Monday, April 27, 2015

Vietnam Veteran Dropping Sunflower Seeds?

A vet seeks to make 58,183 U.S. casualties more than a number 
The Register-Guard
By Jack Heffernan
APRIL 27, 2015
Bruce Hindrichs, a Vietnam War veteran, holds a map of the route of the Seed Walk that he has organized as a memorial for the U.S. soldiers killed in Vietnam. He stands in front of the Lane County War Memorial in Skinner Butte Park in Eugene.
(Andy Nelson/The Register-Guard)
An 11-mile line of sunflower seeds will stretch from south Eugene to Coburg on Thursday.

The seeds — a total of 58,183, the number of U.S. military personnel who died in the Vietnam War — won’t be planted.

They’ll just be sprinkled near roadways, to be blown away by gusts from passing cars or eaten by birds and squirrels.

That’s just fine with Vietnam War veteran Bruce Hindrichs, the Eugene resident who came up with the novel way to commemorate the war.

Hindrichs, along with nine fellow veterans and two family members, plan to drop the seeds along 10 miles of the route on Wednesday.

The entire 11-mile route will begin at Spencers Crest Drive and Willamette Street in south Eugene, then snake north to cross the Ferry Street Bridge and travel along Coburg Road, all the way to the southern city limits of Coburg. The seeds will sit about 1 foot apart along the route.

Hindrichs is then inviting the public to join him to drop the final 5,300 or so seeds on Thursday, the 40th anniversary of the Vietnam War’s end with the U.S. evacuation from Saigon.
read more here

Thugs Kidnapped Korean War Veteran Couple

POLICE: 2 ARRESTED IN KIDNAPPING OF VETERAN, GIRLFRIEND
ABC 6 News
Saturday, April 25, 2015

SOUTHWEST PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- Authorities say two people have been arrested in the kidnapping case of an 86-year-old veteran and his girlfriend in Southwest Philadelphia.

25-year-old Damon Cornish of the 5900 block of 21st Street and 23-year-old Vashti Williams of the 500 block of South 56th Street were taken into custody.

Cornish has been charged with theft and unauthorized use of an auto. Williams is charged with robbery, criminal conspiracy, kidnapping and related offenses.

More arrests are expected.

Authorities say three women kidnapped the veteran and his girlfriend in Southwest Philadelphia then opened a bank account and rented cars in the victim's name.

55-year-old Priscilla Jones doesn't know the trio of women who had a small child with them.

The suspects allegedly abducted her and her 86-year-old boyfriend George Saunders.

Saunders is a Korean War veteran with a double knee replacement.

Both victims use canes and walkers and are new to their Southwest Philadelphia neighborhood.
read more here

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Medal of Honor Recipient John Baca Focused on Healing Others

Whiting: These Vietnam veterans help so others will never be abandoned again
Orange County Register
BY DAVID WHITING / STAFF
April 24, 2015
Medal of Honor recipient John Baca, left, is greeted by Ret. Army Sgt. Greg Young of Yorba Linda before a service for their friend at Miramar National Cemetery.
CINDY YAMANAKA, STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Surrounded by the trees and hills of Julian, Vietnam War Medal of Honor recipient John Baca flips through a binder of thank you cards for the apple pies he sends veterans. At his elbow, the widow of one of this nation’s first combat casualties after 9/11 beams.

It is a moment of friendship, of sharing, of a bridge between two wars. But it is also about much more.

The thank you cards – and the bond between Baca and Mary Ellen Bancroft, both wounded in very different ways by very different wars – embody the legacy of America’s Vietnam veterans.

Shunned by many, including the American Legion, the Vietnam Veterans of America is the largest and most active group of veterans in the U.S. Its motto: "Never again will one generation of veterans abandon another."

A former Orange County resident, Baca has a park named after him in Huntington Beach. But as appreciative as Baca is for the recognition, the soldier who threw himself on a grenade to save eight buddies is not a man who pays much attention to such things.

Baca and other warriors like him focus on reaching out to families like Bancroft’s and helping veterans both young and old deal with such things as navigating VA hospitals, managing finances, coping with PTSD.
read more here
John Baca Medal of Honor
Official Citation:
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. Specialist Fourth Class Baca, Company D, distinguished himself while serving on a recoilless rifle team during a night ambush mission A platoon from his company was sent to investigate the detonation of an automatic ambush device forward of his unit's main position and soon came under intense enemy fire from concealed positions along the trail.

Hearing the heavy firing from the platoon position and realizing that his recoilless rifle team could assist the members of the besieged patrol, Specialist Fourth Class Baca led his team through the hail of enemy fire to a firing position within the patrol's defensive perimeter.

As they prepared to engage the enemy, a fragmentation grenade was thrown into the midst of the patrol.

Fully aware of the danger to his comrades, Specialist Fourth Class Baca unhesitatingly, and with complete disregard for his own safety, covered the grenade with his steel helmet and fell on it as the grenade exploded, thereby absorbing the lethal fragments and concussion with his body. His gallant action and total disregard for his personal well-being directly saved 8 men from certain serious injury or death.

The extraordinary courage and selflessness displayed by Specialist Fourth Class Baca, at the risk of his life, are in the highest traditions of the military service and reflect great credit on him, his unit, and the U.S. Army.

Senator Grassley Has Second History on Veterans Gun Rights

I had some extra time this morning to read some old emails and right now, I am very glad I did. This one came in on the 17th. It is about Senator Grassley all in a dither about veterans losing their "second amendment rights" because of the VA. Seriously? He thought he could get away with it? He voted for it back in 2007!!!!!!!
Joshua Omvig Bill Signed into law Nov 05, 2007 Joshua Omvig Bill Signed into law Senator Chuck Grassley today made the following statement after President George Bush signed into law the Joshua Omvig Veterans Suicide Prevention Bill. The law is named for Joshua Omvig, an Iowa soldier who committed suicide upon returning from serving in Iraq. “Today’s action helps give veterans who are suffering mental anguish a place to turn when all else seems lost. These are brave men and women who need to know that there is help out there and they deserve medical treatment just like any other veteran.”
Sen. Grassley: VA Trampling Vets' Second Amendment Rights 
NewsMax
By Courtney Coren
Friday, 17 Apr 2015
"That's no determination of whether you're mentally defective." Grassley argues that "not being able to handle your own money is not a high-enough standard that you shouldn't be able to have a gun."
Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley tells Newsmax TV that there's no way to justify the Veterans Administration's putting so many veterans on the "mental defective" list, which prevents them from legally obtaining firearms. Grassley wrote a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder this week saying that the classification, which affects 83,000 veterans, "effectively voids their Second Amendment rights." 

"This is something that we're not going to be able to justify," the Iowa Republican told J.D. Hayworth on "America's Forum" on Newsmax TV on Friday. read more here
Some think the latest bill Senator Coburn held up was the only one but way back in 2007, he held up another suicide prevention bill because of gun rights and tracking veterans. Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention
Senator Coburn Opposed the Bill Because He Was Concerned that Data-Gathering Would Prevent Veterans from Purchasing Guns. Coburn expressed concern that a section of the bill saying the Veterans Affairs Department ‘shall provide for appropriate tracking of veterans’ would result in data-gathering that could prevent veterans from purchasing handguns. Coburn said his concern was that if the department shared health data with other federal agencies, such as the Justice Department, then veterans with mental illness could be barred from purchasing handguns. [CQ Today, 8/23/07]
But, again another politician tried to rewrite their own history because Grassley not only supported it, he was part of starting it.
From Senator Tom Harkin
Let me give a little bit of history. I introduced this legislation, along with my colleague from Iowa, Senator Grassley, after learning about the case of a young Iowan--his name was Joshua Omvig--who tragically took his own life shortly after returning home from an 11-month deployment in Iraq. Joshua was a member of the U.S. Army Reserve, 339th MP Company, based in Davenport, IA. Before leaving for Iraq, he was a member of the Grundy Center Volunteer Fire Department and the Grundy Center Police Reserves. He was honored to serve his country in the Reserves and hoped to return to his community to serve as a police officer.

Oklahoma VA Investigator Was Convicted Felon?

Fired Oklahoma Veterans Affairs investigator is charged with 26 counts
The Oklahoman
by Nolan Clay
Published: April 24, 2015
Steven B. Pancoast Jr., a fired Oklahoma Veterans Affairs Department investigator, is charged with perjury, forgery and other crimes. The accusations already have had an impact on pending criminal cases and investigations where he was involved.

EL RENO — Prosecutors are accusing the fired chief investigator of the Oklahoma Veterans Affairs Department of being such a fraud that he even faked the college diplomas on his office wall.

Prosecutors on Friday filed 26 criminal counts against Steven B. Pancoast Jr., 41, of Mustang.

Pancoast was fired March 13 after authorities concluded he had faked his credentials and was actually a convicted felon, not a state-certified law enforcement officer. He was originally charged March 23 with three felony counts.

He is accused in the new charge of lying about his credentials at a 2012 rape trial, at a 2014 murder preliminary hearing, on arrest warrant requests, on a search warrant request, in a deposition and on multicounty grand jury subpoenas for bank records.

He also is accused of carrying around a counterfeit badge, forging law enforcement credentials, forging business cards, forging a diploma from Oklahoma State University and forging a diploma from Southwestern Oklahoma State University.

He is accused of carrying a firearm as part of his ruse for almost a year, even though it is illegal for him to possess a firearm because of his 1993 felony convictions.
read more here

Camp Pendleton Marines Honor Vietnam Predecessors

Marines hold reunion for Vietnam-era recon predecessors
Stars and Stripes
By Jennifer Hlad
Published: April 24, 2015
John Burtoft, of The Villages, Fla., was a corpsman with 1st Reconnaissance Battalion and went to Vietnam twice: once on the USS Pyro for 18 months in 1964-65, and again with recon in 1968-69.

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif.
Ken Benckwitz was spit on at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
Retired Lt. Gen. Bernard Trainor, right, talks to a Marine with 1st Marine Reconnaissance Battalion on Thursday, April 23, 2015, at a reunion for Vietnam-era recon veterans at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
JENNIFER HLAD/STARS AND STRIPES

People threw feces at Dan Mulvihill at LAX.

After his return, John Baker was told by the first girl he dated not to mention to her friends or family that he had been a Marine in Vietnam.

But this week, when about 175 fellow reconnaissance Marines from the Vietnam era gathered in San Diego County, they were welcomed and embraced.

Cpl. Brandon Tan was one of several current recon Marines who participated in a raid demonstration Thursday for the veterans. Afterward, wearing camouflage face paint and foliage on his uniform, he shook the hand of veteran after veteran.

“Thank you. You’re the reason we’re here,” he said.

The reunion was designed as a way for all Marines who served in recon units in 1965-71 to commemorate 50 years since the U.S. entered the Vietnam War.

Active-duty Marines showed off their equipment and demonstrated a helicopter jump and a raid.

Afterward, they honored the memory of their fallen recon brothers at a memorial service.
read more here

National Award for Warrior Transition Units Scandal Reporting

NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth Wins National Journalism Award 
The Society of Professional Journalists Recognizes NBC 5 Investigates Team
By Brian Hocker
Apr 24, 2015
"Our NBC 5 Investigates team and The Dallas Morning News were relentless in pursuing a Texas story with national implications that has helped many soldiers. We couldn't be prouder of these journalists."
"Injured Heroes, Broken Promises," the six-month-long investigative partnership between NBC 5 / KXAS-TV and The Dallas Morning News, has been awarded the prestigious 2014 National Sigma Delta Chi Award for Investigative Reporting under the Large Market Television category by The Society of Professional Journalists.

"Injured Heroes, Broken Promises" uncovered complaints from hundreds of injured, active-duty soldiers claiming they were mistreated, harassed and verbally abused by commanders of the U.S. Army's Warrior Transition Units, or WTUs. These units were created to improve care for injured soldiers after the 2007 Walter Reed Army Medical Center scandal.

Just nine days after the first NBC 5 report aired and appeared in The Dallas Morning News, the Army issued orders requiring staff at all 25 of the Army's WTUs located worldwide, to undergo new training.

NBC 5's coverage about the treatment of soldiers injured in the 2009 Fort Hood shooting resulted in the NBC 5 Investigates team discovering the difficulties that soldiers faced years after they had left the WTUs. NBC 5 filed a comprehensive Freedom of Information Act request seeking Army complaint records at several Texas military installations.

"Our viewers depend on us to dig for information and sources not available to the average citizen," said Susan Tully, NBC 5 Vice President of News. read more here

Congress: Veterans Committing Suicide "National Embarrassment"

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
April 26, 2015

We should file this under Veterans suicide awareness, too much too little, too late for far too many. If we continue to just slam the VA then we will never be truly aware of the origins. Leaving our veterans lacking care is a "national embarrassment" because of how long Congress has been trying to prevent them, or so they said they would.

Why haven't members of Congress managed to look at what the DOD did in the first place to these veterans? After all, their PTSD issues started in the military.

The military has managed to tell servicemembers PTSD is their fault and then they seemed shocked suicides went up. The VA has had issues with getting veterans the proper care to heal PTSD, or at least that is who Congress wants blamed. So why is everyone blaming everyone else leaving little room for real change?
KD Investigation: Congressman Wants Answers In Vet Suicides
KDKA News
Andy Sheehan
April 24, 2015

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — After fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq — returning U.S. veterans are committing suicide in astounding numbers. Just last month, veteran Michelle Langhorst of Plum shot herself in the parking lot of the VA in O’Hara and Iraq war veteran David Cranmer hung himself on a job site, where he was working in the North Hills.

An average of 22 veterans commit suicide in this country every day — and following our report — one congressman is demanding answers on whether we’re doing enough to help them. “This is a national tragedy,” said Rep. Tim Murphy. “This is a national embarrassment.”
Tim Murphy wants to know if veterans with PTSD — post-traumatic stress disorder — are getting the care they need and deserve.

David Cranmer’s father — former Allegheny County Commissioner Bob Cranmer — says they are not. “This casualty rate is unacceptable for people who aren’t actually at war,” said Cranmer.
“These young people have come home, They’re trying to reintegrate back into society and they’re killing themselves.”

Cranmer says his son was diagnosed with PTSD after just one therapy session and his doctor prescribed the psychotropic drug Zoloft — a drug with an FDA warning that it can lead to suicidal thoughts and actions. Cranmer says his son received no other treatment and hung himself a month later.
read more here

Ok, so why didn't Murphy mention the other thing RAND Corp reported on in 2009?
RAND researchers extrapolated from a survey they conducted of 1,965 vets to conclude that nearly 300,000 service members and vets of Iraq and Afghanistan were suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder — PTSD — or major depression. Filner told the pair of researchers, who summarized their findings for his committee, that their work probably understated the problem.

Or the other RAND Corp study on the much touted "resiliency" training the DOD had been doing
Most programs have been implemented before evidence of their effectiveness has been established.
Topped off with the fact that this did not fit with military culture in the first place among many other issues.
"The military has nearly 900 suicide prevention programs across 400 military installations worldwide, but in a report released Tuesday, the task force describes the Defense Department's approach as a safety net riddled with holes."
Task force calls military suicide prevention efforts inadequate, By BARBARA BARRETT McClatchy Newspapers

Or the other thing RAND Corp reported on about the other thing happening to veterans?

A Rand Corp. survey of 522 psychiatrists, psychologists and licensed clinical social workers found that just 13 percent met the study's criteria for "cultural competency," meaning they understood military mores, language and background, and delivered appropriate care for illnesses unique to the military, such as combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

The results are important, Rand researcher Terri Tanielian said, because insensitivity and unfamiliarity with proven treatments may keep troops and veterans from getting quality psychiatric care.

"These findings suggest that when service members, veterans or family members seek care from providers not affiliated with the Defense Department or Veterans Affairs, they may encounter providers who are not as well prepared to deliver culturally sensitive care," Tanielian and the other authors wrote.
Army Times Rand: Civilian mental health providers don't 'get' the military
But then again, why even mention the fact that in 2012 the DOD had not spent all the money Congress had allocated for suicide prevention.
Congressman Jim McDermott (WA-7) and Congressman Leonard Boswell (IA-3) urged leaders of the U.S. House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee this week, to work with them in getting the Pentagon to use all of its unspent suicide prevention funds to reach more service members as soon as possible, and to go even further with higher funding next year.

In July, the McDermott-Boswell amendment that would increase critical funding for suicide prevention for active duty military by $10 million passed with strong support in the House Defense Appropriations bill for Fiscal Year 2013.
Shaun Knittel, Online News Editor, Out Serve Magazine, 20 September 2012

But naturally the biggest whopper of all is that members of Congress keep asking the same questions over and over again,
House Committee Reviews Effectiveness of VA’s Outreach Efforts on Suicide Prevention
Committee Reviews Effectiveness of VA’s Outreach Efforts on Suicide Prevention FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 14, 2010

Washington, D.C. – On Wednesday, July 14, 2010, Chairman Harry Mitchell (D-AZ) conducted a hearing of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee to examine the progress of suicide prevention outreach efforts at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The Subcommittee evaluated the current state of VA’s ability to educate the public of VA services concerning suicide prevention and discussed the effectiveness of the media campaign to encourage veterans to seek help at the VA.

Public Law 110-110, The Joshua Omvig Veterans Suicide Prevention Act, required VA to develop a pilot program encouraging veterans battling suicide to seek help at the VA. As a result, VA advertised its suicide hotline using Washington, D.C. metro area buses and metro subway trains, in addition to creating a Public Service Announcement for network television use.

“As you know, many of our newest generation of veterans, as well as those who served previously, bear wounds that cannot be seen and are hard to diagnose,” said Chairman Mitchell. “Proactively bringing the VA to them, as opposed to waiting for veterans to find the VA, is a critical part of delivering the care they have earned in exchange for their brave service. No veteran should feel they are alone,” said Chairman Mitchell.

The two witnesses of the hearing’s first panel were Warrant Officer Melvin Cintron, USA (Ret.) who has served multiple tours in Iraq, and also Ms. Linda Bean, who tragically lost her son to suicide after he returned from his second tour in Iraq. Mr. Cintron observed that while the VA’s suicide hotline is a valuable and much needed service, there should be other equally accessible resources offered by the VA that service intermediate levels of urgency prior to the final resort of calling the suicide hotline. Ms. Bean stated that to improve suicide prevention and outreach, the VA must publicize civilian mental health counseling alternatives that might better suit some veterans who are either not located near a VA facility, or who may otherwise choose not to approach the VA for help.

Back to the report from above, it is vital to be aware of the fact that most of these veterans committing suicide are over the age of 50,,
"Veterans over the age of 50 who had entered the VA healthcare system made up about 78 percent of the total number of veterans who committed suicide"
but Congress doesn't want us to remember that fact. After all, that would then translate into how long they have had to take care of other veterans and failed. And then when the subject is the younger generations, their numbers show that what Congress has let the DOD get away with has caused most of their problems.
The rate of veterans committing suicide is double the civilian population with the majority of them being over 50. Then there is the other figure of young veterans committing suicide at triple the rate of their civilian peers.


When you have results like this, it seems as if all these years have been a waste of time, yet members of Congress fail to admit it is their job to write the rules for the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs, fund them to meet the need and when they don't, hold them accountable.

No one seems to understand that we are supposed to hold members of Congress accountable for not doing their jobs in the first place. We let all of them get away with repeating the same worn out pretentious grandstanding as if they didn't have anything to do with this tragic outcome.

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Melbourne Wickham Park Veterans Reunion

I was glad for the clouds since it wasn't too hot out in Melbourne this morning. It was great to see the crowds and still stunning, even after all these years, to see the memorials.
















UPDATE

Veterans reunion attendance builds after rainy start
FLORIDA TODAY
R. Norman Moody
April 24, 2015
"I get to connect with my fellow veterans," Miller said. "I get camaraderie with the other veterans."

MELBOURNE – The crowds, kept away from the rained-out opening ceremony of the Vietnam Traveling Memorial Wall, began to build Friday morning at the Vietnam and All Veterans Reunion.

Veterans strolled among the dozens of information and vendor booths and tents as others reflected at the wall.

The reunion, which goes on through Sunday, is open to the public. It is being held at Wickham Park in Melbourne and is billed as the largest of its kind.

"I like to meet different veterans and tell them 'Welcome home,'" said Harvey White, 73, of Charlotte, North Carolina.

White, 73, who served with the Army's 71st Transportation Company in Vietnam, said liked the camaraderie he encountered at the reunion.

"I'm very proud to have worn the uniform of this country," he said.

David Miller, a 69-year-old Vietnam veteran from Palm Bay, has been a part of the reunion for many years. He serves on the organizing board.
read more here

PTSD What Are You Really Aware Of?

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
April 25, 2015

This article got to me this morning.
The deepest war wound may be the anguish of moral injury 
Los Angeles Times
BY NANCY SHERMAN
April 25, 2015
Moral injury is distinct from post-traumatic stress disorder, which is generally thought of narrowly as a fear-conditioned syndrome marked by hyper-vigilance and flashbacks. The prevailing treatment for PTSD is therapy to “decondition” the fear response. But guilt, shame, raging resentment and betrayal are different from fear. To overcome them requires relationships that rebuild a soldier's sense of trust in himself and others, no small order given the effects of war.

When the Greek playwright Sophocles came home from war, in the 5th century BC, trust and betrayal must have been on his mind. He wrote “Philoctetes,” about a wounded Greek warrior abandoned by Odysseus on the way to Troy.

The stench of Philoctetes' wound and his wails of distress made him a liability. That is, until Philoctetes' sacred bow, a gift from the god Heracles, turned out to be the Greeks' last hope for defeating the Trojans. Odysseus returned to rescue Philoctetes (or at least his bow), but he dared not show his face to the man he had left behind. Hidden, he coached a young soldier, Neoptolemus, on how to build rapport with Philoctetes in order to exploit it to get the bow.

The twist in the play is that real trust is cultivated instead; and with it, hope that heals.

The ancient Greeks understood Philoctetes' agony and salvation in the context of the Peloponnesian War. Modern Americans can apply it to the longest conflicts in American history: the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, in which 2.7 million troops have served.

Many are bringing home the weight of resentment and betrayal, and often guilt and shame, even if it's masked by a stoic military demeanor. Like Philoctetes, some feel betrayed by commanders or unit members; some by civilians who've been “at the mall while we've been at war”; and some by politicians they think have failed to take full responsibility for the wars they started.
read more here
It seems as if everyone is doing something to help raise awareness on PTSD, and that is a good thing to a point. The trouble is when no one seems aware of what they need to know if they have PTSD.

There is what the general public seems to believe and then there is the reality of what is actually real to the veterans.

First is how they feel about their service with the DOD claiming they are treating soldiers for what comes after their operational battles. The fight to stay alive after combat is the one they are not equipped to win. No matter what the DOD claims about their own "efforts" to help soldiers heal, the end result has been a rise in suicides.
USA Today addressed a huge part of the problem. Comprehensive Soldier Fitness is the biggest reason why suicides went up. It tells soldiers that they can train their brains to be mentally tough, translating they must be weak if they end up with PTSD. In other words, it is their fault. This is not just a theory. It is what the head of the Army actually admitted he believes. During an interview with the Huffington Post Odierno said a mouthful. Army Chief Ray Odierno Warns Military Suicides 'Not Going To End' After War Is Over
Q: Why do I think some people are able to deal with stress differently than others?
A: There are a lot of different factors. Some of it is just personal make-up. Intestinal fortitude. Mental toughness that ensures that people are able to deal with stressful situations.

This wasn't just a slip because as later reports showed, it was spread wider reenforcing the soldiers beliefs they had something to be ashamed of. Blaming soldiers and their families in public was tame compared to what they actually had to endure.

They had to even endure this emotional abuse in the very place they were sent to as a place to heal. Warrior Transition Units treated them as if they were a problem to the military.

The Dallas Morning News and NBC out of Texas did fantastic reporting on this in Injured Heroes Broken Promises however, when the national news stations failed to notice, the general pubic was left without a clue as to what was behind most of the suffering they wanted to raise awareness of.

The military keeps telling reporters they understand and are doing something to help mend them after war but as suicides within the military and in the veterans community increased, they failed to change anything they did wrong.
Army morale low despite 6-year, $287M optimism program
USA TODAY
Gregg Zoroya
April 16, 2015
"The Army funds this program because the Army values the lives of soldiers and wants to instill skills and competencies that will enhance their connections, relationships and ability to mitigate stressors and exercise help seeking behaviors through their life," says an Army statement released last month.

More than half of some 770,000 soldiers are pessimistic about their future in the military and nearly as many are unhappy in their jobs, despite a six-year, $287 million campaign to make troops more optimistic and resilient, findings obtained by USA TODAY show.

Twelve months of data through early 2015 show that 403,564 soldiers, or 52%, scored badly in the area of optimism, agreeing with statements such as "I rarely count on good things happening to me." Forty-eight percent have little satisfaction in or commitment to their jobs.

The results stem from resiliency assessments that soldiers are required to take every year. In 2014, for the first time, the Army pulled data from those assessments to help commanders gauge the psychological and physical health of their troops.

The effort produced startlingly negative results. In addition to low optimism and job satisfaction, more than half reported poor nutrition and sleep, and only 14% said they are eating right and getting enough rest.

The Army began a program of positive psychology in 2009 in the midst of two wars and as suicide and mental illness were on the rise. To measure resiliency the Army created a confidential, online questionnaire that all soldiers, including the National Guard and Reserve, must fill out once a year.

Last year, Army scientists applied formulas to gauge service-wide morale based on the assessments. The results demonstrate that positive psychology "has not had much impact in terms of overall health," says David Rudd, president of the University of Memphis who served on a scientific panel critical of the resiliency program.
read more here

The worst part of all of this is none of this should have surprised anyone. Even I predicted pushing this FUBAR research project of Comprehensive Soldier Fitness would increase suicides back in 2009.
If you promote this program the way Battlemind was promoted, count on the numbers of suicides and attempted suicides to go up instead of down. It's just one more deadly mistake after another and just as dangerous as sending them into Iraq without the armor needed to protect them.

Again, there are conversations we have and then there are conversations the general public has. Ours is based on the realities we live with everyday hitting every part of our lives. I didn't got to war, but I was the daughter of an Army veteran and am a wife of an Army veteran. What happens to them hits us and our children.

We become experts on what war does after the fact and the facts don't change just because reporters ignore most of it.

Soldiers have to battle the DOD, struggle with being treated as if they are bad soldiers, enforced by the threat of bad paper discharges, like the Army discharging 11,000 in 2013 alone, and being sent to hell to "heal" and then once they are out of the military, treated to more betrayal because the VA wasn't ready for any of them. Wonder how long it will take to actually give these veterans justice? We have an example of that from what was done to Vietnam veterans as 80,000 out of 250,000 are getting a second chance.

We put blame right where it belongs and that is with members of Congress!