Sunday, March 21, 2010

Multimillion-dollar nonprofit charity for Navy veterans steeped in secrecy

The Times also searched LexisNexis, an online full-text database of news and periodical articles and broadcast news transcripts. Nimitz, the head of a nonprofit that boasts 66,000 members and millions in annual revenue, was never profiled or quoted.




Multimillion-dollar nonprofit charity for Navy veterans steeped in secrecy
By Jeff Testerman and John Martin, Times Staff Writers
In Print: Sunday, March 21, 2010
First of two parts

Suppertime on a Sunday evening, a phone rings in suburban Tampa. Some 1,200 miles away, in a call center in Michigan, a cheerful telemarketer starts his pitch for a donation to the U.S. Navy Veterans Association.

Our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan need your help, he says. Any donation, even $20, would help pay for care packages.

He says the Navy Vets group has a long history. "They have a main office right there in Tampa. They really are on the up and up.''

How much of the donation gets to the Navy veterans, the homeowner asks, and how much goes to the telemarketer?

"That's a good question, I'm glad you asked. Hold the line and I'll get a supervisor.''

The supervisor says 20 percent goes to the charity. When the home­owner presses for more details, the line goes dead.

Other questions about the nonprofit went unanswered as well. In a six-month investigation, the St. Petersburg Times could find only one officer in the entire organization, and the nonprofit declined to reveal where its millions of dollars of income went.
read more here

Multimilliondollar nonprofit charity for Navy veterans

It’s never too late to act

It’s never too late to act
Theater class allows seniors to be any age and anyone

For one hour on Monday evenings, Sheri Womach can be someone else.

She doesn’t have to be Sheri Womach, a retiree since 2005 after working for the prosecuting attorney’s office for 30 years. Or Sheri Womach, the primary caretaker of her brother, a Vietnam War veteran suffering from PTSD. On this Monday, she is going to be Marie, a female version of Murray the policeman in Neil Simon’s “The Odd Couple.” And Marie is going to play poker and have a few laughs.

It’s all part of a new acting class, “Act Your Age,” designed for budding actors age 55 and up. Students meet once a week to learn the process of creative dramatics and stage development while also learning about theater and how to build a character.
read more here
http://www.stjoenews.net/news/2010/mar/21/its-never-too-late-act/

Soldier healing after Iraq explosion

Soldier healing after Iraq explosion
By KIM SCHMIDT Hub Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Jeff Burton was a career soldier.

He enlisted with the U.S. Army in 2000 shortly after graduating from Norton, Kan., Community High School. He served in Afghanistan, Egypt and Iraq twice. In 2002, he had a six-month stint providing security at the Pentagon.

He joined the Nebraska National Guard in 2007, and joined Kearney’s 1195th Transportation Company. When he wasn’t training, Burton, 27, worked as a security officer at the Norton Correctional Facility.

When his National Guard commitment ends in October, Burton planned to re-enlist as a full-time soldier.

But Feb. 18 changed all that.

At 2 a.m. that day in Baghdad, the military vehicle Burton and three other 1195th soldiers were heading out on a convoy in was hit by an explosively formed penetrator in northeast Baghdad. EFPs are made of copper heated up to 2,000 degrees and move at about 2,000 feet per second.
read more here
Soldier healing after Iraq explosion

Tough enough to be touched

by
Chaplain Kathie




Yesterday I was on a motorcycle charity ride for a wounded Iraq veteran. During lunch I was talking to the Mom of Marine. He had been deployed to Haiti. I asked her what tugged at his heart more, combat or deployments like Haiti. She said humanitarian missions. They see so much suffering on these missions, people in need, lost, shocked, afraid and driven by desperation to do unreasonable things. They are there to obviously help the survivors but these are the same people we send into combat yet we wonder why what they see touches them so much some end up with PTSD.

They train to be tough and ready to pull the trigger. One moment they will kill an enemy fighter, filled with rage and the next fall to the ground, hold a fallen brother in their arms and weep. They allow themselves a few moments of acknowledging their grief and then snap back to being tough all over again so they can do their jobs.

We hear someone we know has passed away. We order flowers and make some phone calls. We pay a visit to the family. Then we show up at the wake to comfort them. We show up at the funeral if we can and then we may even pay the family more attention for a week or so after knowing how hard it must be for them to lose someone they love. For at least a week, the family is comforted, allowed to cry as much as they need to, provided with a caring ear to listen and hugs whenever they need it. For servicemen and women, they get a few moments to grieve for someone in their military family after the shooting ends and then they have to stand up and get back to the mission.

Do you think that would take a "tough as nails" person to be able to do that? We just assume a tough Marine or Soldier will just recover after brothers and sisters have died right before their eyes. When others are wounded right in front of them and they see what can happen to the human body. Someone they care about has just been killed. Someone they care about has just been wounded. They have just been shocked. They have just experienced trauma so severe it would leave the rest of us unable to go to work for days afterward, surrounded by family and friends and bosses allowing us time to grieve. They have to push themselves to pick up their weapons and return to duty after only moments to grieve.

We pass off what they are able to do as just part of their job, part of their training never once acknowledging the fact they are still just humans filled with the same emotions the rest of us have. When we lose a sibling, a husband or wife, a child or a parent, it takes months, sometimes years to recover to the point when it no longer hurts to think about them and how much we miss them. We will look at the chair they used to sit in and cry. We will do things we used to do with them by our side and feel empty because they are no longer there. Other people fully understand that we need time to heal from the loss but we expect the men and women in the military to "get over it" deal with it.

They cannot simply allow themselves the luxury of healing with time off. They cannot leave Iraq or Afghanistan just because someone they cared about has died and they want to go to the funeral any more than they could have left Vietnam to bury a friend, or Korea or any other nation during WWI or WWII. They have to put the mission before themselves and their human need.

For weeks and months, they carry around that pain. They do their duty with that pain. They see others die and others wounded while they still have that pain inside their skin. When they come home, it is all still there and they are finally allowed time to grieve but other people can't seem to understand why so longer after the loss, they are acting as if it just happened.

For them, it is worse than a recent death because the pain has been added onto by other events they had to endure. Imagine if someone you loved died and you were not allowed to acknowledge it for a year. By the time you were allowed to grieve, it would be like it just happened for you but the time between the loss and the time you were allowed to feel it, those emotions have gotten stronger.

Now think of how strong these men and women are that they were able to wait until they could grieve the loss. It is not that they couldn't care about the loss but that they were able to put others before their own grief, their own self.

They return home and carry it all back with them. For some, they are able to recover sooner than others just as some of us recover from our own losses sooner than others do. Some of them need help to recover just as some of us have to go through grief counseling and others have to go on medication to ease the emotional pain. We don't seem to understand that they are just as human as the rest of us, but unlike the rest of us, their healing is always put on hold until the demands on them have ended.

This is how PTSD takes hold. The doorway is the emotional part of their brain. The same quality of their level of caring tugging at their hearts on humanitarian missions is the same one touched by loss in battle. The same quality within them allowing them to put others before their own life is the same one touched by loss.

When they think of PTSD as a sign of weakness they fail to see just how tough they were that they went on doing their duty, fighting off the pain they felt, pushing themselves to the back of the list of things to do, worrying about their brothers and doing their duty no matter what it cost them. They cannot see the difference between what they are allowed to do back home as a person and what they are unable to do as a human when they are deployed into combat.

PTSD is a sign they were able to care deeply but strong enough to overcome the pain long enough to finish the mission. They have a hard time seeing that makes them as tough as they come because while carrying around that depth of pain, they did not give in when they were needed. They had that much strength within them they were able to put others first because they cared that deeply about their brothers.

Want to see a tough veteran? Talk to a veteran with PTSD and you'll find one as tough as they come because their "hearts" were caring enough to feel but their courage pushed on despite that pain.


Two veterans dead after double murder and suicide

Man shoots himself after killing wife, son
By Ariel Barkhurst and Valentinio Lucio
San Antonio Express-News

Three people are dead after a double murder-suicide Saturday morning in which an elderly man shot and killed his wife and adult son before turning the gun on himself at the breakfast table of their Monte Vista home, authorities said.

Police Chief William McManus said that the man, who was in his late 70s to early 80s, called police dispatch at around 9:15 a.m. to report the shootings.

“He told the dispatcher, ‘There's been two homicides and there's about to be a suicide,'” McManus said.

Before the man hung up, he told the dispatcher he was going to “finish himself off,” according to a police report.

Police found the man, along with his elderly wife and 53-year-old son, in the kitchen of their home on the 200 block of East Summit Avenue. The son was lying face down on the floor and it appeared he was shot in the back of his head, while his mother was found slumped over in a chair at the breakfast table with a gunshot wound to the mouth, the police report states. The father was found on the floor with a black revolver nearby.

Other neighbors said the father was a retired Air Force colonel and that the son also retired from the military.

read more here

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_news/88729367.html

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Why don't people protest for what the warriors need?

Today we went on a ride along with a lot of other bikers for a young soldier. Sergeant Joel Tavera is that one young soldier.



Joel Tavera at the Tampa Polytrauma Center gets a visit from J.R. Martinez and Andy Pujol Building Homes for Heroes, in conjunction with The Windermere Country Club Foundation, will be holding a Golf Outing to benefit Joel.. ...Click here for Event Details





Sergeant Joel Tavera

Army Sergeant Joel Tavera of Havelock, North Carolina (originally from Queens, NY) was deployed to Iraq in the fall of 2007. He was just 19 years of age. Prior to enlisting in the Army, Joel first fulfilled one of his lifelong dreams; he became an active member of the brotherhood of volunteer firefighters. He spent over two years serving as a volunteer fireman, before following in his father’s footsteps by serving the country in the military. Joel’s father served the country in the United States Marine Corps.

In March of 2008, the Humvee that Joel was riding in was hit by five rockets. The blasts killed three men. Joel was thought to be dead as well. Tragically, Sgt. Tavera lost sight in both of his eyes, his right leg, four fingers on his left hand, and suffered very serious head trauma and critical burns to 60 percent of his body. His parents, Jose and Maritza, have been told that their son is the second most severely injured Army soldier to survive since the war in Iraq began. Joel received The Purple Heart and Bronze Star.

read more here

http://buildinghomesforheroes.org/hero-stories/joel-tavera.htm



There are more and more everyday needing to be taken care of, needing to know that people care about the fact they are willing to serve this country no matter what even though when they come home, they have to fight another battle to have their wounds taken care of.

Oh, the physical wounds are easy to understand because we are reminded of what combat does to those we send but it is the wounds we can't see that also need to be taken care of. Not just for the soldiers coming back but for the entire family.

Spouse Calls has a post up with conversations between spouses over PTSD. Well worth the read if you know little about PTSD and what it does to the families.


To the hope of another good day


I wasn't planning on posting today because it's been a long day but as I was catching up on some emails, I came across the articles about protests against the war in Iraq. Stunning when you think of the fact the troops are being pulled out at the same time they are being sent into Afghanistan instead. People have a right to speak out against what they think is wrong. It is better than sitting back complaining while they do nothing. If they feel strongly about it, let them protest but over the last few years, after tracking what is happening to our veterans across the nation, it still puzzles me what they are motivated by.

Are they out for peace? Then why haven't they included the combat in Afghanistan all these years? Are they really fighting for the troops? Then why aren't they fighting for the troops to be taken care of when they come home and face a mountain of red tape along with endless lines at the VA?

I have friends on both sides and I know they care deeply but when they are done arguing over politics, done trying to prove their own points, is it possible for them to at least come together and start really fighting for the troops and the wounded veterans these wars have produced? When you think that both military campaigns are still going on producing more wounded, don't you think it would make a stronger point to fight for them?

Friday, March 19, 2010

Local veterans join national campaign to tell stories of Vietnam

Local veterans join national campaign to tell stories of Vietnam War's fallen
By Mike Baird
Posted March 18, 2010 at 4:23 p.m.

CORPUS CHRISTI — Local veterans have joined a national campaign to personalize our Vietnam War dead.

One is a former Miller High School drum major who watched Hurricane Beulah’s approach in September 1967 as he left for Vietnam. Army Cpl. Robert Ochoa was concerned about his parents who were patching their roof on Koepke Street, but they made it through the storm.

Two months later they learned during Thanksgiving dinner that their son was killed from a hand grenade blast Nov. 21.

Juan Saenz, 68, a surviving Vietnam veteran who was a neighbor of the family, carried Ochoa’s photo Thursday in a ceremony at Nueces County Courthouse announcing the national campaign to build The Education Center at The Wall. It’s a planned two-story underground adjunct to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. The centerpiece will be a Wall of Faces with images of the more than 58,000 fallen alongside media footage and oral histories from loved ones.

Delia C. Alaniz, 81, of Corpus Christi already has provided photos and a letter from her son. Marine Pfc. Paul Alaniz Jr. was shot in the head on Mother’s Day, May 12, 1968, by a sniper in Quang Tri, Vietnam, she said.

“Paul was only in Vietnam eight days,” Alaniz said Thursday while pressing her hand against his photo. “I want everyone to remember my hero, my son.” She keeps her cell phone ring tone set with the sound of a saxophone, which he loved to play.
read more here
Local veterans join national campaign to tell stories of Vietnam

Heritage Museum Spearheads Veterans Project

BEHIND THE WALL: Museum Spearheads Veterans Project, Will Host Traveling Memorial
Plans to bring the Traveling Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall to Northwest Florida are well underway. The Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida (HMNF) will bring this national traveling replica to Okaloosa County in June 2010. The presentation is part of a series of programs and events presented by the regional history museum that honor the 75th anniversary of Eglin Air Force Base and highlights the area unique military heritage. The HMNF will host the traveling memorial, related exhibits, speakers and ceremonies at the Northwest Florida Fairgrounds, one of three U.S. Vietnamese refugee camps coordinated by Eglin Air Force Base and local volunteers in 1975. The highly decorated veteran Retired Air Force Col. Geoege "Bud" Day is scheduled to speak at ceremonies opening public visitation to the Memorial this summer.

(PRWEB) March 19, 2010 -- This summer, the Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida (HMNF) is bringing the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall and Traveling Museum to Okaloosa County.

This half-scale replica of the memorial in Washington, D.C. - also known as The Wall That Heals - has been traveling around the country since 1986 bringing with it a message of history, hope and healing. The museum is taking every opportunity to engage its military-rich community in every aspect of the presentation.

"Our museum is not simply a storehouse. By bringing the Wall we are actively engaging the community in a project that honors history and the people who were a part of it." - Michelle A. Severino, Director, Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida
Because education is central to the HMNF's mission the Wall visit is being used as an opportunity to educate teachers, students and the general public about a largely misunderstood conflict, a pivotal time in American history, the role of the local military bases and the stories of involvement shared by local veterans, refugees and others.

While the Memorial is on view, the HMNF will feature unique, never-before seen collections and original materials including items from the Vietnam Center and Archives at Texas Tech University, the History Office at Eglin Air Force Base and Arturo Studios. Images from the Brian Grigsby Collection at Texas Tech University pertaining to Eglin its role as a site for Vietnamese refugee camps - known as tent city - will be featured. A multi-media presentation developed by students from University of West Florida will include footage of student interviews with veterans from WWII, Korea and Vietnam.

A motorcycle escort over the state line and through the county will include hundred of local veteran, active duty, civilian riders.

Lectures by historians, scholars and honored veterans including George "Bud" Day are scheduled during the exhibit period. Special ceremonies will be held as well. See a complete listing of scheduled activities at wwww.veteranswallokaloosa.com

WHAT: Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall and Traveling Museum
WHEN: June 17-20, 2010
WHERE: C.H. "Bull" Rigdon Fairgrounds, Fort Walton Beach, Florida
WHO: Presented by the Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida (HMNF)
WHY: Honor History, Local Veterans and the 75th Anniversary of Eglin Air Force Base; An Educational Opportunity for the HMNF; An Opportunity for the HMNF to put local history/experience into a larger national/international context.
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2010/03/prweb3601234.htm

New York Army National Guard Conducts Reintegration Event

New York Army National Guard Conducts Reintegration
Event for Combat Veterans from Albany and New York City
by New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs
TARRYTOWN, NY
03/18/2010

New York Army National Guard combat veterans and their families will spend two days learning how to cope with the stresses of returning from a combat zone, and the benefits they are entitled two, during a weekend event at the Marriot Hotel here.

WHO: More than 70 Soldiers, and 90 members of their families and friends.

WHAT: A weekend Yellow Ribbon Reintegration program for Soldiers of the 53rd Army Liaison Team, the 27th Finance Detachment, the 3rd of the 142nd Assault Helicopter Battalion, and other units. The Soldiers come from the Capital Region, New York City, and Long Island.

WHEN: 1 -3 p.m. Saturday, March 20 (Media are welcome to attend during these times.)

WHERE: 670 White Plains Road, Tarrytown NY, 10591
The New York Army National Guard Yellow Ribbon Reintegration Program is an effort to help Soldiers and their families cope with the stress of returning to civilian life after deployment, while also helping Army National Guard units' transition from their federal mobilization status back to state control.
go here for more
New York Army National Guard Conducts Reintegration Event

Tell Gov. Jindal veterans are not there to glorify him

If Gov. Jindal really wanted to honor the men and women veterans, he would do what is right and fitting for them and not subject them to having to wait for when he can get to them. After all, he doesn't have to be the one delivering the medals in person, so this is all about him and his ego. What else can it be? He wants to have his picture taken doing something for the veterans but when you think of them having to wait until he can fit them into his "busy" schedule, it speaks loudly of the importance he places on veterans. They come after him. This is disgraceful! This is not honoring them. It is insulting them.

Veterans are waiting for their medals
March 18, 2010


Louisiana lawmakers are asking the Veterans Administration Director Lane Carson why is it taking so long for the Louisiana Veterans Honor Medal to be delivered. Members of a joint House and Senate committee urged the state Department of Veterans Affairs to step up its delivery of the medals and stop waiting for Gov. Bobby Jindal, who has traveled across the state in a series of events to hand out the medals.


"We literally have World War II veterans who are dying before they get to this jubilee with the governor. They want the medals," said state Senator Robert Adley, a Marine, who sponsored the bill that created the Veterans Honor Medal Program in 2008. Lawmakers said they have received calls from veterans who have waited months for their medals and and have had offers from veterans organizations who offered to make distribution of the medals but were told they had to wait for the governor to be there.
read more here
Veterans are waiting for their medals

Actresses Demi Moore, Nia Vardalos save teen via Twitter

Actresses Demi Moore, Nia Vardalos use Twitter to stave off suicide attempt in Casselberry

The Associated Press

11:17 a.m. EDT, March 19, 2010


CASSELBERRY — Actresses Demi Moore and Nia Vardalos were linked to an online chain of Twitter posts that ultimately led to Florida authorities intervening when a young man threatened to commit suicide.

Moore's Twitter account, mrskutcher, was among those responding to a message from a young man threatening to hang himself early Friday in Casselberry.

Moore — with 2.5 million followers — and husband Ashton Kutcher are both active on the social network.

Vardalos' eponymous account included a message that she had called a suicide hotline and been connected to Florida police. "I gave his name+city. They went to home, helped him," one message read.

The Seminole County Sheriff's Office said authorities received two calls around 2:30 a.m., one from California and one from Vancouver, British Columbia. Both callers reported the suicide threat on Twitter. There was no record of the callers' names, Lt. Sonia Pisano said.

Deputies went to a home and took an uninjured juvenile male to a hospital, Pisano said. She said she could not provide more specifics.

Calls to representatives for Moore and for Vardalos, who starred in "My Big Fat Greek Wedding," went unanswered early Friday.
read more here
Twitter to stave off suicide attempt

We're your combat veterans. We won't be ignored.

Remember Iraq
Clint Van Winkle
Filmmaker Author Iraq War Vet
Posted: March 19, 2010
It is hard to believe that it has been seven years since we invaded Iraq. My unit was a part of the initial invasion force. We fought our way up to Baghdad and then patrolled Saddam City (now Sadr City). I witnessed, and created, more death and destruction than most civilians can comprehend. And those images have remained with me since my mind first took mental snapshots of them. Those images will always be with me. Sadly, few Americans, besides those of us who served in Iraq, seem to care about our war. It has become one of the only U.S. wars that Americans can easily choose not to care about one way or another.

Now, on the seventh anniversary, the Iraq war will get a few seconds of coverage in between American Idol reviews and Dancing With The Stars critiques before being forgotten until next year. Forgetting about the Iraq War is a luxury I don't have.
read more here
Remember Iraq

When a hero hurts there is more to the story

Some will read the following and think it is just fine he is discharged without anything he worked 9 years for, but they are not opening their eyes to acknowledge the rest of the story.

Osborn's unit came under fire, and he was wounded in the firefight. He continued to render aid to others.

Think of the kind of person that would take to be able to do that. Normally we call this type of person a hero, and rightly so, but because he was hurting afterward, he reached for what would help him sleep at night. Pot has been used for centuries and was not illegal in this country until recent times. Doctors have found it helps cancer patients and so they expanded its use to include treating pain. There have been many studies done looking into using pot to treat PTSD but the older veterans already know how well it worked for them when they also self-medicated. Pot is not the answer but we need to understand why they would decide to use it instead of legal medications.

In this case, it should be a no-brainer to have Osborn go through substance abuse counseling and then return him to duty. After all, considering that when he was wounded, he put others first. That is worthy of a medal and not less than honorable discharge from the job he loved to do and few others are willing to step up and do.


Local Sailor Faces Discharge For Using Pot To Treat PTSD
Bill Osborn Diagnosed With PTSD, Mood Disorder

SAN DIEGO -- For nine years, Bill Osborn served as a Navy corpsman, but everything in his life changed in Afghanistan last May.

Osborn's unit came under fire, and he was wounded in the firefight. He continued to render aid to others.


"When I got shot instantly, I was still in the fight," said Osborn.

Weeks after the battle, anxiety and more set in, and it grew worse.

"It's a little embarrassing when you're with this elite unit to try and talk to these guys, so I self prescribed an anti-depressant," said Osborn.

Back stateside, Osborn was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and a mood disorder known as cyclothymia. He self-medicated again by smoking marijuana.
read more here
http://www.10news.com/news/22883918/detail.html

Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day

Vietnam veterans finally get their due

Monday ceremony part of day of honor
March 18, 2010 11:35:00 PM
By Howard Yune/Appeal-Democrat


For Vietnam War veterans, the first annual observance expressly in their honor is a chance to receive thank-yous deferred for decades.

Though belated, the ceremonies this month could undo some of the bitterness vented on U.S. soldiers in the late 1960s and give them the same appreciation given the veterans of other wars, predicted one of the observance's chief backers in the state.

"They were shocked. They didn't expect a heroes welcome, but they did expect to be treated like normal Americans," said Assemblyman Paul Cook, R-Yucca Valley, a 26-year Marine Corps veteran who served 13 months in Vietnam and co-wrote the Assembly bill to designate the day.

"It was a really bad time, and I think a lot of anger was directed toward veterans or anyone in the military — quite different from the attitude toward men and women serving today."

A Vietnam veteran in suburban Los Angeles, José Ramos, began petitioning cities and states a decade ago to give fellow veterans an observance distinct from Memorial Day and Veterans Day.

In September 2009, the Legislature passed a bill to recognize the day, and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed it into law. According to the Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day Organization, 11 other states have created observances for March 30 — the day in 1973 when the U.S. withdrew its last troops from the country, two years before communist North Vietnam's conquest of the south, which American forces had backed for more than a decade.
read more here
Vietnam veterans finally get their due

'Horses for Heroes' helps injured, traumatized war vets adjust

'Horses for Heroes' helps injured, traumatized war vets adjust

12:00 AM CDT on Friday, March 19, 2010
By AVI SELK / The Dallas Morning News
aselk@dallasnews.com

Saddle up, soldier.

The horses of Stajduhar Stables in Colleyville have long been helping children bear the burdens of debilitating diseases. The animals' rhythmic gait can calm the nervous systems of kids with autism and strengthen the muscles of those with cerebral palsy.

Now the therapeutic riding stable is looking for injured or traumatized veterans to get on the horse – no charge. They call it "Horses for Heroes."

The stable has booked five soldiers with post-traumatic stress disorder for its pilot class this spring, but it's still searching for at least one physically disabled veteran to participate. The success of the class will help determine whether the program gets grant money to continue into the future. DFW Case Management Society of America is funding the pilot class with a donation to the stable's nonprofit foundation.

"We can help them regain their strength, regain their balance," said Lisa Stajduhar, a physical therapist who owns the stable. "If they use a prosthetic, we can help them get up and start walking again."
read more here
Horses for Heroes

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Show this to Glenn Beck

When Glenn Beck told his audience to leave their churches if they preached about social justice and the rest of the message Christ left us with, he showed more contempt for the merciful than anyone else could have. This is a picture of true compassion, charity, respect and appreciation for members of the veterans' community. The problem is, people like Beck would treat them as if they should just suffer and die forgotten because these were homeless veterans.


Homeless veterans memorial
(Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times / March 16, 2010)

A memorial service is held at Pierce Bros. Valley Oaks-Griffin in Westlake Village for five veterans who were homeless and without families. The service members are Valentine Plaska, a merchant marine, and four who served in the Army: Glenn Davis, Jefferson Robinson, Sanford L. Garland and Paul Deighton. Among those paying their respects are two veterans with hats in hands: Onesimus Evans, center left, and Salvador Ayala.

find more pictures here

Two Colorado National Guardsmen killed in accident

2 Colo. guardsmen die in car crash

The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Mar 18, 2010 14:44:03 EDT

PUEBLO, Colo. — Two people killed in a crash in southern Colorado were both Colorado National Guardsmen.

The Colorado State Patrol says Master Sgt. Robert Orta, 37, of Pueblo West and Sgt. Arnold Harp, 32, of Colorado Springs were killed in the accident Monday on La Veta Pass.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/03/ap_guard_colorado_crash_031810/

Medicating the military

The saying goes, give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day but teach him how to fish and he'll eat everyday, or words like it but they are from a wise person looking past the need of the moment toward the need of the tomorrows.

Teach a man to medicate, he'll cope for a day. Teach him to heal and he'll live to an old age when you think about what needs to be done at the same time we see what is not being done now. They are given medications with no therapy and very little monitoring by a doctor. How do they expect to treat wounds with masking the pain? They are teaching them that no matter what pain they feel, they can kill it off with medications instead of addressing the cause of the pain in the first place.

Medicating the military

Use of psychiatric drugs has spiked; concerns surface about suicide, other dangers
By Andrew Tilghman and Brendan McGarry - Staff writers
Posted : Wednesday Mar 17, 2010 12:18:59 EDT

At least one in six service members is on some form of psychiatric drug.

And many troops are taking more than one kind, mixing several pills in daily “cocktails” — for example, an antidepressant with an antipsychotic to prevent nightmares, plus an anti-epileptic to reduce headaches — despite minimal clinical research testing such combinations.

The drugs come with serious side effects: They can impair motor skills, reduce reaction times and generally make a war fighter less effective. Some double the risk for suicide, prompting doctors — and Congress — to question whether these drugs are connected to the rising rate of military suicides.

“It’s really a large-scale experiment. We are experimenting with changing people’s cognition and behavior,” said Dr. Grace Jackson, a former Navy psychiatrist.

A Military Times investigation of electronic records obtained from the Defense Logistics Agency shows DLA spent $1.1 billion on common psychiatric and pain medications from 2001 to 2009. It also shows that use of psychiatric medications has increased dramatically — about 76 percent overall, with some drug types more than doubling — since the start of the current wars.
read more here
Medicating the military

Injured War-Zone Workers Fight Insurance Giant AIG

Back From Iraq, Injured War-Zone Workers Fight Insurance Giant AIG, Face Financial Ruin
Civilian Contractors Accuse Insurer of Continuing To 'Delay and Deny' Claims
By AVNI PATEL
March 18, 2010
Civilian contractors who were injured or wounded while supporting American troops in Iraq continue to face long battles with insurance giant AIG for payment of their disability claims, despite Congressional inquiries and calls to reform the system that has handled tens of thousands of disability claims from employees of overseas contractors.

Some AIG clients say they suffered while execs were treated to the high life.

More PhotosThe injured workers, including some wounded by small-arms fire or IEDs during insurgent attacks, complain that AIG has continued to "delay and deny" their claims nearly a year after a joint investigation by ABC News, ProPublica, and the Los Angeles Times first exposed serious problems with AIG's handling of disability claims under a government-funded insurance system. An analysis found that AIG challenged nearly half of the claims involving the most serious injuries.

"They will spend whatever it takes, or do whatever it takes, to berate, belittle and humiliate us," said Bill Carlisle, an injured Arkansas man who drove trucks in Iraq for nearly two years.
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Injured War-Zone Workers Fight Insurance Giant AIG

Husband kills wife during church counseling session

Woman dies after husband shoots her inside church

By KING5.com
KING5
updated 14 minutes ago
FEDERAL WAY, Wash. – Police say a 38-year-old woman is dead after her 42-year-old husband shot her at Calvary Lutheran Church on S. 330th Street in Federal Way Wednesday shortly before 6 p.m.

According to Federal Way Police, the Lakewood couple was at the church for a counseling session during which the husband shot his wife. He reportedly fired his handgun several times at the victim.
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35923993/ns/local_news-seattle_wa/
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