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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 08/30/2011 10:31:21

Good Morning.

Today is our 3,086th day in Iraq, and our 3,614th day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do; with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing wars, courtesy of Antiwar.com:

American Deaths
Since war began (3/19/03): 4474
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4335
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3615
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 246
Since Operation New Dawn: 46

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,747
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 942
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,487
Journalists - Iraq : 348
Academics Killed - Iraq: 448

We find this morning's cost of war passing through:

$ 1, 242, 364, 500, 000 .00


I hope everyone has come through the hurricane this weekend in one piece. There's still some hard work ahead to recover, and perhaps more damage to come as the floodwaters move downstream, but for the most part I think we got through in one piece.


Some folks have been left homeless by the weather, but perhaps they'll be able to recover through insurance and FEMA assistance. I have been holding a story that's completely unrelated to hurricanes except for that one word..."homeless". In states that are now hard-hit by weather, there was already a homelessness problem among veterans that has barely seen notice by the national media.


FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — The number of homeless women veterans is increasing in North Carolina and South Carolina as they become a larger part of the military, but the resources to help them are limited.

The Fayetteville Observer reported that

The state Department of Veterans Affairs says about 90 women veterans who are homeless live in the Fayetteville, home of Fort Bragg, according to the Fayetteville Observer. Crisis Ministry in Charleston, S.C., says it provided temporary shelter to 28 female vets in the previous fiscal year, The Post and Courier of Charleston reported.

But the numbers aren’t necessarily accurate because some people don’t seek help or others bounce from home to home and never enter the system. The National Coalition for the Homeless says women account for 3 percent to 4 percent of the national population of homeless vets, which numbers about 200,000 nightly.

The main reason for the problem is that women account for more of the military. And as wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wind down, service providers expect the number of women who need help to grow.

“The resources are limited,” said Stephanie Felder, homeless program coordinator for the VA in Fayetteville. “They are growing, but they’re limited.”


But it's not just those states, and it's not just female soldiers. Across the US, homelessness is generally on the rise among all veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. And it is specific to these conflicts; the numbers across the entire veteran's community are actually on the decrease, so this is difficult to account for. It is perhaps due to the economy, as it notes in the story..."Now is just a bad time to get out of the military."


More than 10,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are homeless or in programs aimed at keeping them off the streets, a number that has doubled three times since 2006, according to figures released by the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The rise comes at a time when the total number of homeless veterans has declined from a peak of about 400,000 in 2004 to 135,000 today.

“We’re seeing more and more (Iraq and Afghanistan veterans),” says Richard Thomas, a Volunteers of America case manager at a shelter in Los Angeles. “It’s just a bad time for them to return now and get out of the military.”

The VA blames the rise on a poor economy and the nature of the current wars, where a limited number of troops serve multiple deployments.

The result is a group of homeless veterans where 70 percent have a history of combat exposure with its psychological effects, says Pete Dougherty, a senior policy adviser on homelessness at the VA.

Among all homeless veterans, perhaps 20 percent to 33 percent were in combat, he says.

LaShonna Perry, a former Army mechanic who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, was homeless for more than year after leaving the military. She rented an apartment last year with a federal voucher.

“Some soldiers still have issues they’re dealing with from what they’ve seen, what they’ve experienced,” she says. “Some think, ‘There’s nothing wrong with me.’ They can deal with it on their own. Until it gets out of control.”

As of May, there were 10,476 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans either living on the streets, in temporary housing or receiving federal vouchers to help pay rent for an apartment.


Finally this morning....kids in Massachusetts are heading back to school this week. While we usually take that to mean the Public schools, the many colleges in this area are also seeing a huge inflow of new students. Some kids who would otherwise be college freshmen have opted for a military career. Some of them will serve in Japan, Germany, or elsewhere like their forebears did. But for those that go to war, they bear some of the highest costs of all.


SILVANA, Wash. — In a hilltop graveyard overlooking this Stillaguamish River village lies a young soldier killed in the infancy of the Iraq war.

Army Spc. Justin W. Hebert’s story is sad and sadly unremarkable, a tragedy bound up in the tale of a grinding war that took young lives with grievous regularity. Nearly one-third of U.S. troops killed in Iraq were age 18 to 21. Well more than half were in the lowest enlisted ranks.

For Hebert, the Army was an adventure. But it didn’t last long.

Barely two years after he finished high school, exactly three months after President George W. Bush declared the end of major combat in Iraq and just four days after his 20th birthday, Hebert was mortally wounded in an insurgent ambush that may have been a setup by an Iraqi “informant.”

It was Aug. 1, 2003. The war, according to the Pentagon’s plan, was supposed to be over. Baghdad had fallen swiftly. But a new, more menacing phase of conflict was just beginning. An insurgency was in the making, and in its formative months it perplexed U.S. commanders and cost Hebert his life.

In the years since, the U.S. effort in Iraq has veered from the brink of calamity to the threshold of surprising success. With the remaining U.S. troops now packing to leave, possibly for good, casualties and costs will be tallied one last time.

More elusive is a firm judgment on the net benefit of the American sacrifice, the more than 4,400 dead, the tens of thousands injured and the untold numbers suffering unseen psychological wounds for years to come.

The invasion, occupation and transition to Iraqi government control lasted far longer than predicted, cost more than imagined and left a town like Silvana, population 90, to wonder why a war so far away brought grief so close to home.

The sacrifice of so many lives like Hebert’s helped turn U.S. public opinion firmly against the war by the time Barack Obama was campaigning for president in 2008. Three years later, young Americans still die in Iraq even though the war is widely seen as over.

It is also widely seen as a mistake, and by some as a waste.

Hebert was buried here in his hometown, about 50 miles north of Seattle, in a small, century-old graveyard surrounded by cedars and firs, beside a landmark known as The Little White Church on the Hill.

A recent visit to his grave shortly after the eighth anniversary of his death made clear that he has not been forgotten. His headstone was bedecked with one full-size and more than a dozen miniature American flags, potted plants, flower bouquets, cards and birthday balloons — silent tributes from a proud community.

Hebert’s sister, Jessica Cole, described him as mouthy, a jokester, and a “smarty pants.” He also had the inner strength, she said, to overcome his childhood fear of heights and volunteer for Army training in parachuting from airplanes. She said he had never been in a plane until he flew to Fort Sill, Okla., to begin basic training in June 2001.

“He would not get on a ladder to change Christmas lights on a two-story building for the life of him,” she said in an interview.

He saw the Army as a ticket to a better life.

“He joined pretty much to get out of the little town we grew up in,” she said, and for the chance to see the world. She never imagined he would return so soon to be buried by family and friends.


For those of us with school-age children, Labor day seems to be a more important indicator of the cycle of the year than the holidays, or the New Year. So as we head into the beginning of another school year...let's hope for the best all around.
 

45 comments (Latest Comment: 08/30/2011 22:13:22 by Mondobubba)
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Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 12:52:41
:Puts Bob Seeger on Blog sound system: :Dances around in tighty whities:

Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 13:07:54
Morning

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 13:21:16
Good Morning!

Comment by Scoopster on 08/30/2011 14:04:39
Mornin all... I LIIIIVE!!!

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 14:09:33
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin all... I LIIIIVE!!!
Welcome back!

How was your adventure?


Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 14:11:23
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin all... I LIIIIVE!!!


We good. Do you want an Irene particpation ribbon?

I kid Scoop! Good to see you.

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 14:18:31


Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 14:19:32
I think Chris is wrong - Bill Press said that she had an opening band called the White People Soul Band or somehing like that - and she came on after them and said "Who likes White People"

Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 14:26:39
ok - I could be wrong on that now that I hear more of the recording

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 14:31:25
I've got a cunning plan. I am gonna create a Twitter account that will be something like @TheLordYourGod. Then I am going to start sending tweet after tweet to Michele Bachmann advising her issues like family planning and "the gays." Who wants in?

Comment by Scoopster on 08/30/2011 14:33:02
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin all... I LIIIIVE!!!
Welcome back!

How was your adventure?

Well we still have no power in most of my town and a good chunk of the surrounding area. My office building also has no power, so I've had the past two days off. Work should be back soon, but I'm hearing we may not have power at home until at least Friday and at worst NEXT WEEK.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 14:40:02
Quote by Scoopster:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin all... I LIIIIVE!!!
Welcome back!

How was your adventure?

Well we still have no power in most of my town and a good chunk of the surrounding area. My office building also has no power, so I've had the past two days off. Work should be back soon, but I'm hearing we may not have power at home until at least Friday and at worst NEXT WEEK.



Oh that both sucks and blows, the power thing that is.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 14:41:00
Speaking of power, Momma Mondo's power was restored about 5:30ish last night. She and Dog are very happy.

Comment by TriSec on 08/30/2011 14:46:12
Asschubs. You know who you are.

(You'll note I'm not blocked today. I wish I knew what the hell they were doing around here.)



Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 14:47:43
Quote by TriSec:
Asschubs. You know who you are.

(You'll note I'm not blocked today. I wish I knew what the hell they were doing around here.)



Asschubs?

Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 14:47:58
Quote by Mondobubba:
I've got a cunning plan. I am gonna create a Twitter account that will be something like @TheLordYourGod. Then I am going to start sending tweet after tweet to Michele Bachmann advising her issues like family planning and "the gays." Who wants in?



Go for it

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 14:53:02
Quote by Mondobubba:
I've got a cunning plan. I am gonna create a Twitter account that will be something like @TheLordYourGod. Then I am going to start sending tweet after tweet to Michele Bachmann advising her issues like family planning and "the gays." Who wants in?
I love it!

you can use a twitter client to have them send out automatically for days-- on the hour or so....



Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 15:11:53
I hate it when people attribute things to Jesus like that, I find that they don't hear the message they just see the superpowers

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 15:15:42
Mondo-- Create an account called @JehovahGod if it isn't already taken.

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 15:30:41
Quote by Raine:
Mondo-- Create an account called @JehovahGod if it isn't already taken.
It's taken, Try @YourJehovahGod


Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 15:40:30
Rick Perry, king of Pay to play politics.

Perry has received a total of $37 million over the last decade from just 150 individuals and couples, who are likely to form the backbone of his new effort to win the Republican presidential nomination. The tally represented more than a third of the $102 million he had raised as governor through December, according to data compiled by the watchdog group Texans for Public Justice.

Nearly half of those mega-donors received hefty business contracts, tax breaks or appointments under Perry, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis.


Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 16:01:03
I love this! Alexandria Activists finally succeed in getting the Coal Power plant closed here.

Comment by livingonli on 08/30/2011 16:03:05
Good day folks. It's really starting to suck that I don't get up in time to catch Momma. Today I only caught the last 15 minutes. But I love Mondo's idea of tweeting what she might think is God's ideas to her. I wonder if she will actually believe that God is tweeting to her

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 16:05:37
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Mondobubba:
I've got a cunning plan. I am gonna create a Twitter account that will be something like @TheLordYourGod. Then I am going to start sending tweet after tweet to Michele Bachmann advising her issues like family planning and "the gays." Who wants in?
I love it!

you can use a twitter client to have them send out automatically for days-- on the hour or so....




Sample tweet. Michele, for the love of Me stop with the Me talk. I don't like it.

Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 16:06:10
Quote by Raine:
I love this! Alexandria Activists finally succeed in getting the Coal Power plant closed here.



oh wow - they've been trying to shut that place down for a while!

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 16:07:46
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
I love this! Alexandria Activists finally succeed in getting the Coal Power plant closed here.



oh wow - they've been trying to shut that place down for a while!
It's pretty amazing that this started out as a small group of people who just wanted the Air quality improved. What a colossal achievement!


Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 16:08:07
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Mondobubba:
I've got a cunning plan. I am gonna create a Twitter account that will be something like @TheLordYourGod. Then I am going to start sending tweet after tweet to Michele Bachmann advising her issues like family planning and "the gays." Who wants in?
I love it!

you can use a twitter client to have them send out automatically for days-- on the hour or so....




Sample tweet. Michele, for the love of Me stop with the Me talk. I don't like it.



Another sample tweet: Chele, whr in New Test do I dump on gays?

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 16:17:52
Tri if you can, watch -- he is talking about Veteran homelessness.

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 16:19:03
and suicide among vets.

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 16:21:49
Pres Obama pledges lifelong support for veterans suffering lifelong injuries such as TBI - traumatic brain injury.


Comment by BobR on 08/30/2011 17:42:12
Quote by TriSec:
Asschubs. You know who you are.

(You'll note I'm not blocked today. I wish I knew what the hell they were doing around here.)


right back atcha

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 18:09:00
I read that earlier -- It's so seedy.


Comment by wickedpam on 08/30/2011 18:20:17
Quote by Raine:
I read that earlier -- It's so seedy.



Its just centimeters close to being a Lifetime movie

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 18:33:40
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
I read that earlier -- It's so seedy.

Its just centimeters close to being a Lifetime movie

Bob said this to me earlier:

wow - that's straight out of a 1940s bribed cops movie




Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 18:45:17
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
I read that earlier -- It's so seedy.

Its just centimeters close to being a Lifetime movie

Bob said this to me earlier:

wow - that's straight out of a 1940s bribed cops movie


Gawker comes out swinging.


Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 19:25:23



What a dick! I mean really, your wife has left you, dick. You don't get snoop into her private life, dick. Especially by using the police to do it. I mean Ari Gold on Entourage wouldn't even do that!

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 19:37:43
What Billo did borders on Stalking.

Comment by Raine on 08/30/2011 19:40:06
My blood is boiling again listening to Randi talk about the Cheney interviews he has been giving.

I personally find it disgusting that his book is coming out less than 2 weeks before the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 19:43:47
Quote by Raine:
What Billo did borders on Stalking.



Egomanicial douchebaggery of the first order.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 19:45:20
Quote by Raine:
My blood is boiling again listening to Randi talk about the Cheney interviews he has been giving.

I personally find it disgusting that his book is coming out less than 2 weeks before the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks.



I'm sure his publisher planned that too. Which makes it even worse. Speaking of Skeletor, did you see the latest pictures of him? He looks like death warmed over. Even more like Skeletor or Emperor Palpatine that before.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 20:32:04
Sean Hannity calling anybody stupid is well, stupid. . Sean Hannity thinks the London Underground is a political movement. That is how stupid he is.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 21:31:31
Comment by Mondobubba on 08/30/2011 22:13:22
102 years o' bitchin' evolutionary coolness The late Stephen Gould wrong a great book on the Burgess Shale fossils called "Wonderful Life." Mondo sez check it out.