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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 11/16/2010 11:39:30

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,799th day in Iraq and our 3,327th 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): 4427
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4288
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3568
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 199
Since Operation New Dawn: 9

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,385
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 824
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,487
Journalists - Iraq : 348
Academics Killed - Iraq: 448

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

$ 1, 108, 128, 250, 000 .00



We're just past Veteran's Day....and over the course of the past week quite a few new stories have popped up about what it means to be a Veteran in these United States. One of the hardest things a vet has to do once he gets out of the service is find work...a task not made any easier by the current state of the economy.




Since 2008, when recession gripped the US economy, the unemployment rate among Massachusetts veterans has soared, rising from 2.8 percent to 8.7 percent in one year, according to the most recent data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. The Bay State’s civilian population had an average unemployment rate of 8 percent in 2009, nearly a full percentage point lower than veterans, according to the data.

Veterans looking for jobs face unique challenges. Younger veterans returning from combat must make the transition to civilian life. Older veterans, who once easily found jobs in the skilled trades, have been hurt by losses in manufacturing. Disabled veterans often have limited job options. Globe North today looks at the effect of unemployment on three veterans this Veterans Day.

Bob Nadeau
'Old school' experience hasn't led to employment
‘I’m 62 years old. I have no college education,’’ Bob Nadeau said. “I have life and work experience. I was a kick-bum kind of guy at work. No slackers worked for me. That’s how I moved up in business.’’

The Vietnam-era Navy veteran from Lynn was laid off from his $65,000-a-year job as a sales manager last year. He’s been collecting unemployment benefits and searching for jobs with little luck.

“I’m from the old school,’’ said Nadeau, who is married with grown children. “I’m afraid no one’s going to hire me.’’

Nadeau looks for jobs at the North Shore Career Center in Salem, where he works with Tom Frisiello, the veterans employment specialist.

“A lot of younger veterans now are opting for schooling,’’ said Frisiello, who has been counseling veterans since the 1970s. “It’s different for older veterans. In the past, they could go into a trade, or into manufacturing. Today, a lot of jobs require a higher level of education than many of them have.’’

Nadeau, who is proud of his six-year stint in Navy, isn’t sure veterans status makes much difference.

“In this economy?’’ he said with a sigh. “I don’t think it matters a hill of beans. This career center is inundated with people looking for jobs.’’



Mr. Nadeau's story is just one of many enumerated in the story....so do go check it out if you have a chance. But sadly, for many veterans, they have reached the end of the line, and whether it's war trauma, lack of support, or simply giving up all hope, they decide to leave this life for the next one. Despite the best efforts of soldiers and civilians alike suicide rates continue to soar.


WASHINGTON — The economic downturn and the trauma of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have pushed more US veterans to suicide, Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki said Thursday.

As Americans across the United States and around the world celebrated the contributions of men and women in uniform on Veterans Day, Shinseki outlined a sobering picture for the approximately 23 million veterans in the United States.
Only eight million of those veterans are currently registered with the Department of Veterans Affairs, Shinseki said. Many slip through the cracks due to crippling mental health problems, homelessness, alcohol and illegal drug abuse or crime.
Several studies have shown that suicides are on the rise among youths who have left the military.

"It's compounded by the stress, the trauma that goes with the current operations, where we have a much smaller military being asked to do so much and then repeat it tour after tour," Shinseki told National Public Radio (NPR).
"I know the suicide numbers are up."

In January, he indicated that 20 percent of some 30,000 suicides in the United States each year are committed by veterans. That means that an average of 18 veterans commit suicide each year.

Suicides claimed the lives of a record 309 servicemembers last year, up from 267 in 2008, according to Pentagon numbers. The number of suicides between 2005 and 2009 -- 1,100 -- exceeded that of the number of US military members killed in Afghanistan since 2001.

The Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs do not keep statistics on veteran deaths.


The last sentence bears repeating..."The Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs do not keep statistics on veteran deaths." As if by ignoring the problem, it will go away.

One thing that will never go away is the pain and anguish suffered by the survivors. You've all seen the WWII movies...uniformed men arrive on a families doorstep with crushing news. But what happens to the family in the weeks, months, or years afterwards? This is what upsets me the most about the Arlington fiasco. This is the only memorial most families have to their lost loved ones, and nobody can even be sure the right body is buried where the headstone says it is, but I digress. This is the story I couldn't finish last week. But it must be read, all the same.


Reporting from Arlington, Va. — It's a perfect autumn Sunday and Chad Weikel is sitting outdoors, having a beer with his big brother, Ian. Chad's beer is resting in the cup holder of his folding chair. Ian's is propped up against his headstone.

Army Capt. Ian Weikel, 31, was killed in action in Iraq on April 18, 2006, so this is how they visit now.

Three rows back, Nicki Bunting's 3-year-old, Connor, is building a campfire for his dad. Or maybe it's an ant farm. He hasn't decided. He was 1 when his father, Army Capt. Brian "Bubba" Bunting, was killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan on Feb. 24, 2009. They drive from Maryland to "visit Daddy" every Sunday — Connor, his mom and his little brother, Cooper, an R-and-R baby conceived a month before his father died.

You don't see scenes like this at very many gravesites in America; in fact, you don't see them anywhere else but here at Arlington National Cemetery, the hallowed burial ground for two U.S. presidents, 12 Supreme Court justices and veterans of every war since the Revolution.

This is Section 60, where more than a tenth of the casualties from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan rest: 648 at last count, more than in any other single place. These service members died recently, and they died young. The grief here is raw — parents who outlived their children, spouses still raising their babies, friends who thought death was an older generation's burden.

Their sorrow has a tragically youthful spin that defies the rigid orderliness of a military burial ground better known for riderless horses and gun salutes. Section 60 is strewn with bits of unfinished life: carved pumpkins, cigars, a birthday cake, an "It's a Boy" balloon, Mardi Gras beads, a note — "We love you son. Always will." — a Darth Vader doll, a can of Bud Lite.

"We all share in the same loss," Nicki Bunting says. "In any other section or cemetery, I don't know each person's story. It could have been cancer or a car accident. But in Section 60, we've all had the same knock at the door."

On Thursday, the nation pauses to honor all who served and remember the fallen. Visitors will flock to Washington's monuments erected for nearly every American war. But there is no memorial for the two wars still raging. Section 60, on 18 acres of grass across the Potomac River from the nation's capital, has come to serve that purpose.


...
 

35 comments (Latest Comment: 11/17/2010 01:53:31 by trojanrabbit)
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Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 14:16:56
Morning

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 14:33:14
Good Morning! After reading such a sad blog, this made me smile, because of the sick irony.

A conservative Maryland physician elected to Congress on an anti-Obamacare platform surprised fellow freshmen at a Monday orientation session by demanding to know why his government-subsidized health care plan takes a month to kick in.

Republican Andy Harris, an anesthesiologist who defeated freshman Democrat Frank Kratovil on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, reacted incredulously when informed that federal law mandated that his government-subsidized health care policy would take effect on Feb. 1 – 28 days after his Jan. 3rd swearing-in
.


Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 14:34:23
Listening to the show, I can say there is nothing wrong with good earmarks-- like money to repair roads.

Bridges to nowhere, however -- are another story.

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 14:42:02
Quote by Raine:
Good Morning! After reading such a sad blog, this made me smile, because of the sick irony.

A conservative Maryland physician elected to Congress on an anti-Obamacare platform surprised fellow freshmen at a Monday orientation session by demanding to know why his government-subsidized health care plan takes a month to kick in.

Republican Andy Harris, an anesthesiologist who defeated freshman Democrat Frank Kratovil on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, reacted incredulously when informed that federal law mandated that his government-subsidized health care policy would take effect on Feb. 1 – 28 days after his Jan. 3rd swearing-in
.



jeez

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 14:45:15
he couldn't have afforded his airplane without a tax break - is that what he said? cry me a frickin river

Comment by Scoopster on 11/16/2010 14:56:15
Mornin' all!

I'm curious - why has no one brought up Al Franken's plan to tweak Social Security that he outlined over and over again on his radio show?

Not even.. Sen. Al Franken?

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 15:14:26
Mini-Kiss makes me happy - I'm with Jim the orginial now doesn't sound right to me either

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 15:23:53
boo hooo, waaawaaawaaa - sounds like she's just greedy

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 15:24:26
Wow a female winger!

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 15:28:27
Quote by wickedpam:
boo hooo, waaawaaawaaa - sounds like she's just greedy

You know, she sounds more concerned about what she's gonna get.


there are PLENTY of loopholes if her father or whoever this fictional character is to get around that.

this has a lot of good information about the estate tax.

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 15:29:52
besides -- he's gonna be dead -- it SHE who is worried about paying taxes on something she did not necessarily earn

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 15:31:24
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
boo hooo, waaawaaawaaa - sounds like she's just greedy

You know, she sounds more concerned about what she's gonna get.


there are PLENTY of loopholes if her father or whoever this fictional character is to get around that.

this has a lot of good information about the estate tax.



exactly

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 15:32:15
http://www.cbpp.org/images/cms/btn-estatetax.jpg


Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 15:49:54
oh that Redskins game last night -- poor Kevin in DC. it was wretched.

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 15:57:58
I am so sick of these Gotcha callers.

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 15:58:33


Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 16:07:10
This is really important:
Pass the tax cut extensions for everyone, across the board. Send it to the president, and get it signed into law.

Then come back with a reconciliation bill repealing the extension for the top brackets. Since current law at that point will score the repeal as a $700 billion savings over 10 years, you're good to go on the deficit reduction requirement. Move it under the FY2010 reconciliation instructions, and you're done.


I fully expect the pearl clutchers to scream that the Dems are selling people down the river because they don;t get the second part.


Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 16:18:16
I this kid.

Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 16:18:47


Comment by TriSec on 11/16/2010 16:20:09
Grunt.



Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 16:20:59
For those not listening to the show, here is the link from TowelRoad Video is there as well.



Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 16:21:30
Quote by wickedpam:
Watch him talk -- it is incredible.


Comment by wickedpam on 11/16/2010 16:29:46
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Watch him talk -- it is incredible.



yeah, saw part of it yesterday

Comment by livingonli on 11/16/2010 16:30:49
Good morning everyone.

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 16:31:03
Momma, Doggie Door and Racoons... Crap. I can identify with that one.

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 16:31:22
Quote by livingonli:
Good morning everyone.

Why good morning Sir!

Comment by livingonli on 11/16/2010 16:43:10
Quote by Raine:
Momma, Doggie Door and Racoons... Crap. I can identify with that one.

I wonder how glad she is to be back in LA?

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 17:30:33
here is the irony of Earmarks, and something I think SHOULD be looked at: (from the previous Wiki link)
Against:
An earmark is an item that is inserted into a bill to direct funds to a specific project or recipient without any public hearing or review. One of the problems is that there is no transparency or accountability in the system.

U.S. Congressional members can secure hundreds of millions of dollars of funding for a project without subjecting it to debate by their colleagues in the Congress, or to the scrutiny and oversight of the public. Because earmarks are hard to identify, some members use them to secretly award their biggest campaign contributors or exchange them for bribes. The secrecy of the earmarking process invites unethical and corrupt behavior, where lobbyists and contractors and well-connected individuals give campaign contributions to legislators in return for federal funding.

Generally the more powerful members of the U.S. Congress get more earmarks. Members of the Appropriations Committees in the House and Senate are in the best position to secure earmarks. They can insert them into spending bills during closed committee meetings, with no public scrutiny. Earmarks are also offered to members to entice them to vote for a bill they otherwise might not vote for.

For:
Scott Frisch and Sean Kelly point out that directing money to particular purposes is a core Constitutional function of Congress. If Congress does not make a specific allocation, the task falls to the executive branch; there is no guarantee that the allocation made by executive agencies will be superior to Congress's. Presidents and executive officials can use the allocation of spending to reward friends and punish enemies. The process of earmarking has been substantially reformed since the beginning of the 110th Congress. Members of Congress must post all their requests on their websites and they must sign a certification letter (which are then put online) indicating that neither they nor their spouse has financial interest in the earmark request.Many members have instituted an applications process that their constituents must undergo for earmark requests. Finally, member-directed projects constitute less than 2 percent of the federal budget.


So why not put it all on line and let there be transparency?

Comment by TriSec on 11/16/2010 18:25:22
Now enjoying the dulcet tones of the "John Wayne Big Band, Live at Newport!

(A few jobs ago now, I was talking to one of my coworkers about one of Duke's wartime albums being re-issued. One of the lesser lights overheard and in all seriousness said, "I didn't know John Wayne was a musician, too!"



Comment by livingonli on 11/16/2010 19:57:42
I think I'm hitting the wall. Wish I could afford a vacation.

Comment by Raine on 11/16/2010 21:05:14
this is an interesting graphic. It's from 2004.

http://democraticactionteam.org/redstatesocialism/red-state-socialism.jpg


Comment by BobR on 11/16/2010 21:22:53
Looks like Cheney may be about to close out that contract with the Devil. He's not looking so good

Comment by trojanrabbit on 11/17/2010 01:53:31
Looks like the wife brought home another cat.

Her new boss has 5 and can't take care of them any more so she gave my wife one of them. I told her I didn't want any more cats, but who am I?

Whatever, the cat is here, hiding in the closet. She's a cutie (a gray tabby), and the problem is I'm going to fall in love with her because I do love cats. I guess the only ones with any say are Lucky & Cleo.