories of them. When it came to your own people, again, you did not know who was the enemy any more than you knew who were your supporters. Even within your own family you'd hear them talk about how it was all a waste of time and money, while you were thinking of friends no longer here, because they died there. You kept quiet. No one considered anything beyond gut reactions into the fact that no one was coming up with any plans to "win" it. It was just allowed to go on and on as the lives were lost and limbs were blown off. You were a stranger in your own town. You were not the same. War changed you from civilian to veteran and you became a member of a minority group few others understood.

We wrote off the Vietnam veterans and wanted to forget all about all the years. We wanted to forget about the lives lost and about the wounded veterans. We told them to just get over it. We basically gave up on them. The truth is, no matter how badly they were treated, they didn't give up on us. They knew within their hearts that if they could help us to understand that combat veterans never really leave war all the way, we would do something about it. They still believed in us.

This faith in the American people did not end when monuments were built and they were suddenly invited to walk in parades. They fought to make sure the unseen wounds were tended to. They fought for treatment and compensation of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, a plague every other generation suffered in silence with. They fought for all veterans knowing this price should never be forgotten or hidden.

While they remembered how badly they were treated, they are grateful this new generation is getting what they never did. As the VA and new service groups form using the latest technology to support them, the Vietnam veterans are yet again pushed back and forgotten about. The new groups don't want them in just as the older groups didn't want them in when they came home. Yet what do they do in return? They open their arms for all veterans and stand with them.

They join groups like the Patriot Guard Riders, Rolling Thunder, Vietnam Veterans of America, take the leadership rolls of the DAV, the VFW, the American Legion and Nam Knights, which was founded by a Vietnam veteran and law enforcement officer. They took on filling gaps in all aspects of society like the International Fellowship of Chaplains, founded by a Marine Vietnam veteran and law enforcement officer. Point Man Ministries also begun by a Vietnam veteran.

All they did ended up helping every single law enforcement and firefighter. They helped every civilian and most of us never even understand where this help came from. When it comes to surviving trauma, what we know as PTSD, any help we receive was because they fought for it. They lobbied congress for research and treatment as well as have it recognized as war born disability and be compensated for it. Because of them, there are a lot fewer veterans unable to work because of their service, abandoned by the nation who sent them. Think of how bad it would all be for the newer veterans had they not accomplished what they did and then think about the people across this nation without being treated after traumatic events in our own lives.

The next time there is a tornado or flood or hurricane and people show up to help, this is because of them. Crisis responders were born from their efforts. Trauma teams rushing to help were because of what they started. They came home and fought for themselves along with everyone else, including the people who took out their anger over Vietnam out on them.

They are still standing by the side of the people of this country while most of us still ignore all they did in spite of what we did not do for them.


Thousands help raise funds for wounded warriors
by Thomas Geyer

Jake and Hugh Pries sat with their families Saturday at Davenport's LeClaire Park waiting for the concert to raise funds for wounded warriors to begin.

Jake Pries already has served a tour of duty in Afghanistan with the Army National Guard 834 Combat Engineers. His father, Hugh, a retired Army colonel, served a year in Iraq in 2007-2008 when he was all of 59.

"We're here to listen to good music and support the troops," Hugh Pries said.

"There was no way we weren't going to show up for this," Jake Pries said.

Both appreciated the fact that contemporary Christian singer and songwriter Michael W. Smith was on the headline.

"I've listened to him on the radio," Jake Pries said.

More than 6,000 people, nearly all packing lawn chairs and quilts were estimated to have gone through the gates for the concert.

For Jim Reistroffer, of Davenport, the night was special in another way. He served in the Army during Vietnam. He was sent over in 1967 and spent 18 months in country.

When he came home, it was a completely different atmosphere. He wanted to get his uniform off as fast as he could for his own protection.

"I went over as a clerk-typist, and they assigned me to a gunship," he said. "When I came home, we didn't have anything like this. Nobody supported us. We were spit on and called baby killers.

"I'm happy these kids are getting this."
read more here
Thousands help raise funds for wounded warriors

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Some don't rest on Labor Day

by
Chaplain Kathie

Tomorrow is Labor Day, but as we go about enjoying the day off, for those with a job, there are some who never get a day off. They work even longer hours than I do. They are working right now in Iraq and Afghanistan. They are the men and women in the military, Soldiers, Marines, Sailors, Airmen, regular military, National Guards and Reservists. Say what you will about the necessity of Iraq and now even Afghanistan, but you cannot honestly deny these men and women serve for the good of the country, no matter if the county's leadership is right or wrong, they serve for us.

They accept the risk and expect the best out of us in return, but we've fallen so far from living up to their expectations that I don't know how we'll ever deliver on what they need from us. Some in this country cannot seem to be interested in any of them, so, since this is a slow news day, let's try to personalize it.

You live all your life knowing what you want to do for a living. You read everything you can about it. You plan for it. Your entire life is dedicated to doing it. You train for it. You dress for it. You adapt to all of your co-workers and find some friends there. The entire company begins to feel more like a family soon after. While on your job, you have to travel away from your family and friends, your favorite places, and end up in some strange place where you have to learn all kinds of local customs. You have a dangerous job, but you knew that from the start. It's a job that has to be done and you believe with all your heart it's what you were meant to do.

In the process of doing your job, some of your friends get hurt on the job. You see them being carried away and from that second on, you always think of them, wondering how they are, where they are and how they are doing. You also wonder if you'll be next. Then it happens. You ended up being carried away. You think it's just a small injury that can be taken care of and then you can go back to work. You find out, there was another injury that came with it and you'd never be able to do your job again or any other job. All you ever wanted to do was what you were doing. It was going to be your career for the rest of your life. Now, it's all gone.

This is what happens when they are in the military and end up wounded by catastrophic wounds preventing them from staying in the military or working any other job. In the civilian world, you file a workman's comp claim and get social security disability. Sure you have to wait but your medical needs are taken care of under workman's comp and your medical insurance. In the military, the DOD takes care of everything until you are discharged. After all, they don't keep you on their books forever. Then you are trapped waiting in the between world of soldier and civilian, DOD and VA.

Not only do you have to wait for the checks to pick up and catch up to you, you have to wonder what you're supposed to do with the rest of your life when this was all you ever wanted to do. You're also unemployed.

The rest of us have that same problem. We know our jobs can end at any time and that is really frightening. We know our family needs that paycheck and we worry about when we cannot provide for them. Now that it is on a more personal level, think about what it's like knowing you did what you did for the country.

Tomorrow as you go off shopping or taking it easy for the day, think about them without a day off so far away from home and then make them a promise that from tomorrow on, you'll try to pay attention to what's happening to them while they are in Iraq and Afghanistan and what happens to them when they come home needing us for a change. While we worry about losing our jobs because of cut backs and closures, they have to worry about losing their jobs because they were wounded while doing it.

Factory employees left without healthcare while company still took funds

If you still think that you want the government out of your way when it comes to health insurance, think of this. You go to work, you see deductions coming out of your pay for your premiums, believe you have coverage, then find out, you don't have it. We hear all the time people saying that people without coverage have only themselves to blame, but never do they mention people like these factory workers, or people with coverage but end up having supposedly covered treatment denied. I really hope you never find out you trusted the wrong people with your life because this is not a matter of deciding your own health, it's about greedy companies deciding who gets to pay and who gets denied.


McCain campaign-stop factory ceases paying health premiums, tells no one
By Daniel Tencer

Published: September 6, 2009
Updated 29 minutes ago


When then-presidential candidate John McCain declared Pennsylvania’s Turbine Airfoil Designs an example of “both the opportunities and the challenges that face our manufacturing base,” he probably had little inkling that one of those “challenges” would be the company’s decision to stop paying the premiums on its employees’ health care — without telling the employees.

Until they received a letter from Capital BlueCross in March of this year informing them that their insurance had been canceled, employees at the aircraft parts manufacturer in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, thought their insurance policies were valid, because their insurance cards continued to be accepted.

But, in fact, TAD had stopped paying health insurance premiums in October, 2008, even as employees continued to see health premiums deducted from their paychecks.
read more here
McCain campaign stop factory ceases paying health premiums

Man shoots 4 family members, then himself

Police: Man shoots 4 family members, then himself
Story Highlights
Dennis Carter Sr. killed his estranged wife, their son and grandson, police say

Police say he also shot his pregnant daughter-in-law, who is in critical condition

Carter drove away, then shot himself to death as police pursued, authorities say

Sheriff's office says Carter had record of domestic violence

(CNN) -- A man shot his estranged wife to death, along with their son and grandson, before turning the gun on himself as police closed in, authorities in Livingston Parish, Louisiana, said Sunday.


Police say Dennis Carter Sr. shot four family members, three fatally, before turning the gun on himself.

Dennis Carter Sr., 50, also shot and critically injured his pregnant daughter-in-law, the parish sheriff's office said in a statement. The shootings occurred Saturday night in the town of Holden, Louisiana.
read more here
http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/09/06/louisiana.shootings/index.html

In Remembrance CD to help USA Cares

Local talent contributes to CD dedicated to military families

By Scott DeSmit sdesmit@batavianews.com
Saturday, September 5, 2009 2:23 AM EDT
Thaddeus Nauden Jr. wasn't sure it would come to this.

After countless hours in the studio, on the phone, on the computer and out of his mind at times, his project, three years in the making, is finished and ready for release.

In Remembrance, a CD collection of 10 songs plus a hidden bonus track is scheduled for national release Tuesday, appropriately enough three days before the anniversary of the events that gave impetus to the project.

The CD, which includes an array of local and national talent, is dedicated to the memory of those who "served and suffered" in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Proceeds benefit USA Cares, a non-profit agency that supports post-9/11 military families with money and advocacy.

"There were times that I thought this project would never get done," said Nauden, 36. "But I worked with some of the best up-and-coming artists and now we are eagerly awaiting its release."

Nauden is president of Stage Recordings & Publishing, which he created in 2002 and incorporated in May 2008.

In Remembrance is the company's first major project and one that Nauden hopes will raise $1 million for USA Cares.

"When Thaddeus first came to us, we were ecstatic," said retired Navy Commander Bill Nelson, executive director of USA Cares. "Our caseload at USA Cares has been going up, up up and like anyone else, we're struggling to keep up. Thaddeus came out of the clear blue Western New York skies and to have him tell us he wants to raise $1 million, it just humbles us."
read more here
http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/articles/2009/09/05/news/5918622.txt

Sgt. Jared C. Monti of Raynham MA to receive Medal of Honor posthumously

He could not leave a comrade behind
Sgt. Jared C. Monti of Raynham, who braved fatal fire in Afghanistan, will receive the nation’s highest honor

By Bryan Bender
Globe Staff

The sound of feet shuffling in the woods, high on a ridge in remote Afghanistan, was the only warning that Sergeant Jared C. Monti and the 15 men under his command were about to be attacked. Before they could even react, they were bombarded with rocket-propelled grenades and machine-gun fire.

The ambush by mountain tribesmen allied with the Taliban came so suddenly and with such ferocity that some members of Monti’s unit “had their weapons literally shot out of their hands,’’ according to an Army report.

Monti, a 30-year-old staff sergeant from Raynham, shouted orders and radioed for support as he found cover behind some large rocks. An officer a few miles away asked whether he could pinpoint the enemy’s position.

“Sir, I can’t give you a better read or I’m gonna eat an RPG,’’ Monti replied.

But later, when one of his men was wounded and lying in the open, Monti braved intense fire to try to rescue him - not once, but three times. It cost him his life.

Three years later, after an Army review of Monti’s actions that day, President Obama will award him the Medal of Honor, the highest recognition for valor in the US military. When Monti’s parents, Paul and Janet, accept the award in a White House ceremony on Sept. 17, it will be only the sixth time the Medal of Honor has been awarded since Sept. 11, 2001, and the first time someone from Massachusetts has earned it since the Vietnam War.




read more here
He could not leave a comrade behind

UK Guardian missed point of dying Marine's picture

It's not about sanitizing anything. It's about grabbing headlines no matter who gets hurt. You really have to wonder if any of the people making the decision to publish this picture ever wondered if it was their own family member. What would they want in the last second of their life especially if the death was like this? The key word is "want" and that is exactly what they took away from the Bernard family. It should have been up to them and what they wanted.

Much like the fallen in flag draped coffins, the families are allowed to make their own decision about media coverage or not and that is as it should be. We can respect that when the coffin does not show the face but we cannot respect that when it is in the last second of their lives?

I've spent over half my life looking at pictures of wounded from war and graphic pictures of death. The point is there have been a lot fewer ones of the dead than the living wounded. There is a reason for this. It's not that photographers in the past did not witness them dying. It's because they had enough respect in that moment to not take the picture of them. There were many photographers in Vietnam but most of the photographs I've seen were of wounded and men helping the wounded. Those were powerful images. The war was not sanitized but they had deeply rooted ethics.

The debate is over publishing the photo or not, but you have to wonder why it was taken in the first place. What was in Julie Jacobson's mind? She said it was to show "sacrifice and the bravery of those fighting in Afghanistan" but while it shows sacrifice as high as it can get, it does not show respect for the life gone because he was brave.

Would she want some photographer to take a picture of the last moments of a family member of her's? Would she want the right to decide if the picture was ever seen or not? Above all, would she want someone thinking the death of someone she loved would make a great picture? That's the point. She was not exactly a stranger to his unit. She was with them. She must have known him even slightly. Did it occur to her that he had a family and that family would have to see that picture? Did it enter into her mind that photo would be engrained in their minds for the rest of their lives? Did it enter into her mind that as they stand at the cemetery, in front of the flag draped coffin, they will see the way he died and the fact that as he was dying, someone was taking a picture?

The debate about publishing it or not wouldn't have happened if she thought about what she was doing while he was dying.


Pictures of dying marine bring war home to America
Angry debate in US as agency releases picture of dying marine in Afghanistan

Gaby Hinsliff, political editor The Observer, Sunday 6 September 2009
It is a graphic image of the harsh realities of war: the fatally wounded young marine lying crumpled in the mud, his vulnerable face turned to the camera. And it is one the US defence secretary would rather you did not see.

Lance Corporal Joshua Bernard, pictured being tended by comrades in southern Afghanistan, died of his injuries soon after. Now the release of this record of the 21-year-old's last moments has divided America, prompting furious debate over the sanitisation of war at a critical time for the military offensive.

The US defence secretary, Robert Gates, condemned the decision by the news agency Associated Press to publish. "I cannot imagine the pain and suffering Lance Corporal Bernard's death has caused his family. Why your organisation would purposefully defy the family's wishes, knowing full well that it will lead to yet more anguish, is beyond me.

"Your lack of compassion and common sense in choosing to put this image of their maimed and stricken child on the front page of multiple American newspapers is appalling."


However, AP, whose photographer Julie Jacobson took the shot after being caught in the middle of an ambush while accompanying marines on patrol, said it had acted only after a "period of reflection" and argued that the picture illustrated the sacrifice and the bravery of those fighting in Afghanistan. "We feel it is our journalistic duty to show the reality of the war there, however unpleasant and brutal that sometimes is," said Santiago Lyon, the director of photography for AP.

read more here

Pictures of dying marine bring war home to America


Should AP photo of dying Marine be published?
Baltimore Sun

Camp Lejeune Veteran Marines want answers on water and cancer

What was in Marines' water?
Study probes vets' health problems
BY MEGHA SATYANARAYANA
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER


Shelby Township resident James Fontella is a breast cancer survivor who believes contaminated water at the Camp Lejeune military base in North Carolina caused his illness.

The Marines are trying to determine whether he and 3,346 other Michiganders with various illnesses are correct about a possible link.

They are among 144,000 people nationwide participating in a study on the health effects of drinking water at Camp Lejeune between the mid-1950s and the mid-1980s.

The list includes servicemen such as Mike Doyle and John Yeip of Warren and Pat Flynn, who lives near Iron Mountain, all with kidney problems; Natalie McPherson, whose husband, Anthony, died of Hodgkin's disease; Tim Heffron of Grand Rapids, who has lumps in his chest; and Joshua Smith of Chelsea, Kathleen Armstrong of Redford Township and Richard Herr of Jackson -- three breast cancer survivors.

Fontella, a 63-year-old Vietnam veteran, wants more than confirmation. He wants compensation.

As a veteran, he can't sue the government, but he and two others asked Sen. Carl Levin, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, to co-sponsor a bill that would ensure hospital, medical and nursing home care for Camp Lejeune veterans and families.

Camp Lejeune is a Superfund site now -- the federal government ordered the military to clean it up.

Did you ever live at Camp Lejeune?


The water at the base was contaminated between the 1950s and 1980s, and the Marine Corps has a registry at https://clnr.hqi.usmc.mil/clwater.

Click on "Register Here." The Camp Lejeune Call Center number is 877-261-9782, Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Detroit time, or e-mail clwater@usmc.mil.



For advocacy information, a time line of Camp Lejeune contamination events and a discussion group, go to www.tftptf.com , a Web site hosted by Mike Partain.




read more here
What was in Marines water

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Nonprofit groups receive $916,000 to help military personnel, families

Nonprofit groups receive $916,000 to help military personnel, families

Posted On: Tuesday, Sep. 1 2009 03:41 PM
Special to the Hood Herald

DALLAS — Fifteen nonprofit organizations were awarded $916,000 to aid in the growing needs of military personnel who are serving or have served in Iraq or Afghanistan through The Dallas Foundation's Texas Resources for Iraq-Afghanistan Deployment (TRIAD) Fund.

"Our troops and their families need help now more than ever," said Philip Ritter, vice chair of The Dallas Foundation's TRIAD Fund Advisory Committee. "The TRIAD Fund provides aid to our military men and women so their rising needs don't fall through the cracks, especially during these tough times."

Military personnel today have to deal with new difficulties including longer tours, multiple deployments and limited resources. With record suicide rates, rising divorce rates and homelessness among veterans, the TRIAD Fund continues to help grantees address these issues, and many others, facing military families.

Among the recent grant recipients is USO Dallas/Fort Worth, which received $100,000 from The Dallas Foundation.

The following are the most recent recipients of TRIAD Fund grants:

$32,000 to Families in Crisis will provide support for a casework manager at a shelter in Killeen for victims of domestic violence.

$27,029 to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Waco will provide peer-to-peer counseling and support group sessions in the Waco and Fort Hood areas.

$15,638 to Ride on Center for Kids will provide equine-assisted therapy sessions for people with cognitive and physical challenges from Fort Hood at no charge.

$10,640 to the Texas National Guard Family Support Foundation will expand the emergency financial assistance and short-term interest-free loan program to increase both the number served and the amount of funding available per request from $600 to $1,000. The other initiative is Young Heroes Youth Summer Camps for children of National Guard members.
http://www.kdhnews.com/news/story.aspx?s=35542

Police: "Possessed" Man Attacks Cop After Crashing Into Hospital

Police: "Possessed" Man Attacks Cop After Crashing Into Hospital

By CHRISTINE DEMPSEY

The Hartford Courant

September 5, 2009


SOUTHINGTON — - Saying he's the devil, a man who had just jumped out of a car he had driven into a hospital lobby early Friday attacked a local officer, police said.

The officer used a stun gun to get Matthew Dufresne under control. Dufresne, 31, of Bayberry Drive in Bristol, was charged with two counts of assault on a police officer, first-degree reckless endangerment, first-degree criminal mischief and interfering with an officer, police said.

The bizarre chain of events started at about 2:30 a.m., when a security guard at the Hospital of Central Connecticut at Bradley Memorial on Meriden Avenue saw a car driving erratically through the parking lot, Sgt. Lowell DePalma said.
go here for more and for video
Possessed Man Attacks Cop After Crashing Into Hospital

Lt. Gen. Samuel Helland, Vietnam Vet leaves Camp Pendleton



Marine general bids farewell, thankful for public support for his troops
September 5, 2009 12:11 pm
Sometimes there is a back story that underscores certain public events.

Take Friday's change-of-command ceremony at Camp Pendleton, where Lt. Gen. Joseph Dunford Jr. assumed command of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force from Lt. Gen. Samuel Helland (pictured above). Helland is retiring after 41 years in the military, taking to the open road with his wife, Pam, in a newly purchased recreational vehicle that he calls "our land yacht."

In his address to several hundred Marines, their families and civilian guests, Helland lavishly praised the public support given to his troops. Without that support, he suggested, the Marines' difficult missions in Iraq and Afghanistan might not be possible.

Earlier, in a private message to the 25,000 Marines and sailors of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, Helland wrote that they should "take pride in the knowledge that your superb actions have brought continued security at home and that the people of this great nation stand with you."

It helps to know that Helland is one of the last generals in the U.S. military who served in Vietnam.

He left the University of Minnesota in 1968 after three years and enlisted in the Army. He served three years with the Army Special Forces, including a combat tour in Vietnam. He fought beside the Montagnards, the mountain tribesmen known for their ferocity.

Helland is not a sentimentalist or given much to spinning anecdotes from his past. But his regret is palpable about how the U.S., in effect, abandoned the Montagnards. "We lied to them," he said in an interview. "We told them we'd never leave and then one day we disappeared."
go here for more
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/09/my-entry.html

Soldier from Blaine found dead in Alaska barracks


Soldier from Blaine found dead in Alaska barracks
The Army says the death of a Fort Wainwright, Alaska-based soldier from Blaine, Wash., is under investigation. The soldier, 31-year-old Spc. James T. Townsend, was found dead Wednesday afternoon in his barracks room by his squad leader.

By The Associated Press

ANCHORAGE — The Army says the death of a Fort Wainwright, Alaska-based soldier from Blaine is under investigation.

The soldier, 31-year-old Spc. James T. Townsend, was found dead Wednesday afternoon in his barracks room by his squad leader.

The Anchorage Daily News says Townsend had just returned from a 12-month deployment to Iraq.
read more here
Soldier from Blaine found dead in Alaska barracks

Missing Boy Hidden in Grandma's Wall

Missing Boy Hidden in Grandma's Wall
By JIM SUHR, AP
ST. LOUIS (Sept. 5) - A boy allegedly abducted in a custody dispute nearly two years ago has turned up alive, hiding with his mother in a small, specially built secret room at his grandmother's Illinois home, investigators said.
Richard "Ricky" Chekevdia, who turns 7 on Sept. 14, was in good spirits and physically fit after being found Friday by investigators with a court order to search the two-story rural home in southern Illinois' Franklin County, about 120 miles southeast of St. Louis.
The boy's mother, 30-year-old Shannon Wilfong, is charged with felony child abduction. The grandmother, 51-year-old Diane Dobbs, is charged with aiding and abetting. Wilfong remained jailed Saturday on $42,500 bond in Benton, Ill., where Dobbs was being held on $1,000 bond. The women did not have attorneys listed Saturday in online court records.
read more here
Missing Boy Hidden in Grandma's Wall

Clergy discuss health reform

Clergy discuss health reform
By Mindy Rubenstein, Times Correspondent
In Print: Saturday, September 5, 2009


CLEARWATER — Eileen Jacobs of Clearwater drew applause and cheers as she pointed out Friday morning that one of the nation's largest health insurers took in a $5 billion profit this year and asked, "Why are we so afraid of government? … The government is us."

Her husband, O'Neal Jacobs, 87, is a World War II veteran who receives health benefits from the Veterans Affairs Department, including $4,400 worth of eye medicine each month. She pointed out that the VA system is one of the best.

When people say, " 'get government out of my health care', I am appalled," she said.

Eileen Jacobs, 80, was not alone in her pleas. The passions were overflowing Friday morning during a public forum that included about eight clergy from different faith traditions, who came together to discuss health care reform.



"We were a little nervous about opening it up to people, but something told us that we needed to," said the Rev. Abhi Janamanchi of the Unitarian Universalists of Clearwater, which co-hosted the forum with Hammock's Unity Church of Clearwater. "The stories that followed were very powerful."

He said the goal was threefold: to urge people to respect the democratic process and respect each other's opinions; to engage in the process, including contacting their elected representatives; and to remind people that we have a moral obligation to speak up for those without health care.

"In this crisis, we have an unprecedented opportunity" to create a fair system, he said.

read more here

http://www.tampabay.com/news/health/clergy-discuss-health-reform/1033889



You should also read this.

Know the facts before taking stance on health care
By Jan Glidewell, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Sunday, September 6, 2009

Things didn't really get better until 1972 when Congress decided to fund dialysis through Medicare (a, ahem, government program).

Today, some 345,000 Americans, including a dear friend of mine, are being kept alive by dialysis.

At the risk of hammering home a point too hard, it wasn't medical corporations or insurance companies that saved all of those lives, it was government realizing that the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness works better for those who are actually alive.

And trying to make an issue of end-of-life counseling is obviously being ballyhooed by those who have never had to make that decision.

go here for the rest of this

Know the facts before taking stance on health care

Cheerleader, 17, fatally shot in car; no arrests yet

When you read this, you'll be shocked to read this teenager was taken home and died there instead of taken to a hospital. Why? Who brought her home?

Cheerleader, 17, fatally shot in car; no arrests yet

The Associated Press

2:36 p.m. EDT, September 5, 2009


BRADENTON, Florida - Authorities say they have a suspect in the killing of a Bradenton high school cheerleader although no arrests have been made.

Manatee County Sheriff Brad Steube said Saturday that officers were looking for 18-year-old Daniel Williams in connection with the shooting for 17-year-old Jasmine Thompson, who was sitting in the back seat of a car Friday night when someone opened fire.

read more here
Cheerleader fatally shot in car; no arrests yet

Vietnam Vet on death row finally gets Purple Heart

Death row for a Vietnam vet is wrong in so many ways, but add in that he is also mentally ill. What is wrong with North Carolina they allowed this to happen? Why didn't they at least give him life in prison insted of this?

That's one of the biggest problems for Vietnam veterans. They never received what they needed when they came home and they are still being forgotten about. Did he commit murder three times over? Yes. Were families left in pain over this? Yes. But is justice the death of this man when we have laws saying that we don't put people with mental illness to death, and the same nation that says we honor the veterans? I don't think so. There are so many in jail and if we don't start to ask if they should be or not, there will never really be justice for Vietnam veterans no many how many monuments we build or parades.

Death row inmate gets Purple Heart from Vietnam

The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday Sep 5, 2009 13:29:42 EDT

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — Guards took the shackles off death row prisoner James Davis and led him into a small room to get the Army medals he earned more than 40 years ago.

The North Carolina inmate slouched over as retired therapist Jim Johnson picked up the Purple Heart and the Good Conduct medals Davis earned in Vietnam, but never received.

But Johnson recalled that as he prepared to pin the medals on the triple-murderer from Asheville, Davis snapped to attention, hands cupped to the side. Johnson stepped back, and the two Tet Offensive veterans looked at each other. Davis then gave a textbook-sharp salute, Johnson said.

A few minutes later, the medals were tucked away. Davis, who will likely never touch them again, returned to his cell on death row, hard of hearing from the bombs that fell in 1968, one of which rocketed a chunk of metal that remains in his thigh. The leg still throbs when it gets cold.

The 62-year-old killer wants to give up all his appeals for killing two of his former bosses and another person in a tool company in 1995, although an attorney continues to fight for him.

“No soldier’s service to our country should be ignored,” Johnson said. “A lot of people would say, ‘It’s just a medal. Forget it.’ Not to me, it’s not. To me, it’s the recognition that every soldier deserves. No matter what happened, his service should be recognized.”

Davis’ attorney Ken Rose brought the two together. Rose is trying to get Davis off death row, saying his trial attorneys did not do their jobs He contends they mostly ignored signs of mental illness in their client that started early because of abuse when he was a child and was made worse through post-traumatic stress disorder caused by the war.

A Veterans Administration physician determined Davis suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and depression. His marriage collapsed, he attempted suicide and he was fired for fighting with co-workers not long before he returned to his job and went on a shooting spree.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/09/ap_death_row_purple_heart_090509/

SEMINAR FOR SURVIVING FAMILIES OF MILITARY SUICIDE

TAPS: SEMINAR FOR SURVIVING FAMILIES OF MILITARY SUICIDE
OCT. 8-11 IN SAN DIEGO
TAPS SEMINAR FOR SURVIVING FAMILIES OF MILITARY SUICIDE OCT. 8-11 IN SAN DIEGO OFFERS COMFORT

Largest gathering ever held for military suicide survivors will draw more than 200 family members Department of Defense Suicide Prevention Task Force meets Thursday, Oct. 8 to hear from families.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - September 2, 2009

San Diego, Calif. – Families who have experienced death by suicide of a loved one who served in the military will find help and comfort in a suicide survivor seminar and Good Grief Camp offered October 8-11 by TAPS, the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors.

“Experiencing the death of a loved one is difficult for any family, and suicide carries unique challenges because of the stigma associated with this type of loss,” said Kim Ruocco, director of suicide survivor education and support with TAPS. Ruocco’s husband, Marine Major John Ruocco, took his own life in 2005 three months after returning from a deployment in Iraq. “The family is left to pick up the shattered pieces of their lives and we’re here to help,” said Ruocco.

TAPS will hold peer mentoring training on Thursday, October 8. Peer mentoring training teaches survivors how to support each other through grief. As part of the training, survivors will also learn how to tell their story in an educational way, which empowers survivors to help others.

At the beginning of the seminar, the Department of Defense Task Force on the Prevention of Suicide by Members of the Armed Forces, chaired by Major General Philip Volpe and co-chaired by TAPS founder and chairman Bonnie Carroll, will hold a meeting on Thursday, October 8. The task force will hear from surviving families that have experienced the death by suicide of a loved one who served in the military. The task force is preparing a report with recommendations and findings that will be presented to the Secretary of Defense and Congress. More information about the task force is available at http://www.health.mil/dhb/default.cfm

The surviving families left behind following a suicide ask many questions and seek to understand their loved one’s death. The TAPS Suicide Survivor Seminar being held October 9-11 includes advice from experts to help families cope and support group time. The opening session will address common questions asked by suicide survivors with an address by Dr. Frank Campbell called, “The Canyon of Why: Metaphors for Healing from Sudden and Traumatic Loss.”
read more here
SEMINAR FOR SURVIVING FAMILIES OF MILITARY SUICIDE

After 8-year delay, VA program hopes to help vets

After 8-year delay, VA program hopes to help vets
By: ARELIS HERNANDEZ
Associated Press
09/05/09 10:30 AM PDT HOUSTON — The drone of helicopters still haunts William Callahan decades after Vietnam combat left him paralyzed, but he said government bureaucracy stood in the way of getting the one thing that made the echoes stop and kept him independent: a service dog.

It took four years and giving up on a Veteran's Affairs canine program for Callahan to find Taylor, a specially trained Labrador retriever.

Although the canine program's Web site touts that it "routinely" gives veterans service dogs, the program's director Neil Eckrich said only two dogs have been paired with veterans since Congress authorized the program in 2001. Eckrich acknowledged there were difficulties with the program, including the time it took to conduct studies on the dogs' benefits and problems promoting the service.

Finally, about eight years after the program began, many hope it will start finding homes for the four-legged companions that can help disabled veterans be more independent, better deal with post traumatic stress syndrome and to just be a friend. The VA is now working on improving the program and in Washington, increasing funding for such programs is getting bipartisan support.

Callahan, 63, began trying to find a service dog in 2004, and his local VA office said the program didn't exist — even though that wasn't true. He eventually turned to one of the more than two dozen nonprofit groups in the U.S. that train dogs for injured veterans.
read more here
http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/ap/57566422.html

Nam Guardian Angel and Brave-Aid




I mentioned how there would be some changes on the blog yesterday and it is done. Not so great of a change to the naked eye. There is just a new link on the side bar to Brave-Aid.

When you come into this blog, there is usually only one reason behind it. You love the troops and our veterans. Sure there are stories here and there about other people and traumatic events, but I can tell from the hit counts where most of the traffic is coming into and for this, I am grateful to have readers like you.

Because you care and because to you support means really supporting them when they need us, especially when they come home wounded, I'm asking you to join Brave-Aid and fight for them with me.

It's going to cost you $20.00 a month to do this. Can you spare it? The way it was put to me, that amount of money is two cigarettes a day. (Yes I know I should quit smoking and as a matter of fact, I have an appointment with the doctor to do just that next week.) You can drop out later if you want or if you have to.

Now, I know I give a lot to the veterans, between the groups I belong to, the money it costs me to be a Chaplain with the training, licenses and insurances, but 70 hours a week is a lot to give. I know you can't do that. I know you can't do much at all by yourself. That's why I'm asking you to join a team already in place. I almost forgot the best part of all. You can make money at the same time you are helping veterans. Doesn't get much better than that.

I can help save their lives and I do it everyday but I can't help them pay a bill. I can offer comfort and spiritual support, but I can't take away their earthly burdens. My greatest concern for them is that while they wait to have their claims approved, there is no income for them and no help for them to pay their bills. This will help a lot of veterans facing that on a daily basis that you do not read about in the paper or on cable news.

The other reason to join a group like this is they are not just helping the newer veterans. They are helping older ones too. People like my husband. Vietnam veterans left behind when they were the ones that made all that is being done on PTSD possible. They still to this day have to wait at the back of the line and too many of them are still not healing. Most of the new groups are all about the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans and there families, but that leaves us to wonder if anyone gives a crap about the older veterans waiting all these years to start living lives again.
Brave-Aid doesn't separate veterans into groups. They all served under the same flag and for the sake of the rest of us. There should never be one group more important than the others.
So, what do you think? Can you take the love you have for them to another level and pitch in where it will really do some good?

Click this link Chaplain Kathie

and please join a group that is working to make sure all our veterans know were we are when they need us.

God willing we will help the warriors He sent to take care of us.

Boy With Heart Condition Found Dead In Septic Tank

Boy With Heart Condition Found Dead In Septic Tank
Hundreds Searched For Boy In Beaver County; Father Questioned
POSTED: 8:39 am EDT September 5, 2009


GREENE TOWNSHIP, Pa. -- Authorities have a single person in custody early Saturday afternoon after discovering the body of a boy with a heart condition for whom hundreds of people had searched in Beaver County.


Wyatt Thomas Smitsky, 4, who has a congenital heart defect that requires medication, disappeared while playing outside his home in the 600 block of Georgetown Road in Greene Township early Friday at about 6:30 p.m.

A relative told WTAE Channel 4's Bob Mayo on Saturday morning that Wyatt had been outside playing with his 3-year-old and 6-year-old sisters. When the children's mother called them in for dinner, the girls came home, but Wyatt did not. The relative said the girls told their mother that Wyatt went under a "sticky fence."
read more here
http://www.thepittsburghchannel.com/news/20742620/detail.html

RawStory went too far with link to picture of Lance Cpl. Bernard

Just below where I cut this article off, is a link to the photo in question. I love RawStory and will keep reading it, but this time I think they could have left out a link to the picture. I believe the family is the only one that matters on this and it should be up to them. No one else. It is the same with media coverage of the coffins and military funerals. It's up to the family.

Sorry RawStory but you are wrong this time but at least you had enough class to not put the picture up on the article itself.

Pentagon incensed with AP over photo of dying soldier

By Raw Story

US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has sharply criticized the US news agency the Associated Press (AP) for distributing a photograph of a mortally wounded Marine in Afghanistan.

Gates, in a letter Thursday to AP president Thomas Curley, described as “appalling” the news agency’s decision to distribute the graphic picture of Lance Corporal Joshua Bernard to its clients.

Gates noted that the decision to transmit the photo was made “over the objection of Lance Corporal Bernard’s grieving father” and he asked the AP “in the strongest of terms to reconsider.”
read more here
Pentagon incensed with AP over photo of dying soldier

Mother wants U.S. military to allow justice for girl's rape

Mother wants U.S. military to allow justice for girl's rape
The alleged rape of a girl at the hands of a U.S. officer on a Colombian military base has rekindled the anger and frustration of her mother, who also was raped 12 years ago and faces major hurdles in her quest for justice.
BY GONZALO GUILLEN AND GERARDO REYES
El Nuevo Herald
Olga Lucía Castillo could never bring to justice the men who raped her in Bogotá when she was pregnant with her daughter. Twelve years later, she is putting up the fight of her life to have a U.S. Army officer and a Mexican-born contractor indicted because, according to her, they raped her daughter at the military base in Melgar.

The older of her two daughters was sexually abused at a military base in this city, 62 miles from Bogotá, in August 2007, according to a criminal charge filed by Castillo at the Colombian prosecutor's office.
read more here
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/americas/story/1218573.html

Vietnam’s Damage, Four Decades Later

This is one of the best articles I've read on Vietnam veterans. The only problem I had with it was the amount of money 100% veterans receive. It is not $3,000.

$2,673 For a veteran alone.
http://www.vba.va.gov/BLN/21/rates/comp01.htm


This does not factor in the fact that the VA does not cover all treatment for our veterans unless it is connected to their service. A PTSD veteran is only covered for PTSD mental health, free of charge and that includes medication. For most veterans they have to carry other insurance as well for anything else they receive that is not connected to their claim. They have to provide Medicare/Medicaid insurance information along with any other coverage. We have to carry private insurance and the VA bills them for anything other than what is connected to my husband's disability. Veterans have to meet a "Means test" to show if they have the means to pay for their services if they do not have an approved claim.

There is a misperception that the VA covers everything, when they do not. If you do not have an approved claim and a high enough rating for free care of that medical care, you pay or your insurance does. In other words, if it isn't approved by the VA and part of a veterans service, it isn't free.

All this nonsense in the emails and all over the web about billing insurance companies for veterans care never takes into consideration, it's already being done and done the wrong way. This has been going on for years.

The rest of this article is exactly why I do what I do. I ran into so many in denial and they are hard as nails. It's a battle to get them to go for help because they think they are supposed to be tough enough to just get over it. They know something is "wrong" with them. They are not idiots but after being trained to do what they do in combat, you can't take that out of them, no matter how hard you try. They have to understand it on their own and sometimes it takes years to get them to even think of going to the VA.

My husband is one of them. He came home in 1971. We met in 1982 and the first thing my father said when he met him was "That guy has shell shock." That's what they called it back then. Since it came from my Dad, a Korean War vet, I took it to heart. I started to help veterans like my husband at the same time he wouldn't listen to me. It took until 1990 to get him to a psychiatrist when he finally heard the words "Post Traumatic Stress Disorder" from someone he believed. It took another three years to get him to go to the Veterans Center and then more months to get him to go to the VA. 22 years from Vietnam to the VA.

He spent all those years thinking that he would "get over it" and suffering. He thought like his father did. "The VA is for guys missing legs and arms, not for guys with nightmares." The ones with the real mental health problems were locked up in the "looney bin" and would never come out. One of my husband's uncles was such a case. He was in WWII and ended up living on a farm for the rest of his life so that he could be taken care of with some other veterans. Veterans like my husband, well, they thought they didn't need anyone or anything and they would just "suck it up" like all the generations before them.

That was the problem back then but even though we've come so far getting the word out that PTSD is nothing to be ashamed of and raising the awareness of this invisible wound trying to kill them, they are still having a hard time coming to terms with it and even a harder time sucking up their foolish pride to get the help they need to live lives instead of just existing in them.


Ross Taylor for The New York Times
A LIFE-SHAPING EXPERIENCE Philip Van Cott reflected in a picture from his Vietnam days, with his Purple Heart medal.


Vietnam’s Damage, Four Decades Later

By MICHAEL WINERIP
Published: September 4, 2009
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.

ON Aug. 26, 1966, Philip Van Cott’s Marine unit was ambushed in the jungles of Vietnam, a trip wire went off, a bomb exploded and shrapnel pierced a hole in his right hand. Mr. Van Cott, whose squad was in constant firefights during his five months in the jungle, was helicoptered to safety. He spent seven months in Japanese and American hospitals as the wound healed, completed his two-year tour in the States, then was honorably discharged.

In the years since, he has been married to the same woman, Karen, for nearly four decades, had two sons and a grandson, held several jobs, bought a home, owned a restaurant, spent 20 years with the post office and in 2006 at age 60, retired.

Nowadays, he paints in his studio several times a week, swims and lifts weights, attends 7:30 Mass on Sunday mornings, and travels with his wife. Every other Thursday, for the last 10 years, he has driven to the Veterans Administration Vet Center here where he gets therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder in connection with his Vietnam combat service.

He first went for help after threatening a supervisor at the post office, and nearly losing his job. “I had rages, and I was getting worse,” he said. “I was constantly embarrassing my family, screaming and hollering at people.”

He got into fistfights at Little League and high school football games. At night, asleep, he’d have nightmares, break into cold sweats, scream and flail at his wife. “It’s been going on so long, now she hears me wind up and wakes me before I do it,” he said.

When a V.A. psychiatrist diagnosed the disorder, Mr. Van Cott did not believe it — Vietnam was so long ago. They had him join a therapy group for Vietnam veterans. “I figured these guys were doing it to collect a disability check,” he said. “It took two to three years before I started realizing what I was doing was crazy.”

He now takes medications for anxiety and depression. And in therapy, he works on anger control. His wife thinks it’s helped, but he’s not sure. “I don’t know if you can escape what you are,” he said. In mid-August, he stormed out of a session at the Vet Center because he was sure his therapist was snubbing him. “He was late for our appointment, then walked by three times without saying anything,” Mr. Van Cott said.

While studies estimate as many as 20 percent of those now returning from Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from P.T.S.D., it is veterans like Mr. Van Cott, from a war nearly a half-century ago, who still dominate the administration’s P.T.S.D. caseload. In 2008, of the 442,695 people seen at veterans hospitals for P.T.S.D., 59.2 percent were Vietnam-era veterans, while 21.5 percent served in the Iraq, Afghanistan or Gulf wars.
go here to read more
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/06/fashion/06generationb.html?_r=1

Friday, September 4, 2009

US Embassy fires guards shown in lewd acts

Watchdog fears contractor may impede investigation of Kabul ‘hazing’


Share on Facebook By David Edwards and Muriel Kane

Published: September 4, 2009
Breaking: US Embassy fires guards shown in lewd acts

Earlier this week, a watchdog group revealed flagrant misbehavior by employees of the private security contractor ArmorGroup North America assigned to guard the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. Photographs received from whistleblowers showed “hazing” that included simulated sex acts and guards urinating on one another.

The US Embassy in Kabul stated on Friday that it had already fired eight of the guards shown in the photographs, while two others had resigned, and that the contractor’s local management team was also being replaced. ArmorGroup’s parent corporation, Wackenhut Services, responded to inquiries by stating that it is “fully cooperating” with the Department of State in investigating the incidents.
read more here
http://rawstory.com/08/news/2009/09/04/state-dept-knew-of-deviant-behavior/

911 caller arrested in Georgia massacre

911 caller arrested in Georgia massacre
Story Highlights
NEW: Warrant lists eight counts of first degree murder for Guy Heinze Jr.

Heinze told police he was not home when the killings occurred

3-year-old injured in last week's attack at Georgia mobile home is on life support

Funeral for seven victims will be held about Saturday

The man who called 911 to report slayings in a southeast Georgia mobile home last weekend has been arrested on suspicion of murder. Guy Heinze Jr. -- the son of one of the victims -- has been arrested for eight counts of first-degree murder, police said Friday. Seven of the eight victims will be buried Saturday, while a 3-year-old who was injured struggles to survive at a Savannah hospital.

West was the boyfriend of Chrissy Toler, 22, who died along with her father, Russell D. Toler Sr., 44, and three siblings: Michelle Toler, 15; Michael Toler, 19; and Russell D. Toler Jr., 20. Michael Toler had Down syndrome.

Russell Toler Sr. and Isenhower were divorced.

Also killed were Guy Heinze Sr., 45 and Brenda Gail Falagan, 49, police said.



developing story
911 call: 'My whole family's dead'

Two clinics promise treatment, regardless of income

Two clinics promise treatment, regardless of income

By Connie Thompson
SEATTLE -- With the recent economic slump, the number of people using hospital emergency rooms for treatment has jumped as much as 30 percent. More people are out of work and with no health insurance, they use the ER to replace their family doctor.

But for many, there's an alternative where lack of insurance in not an obstacle. And patients who know about it are traveling miles out of their way to get a local primary care physician they can see on a regular basis, without having to worry about getting turned down over money.

One couple taking advantage is Deborah Spear and her fiance Darion Mallard.

After Deborah's recent stroke, they didn't have to worry about finding a doctor to follow up with Deborah's care, thanks to the Country Doctor Community Clinic.

"We don't deny services to anybody, based on their inability to pay," said Dr. Rich Kovar, medical director at the clinic -- one of two unique clinics in Seattle.

The clinics have one mission: Provide quality health care without regard to the patient's ability to pay the bill. Patients are billed on a sliding scale, with a co-pay based on documented annual income.

"Many of our patients go on and off insurance but they still can come here and not be treated any differently," Kovar said.
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http://www.komonews.com/news/consumer/57288832.html

This guardian angel flies by her gut

This guardian angel flies by her gut
Carrie Smith, 68, is a one-woman fraud alert. From her perch behind the customer-service desk, she can sense the evil of the outside world sending good people to the MoneyGram machine, which is used to wire money throughout the country and beyond.


Nicole Brodeur

Seattle Times staff columnist
The elderly woman was in a wheelchair, so she struggled to pass the envelope over the counter.

Carrie Smith opened it to find $4,000 in cash. The woman had taken the money from her savings to send to someone who had called, saying her daughter was in trouble and needed money — fast.

"You don't want to do this," Smith told the woman, who had taken the bus to the Walmart in Renton to wire the money off.

Then there was the unemployed woman who sold her mother's silver online for $750. The buyer sent her a check for $1,100: Could she deposit the check and wire back the extra $350?

Again, Smith listened to the story, then to her gut.

"You don't want to do this," she said.

Smith, 68, is a one-woman fraud alert. From her perch behind the customer-service desk, she can sense the evil of the outside world sending good people to the MoneyGram machine, which is used to wire money throughout the country and beyond.
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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2009803285_nicole04m.html

Operation Comfort Warriors: We owe it to our heroes

Operation Comfort Warriors: We owe it to our heroes
Submitted by Robby Douglas on Thu, 09/03/2009 - 6:24pm.
By Jay Conti Sr., American Legion
4th District Vice Commander

There are many great reasons to belong to the American Legion family, but I can think of no greater purpose than to support our hospitalized heroes.

Operation Comfort Warriors accomplishes this mission since last December, Operation Comfort Warriors has raised $189,483 to purchases items not normally budgeted through government channels to troops recovering in U.S. military hospitals and warrior transition units around the world.

These items have included sweatsuits, iPods, computer games, DVD players, puzzles, books and other comfort items. Operation Comfort Warriors won't heal our troops or make them "whole" again, but it will show them that we care and appreciate their great sacrifices.

Nearly 35,000 of our men and women in uniform have been injured in Iraq or Afghanistan and more are hurt every day. Moreover, thousands more are hurt each year in accidents or are hospitalized due to illnesses. While the American Legion family has raised a lot to help these heroes, the need is even greater. And with your help, we can work toward meeting that need.
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Operation Comfort Warriors

In Future, Science Could Erase Traumatic Memories

In Future, Science Could Erase Traumatic Memories
by Jon Hamilton


Scientists are beginning to understand why fearful memories are so persistent in the brain, and how they can be erased.

The research could help thousands of people with post-traumatic stress disorder, including many veterans, says Kerry Ressler, a psychiatrist at Emory University and investigator for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

In recent years, Ressler says, he's been working with veterans from Iraq who survived incidents like being in a Humvee that was blown up by a bomb. Many are haunted by the memories.

Behavioral therapies can help these PTSD patients cope with their fears, Ressler says. They learn to believe that a car ride doesn't have to end in violence.

But the traumatic memory is still there and can be set off again by almost any emotional event.

The Root Of Fear

That's because fear comes from a part of the brain called the amygdala. The amygdala isn't logical, Ressler says. It just reacts.

"Before we are even consciously aware of something the amygdala has activated the fight-or-flight reflex," he says, "and activated the fear system.
read more here
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=112531962

Jacksonville Kennel Club owner sues Allied Veterans of the World

Before you read this, first know what Allied Veterans are about
Allied Veterans of the World donates $30,000 to Orlando VA Medical Center
posted by Darryl E. Owens on Jan 17, 2008 5:00:17 PM
The Orlando VA Medical Center received a $30,000 donation today from the Allied Veterans of the World to support diverse veteran programs locally and in Viera.

A portion of the donation will enhance care of the center's nursing home and domiciliary residents. A portion of the donation will help fund the Welcome Home Celebration at the Orlando VA Medical Center Feb. 23 for veterans serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, which will provide information on housing, education, jobs, financial assistance, VA claims, and healtchare.

The Allied Veterans of the World is a nonprofit veteran service organization that provides succor to veterans.
http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_military/2008/01/allied-veterans.html


There are a lot of groups here in Florida without a clue the VA clinic has a Dom. That is for homeless veterans. There are over 60 there in a great program, but no one seems to know about it. Looks like Allied Veterans does! It also looks like they are doing a lot of good for the veterans too.

Jacksonville Kennel Club owner sues internet cafes, alleging illegal gambling
Allied Veterans of the World Internet Cafes claims to be conducting game promotions or sweepstakes
By Kevin Turner
Story updated at 5:02 PM on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2009
An attorney for Allied Veterans of the World rejected a claim in a lawsuit filed by Jacksonville Racing Inc. Tuesday that the organization’s Internet cafes are fronts for illegal gambling.

Jacksonville Greyhound Racing Inc. charged in a suit filed in the Fourth Circuit Court that it has “overwhelming evidence” that seven area Allied Veterans of the World facilities are “masquerading as legitimate businesses,” and wants them closed.

“Allied Veterans of the World Internet Cafes claim to be conducting game promotions or sweepstakes. In reality, they are engaged in illegal gambling as defined by Florida law,” the company said of the lawsuit in a release.

According to its Web site, Allied Veterans of the World is a nonprofit organization that formed in 1979 and has 36 affiliates in Florida. Jacksonville attorney Kelly Mathis, who represents the organization statewide, said Jacksonville Sheriff John Rutherford is aware that the organization sells Internet access time and home dial-up service and enters customers into a sweepstakes for prizes on a prize table.

“In Florida, you can give away free prizes based on chance in connection with a product or service, so long as you don’t charge for entry,” Mathis said.

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Jacksonville Kennel Club owner sues

Jury: Death for man who murdered cop's daughter

Jury: Death for man who murdered cop's daughter
Story Highlights
Jury votes 12-0 to recommend death sentence

Michael King convicted of kidnapping and murdering Denise Lee

Mother of two was taken from her home by man in green Camaro

Centerpiece of trial was victim's frantic 911 call
By Ann O'Neill
CNN


(CNN) -- A Florida jury has recommended that a plumber who kidnapped, raped and murdered a police detective's daughter be executed for his crimes.

Michael King, 38, showed no reaction Friday afternoon as the jury's 12-0 recommendation of death was announced in Sarasota. Jurors deliberated for nearly three hours.

King was convicted a week ago of first-degree murder and related offenses in the January 17, 2008, death of Denise Lee, a 21-year-old mother of two boys.

Nathan Lee and Sgt. Dave Goff, the victim's husband and father remained composed in court. They had maintained a daily presence in the courtroom during a trial that included the heartbreaking tape of Denise Lee's frantic 911 call on her captor's cell phone.
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Death for man who murdered cops daughter

DoD, AP battle over photo of dying Marine

Honestly this should be left up to the family. Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard belonged to the military and the country, but he belonged to his family first. It should be up to them if it is seen or not.

For people believing these pictures should never be shown, no matter how the family feels, I bet you are not considering the fact there is so little real coverage about what our troops are going through and this makes combat unreal. Videos games are played more often than taps are listened to. Kids with fast reactions blast away "the bad guys" scoring points, so detached from what combat really is, they never consider the real price paid.

The rest of us, well we're a pretty pitiful bunch of flag wavers, feeling oh so patriotic because we use words saying we support the troops, but never once think of donating to any of the veterans groups out there trying to take care of the veterans. As long as we don't have to pay attention once they leave or after they come home, we're all fine with that. Maybe seeing it would wake people up.

Not too long ago, there was a ban on photographing the flag draped coffins coming back to Dover and media coverage of military funerals. Now these solemn events are left up to the families to decide what they want. This one should be left up to the family as well.

DoD, AP battle over photo of dying Marine

By William H. McMichael - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Sep 4, 2009 13:47:53 EDT

A graphic photograph of a mortally wounded Marine released for publication Sept. 3 by the Associated Press — over the objections of the family and the Pentagon — has reignited the debate over how to juggle frank and honest coverage of combat with sensitivity toward loved ones of the deceased.

Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade during an Aug. 14 Taliban ambush in Afghanistan. He suffered severe leg wounds and died on a field hospital’s operating table, according to the Associated Press.

An AP photographer’s slightly blurred image captured Bernard lying on the ground, with two fellow Marines rushing to his aid. His face is fairly recognizable, and a leg wound is visible.

The AP released the photo as part of a larger story package on Bernard’s death after what it called “long deliberations.” AP had placed a one-day embargo on the photo’s release to give media outlets time to consider whether to publish the graphic image. And it had called on Bernard’s family before moving the photo to its member publications, said Paul Colford, an AP spokesman.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/09/military_ap_photo_gates_bernard_090409w/

Veterans unemployment rate hits 11.3%

Veterans unemployment rate hits 11.3%

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Sep 4, 2009 13:50:40 EDT

The number of unemployed Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is now almost the same as the number of service members currently deployed in support of those two wars, according to new Labor Department numbers.

A key member of Veterans of Foreign Wars said the data indicates that the government needs to do more to help separating combat veterans find jobs and that veterans need to think about their options, including using the improved GI Bill to attend college while also getting a living stipend.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/09/military_veterans_unemployment_090409w/

Lance Cpl. Sally Clarke Injured Medic Saves 7 Soldiers

Injured Medic Saves 7 Soldiers
AOL News
(Sept. 2) - A British army combat medic put the safety of her comrades above her own in saving seven fellow soldiers in the aftermath of a grenade attack in Afghanistan.
Lance Cpl. Sally Clarke, 22, was serving with her patrol in the country's Helmand province when they came across a field mine. While waiting for a team to dispose of it, they came under a surprise attack from Taliban insurgents who fired a rocket-propelled grenade into their midst, according to Britain's Daily Telegraph.
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Injured Medic Saves 7 Soldiers

Vietnam veterans to host convention in Rothschild

Vietnam veterans to host convention in Rothschild
September 3, 2009


ROTHSCHILD — The 27th annual Vietnam Veterans of America Wisconsin State Convention will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 19 at the Holiday Inn Hotel and Suites in Rothschild.

The convention includes a panel on Advocacy and Claims Representation for Veterans made up of county Veterans Service officers. The panel will discuss advocacy, networking and what the Veterans Service office does.


This year’s convention has a special emphasis for veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Topics on post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, traumatic eye injury, suicide ideation and the latest treatment methods will be presented by Dr. Tom Berger, an expert in the field and former VVA National Committee Chair for PTSD and Substance Abuse.
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Vietnam veterans to host convention in Rothschild