Saturday, February 23, 2013

Daytona race leaves fans injured after crash

Update February 24, 2013
From WESH2 News
28 Hurt in last lap crash at Daytona
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. —At least 28 people were injured Saturday when large chunks of debris, including a tire, sailed into the grandstands when a car flew into the fence at Daytona International Speedway on a frightening last-lap accident in the second-tier Nationwide Series race.

Daytona Nationwide crash: Kyle Larson's frightening wreck sends car parts into stands
Jeff Owens Sporting News
Speed TV reported that 15 spectators were taken to local hospitals, with six being treated for trauma-like injuries.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — A spectacular crash in the Nationwide Series race Saturday tore apart the catch fence and sent parts of Kyle Larson’s car, including the engine, flying into the grandstands at Daytona International Speedway.

Larson’s car was flipped upside-down into the fence during a frightening melee on the final lap.
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More military lives lost to suicide in 2012 than battle dead from three wars

I have been looking at these numbers for so long now that it has become infuriating to turn on the news and not hear one word about any of this.

Last year we lost more troops to suicide than we lost in battle during the Gulf War.
Gulf War
Persian Gulf War
Total Served 2,225,000
Total Deaths
382

2012 Military Suicides
449


Last year we lost more veterans to suicide than we did in 11 years of fighting two wars.

US Killed in Afghanistan
2001 12
2002 49
2003 48
2004 52
2005 99
2006 98
2007 117
2008 155
2009 317
2010 499
2011 418
2012 310
2013 3
Total Deaths
2,177


US Killed in Iraq
2003 486
2004 849
2005 846
2006 823
2007 904
2008 314
2009 149
2010 60
2011 54
2012 1
Total Deaths
4,486

Total Killed in Three Wars
7,045


2012 Veteran Suicides
8,030
Military/veteran families grieving by graves filled last year by suicide
8,479

UPDATE February 24, 2013
John Henry Parker, a friend, wrote on Huffington Post that this was happening and it was a big deal even before the new numbers came out. The veterans committing suicide figure went up along with military suicides. It you want to know why this is such a big deal to people paying attention, read this.
Veteran Suicides Each Year Eclipses Total OEF/OIF U.S. Military Killed in Action Since 9/11
Huffington Post
John Henry Parker
Co-Founder, Purple Star Veterans and Families (PSVF)

Wake Up, America.

We are crossing a serious milestone in our nation's history -- and nobody knows it.

The latest U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) report from the DEFENSE CASUALTY ANALYSIS SYSTEM puts the number of U.S. military killed in action (KIA) while serving in Iraq and Afghanistan at 6,567 as of December 14, 2012.

Unfortunately, the vast majority of Americans are not correlating the lives lost in The War On Terror with the catastrophic loss of life occurring when warriors come home. In the United States, every 80 minutes a U.S. Military Veteran dies from suicide. That's 18 per day, 6,570 per year.

Speaker Boehner forgets he forgot about veterans

Boehner is at it again! He forgets what Congress is supposed to do all the time. THIS FALLS UNDER THE CONGRESS AND IT IS THEIR JOB TO FIX IT. THEY HAVEN'T AND VETERANS SUFFER BECAUSE OF WHAT THEY HAVE FAILED TO DO!
Boehner: Veterans’ claims system is broken
By Lisa Cornwell
The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Feb 22, 2013

CINCINNATI — U.S. House Speaker John Boehner said the system for handling veterans' disability claims is broken and he wants the head of the Department of Veterans Affairs to explain what is being done to fix it.

Boehner, a Republican from Ohio, said in a letter to Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki this week that the benefit delivery system for veterans has not shown any noticeable improvement in the four years Shinseki has headed the department and the backlog of compensation claims "remains alarmingly high."

The VA was preparing a formal response to Boehner's letter, a VA spokesman said Friday. The VA has said it completed a "record-breaking" 1 million claims per year the past three years.

But the speaker wrote in his letter that the backload remains high, especially in Ohio, despite the announcement at the Cleveland Veterans Affairs Regional Office last summer of a new organizational model to help reduce the backlog by 2015. The Cleveland office, which handles claims from around the state, is now processing claims in an average of 334 days compared with the national average of 272 days and the VA's own goal of 125 days, Boehner said.
read more here

Entire F-35 fleet grounded over engine issues

Entire F-35 fleet grounded over engine issues
Army Times
By Aaron Mehta
Staff writer
Posted : Friday Feb 22, 2013

ORLANDO, Fla. — The Pentagon has suspended all test flights for the entire Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter fleet due to engine problems.

The move came nine days after the Pentagon cleared the F-35B jump-jet variant, designed for the U.S. Marines, to resume tests after a monthlong suspension. Both suspensions are due to problems with the engines. It also comes at a time when the program is facing increased scrutiny from lawmakers and senior DoD officials.

Unlike the last suspension, which was only for the B variant, this suspension affects all three variants: the F-35A Air Force conventional takeoff version, the F35-B for the Marines, and the F35-C carrier variant for the Navy.

“On Feb. 19, 2013, a routine engine inspection revealed a crack on a low pressure turbine blade of an F135 engine installed in a [conventional takeoff] test aircraft at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif,” wrote Kyra Hawn, Joint Program Office (JPO) spokeswoman, in a statement.
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Fort Knox soldier, wife found fatally shot

Knox soldier, wife found fatally shot
The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Feb 22, 2013

FORT KNOX, Ky. — Fort Knox officials say a soldier and his wife have been found fatally shot in their on-post housing unit in what appears to be an episode of domestic violence.

A statement from the central Kentucky Army post said military police found the couple Friday morning after getting a 911 call from the residence. Officers said they heard gunfire inside the residence when they arrived. Both people died at the scene.
read more here

Military, trained killers or defenders?

Military, trained killers or defenders?
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
February 23, 2013
The men and women leaving their homes and entering into the military are perplexing to some. Judging what I've read lately many people do not understand them at all.

Why would trained killers suffer afterwards? Isn't that what they wanted to do? Isn't that why they volunteered? Some of those questions come from complete morons and it is easy to just pass of what they think. It is when other people have the same simple understanding that shows how little the people of this country think about those who serve her.

Yes, they are trained to kill. They are trained to use the weapons of war. They are trained to follow orders sending them into hell. But that does not mean they are "trained killers" because if they were, then they would try to kill everyone. The goal, much like boxing, is to get the opponent to stop fighting and lay down. It is not to kill them. Law enforcement officials have the same goal. They need to stop the "criminals" they are up against and arrest them. They are trained to kill when necessary but they prefer to keep their weapons in the holster. In war, the opponents are trying to do the same thing. If they have to kill hundreds to get thousands to stop fighting, they would be happy to not have to kill anymore.

That is the part most miss. Had they been doing what they did in combat with only the goal of killing as many as possible, then they would be more like machines, unable to feel any of it.

In the news lately there is much debate about the "moral injury" inflicting thousands upon thousands of OEF and OIF veterans but while this manifestation appeared in generations of war fighters, it has only recently been the subject of news reports. Unfortunately, it has been the subject of researchers and scholars since the days when King David recorded his thoughts in Psalms.
Psalm 23
King James Version (KJV)
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.

2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.

3 He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake.

4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.

5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.

6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.
This is the prayer of war fighters and police officers. As with David, the enemy was defeated, yet lived "in the presence of my enemies" addressed that desire. "He restoreth my soul" after battle because the "righteous" intent caused the death of others. The "valley of the shadow of death" is what every war fighter faces.

They understand the first defender came in the form of a warrior angel. Archangel Michael is the defender of Heaven and necessary because even in Heaven, the angels were given freewill to do good and worship God or to do evil against God. Michael was not created to kill but to defend.

The men and women in the military are defenders. They are protectors. That is their motivation. No matter how much they train to use their weapons, they do not look forward to using them against an opponent chosen by the leaders of this country even though they are prepared to do whatever is necessary for the rest of this country.

During Vietnam, there were members of the opponent military forces in uniform but there were also civilians trying to kill our troops. This caused a conflict within them because while they had made peace with the fact they would have to kill the opponent military forces, they were not able to justify killing civilians to themselves.

The OEF and OIF war fighters are battling the same moral dilemma. They are prepared to fight opponents trained to defend their own country but civilians were not part of the deal especially when Afghans were not the target, but the members of al-Qaida were. Afghanistan did not have a regular Army but the intent was to capture or kill members of that group responsible for the attacks of September 11. Iraq had a military the coalition forces were sent to defeat but they also adapted to using bombs planted in the streets and suicide bombers. The moral dilemma stuck the war fighters harder because of what they were forced to do in order to defend the others they were with.

The military tried to address this and the San Francisco Gate published this.

THE SCIENCE OF CREATING KILLERS Human reluctance to take a life can be reversed through training in the method known as killology
Vicki Haddock
Insight Staff Writer August 13, 2006

"an occupational hazard to some -- particularly soldiers, police officers, spies and victims of savage crimes. All of them may face situations in which hesitating to kill is the surest way to get killed."

That's why military training camps, police academies and even some self-defense pros are constantly searching for more effective methods of suppressing the human revulsion to taking human life -- virtually rewiring the brain to react first in certain situations with an automatic response to kill.


But the military is the last to learn that when they try to rewire the minds of the war fighters, they end up with a human with twisted wires they cannot untwist back home and in the end, the real nature of the war fighter lives on to awaken to what he had done. He believes since he did not allow himself to feel when he pulled the trigger, he had turned into an "evil" person.

Psychologists who advised the military and law enforcement agencies began to push for changes that would revolutionize training to improve kill rates. Their methods -- familiar to those who operate boot camps, police academies and aggressive-response self-defense courses -- are a distasteful mystery to most in the outside world. But they work.

The Pentagon improved firing rates. Research suggests that 55 percent of U.S. soldiers fired on the enemy in the Korean War. By Vietnam that rate had climbed to more than 90 percent. Police studies document similar changes in recent decades.

One of the key changes was to get rid of the old firing ranges, where shooters took target practice in an open field aiming at a bull's-eye. This failed miserably at preparing shooters for real-world confrontations.
They tried to change training into real conditions the recruits would face, in other words, make it all more real to them. Yet this did not awaken the trainers to the other side of this training that ended up exposing them to real traumas of war. When they refer to the fact many of the members in the military committing suicide had never been deployed, they pass off all of this as if it had nothing to do with the trauma inflicted on the trainees. Add in the simple fact less than half of the veterans needing help for PTSD seek it and that shows how few will admit to needing help during training when combat veterans cannot bring themselves to admit they need help.

So how do we fix this? The answer comes when they are understood, not manipulated. The basic desire to serve, in most cases, had been within them all along. It is the desire to defend, not to kill. It is the desire to defeat, not to destroy. When they are being conditioned to be "trained killers" the humanity and goodness within them is eroded but does not die. It resurfaces to battle what is perceived as evil within them. Want to save their lives, then save who they are inside and get them to see what their intent truly was. It was not evil and they are not evil especially when they feel so much emotional pain afterwards. Evil feels no pain but rejoices over what was lost. The very fact they grieve is testament to the strength of their soul.

NBC Rock Center focus on contaminated water at Camp Lejeune

I watched this last night and was not shocked because of how many times I posted on this but I was happy to see it being the topic of national news coverage.
Men say their breast cancer was caused by contaminated water at Camp Lejeune
Fri Feb 22, 2013
By Ami Schmitz and Kristina Krohn
Rock Center

Mike Partain got the shock of his life five years ago when he was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 39. That he got breast cancer at all is surprising. It's so rare that for every 100 women who get it, just one man will.

“Five years ago I was just an ordinary father of four, husband of 18 years. And one night, my then-wife gave me a hug and she felt a bump on my chest,” he said in an interview with Dr. Nancy Snyderman airing tonight at 10pm/9CT on NBC News’ Rock Center with Brian Williams.

When his doctor delivered the devastating news in a phone call, Partain’s first thought was, “What contest in hell did I win to deserve this?”

After his diagnosis, Partain was desperate to answer the question, “why”? He said, “I don't drink. I don't smoke. I've never done drugs. There is no history of breast cancer in my family.”

But everything changed after he saw a news report, where a former Marine drill instructor named Jerry Ensminger told Congress how his 9-year-old daughter Janey died of leukemia, and that he believed her death was caused by drinking water at Camp Lejeune contaminated with chemicals.
read more here

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Fort Bliss soldier acquitted in deaths of two others

Bliss soldier acquitted in slayings of 2 pvts.
The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Feb 22, 2013

EL PASO, Texas — A West Texas jury has acquitted a Fort Bliss soldier charged with murder in the shooting deaths of two fellow soldiers during an argument outside a bar.

Jurors in El Paso on Thursday acquitted Spc. Tyrone Head. The defense said Head fired into the air during the January 2012 incident and did not shoot anyone.

Prosecutors say Head was charged with murder because his actions served as a threat that led to the deaths of the two privates. The victims were Preston Brown and Damien Bailey.
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Kansas City National Guard armory now has a food pantry

Soldier’s Wife Takes on Mission to Help Feed Kansas City Troops
DODLive
Posted on February 22, 2013
by kfinley
Story by Jennifer Archdekin
Missouri National Gaurd

Thanks to volunteers at the Kansas City National Guard armory, military service members now have an additional resource available to them when it comes to feeding their families.

Recently an on-site food pantry opened its doors to local Guardsmen, as well as all active military personnel and veterans, regardless of their branch of service.

The Family Readiness Group leader for the 110th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, Tracy Belt, manages the pantry.

“There was a need,” said Belt. “We just needed to have it for people to take advantage of it.”

According to Belt, the Harvesters-sponsored food pantry was able to move in 1,600 pounds of food to their shelves in January. She said they don’t require any financial information, just a few basic questions, and will serve the troops regardless of their income.
read more here

Friday, February 22, 2013

Study: Why soldiers take their own lives

There is hope because they are finally starting to get it. Well, at least some of them are. This is what I've been talking about since the 80's because the experts I learned from studied soldiers and not civilians. This type of PTSD is a whole different story.
Study: Why soldiers take their own lives
WTVD News
February 22, 2013

FAYETTEVILLE (WTVD) -- A new study published Friday sheds new light on what groups in the military are at higher risk of suicide and why.

Army Research Psychologists James Griffith and Mark Vaitkus looked at years of data collected by the Army National Guard for their findings.

They said white males aged 17 to 24 are at the highest risk - regardless of whether they have been deployed overseas. The researchers said the younger men are at an age when many struggle to define who they are and how they relate to others. They also said men in other ethnic groups often have better support systems through church, family, and community.

The military has struggled to prevent suicide in its ranks. 2012 was the worst year for Army deaths, with 323 soldiers taking their lives.

While the study downplays the link between deployment and suicide, mental health professionals in the community around Fort Bragg say they're increasingly dealing with soldiers who suffer from posttraumatic stress syndrome.

Troops are coming from war zones where they're passing out candy in friendly communities one minute, and losing lives the next.

"They're in an environment where they may leave and come back and there's an IED [improvised explosive device] where they were just handing out these types of things. The fact that people don't really feel like they know who their enemy is, who they can trust, is one reason why this conflict in and out of itself is breeding so much posttraumatic stress disorder," explained psychologist, Christopher Ketchman.
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