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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 06/24/2025 11:32:39

Good Morning.

Well, since we're at war again, let's think about actual veterans.


And a long-form story as well. We've written about military suicides and the often feeble attempts to "do something" to reduce those numbers over the years. Despite all the efforts, the rate of military suicide is starting to climb again.


In CY 2023, 523 Service members died by suicide, which is more than the previous year (493). The Total Force rate – which is the focus of the ASRM report – of suicide deaths per 100,000 Service members was 9 percent higher than in 2022.

Active Component suicide rates have gradually increased since 2011. The 2023 Active Component rate is higher (12 percent) than 2022.


Military life is not a common choice where I live, but nevertheless I have had some friends that did serve, including during wartime. Dear Leader and his cabal seem hell-bent on perpetuating the forever-war state of these United States, so one would expect that this will be a constant problem for decades to come.

Front-line personnel are often considered the most likely to become that statistic, but it isn't always so. A rather revealing piece has been published through the Washington Post, and it has made it to my usual source. We'll have some excerpts below.


BEAUFORT, S.C. — Tatiana Sowell held her youngest child as she stood amid the rows of white headstones and stately mossy oaks. Her late husband, Logan, was buried in this national cemetery nearly four years ago after taking his life and ending what his widow describes as a ruinous tenure in one of the U.S. military’s most iconic jobs: Marine drill instructor. He was 33.

Logan Sowell’s suicide in July 2021 is one of at least seven in the past five years involving the Marine Corps’ stable of drill instructors, according to military casualty reports obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests. In 2023, three occurred at Parris Island within less than three months.

A study completed by the Marine Corps in 2019 found that during the previous decade, 29 drill instructors either ended their lives or openly acknowledged they had contemplated doing so — an aberration the study’s authors characterized as startlingly high compared with the occurrence of suicidal ideation among Marines who had never held that job.
Rates of addiction and divorce among drill instructors also were higher, researchers found.
Critics and relatives of those who died accuse the Marine Corps of fostering an environment that contributed to their deaths. They describe routine 90-hour-plus workweeks, sleep deprivation and an always-on culture that frequently caused the job’s requisite intensity to seep into their personal lives, igniting disputes with loved ones. Others detailed bouts of depression or alcohol dependency.

While the adrenaline-fueled assignment has always been high-stress, the 2016 death of 20-year-old Raheel Siddiqui, a Muslim recruit who was found by investigators to have suffered vicious abuse while at Parris Island, led the institution to sharpen its oversight of the men and women who indoctrinate newcomers. There is uncompromising accountability now, which has made the hardships long associated with being a drill instructor dangerously unbearable for some, observers say. They note, too, that the Marine Corps lacks adequate services for those who are struggling and need help, and tacitly condones a culture that stigmatizes those who seek it.


Consider the last line - the Marines condone a culture that stigmatizes those who seek help for mental health issues.

Where does that leave the unsupported? Drugs, alcohol, anger, risky behaviour, violence...we see this in all kinds of veterans.

I am not a veteran. You all know this. But another line has given me pause as well, because I once worked in an environment that felt like this, too.


...routine 90-hour-plus workweeks, sleep deprivation and an always-on culture that frequently caused the job’s requisite intensity to seep into their personal lives, igniting disputes with loved ones.


It's no joke. It can dominate you - to the extent that everything that isn't your work becomes secondary, if you let it. Lives and families can become secondary, or even become destroyed without the proper coping mechanisms.

Our military culture today emphasizes rabid masculinity, and just below the surface white supremacy and misogyny as well.

But for this cabal, the military is just another propaganda tool, never mind the human cost.
 

9 comments (Latest Comment: 06/24/2025 15:34:26 by TriSec)
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