Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Veteran leaves message "And let my demon sleep"

"And let my demon sleep" sounds like such an easy thing to do. It also sounds like a good thing to do. Letting a "demon" sleep should mean the veteran is able to rest, and in many cases, rest does come, but the problem is, rest does not last. The demon gains strength while resting. When it awakens, he does it without warning and attacks with vengeance. The best time to fight this demon is as soon as he shows up. Defeat it with the weapons known to destroy it. The truth, support, faith and above all, forgiveness.
Facing up to hidden wounds
Published: Tuesday, April 03, 2012
By The Oregonian Editorial Board
Jamie Francis / The Oregonian More than 1500 ribbons like this are display inside the PTSD unit of Roseburg Veterans Medical Center. Each ribbons was placed there by a graduate of the program.
During the first few years of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Army Surgeon General Lt. Gen. Patricia Horoho told the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee last week, the Army medical system was "overwhelmed."

The Army had sent so many soldiers to war so many times that its longstanding medical evaluation process simply couldn't keep up with the demand. This imbalance, Horoho told committee chairman Patty Murray, D-Wash., was especially acute for those suffering from invisible wounds such as post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD.

The Army overhauled its medical evaluation system in 2007, but all the services are still scrambling to catch up. And the effort can be messy.

The latest evidence comes from up the highway at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, the military base near Tacoma that most Oregon National Guard soldiers have passed through on their way home from deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Investigators are studying whether medical officers at Madigan Army Medical Center deliberately chose not to diagnose soldiers suffering from PTSD in order to limit costs to the government.

Those costs are substantial. In 2008, Congress granted a 50 percent disability rating for any service member who left the military with a PTSD diagnosis. That means each diagnosis puts the government -- the taxpayers -- on the hook for a lifetime of benefits.
read more here


Truth comes when the veteran faces the truth about himself/herself. Not the way they see themselves in the moment of deepest suffering but in the moments leading up to the event haunting them. What were they thinking? What was going on around them? What was their intention? Watch the "whole movie" in their minds instead of the end result frozen in time. There was a lot more going on causing the outcome.

They usually forget about what they had inside of them pulling them to enter into the military in the first place. It was not about killing but more about defending. Then it became a cause greater than themselves. Being willing to die for the sake of someone else. There is no "demon" able to defeat that when they see the truth within them.

War is so horrible most wonder where God was and why He allowed it. The truth again is already known to them. God does not interfere with freewill. What man does to man is up to them and since the beginning of time, they have gone to war. Yet even during such horrific events, God is there but they cannot see Him. They cannot connect their ability to care at all to the fact that God is there with them. When there is an act of kindness or heroic act, He was there. When one of them shed a single tear for someone they called enemy as well as for a friend, He was there.

We know there is nothing God cannot forgive but too often it is harder for a veteran to forgive him/herself for what they had to do and the fact they survived. The demon is defeated when they are able to make peace with themselves. They can do that with the right support, someone to listen to them without judging them. They don't need judgement since they already judged themselves and are punishing from within.

The old warrior can only rest when the demon is defeated.

PTSD on Trial: Iraq veteran returns home for new start

Ex-soldier returns to Virginia Beach for new start
By Corinne Reilly
The Virginian-Pilot ©
April 4, 2012 VIRGINIA BEACH
When the plane carrying Daryl Beamer home finally landed, the passengers around him scrambled to check messages and gather luggage. Beamer just waited. He had no cellphone and only a handful of belongings to his name. In the terminal at Norfolk International, he passed a soldier in uniform, and he thought, That should be me. That's how I wanted to come home.

But it had been years since Beamer wore those clothes. Now, in late March, he was in a T-shirt he'd bought at the Wildwood Correctional Center commissary in Alaska and a pair of jeans a fellow inmate had given him.

His eyes met his mother's. She rushed to meet him, wrapped her arms tightly around him, and spoke to God.

"Praise the Lord!" she called out. "My baby is here!"

As she held her son, shaking and crying, hurried travelers paused to stare.

She didn't care. Her boy was home.

The last time The Virginian-Pilot published a story about Beamer and his mother, Ozawa Skipper-Coleman, was in July 2010, several months after Skipper-Coleman called the newspaper pleading for help for her son, an Iraq war veteran who was then 26.

A tough but warm woman from Virginia Beach who'd raised Beamer and his two brothers mostly on her own, she was desperate to save her middle child from a fate that was beginning to feel inevitable: years of prison time, or worse, a jail-cell suicide.

If only she could get someone - the Army, the legal system, her congressman - to see Beamer for what he really was, a mentally ill combat veteran in urgent need of treatment, not a common thug.
read more here

Parade planned for veterans in Des Moines

Welcome-home parade set in Des Moines for Iraq war vets
Apr. 4, 2012
Written by WILLIAM PETROSKI

State officials are planning a big parade in downtown Des Moines in June to officially welcome home thousands of Iraq war veterans while honoring other Iowa military service members from the past and present. A similar parade held in August 1991 after the Persian Gulf War drew an estimated crowd of 50,000 people who lined the streets of Des Moines.

The patriotic event included about 120 floats, marching soldiers wearing the uniforms of major wars, military vehicles, and entries from about 80 organizations. The upcoming parade will be held at 10 a.m. on June 30. It will begin at the Iowa Capitol and end at the Veterans Memorial Community Choice Credit Union Convention Center.

“I think every opportunity that we can take to thank our service members and our veterans is crucial,” said retired Iowa National Guard Col. Robert King, who was asked by Gov. Terry Branstad to head the event’s planning. “Some of our older veterans are passing on every day, and now we have a new breed of soldier who is coming home and assimilating back in our communities,” King said. “They gave a lot, too, and a good number of them didn’t come home.” Sixty-five Iowans died in the Iraq war, and 20 others have died in the Afghanistan war.

The June parade is titled “A Salute to Service Members and Veterans.” It will include an observance of the 50th anniversary of the U.S. combat involvement in Vietnam. read more here

Marine veteran Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. killed by police who "came to help"

Marine veteran Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. killed after clash with police who responded to his medical emergency Exclusive:
White Plains police came to 'help,' but shot 68-year-old with stun gun and beanbag gun
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Wednesday, April 4, 2012,
What began as a mission of mercy at a public housing project in White Plains ended with police killing the very man they had been dispatched to help. By the time the rapidly escalating conflict was over, police had zapped a 68-year-old former Marine and correction officer with a stun gun, shot him with a beanbag gun and blasted him twice in the chest.

The chronically ill Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. died at White Plains Hospital shortly after the early-morning clash on Nov. 19. Only now, more than four months after the fact, have authorities finally agreed to convene a grand jury to determine if the cops committed a crime.

 Like 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, Chamberlain was African-American, and his death has added fuel to the growing national debate that has flared since the Florida teen was killed on Feb. 26. As in Florida, the White Plains incident received little press attention for weeks and authorities resisted a grand jury probe.

Since then, accounts have surfaced that at least one officer was heard on a tape hurling racial epithets and taunts in the moments before cops removed Chamberlain’s apartment door from its hinges and burst inside. During the past several days, nearly 200,000 people have signed an online petition demanding justice in Chamberlain’s case. White Plains Mayor Tom Roach on Friday issued his first public statement of condolences to the dead man’s family. read more here 68 year old Ex-Marine's medic alert alarm got him killed by police

WUFT Florida focuses on combat and PTSD

The effects of PTSD on military families
Front Page Edition on April 3rd, 2012
By Luis Giraldo
WUFT-FM

Yesterday we heard from John McDaniel, the founder of Wounded Warriors In Action, about the opportunities he is giving purple heart veterans as they battle physical injuries and cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Today, Florida’s 89.1, WUFT-FM’s Luis Giraldo brings us the voice of someone who knows PTSD symptoms well, through her experience with the United States Military and her family.

Although a cure for the disorder does not exist, more and more veteran centers are providing counseling opportunities to veterans that now recognize that talking is the best medicine in this case. Tomorrow, Luis will bring us the voice of Scott Camil, a Vietnam War Purple Heart recipient who recognizes the issues going on in the news right now with PTSD as those he witnessed when he was the hero on ground.
go here to listen

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

New phishing scam targets troops’ fiancees

New phishing scam targets troops’ fiancees
By Karen Jowers - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Apr 3, 2012

 One of the latest phishing scams targets fiancées of service members in an attempt to lure them into “registering” in the Defense Finance and Accounting Service “system” to be entitled to receive benefits if their service member dies — for a $350 fee. It’s not from DFAS. Rather, it’s a typical scam used by phishers when trying to extract personal information and, in this case, money, from any victim who takes the bait. read more here

Source of Iraq WMD Claim Admits He Lied

With all the talk from the tea party folks, you'd think they'd mention this as if it was an important story and part of our budget problem. So why do they ignore this? Why have they ignored it all along instead of demanding accountability?
Source of Iraq WMD Claim Admits He Lied

April 03, 2012
The Independent
by Jonathan Owen

A man whose lies helped to make the case for invading Iraq -- starting a nine-year war costing more than 100,000 lives and hundreds of billions of dollars -- told British television Monday that his tales of WMD were lies. "Curveball," the Iraqi defector who made claims about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, smiles as he confirms how he made the whole thing up.

It was a confidence trick that changed the course of history, with Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi's lies used to justify the Iraq war. He tries to defend his actions: "My main purpose was to topple the tyrant in Iraq because the longer this dictator remains in power, the more the Iraqi people will suffer from this regime's oppression."

 The chemical engineer claimed to have overseen the building of a mobile biological laboratory when he sought political asylum in Germany in 1999. His lies were presented as "facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence" by Colin Powell, U.S. Secretary of State, when making the case for war at the U.N. Security Council in February 2003. But Janabi, speaking in a two-part series, "Modern Spies," says none of it was true. When it is put to him "we went to war in Iraq on a lie. And that lie was your lie", he simply replied: "Yes."
read more here

Ramstein Air Base students "hoodie up" for Trayvon Martin

Ramstein students put on their hoodies for Trayvon Martin
By JENNIFER H. SVAN
Stars and Stripes
Published: April 3, 2012

RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany — In a show of solidarity for slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, more than 230 students at Ramstein High School wore hooded sweatshirts or jackets to class Tuesday as part of a peaceful demonstration they called “Hoodies Up.”

 The intent was to show that wearing a hoodie should not make a person appear threatening, said 17-year-old senior Caleb Guerrido, one of five students who came up with the idea of wearing hoodies to school. 

Martin, 17, was shot Feb. 26 by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman as he walked back to the townhouse of his father’s girlfriend in the gated community of Sanford. Zimmerman, 28, told police that Martin, who was unarmed, was wearing a dark hoodie and looked “suspicious.” He claimed that when he questioned Martin, the teen jumped him and that he shot him in self defense.
read more here

UK Ex-soldier with PTSD cleared of gun murder

Ex-soldier cleared of gun murder
Published on Monday 2 April 2012
A former soldier from Leeds suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in Afghanistan has been cleared of murdering his landlady.

Aaron Wilkinson, 24, of Alma Street, Woodlesford, Leeds, was found not guilty of murdering 52-year-old Judith Garnett by shooting her in the chest and head. The jury took around three hours to reach the not-guilty verdict after the two-week trial. Wilkinson, who was also diagnosed with a form of Asperger's Syndrome, told Bradford Crown Court he was not in control of his actions when he shot Mrs Garnett. He has admitted manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

The trial heard that Wilkinson joined the Territorial Army at 19 and went on a six-month tour of duty of Afghanistan in 2009. Following his return, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress reaction by an army doctor. He was later assessed by psychiatrists who diagnosed him with the more serious post-traumatic stress disorder. Wilkinson had worked for Mrs Garnett on her game farm for around 10 years and moved into her attic room as a lodger in July 2010 after an argument with his mother. He described Mrs Garnett as being like a "second mother" to him.
read more here

To DOD brass, N.O.W. cut the crap of resiliency

To DOD brass, N.O.W. cut the crap of resiliency
by Chaplain Kathie
I have been struggling with this for the last couple of days waiting to calm down. That isn't happening. If you follow this blog, you know that this is one thing I am very passionate about, so you're accustomed to my rants. This is about to be another one.


The fact that most military leaders care about the men and women serving is not the problem. Understanding them is. After hearing they can "train their brains" and become "resilient" they blame themselves when they end up with Combat PTSD. While the DOD will mention that some suicides are committed by men and women that had not deployed yet, they fail to address the fact that the threat of deployment plays a huge role in their suicides. The fact they feel the need to mention this when releasing suicide numbers, screams they are searching for excuses as the numbers prove what they are doing is a massive failure.
Enlisted Leaders Focus on Suicide Prevention
By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, March 29, 2012 – The most senior enlisted leaders from each branch of service and the combatant commands focused on the health of the force, and specifically on suicide prevention, during a conference here this week, the military’s top enlisted member said today. Marine Corps Sgt. Maj. Bryan B. Battaglia, senior enlisted advisor to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he and the other enlisted leaders collaborated on issues pertaining to the health, welfare and wellness of service members and their families.

Battaglia highlighted his “NOW” initiative, designed to reach younger service members. “The audience that I really wanted to reach is the 18- to 24-year-olds,” he said. The suicide issue seems to be most prevalent with younger service members, he said, but “it’s also important to educate the leadership too, so the audience wasn’t restricted to simply the young [troops].” The sergeant major broke down the initiative’s three-letter acronym.
read more here
The DOD bought the bullshit line that troops could train their brains to be "tough" because they didn't understand them in the first place. Did they ever ask themselves what it would sound like to them to hear this? Did they ever once wonder about boot camp training them in the first place to be physically and mentally tough? Being willing to risk their lives along with all the other hardships they are prepared to accept when they walk into a recruitment office proves they are tough enough to even think about it.

What has the DOD been doing? Telling them since the Battlemind training came out that they are not tough enough and have to train their brains to deal with combat. Whatever else the DOD has to say after this has fallen on deaf ears. How is a combat veteran supposed to think PTSD is not connected to being weak when that is exactly what this type of training drills into their brains? Does the DOD really expect them to reach out for help after this? Are they out of their own minds?

For the last 30 years (yes, I’m that old) I have been reading all the data coming in on PTSD. The VA didn’t accept the term until the 80’s but the mental health community was already using the term with an ever-growing understanding of what traumatic events do, especially when it came to combat trauma. In the 70’s, the Disabled American Veterans had already established Veterans Centers to help Vietnam veterans heal from where they’ve been. PTSD is not new. 

What is needed is not some new notion. What fails has been learned a long time ago and telling them it is their fault is the biggest mistake they could ever make. Do they learn from any of this? Hell no! They keep repeating the same basic principle under a different acronym expecting a different result.

The human mind has been studied enough that the age group the DOD targets for recruitment is not fully emotionally developed until the age of 25 when the region of the brain controlling emotions is as strong as it will ever be. Life forms this. Everything from the day they were born goes into who they will become and the good along with the bad experiences in life build into how they feel. In other words, they have been “training” their brains since the day they let out their first scream after being shocked into the first breath on their own.

This same age group, exposed to combat trauma, has an open door policy to PTSD crashing in. The other factor of their age is they believe they’ll get over it. Resiliency training enforces this delusion. If they want to save lives, stop military suicides then they need to stop this deadly approach.

Medicating PTSD troops and sending them back into combat without psychologists monitoring them and proving therapy is deadly especially when everyone they are serving with has been provided with the same “training” leaving them to believe their “buddy” is just weaker than they are.

They have no one to trust with what they need to talk about. They look at their buddies with “normal” reactions to the same event and they believe what the DOD told them. They didn’t train their brains and are weak. We see the number of suicides across the branches fluctuate month to month but then we read about the increased number of attempted suicides indicating that this approach is a colossal failure.

What works is explaining to them what PTSD is. They were exposed to a traumatic event that hit them harder this time than other events. That others exposed to the same event may not show problems today, but they may show up years from now. That the rate of PTSD for humans is one out of three and no one walks away from combat the same way they went in. Everyone is changed by it. The event caused PTSD and had nothing to do with how well they “trained” to be tough.

Start with preparing for traumatic events the same way the civilians do. Police and fire departments are ready right after the event to emotionally debrief the responders. Yes, they figured this out a very long time ago. This gives the “survivors” the ability to walk through the event from start to finish so that the last, worst, image in their minds is put into context with everything else that happened. If they had to kill someone, they will not just see the dead body but they will see that other lives were in danger before they had to pull the trigger.

Firefighters experience the traumatic event after the fire started but all too often they are too late to save all the people in the building and they need an emotional debriefing to understand that some things are out of their power.

For the members of the military, they not only face the situations where they are saving lives, but they are taking lives as well. They need the same approach available to them.

Train people in every unit to be able to walk them through the event as soon as possible so the last, worst image is not the only image they see when they go do sleep. They need to feel safe talking to someone that will understand and not judge them. They need to be able to talk until they are done talking about it so they can “fix” it themselves. In other words, make peace with it.

They need trained Chaplains and lay people to talk to about their spiritual issues without hearing some zealot tell them they are going to hell if they do not convert. I am with Point Man International Ministries because it works. They have been doing it since 1984 and saving lives while helping veterans live better lives. The peer-to-peer support needs to be replicated by the DOD coupled with healing the spirit/soul of the warrior sent and veteran coming home. Point Man helps all veterans. They do not separate them by wars but links them to each other.

With all that has been learned since Vietnam veterans fought to have PTSD treated, the DOD is the last to learn these lessons. We know what works but they have not understood what has failed.

Jacksonville's Arlington area to offer a place for homeless veterans

Center opens in Jacksonville's Arlington area to offer a place for homeless veterans
The former nursing home is turned into housing for ex-service members.
Posted: April 3, 2012
WILL DICKEY/The Times-Union 
Jerry Bass is the national commander of the Allied Veterans of the World and Affiliates, and has an office at the Allied Veterans Center, which is located in a former nursing home on Acme Street in Arlington.
By Beth Reese Cravey

Last year, Gale Patrick Lancaster was homeless and jobless.

He was living on the street in downtown Jacksonville and, because of his circumstances, had lost visitation with his young daughter. Now, the 41-year-old Marine veteran has a place to stay at the newly opened Allied Veterans Center for homeless veterans off Atlantic Boulevard in the Arlington area.

He is now doing construction and janitorial work and in May will begin studying logistics and transportation at Florida State College at Jacksonville, with hopes of getting a port-related job. And he recently had a reunion with his daughter, after center officials helped get his visitation rights restored. Lancaster, who served in the Gulf war, credits the center for turning his life around.

“It’s a place for vets to get back on their feet, become productive members of society,” he said. “It’s hard to get help … [that helps] you out of a situation, rather than shoving you here or there.”
 read more here

Ensure veterans in trouble with the law receive the help they need

Saratoga County Veterans Service Agency director: Ensure veterans in trouble with the law receive the help they need
Published: Monday, April 02, 2012
By MICHAEL CIGNOLI
BALLSTON SPA — A driver who gets pulled over for driving 85 miles per hour on the Northway will likely get a speeding ticket from a law enforcement official. But if that driver is a veteran, Saratoga County Veterans Service Agency Director Andrew Davis wants to ensure the police officer also provides a list of contact information for local veterans programs.

Studies have shown that as many as 26 percent of veterans returning from overseas suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injuries. Even more suffer from depression or other disorders that may contribute to — though not necessarily excuse — their getting in trouble with the law. 

Addressing the county Board of Supervisors’ Veterans Committee on Monday, Davis outlined a new initiative designed to educate Saratoga County’s 14 law enforcement agencies about some of the issues veterans face as they return home from combat. He’s looking to improve officers’ ability to work with veterans who suffer from mental health disorders and allow those veterans to receive whatever help they need.
read more here

PTSD Peer to Peer Pilot Program named after PFC. Joseph Dwyer

Peer to Peer Pilot Program Targeted to Assist Veterans Suffering from PTSD and TBI

(Sayville, NY) Senator Lee M. Zeldin (R, C, I- Shirley) announced today that the New York State Senate, Assembly and Governor Andrew Cuomo, approved funding for the PFC Joseph Dwyer Program, a pilot program for four counties, including Suffolk County, to help returning veterans cope with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) by offering a Peer to Peer mentoring program.

Peer support establishes an intervention mechanism and reasonable means to provide assistance to those suffering from PTSD and TBI symptoms. In many instances, peers with the same combat and reintegration issues will benefit from joint participation in the same mentoring program.

PFC Dwyer enlisted in the Army within days of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. He served with courage and honor in Iraq, but returned home with PTSD.

On June 28, 2008, this illness took his life, leaving behind his wife, Matina, and their two year old daughter, Meagan. Senator Zeldin, who campaigned for election in 2010, then promised he would spearhead the creation of the PFC Joseph Dwyer Program. Immediately after taking office in 2011, Zeldin formed the Blue Ribbon John P. Jennings Veterans’ Advisory Panel to assist him in studying and crafting the framework of the PFC Joseph Dwyer Program.

read more here
Pfc. Joseph Dwyer to have street named after him
What Joe Dwyer's death can teach us

Monday, April 2, 2012

Military dogs saving lives on battlefield

Military dogs saving lives on battlefield, building special bonds with soldiers By Hugh Lessig, April 1, 2012 In 2007, Jonathan Bourgeois was on patrol in Iraq when heard the call. Get back. Up ahead, a military working dog had detected the scent of explosives. "That day, they saved my squad from being blown up," he said. Bourgeois, an Air Force staff sergeant, now works as a military dog handler at Langley Air Force Base in Hampton. He traces his passion for the fearless, four-legged warriors to that roadside conversion. "Ever since then," he said, "I've been hooked." read more here linked from Stars and Stripes

4 Bliss soldiers believed missing in N.M.

UPDATE
1 missing Bliss soldier contacts search crews
The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Apr 3, 2012
MOGOLLON, N.M. — New Mexico state police say one of the Fort Bliss soldiers believed to be missing after a weekend kayak trip has contacted search crews. Lt. Robert McDonald said Tuesday that Sgt. Nicholas Mummert walked out to searchers late Monday. read more here
4 Bliss soldiers believed missing in N.M.
The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Apr 2, 2012

MOGOLLON, N.M. — Officials at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas, say a search has been launched for four soldiers and a civilian believed missing after a weekend kayak trip on Mogollon Creek in New Mexico’s Gila National Forest. Military officials say Spc. Alton Weber and Sgt. Nicholas Mummert were confirmed overdue Monday morning. Two other soldiers as well as a civilian, identified as Angelica Gonzalez from El Paso, are believed to be missing with the men. read more here

Memphis falls short on PTSD

Memphis falls short on PTSD
City policy does not recognize officer's psychological injury 
By Amos Maki
Posted April 2, 2012

Memphis Police Department officer Gabriel Lawson was one of dozens of officers who responded to a disturbance at the DoubleTree Hotel Downtown on July 3, 2011. Once inside, Lawson and others found fellow officer Timothy Warren had been shot. While still under fire from his shooter, the officers pulled the fatally wounded Warren from the line of fire and stayed with him until paramedics arrived.

Alexander Haydel of Cleveland, Miss., has been indicted on two counts of first-degree murder in the shootings, accused of killing his wife's former husband at the hotel before shooting the officer. Shortly after the shootout, which also left Arthur Warren -- who is unrelated to the fallen officer -- dead, Lawson began displaying signs of post-traumatic stress disorder, including flashbacks, nightmares, emotional detachment and insomnia. Lawson took an extended leave and sought medical help. read more here

Army veteran college student found dead

Army Veteran, Towson Student Found Dead
April 1, 2012
 TOWSON, Md.
(AP) — An Army veteran and Towson University student has died. Baltimore County police say Timothy Coyer, 27, was found dead by his roommates inside his apartment near campus Saturday afternoon. Although the cause and manner of death are not known, police say Coyer’s death was not a homicide. read more here

Tulsa Soldier Rebuilding Credit, Life After Burglary While Deployed

Tulsa Soldier Rebuilding Credit, Life After Burglary
Posted: Apr 02, 2012
Craig Day, News On 6
TULSA, Oklahoma - A soldier back on the Homefront from Afghanistan is trying to recover from being a crime victim. While he was deployed, someone cleaned out his storage unit, taking everything he owned.

Stealing is always wrong. Stealing from a deployed soldier, that's an outrage. While most soldiers with Oklahoma's 45th Infantry are readjusting to life back home, Greg Goodson is starting over. "It sucks, you know. You think you could come home and your stuff is all there, and it's not," Goodson said. A few days ago, Goodson was among a group of soldiers welcomed home after a yearlong deployment, most of it in Afghanistan. He returned knowing everything he owned was taken while he was away. "Some of the lowest people I could ever think of probably," said soldier Greg Goodson. read more here

Army General Martin Demsey talks about well being of soldiers and families

JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF CHAIRMAN STRESSES TRUST
 By: Dennis E. “Mac” McGowan, author of “The Living Diet: Conquer stress in your life now!”

The image of trust is fundamental in the relationship that exists between our men and women in uniform and their society, emphasized the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman.

Speaking March 30 at the Mental and Physical Well-Being of Soldiers and their Families Conference in Washington, DC, U.S. Army General Martin Demsey said, “Very few of the problems that we’re facing are problems that we’re facing for the first time.”

The Defense Department and Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury hosted the Conference. Demsey pointed out the important role of the 750 military leaders and pay experts attending the conference. Their role included reviewing the required life skills, confidence building and hope that enhance the resilience of our military forces. “There is a band of trust promised” for both active duty and retired military, he said. “Each day is another opportunity that bonds us as a profession,” he added. Demsey continued, “If we lose that, it doesn’t matter how much money we throw at it.” General Demsey highlighted four focus areas.

 The first area was “achieving the objectives in our country’s current conflicts.” The military needs to “seek a deeper and richer understanding” of what has happened to our forces over the last 10 years. Secondly, he stated that the military needed to look into the future and “develop the Joint Force of 2020.” Demsey disclosed that his 37-year Army career began right after Vietnam.

He discussed the human conflict in our military services that occurred as a result of Vietnam. He mentioned that a major rethinking developed when the military “switched from a conscript to an all-volunteer military” force.

The next area of focus was the “profession of arms.” There was one word unique among all others – trust – that “separated our country from every other country in the world.” Demsey added that one significant goal of the conference participants was to generate proposals “to decide what we need to do and how best to do it. We need to remind ourselves that this is about people.” You want others to look back, in 10 years, and say about you: “That’s a country that got the people right.”

The final area that Demsey noted was the importance of “keeping faith with ourselves, our families and our commitments.” He associated this area with the trust this country promises for its military. The general encouraged attendees to “develop a list of priorities that produced benefits for families.” While he was a proponent of greater transparency for providing health care policy information to families, he acknowledged that goal was often “impeded by well meaning legislation that protected individual privacy.” His career convinced him that the resiliency of the military was due to it being a team sport. Activities at the ground level must be performed in the context of a team.

In response to a question, he commented that he was in favor of the different branches sharing generic data. However, he would not advocate joint medical sharing for all existing practices among the services. Demsey said, “The attribute that I have begun to value most is adaptability.” He was not convinced that “today’s attributes were appropriate for 2020.” The military’s biggest failure was in accurately predicting the way the military forces would be used in the future. Demsey believed that what made the military work was “the leader who can adapt.”

He talked about the significance of a leader taking something that was ill designed for the purpose intended, and successfully completing the mission. Demsey believed that if the military placed individuals in unfamiliar circumstances they would have the best chance for succeeding. Those enduring attributes – integrity, honor and courage – would rise to meet the challenges. Demsey concluded by emphasizing the importance of building adaptability in individuals by giving them the opportunity to face “change, failure and chaos” in the military’s training and education programs.

Two die in speedway motorcycle crash after Vietnam vet event

Two die in speedway motorcycle crash after Vietnam vet event
 By: Charlotte Observer
 McClatchy Tribune News Service
 Published: April 02, 2012
 CONCORD -- Two people died and one remained in critical condition late Sunday following a motorcycle wreck Saturday at Charlotte Motor Speedway. About 5 p.m., shortly after the day-long Vietnam Veterans Homecoming Celebration in Concord ended, two motorcycles crashed into each other on the speedway’s track, Concord police said. Three people were hurt in the collision, and all were rushed to area hospitals.

 Both drivers died a short time later, police said, and the third person remained hospitalized, police said. Concord police have not released the names of the three victims, although they said that none of them are from the Charlotte area. Adrian Parker, director of communications for the speedway, declined to release details of how the collision happened, saying that was part of the Concord police investigation. He also wouldn’t say whether the speedway would review its safety procedures or how it would plan to prevent similar incidents from happening in the future. read more here