Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Cape Canaveral National Cemetery Dedicated

National Cemetery dedicated in north Brevard
FLORIDA TODAY
R. Norman Moody
November 21, 2015

SCOTTSMOOR — Cape Canaveral National Cemetery has officially become the ninth national cemetery in Florida and the 134th in the nation.

The Cape Canaveral National Cemetery, which will serve the burial needs of veterans in Central Florida for many years, was dedicated in a ceremony Friday afternoon that attracted hundreds veterans and their families from Brevard and surrounding counties.

"This is probably one of the best things for the veterans and their families since the VA hospital in Orlando," said Al "Gunner" Dudley, a Marine veteran from Mims who is past state commander of the American Legion.

Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert McDonald told the crowd of more than 500 that he was pleased to be a part the dedication that shows the nation's gratitude to those who served in uniform.
The VA purchased the land for the cemetery in July 2012 for $2.1 million. The construction company, G and C Fab-Con, LLC., is expected to complete an early turn-over portion of the cemetery which will be used for in-ground casket and cremation interments in January. That phase of construction is anticipated to provide for about 17,000 burial over the next 10 years.
read more here

Monday, November 23, 2015

Thief Stole Fallen Soldier's Memorial Quilt

THIEF CAUGHT ON CAMERA STEALING PACKAGE FULL OF DECEASED SON'S T-SHIRTS IN EDISON
ABC 7 News
By Anthony Johnson
Friday, November 20, 2015

EDISON, N.J. (WABC) -- A family in New Jersey is heartbroken after someone stole an irreplaceable package from their front porch in Edison.

A heartless thief was seen on surveillance video calmly walking up to the door carrying a pillow and then stealing the memories of a beloved son.

This insensitive act has angered many because the culprit took memory quilts made by a mother to remember her son who died a year ago.

"I just want them back, that's all we have really are his memories and some of his things," said Karen Delmonaco, Robert Delmonaco's mother.

The quilts made of her son's t-shirts were supposed to be Christmas presents and were sent to a company to be stitched together.

Karen was happy and ready to receive the package, but is now upset that her son's lasting possessions have been taken.
read more here

Southeast Asian Refugees Face Deportation

Forty Years After Resettlement, Thousands of Southeast Asian Refugees Face Deportation
NBC News
by JUSTINE CALMA
November 23, 2015
Over the past two decades, more than 13,000 Cambodian, Vietnamese, and Laotian Americans have been served deportation orders, according to the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center. Advocates say those communities live in constant fear of being relocated from their homes.
David Ros, second from the left, stands for a photo with his siblings, mother, and extended family. Ros and his family, who fled Cambodia together, are wearing T-shirts donated to them once they reached a refugee camp in Thailand. Courtesy of David Ros
Memories of captivity are still vivid for David Ros. "I remember clearly the hunger," Ros told NBC News. "And [I remember] the crying and the foraging for anything I [could] find that was edible."

Ros was born in Cambodia in 1974, one year before the capital, Phnom Penh, fell to the Khmer Rouge — a Communist regime that would ultimately claim the lives of two million Cambodians. Because his family was connected to the military—his grandfather had been a lieutenant colonel before the war—Ros, his parents, and siblings were targeted by the Khmer Rouge and detained.

His father was killed and his mother was tortured and beaten, Ros said.

Ros also has memories from the dangerous journey his family took when they escaped to Thailand in 1978: bombs, fires, dead bodies floating down the river.

But Ros says he considers himself and his siblings lucky to have survived long enough to reach a refugee camp and be sponsored by a Catholic organization for resettlement in the United States.
read more here

Veterans Appeals Never-Ending Wait

VA is buried in a backlog of never-ending veterans disability appeals
LA Times
Alan Zarembo
November 23, 2015
If they limit veterans to one appeal a claim, it makes the system more efficient at the detriment of veterans' rights.
- James Vale, director of benefits for Vietnam Veterans of America
It's a veteran disability case that never ends.
Ivan Figueroa Clausell with paperwork from his disability appeals to the Department of Veterans Affairs. (Erika P. Rodriguez / For The Times)

In 1985, Ivan Figueroa Clausell filed a claim for a variety of conditions he said stemmed from a car accident while training with the Puerto Rico Army National Guard. The Department of Veterans Affairs ruled that he wasn't disabled.

He appealed and lost. He appealed again and lost again, and again and again.

In all, the VA has issued more than two dozen rulings on his case over the years. Still, he continues to appeal. Even after he won and started receiving 100% disability pay, he pressed on in hopes of receiving retroactive payments.

"I'm never going to give up," said the 66-year-old Vietnam veteran. "I don't care how long it takes."

Figueroa's is the oldest case among the more than 425,000 now swamping a veterans appeals system that advocates and government officials say is badly broken.

The appeals system does not have enough staff to handle the record number of veterans — from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq as well as Vietnam — filing for disability payments over the last decade, then appealing when all or part of their claims are denied.

But experts point to a more fundamental problem. Unlike U.S. civil courts, the appeals system has no mechanism to prevent endless challenges. Veterans can keep their claims alive either by appealing or by restarting the process from scratch by submitting new evidence: service records, medical reports or witness statements.
Appeals that can't be resolved at VA regional offices around the country wind up at the appeals board. The 65 judges who handle cases ruled on 55,713 cases last fiscal year — an all-time high.
read more here

Test the PTSD Suicide Awareness Groups

Be Aware of What They Don't Know
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 23, 2015

With all the groups out there claiming to be raising awareness on PTSD and suicides, things just keep getting worse for our veterans.  It is time to find out what they know and what they are telling the veterans they are claiming to be helping.

The following are basic questions I've learned the answers to over the last 3 decades. If they really know what they are talking about, then they should already know all these answers. I supplied links to the answers of what they should know. If a link is missing it means the answer can be found within another question. I don't want to make it too easy on them. On some questions there are several answers, so search for all the ones you can find. If they cannot answer all of them, then they are part of the problem our veterans have been dealing with.

You'll know the answers but if you print the questions out in plain text without the links, they can either track back this post or actually look them up themselves. If they don't even bother to find the answers, then they do not deserve any support from you or anyone else. At the very least, they may learn something to actually change things for the better.

What is PTSD?
What do the terms used actually mean?
What are the causes of PTSD?
What are the different types of PTSD?
How many Americans have PTSD?
What is the history of PTSD and war?
What is Complex PTSD?
What is MST PTSD? What is a secondary stressor?
What is secondary PTSD?
What is a flashback?
What is Peer Support?
Why do they have a hard time sleeping?
What does lack of sleep do?
How is PTSD diagnosed?
Is PTSD a mental illness?
Is PTSD curable?
When did research start on PTSD?
What is the worst program the military is using?
When did Congress start addressing suicides?
What is the difference between self-medicating and addiction?
What is a dual diagnosis?
What is TBI?
Should TBI and PTSD be treated the same way?
What have brain scans shown?
What are the statistics on suicide among veterans?
Why are there so many accidents with PTSD veterans?
Do you help all veterans or only some generations?
Do you help families?
How do you help them?
What is spiritual therapy?
What are the different ways to do physical therapy for PTSD?
Why does it work?
What is your background?
What is your training?
How long have you been doing it?
What are you doing differently?
Do you have proof what you do works?
What are you doing with the money donated to you?
Why do you need money if Facebook is free and that is where most younger veterans search?

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Marine Vietnam Veteran Attacked At Airport By Current Marines

Veteran says he was attacked, shamed at Charlotte airport
WSOC News North Carolina
By Ken Lemon
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
November 18, 2015

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A Vietnam veteran and two-time recipient of the Purple Heart said he was attacked Saturday at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport.
Jack Hughes, 66, said when he came home from battle in the 1960s, people threw rotten eggs at his uniform. Vietnam was an unpopular war and he expected that back then.

He said he didn't expect to be assaulted by other Marines when he arrived Saturday.

Hughes, who lives in Gastonia, showed Channel 9 the jacket he wore Saturday with his medals and ribbons.

He cried thinking about the feeling he had when he said Marines at the airport accused him of pretending to be a veteran.

"I just can't believe that one veteran or group of veterans would do that to somebody else,” Hughes said.

He said as he got off the plane from a Veterans Day event in St. Louis, another man, claiming to be a Marine himself, walked towards him yelling.

"Your ribbons are crooked. You’re a fake. You are a phony," Hughes said the man shouted.
read more here

Support pours in for Marine vet who says he was shamed at airport
AJC news
Ken Lemon
Nov. 21, 2015

GASTON COUNTY, N.C. — Support has poured in for a Marine veteran who said he was assaulted and shamed by other Marines at Charlotte’s airport.

Jack Hughes sat down for a follow-up interview and discussed the calls and letters that he said saved his life.

Hughes suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder from his stint in Vietnam. He said when the other Marines tried to wrongfully shame him Saturday it sent him back in a regressive state, but the tremendous outpouring of support has been more than a boost. They shouted at him in the airport, and one even tried to rip the ribbons off of his jacket.
read more here

Iraq Homeless Veteran Coming Out of the Woods

Out of the Woods
Inside Nova
Jill Palermo
November 20, 2015

After living outside off and on for much of the last decade, Garrett, a local Iraq War vet, insists he had no plans to leave his Woodbridge homeless camp.
Garrett, who didn't want his last name used, lives in a homeless camp, but recently received a housing voucher through a federal program for veterans. By Delia Engstrom/For InsideNoVa.com
Stubbornly independent, the broad-shouldered, 30-year-old Army reservist spent a year protecting military convoys behind an M240 machine gun in 2009. He was homeless before deploying overseas and returned to living outside after his marriage broke up in 2013.

Garrett, who asked that his last name not be printed, said he’d since grown accustomed to living in the woods. He has long refused to move back home to Manassas and didn’t like the idea of being tied down by a lease.

Then, two things changed his mind.

First, he told his Veterans Administration counselor that his homelessness was making it difficult to show up for counseling appointments to help with his post-traumatic stress disorder. Then, his girlfriend found out she was pregnant.

Thanks to the counselor, the first revelation helped Garrett obtain one of 30 Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers allotted to Prince William County veterans who cannot afford to live indoors. The news that he would soon become a dad convinced him to take it.
read more here

Twenty Nine Palms Marine Killed In Car Crash

Marine based at 29 Palms killed in car crash
The Desert Sun
Sherry Barkas
November 20, 2015
A Marine based in Twentynine Palms was killed early Wednesday morning in a single-vehicle crash outside of Traver, the California Highway Patrol has confirmed.

Layne Johnson, 19, a private first class armorer with the Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 1 – or VMU-1 – was northbound on Highway 99 in Tulare County when he may have fallen asleep at the wheel, CHP spokesman Officer Scott Harris said Friday.

Johnson's Volkswagen Jetta drifted onto the shoulder and slammed into a guardrail with so much force that the car went airborne.

The car's roof hit a sign about 4 feet off the ground, Harris said.
read more here

Walk For PTSD Awareness Forgot About 50 Others

How Does False Awareness Change Anything?
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 22, 2015



Not a great way to start a Sunday morning at 6:30 when I opened my email to find an alert about another "awareness" group making the news.

How many more groups pop up all over the country, getting folks to walk to raise awareness while kicking in money for what is false?

How many more times does it have to be pointed out that the VA Suicide Report was an average from 21 states using limited data before they actually get it right?

How many more times does it have to be reported that veterans commit suicide double the civilian rate?

The truth is when you use reports of suicides in America, then factor in the reality you arrive at 73 veterans a day committing suicide. So who is making anyone aware of the other 50 forgotten about in all of this?
The word Apocalypse has been flooding my brain lately when I read reports about suicides tied to the military. 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.

It isn't as if these reports have not been made public but it appears all these folks doing the talking and walking didn't take the time to understand what is real and what is simply an "easy number" to remember. When all is said and done the hardest number to remember is the family member no longer here.
Veterans are double the civilian rate then for every one civilian there are two veterans. That would mean there are 26,666 veterans committing suicide every year and not 8,030 people keep repeating when they say "22 a day" are veteran lives lost to suicide. We know that most of them are tied to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and until we get the wrong information out of the way, we'll never be closer to actually making them aware of what really works.

The other sad truth is that the majority of these veterans are over the age of 50.  Look up most of the new groups and you'll find they are only interested in Afghanistan and Iraq veterans as if the older veterans don't matter at all to anyone.

There is yet another group Operation23tozero
He encourages people to check out Operation 23 to Zero, which takes donations to fund future programs and events and also provides access to resources, such as phone numbers and links for those who are struggling or know someone who is.
They may be fine folks with good intentions however they don't seem to have factual information. Maybe someone should ask all the other "awareness" folks why they don't do their own research before they get into the business of sharing what has already been proven wrong?

Wounded Times has links all over the country and has plenty of information within the over 25,000 posts topped off with over 30 years of research and living with Combat related PTSD but it is all given out for free.  Sharing information costs nothing but time.

Sure I'll gladly accept donations to cover what I have to buy but when nothing comes in, I have a paying job to cover expenses doing this. I lose a couple of thousand a year.  Most of the leaders in Point Man International Ministries operate the same way. Our job is, as it has been, to lead the way out of darkness and toward living a better quality of life.  The kicker is, Point Man started working on PTSD in 1984. I started in 1982 because I met, fell in love with a Vietnam veteran I am still married to.

What works is simple and basic but no one has time to discover what has been done since Vietnam veterans came home and fought for all of it.

So how does anyone honestly say they are raising awareness when they are not telling folks the facts and using a number that has been dissected since it was released? As for reporters, they don't even ask questions at all.
GALLERY: From Faribault to Waseca, 3-Legion walk raises awareness of veteran suicide
County News
By JACOB STARK
November 21, 2015
The event was hosted by Operation 23 to Zero, an organization dedicated to raising awareness about issues like veteran suicide and post traumatic stress disorder.

Flags led the way down State Street as many walkers with rucksacks rounded out a several mile journey intended to raise awareness of high suicide rates among veterans.

The Three-Legion Ruck occurred all day Saturday, encouraging people from all over the upper Midwest to participate in a 25-mile walk that started in the morning at the Faribault American Legion before going to the Legion post in Morristown and ending at the Waseca post in the early evening.

"There's a statistic going around that up to 22 veterans a day commit suicide," said Jeremiah Miller, who helped organize the event. This statistic is from a 2012 study by the Department of Veterans Affairs.
read more here
How about some other facts. Young veteran suicides are triple their peer rate. A sad statement but repulsive when you consider all the groups popping up to "raise awareness" about them don't seem to know any of this.
The suicide rate among young male veterans continues to soar: ex-servicemen 24 and younger are now three times more likely than civilian males to take their lives, according to a federal study released Friday.
The majority of Veteran Suicides are over the age of 50
The VA study found that the percentage of older veterans with a history of VA healthcare who committed suicide actually was higher than that of veterans not associated with VA care. 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 - 9 percentage points higher than the general pool.
The reports on Veteran Suicides being double civilian rate go back to 2007 National Institute of Mental Health June 2007 and has been unchanged.
Male veterans in the general U.S. population are twice as likely as their civilian peers to die by suicide, a large study shows.
We have had Congress addressing this since 2007 after the report of military suicides reaching a 26 year high rate of 99 soldier suicides in 2006 and they passed the Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention Act.

Then when it didn't work, they followed up by more of the same bills that did no good at all. They came up with the Suicide Prevention Hotline
“Since its inception, the crisis line has had over 1,150,000 calls,” said Thompson of the VA’s suicide prevention program. “That’s pretty extraordinary. We’re so glad we’ve had that many calls, but of course it’s heartbreaking that people need to reach out that much.” 
Another number we don't talk about are the attempted suicides.
950 suicide attempts per month among Veterans receiving care as reported by Veterans Health Administration (VHA) suicide prevention coordinators (Oct 1, 2008 - Dec 31, 2010).
We don't talk about the fact that there are things that do work because we can't get this number right or the simple fact that after it seems everyone is doing everything to raise awareness veterans know less of what they need to know to survive back home after surviving combat.

False awareness changed nothing. How do they or any of the other 400,000 veterans charities explain any of this?


UPDATE
There is a group out there that was one of the first to raise awareness that is not included in the above rant.

22TooMany and they run to help get the word out. While research changed the totals, this groups started long before there was time to digest all of the information.

They started right after the VA report came out in 2012 and are friends of mine.

Georgia Veteran Killed Police By Had PTSD

Wife of man killed by Paulding County deputies speaks
WSB TV 2 News Atlanta
November 21, 2015
PAULDING COUNTY, Ga. — The wife of a war veteran shot and killed by Paulding County deputies says her husband suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and believes his death could have been prevented.

Christina Tarrant says her husband William Tarrant, 39, was getting treatment for PTSD, but needed more help.

Tarrant says she tried to tell deputies that, but he was killed anyway.

"I kept telling the police officers from 10-11 in the morning up until (he was shot) that he is not right in the head. He needs help," Tarrant said.

Tarrant told Channel 2's Matt Johnson her husband was a 10-year combat veteran with a Purple Heart.

"There's no better definition of a hero other than what my husband displayed," Tarrant said.

Tarrant says her husband went to his parents' house Friday morning to check on their 6-month-old son Liam and his behavior raised red flags.
read more here


Authorities release name of man shot, killed after pointing gun at deputies November 20, 2015