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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 03/15/2011 10:36:23

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,918th day in Iraq, and our 3,446th 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): 4439
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4300
Since Handover (6/29/04): 350
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 211
Since Operation New Dawn: 21

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,495
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 862
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,487
Journalists - Iraq : 348
Academics Killed - Iraq: 448

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

$ 1, 165, 753, 800, 000 .00



I've got something a little different this morning. It's rarely talked about, but in these desperate times, the ocassional returning soldier will not seamlessly integrate back to civilian life and instead turns to a life of crime. This group of citizens could easily be ignored and forgotten in a prison population, but the Bay Area VA has recognized these veteran's extremely narrow and special needs and is doing something about it.


SAN BRUNO, Calif. (KGO) -- Officials with the Veterans Administration in Washington are taking a close look at a unique program in the Bay Area designed to help former soldiers who are out of the service, but in jail, held in a separate unit just for them.

Carlton Koonce has been out of the Navy for years and out of jail just a few months. He says going to jail saved his life. That's because Koonce was an inmate at San Francisco's County Jail No. 5. Every inmate in this pod is a military vet.

"When I first came in here, I mean just walking through the door you could feel the atmosphere," said inmate Bruce Romans.

It's a pilot program called COVER -- Community of Veterans Engaged in Restoration.

"The sheer fact that we are kind of a fraternity, a family, is a very powerful experience for me," said inmate Evan Graham.

Those who once served their country are now serving time with a focus on their special needs, including post-traumatic stress and substance abuse. Specialized therapy sessions help them identify the triggers of violent behavior.

COVER has been in operation since August under the direction of Sheriff Michael Hennessey who believes those who sacrifice for the nation are owed a debt from society.

"We're used to seeing happy scenes of military people emerging from the airport doorways and here we're going to have these men emerging from the jail doorways and you don't see those same happy scenes," said Hennessy. "I think the veterans coming through either door are deserving of our support and respect."

Hennessey says estimates there are about 140,000 vets in state and county jails. In San Francisco, about 5 or 10 percent of the 1,700 prisoners once served in the military.

"When there's not much of a safety net, vets will tend to fall through that," said Michael Blecker who served in the Vietnam War and heads Swords to Plowshares, a Bay Area vets organization founded in 1974. He helped create the jail house program. "I can't help thinking about what happened to Vietnam War veterans and how they ended up homeless, self-destructive, and suicidal, and having HIV issues and aging well past their own years, and we want to prevent that from happening to this young generation of veterans."

There is no formal funding for COVER. All the staff are volunteers and they are preparing for more men.


Like everyone else in the world, we at AAV are also looking at the news coming out of Japan with great alarm. However, there is the tiniest bit of good news...all US personnel in Japan have been accounted for.


The Pentagon says that U.S. Pacific Command reports all U.S. military personnel in Japan have been accounted for after Friday’s earthquake and tsunami. Press secretary Geoff Morrell says there are no reports of injuries to American personnel or damage to U.S. installations or ships in the area.

The largest earthquake in Japan’s history — measured at a magnitude of 8.9 — pummeled the eastern coast of Japan Friday, accompanied by a towering tsunami.

Morrell says U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates was briefed by Pacific Command officials Friday while he was in Brussels to attend a NATO meeting on the Afghanistan war.

The Air Force has three bases in Japan: Misawa, Kadena and Yokota air bases. Lt. Col. John Haynes, an Air Force spokesman at the Pentagon, said Friday that the service has not received any report of major damage to the bases.

The U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet is based in Yokosuka, Japan. The fleet’s Facebook page was updated to confirm that there were no injuries of any 7th Fleet personnel and no reported damage to its assets.

The update went on to say that CTF-72 (Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance Force) headquarters in Misawa was briefly evacuated, and it currently does not have power and is operating from a generator.


Of course, it rarely receives any coverage in the media, but whenever there is a disaster anywhere in the world....the US Military is usually among the first to help.


Marine forces in Japan are delivering food, water and other supplies to assist in disaster-relief efforts following the massive earthquake and tsunami that devastated the region Friday.

The first personnel and equipment to arrive include command-and-control and logistics assets, plus CH-46E transport helicopters and KC-130J cargo aircraft, officials said in a news release. Those assets have moved from Marine facilities in Okinawa and are now operating out of mainland Japan.

They will be joined shortly by elements of the Japan-based 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, who are returning from exercises in Cambodia.

Aviation assets from Marine Corps Air Station Futenma were quickly dispatched to areas on the mainland where the need was greatest, Lt. Col. Karl C. Rohr, a spokesman for III Marine Expeditionary Force, said in a news release.“

In a matter of hours,” Rohr said, “supplies, gear and manpower began flowing into mainland Japan with more to follow.

CH-46 Sea Knights from Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 265 were among the first assets to leave Futenma. They’re now operating out of Naval Air Facility Atsugi, according to the news release.

The helicopters “provide commanders with the greatest flexibility of options,” said Lt. Col. Damien M. Marsh, HMM-265’s commander. They can handle the “full spectrum of rescue operations,” including rescue ashore, casualty transfer, and troop and cargo transport, he said, calling the 46s “extremely maneuverable, versatile and environmentally friendly in urban areas.”

The KC-130J Super Hercules are assigned to Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron 152.

Additional aircraft and supplies will continue to be moved during the next several days, officials said.

Elements of the 31st MEU, embarked aboard the amphibious ships Essex, Harpers Ferry and Germantown, are currently transiting toward Japan, according to the unit’s Facebook page. The MEU includes Battalion Landing Team 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines, out of Camp Pendleton, Calif.; HMM-262, another CH-46 squadron based at Futenma; Marine Attack Squadron 211, an AV-8B Harrier squadron out of Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz.; and Combat Logistics Battalion 31.

Based at Yokota Air Base, Japan, U.S. Forces Japan is the lead military command for coordinating all humanitarian-assistance and disaster-relief efforts on the mainland. It’s been dubbed Operation Tomodachi, which means “friendship” in Japanese, officials said.


Finally this morning....you may be wondering where to send help to Japan. If you are....be careful out there. The Red Cross and other established international organizations are usually the best choice.


 

52 comments (Latest Comment: 03/16/2011 01:55:35 by TriSec)
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Comment by wickedpam on 03/15/2011 12:31:52
Morning

Comment by Scoopster on 03/15/2011 12:41:07
Morning all.. still a little froggy in the throat area today, but otherwise okay.

BTW, Eric Cantor is a giant douchenozzle.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 12:53:02
Quote by Scoopster:
Morning all.. still a little froggy in the throat area today, but otherwise okay.

BTW, Eric Cantor is a giant douchenozzle.

and, in other news, the sun rose today... but seriously, what did cantor do this time?

:coffee: good morning!

Comment by Scoopster on 03/15/2011 12:56:29
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Scoopster:
Morning all.. still a little froggy in the throat area today, but otherwise okay.

BTW, Eric Cantor is a giant douchenozzle.

and, in other news, the sun rose today... but seriously, what did cantor do this time?

:coffee: good morning!

"All of us need to be tempered by the fact that we've got to stop spending money we don't have. Essentially, what you are saying is to go borrow money from the Japanese so we can spend it there to help the Japanese."



Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 13:06:33
Quote by Scoopster:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Scoopster:
Morning all.. still a little froggy in the throat area today, but otherwise okay.

BTW, Eric Cantor is a giant douchenozzle.

and, in other news, the sun rose today... but seriously, what did cantor do this time?

:coffee: good morning!

"All of us need to be tempered by the fact that we've got to stop spending money we don't have. Essentially, what you are saying is to go borrow money from the Japanese so we can spend it there to help the Japanese."


o.
m.
g.


Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 13:19:51
Fox outdoes itself. This is rather stunning, even for them.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 13:38:15




Comment by TriSec on 03/15/2011 14:00:09
Quote by Raine:
Fox outdoes itself. This is rather stunning, even for them.


Hmmm....didya notice that Sendai seems out of place, too?

I have a devil's advocate sort of thing I heard last night...

There was a gentleman on "Nightside" (WBZ) that claimed to have worked on the containment building here at the Seabrook nuclear power plant. He proposed that the current disaster should actually be considered to show how safe nuke plants are. The point being that it took a 9.0 earthquake, multiple aftershocks, a 25-foot tsunami, and days of power loss to cause the plant to be in the state it's in. Plus, the containment building still seems to be holding.

Not sure I agree....but I will yield that he makes a valid point.




Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 14:11:32
If this is true... It's very good news. Tepco press release
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110315_05.gif


Comment by BobR on 03/15/2011 14:11:55
btw - re:, today's blog: I hope the troops that came to the aid of Japan do suffer any ill effects due to radiation exposure.

Comment by wickedpam on 03/15/2011 14:27:24
oh heck, I've seen some very lovely looking families at Tyson's Corner Mall whip out the camera and start taking pix - which to me is odd, always thought they had cooler malls over there

Comment by Scoopster on 03/15/2011 14:50:13
Quote by Raine:
Fox outdoes itself. This is rather stunning, even for them.

This brings new meaning to Disco Inferno.

Comment by Scoopster on 03/15/2011 14:56:08
Quote by Raine:
If this is true... It's very good news. Tepco press release
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110315_05.gif

This is a status update for the Fukushima #2 (Daini) Station, which is pretty much in the clear. The major issues are all taking place at Fukushima #1 (Daiichi).

Comment by wickedpam on 03/15/2011 14:59:04
oh rush, I don't want a Godzilla/mothra fight - I would rather there not be any meltdowns and if I could wiggle my nose and set it all right - I would

Comment by Scoopster on 03/15/2011 15:09:28
Quote by wickedpam:
oh rush, I don't want a Godzilla/mothra fight - I would rather there not be any meltdowns and if I could wiggle my nose and set it all right - I would

Rush should just pretend he's Godzilla and go pick a fight with Donald Trump.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 15:42:31
Quote by Scoopster:
"All of us need to be tempered by the fact that we've got to stop spending money we don't have. Essentially, what you are saying is to go borrow money from the Japanese so we can spend it there to help the Japanese."

listening to George Takai, and it is very sobering.

Then I came across something from Ted Rall, that reminded me of the asshattery from Cantor:
@TedRall I'll donate to Japanese earthquake relief after they slap a retroactive 99% income and wealth tax on Japanese millionaires and billionaires.


This is why he had fallen out of my favor a while ago. This is incredibly heartless.


Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 15:49:10
and now a dose of cute.



Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 16:08:52
AND Ed goes *click*

Comment by trojanrabbit on 03/15/2011 16:14:20
Afternoon all.

Just came back from my drug test.

If Eric Cantor wants to come out in favor of withdrawing ALL foreign aid INCLUDING Israel, I'm listening. Otherwise STFU.

He's probably cooking up a bill to bail out those poor NFL owners who are trying their best to kill their sport.

Comment by trojanrabbit on 03/15/2011 16:16:31
Quote by Raine:
and now a dose of cute.


C'mon human, help me!

Hope the poor little thing was eventually righted.

Comment by trojanrabbit on 03/15/2011 16:17:06
Quote by Raine:
AND Ed goes *click*


Is it Ed, or is it Jeff Santos?

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 16:23:29
Articles like this are why I have little to no respect for FDL.

They portend they are a source for news, and they are nothing but specualting SHIT.

No offense to Speer (whose concerns deal with genuinely suicidal people), but the picture Ferguson uses to advertise the smocks–with the caveman looking models–doesn’t help make them look any less stupid.

While it’s unclear whether Quantico is using this particular gown or not, one thing is clear: what Manning is forced to wear is not comfortable. Here’s how he described it.


I am so sick of this shit. The damn story is bad enough with out fabricating presumptions as tho they were truth, when no one really knows.

(I am pretty pissed at the NYT editorial page today as well) I am gonna go on a rant that may not be very popular.

There is something called the Military Code of Justice -- and MAnning won;t be tried for anything as long as lawyers keep filing briefs. Manning gave private information to a NON citizen -- there is a reason why he is sitting in Quantico. He's an idiot -- but he was a member of the armed services and what he is accused of doing is pretty bad shit.

AND -- it's commonly known that people who are on suicide watch generally have clothes taken away -- they call it imprisonment for a reason. He's been given a smock. That does not constitute torture --From all that I can see, the Military Code of justice is being followed.



Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 16:24:25
Quote by trojanrabbit:
Quote by Raine:
AND Ed goes *click*


Is it Ed, or is it Jeff Santos?
It was Ed.

and I was really displeased with how he decided having a discussion about the safety of Nuclear power was not worthy for discussion.




Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 16:24:48
AND, btw: *HI RABBIT!!*

Comment by wickedpam on 03/15/2011 16:28:34
Quote by Raine:
and now a dose of cute.




aaww Totally needed that

one of neighbors has a pug - she's so cute!

Comment by livingonli on 03/15/2011 16:29:49
Hi everyone. Another sluggish start for me. Working late the night of the clock change really screwed my system.

Comment by wickedpam on 03/15/2011 16:35:18
tell me about - I can fall asleep by the clock time my head keeps saying its earlier

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 17:05:17
Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 17:21:30
Picture a bright blue ball just spinning, spinning free
Dizzy with eternity.
Paint it with a skin of sky, brush in some clouds and sea
Call it home for you and me.
A peaceful place or so it looks from space
A closer look reveals the human race.
Full of hope, full of grace, is the human face.
But afraid, we may our home to waste.
There's a fear down here we can't forget hasn't got a name just yet
Always awake, always around singing ashes to ashes all fall down.
Now watch as the ball revolves and the nighttime calls
And again the hunt begins and again the bloodwind calls
By and by again, the morning sun will rise
But the darkness never goes from some men's eyes.
It strolls the sidewalks and it rolls the streets
Stalking turf, dividing up meat.
Nightmare spook, piece of heat, you and me, you and me.
Click, flashblade in ghetto night. Rudies looking for a fight.
Rat cat alley roll them bones. Need that cash to feed that jones
And the politicians throwing stones
Singing ashes, ashes all fall down.
Commissars and pin-striped bosses role the dice
Any way they fall guess who gets to pay the price.
Money green or proletarian gray, selling guns instead of food today.
So the kids they dance, they shake their bones
While the politicians throwing stones
Singing ashes, ashes all fall down.
Heartless powers try to tell us what to think
If the spirit's sleeping, then the flesh is ink.
History's page, it is thusly carved in stone
The future's here, we are it, we are on our own.
If the game is lost then we're all the same
No one left to place or take the blame.
We will leave this place an empty stone
Or this shinning ball of bule we can call our home
So the kids they dance, they shake their bones
While the politicians are throwing stones
Singing ashes, ashes all fall down.
Shipping powders back and forth
Singing "black goes south while white comes north"
And the whole world full of petty wars
Singing "I got mine and you got yours."
And the current fashions set the pace.
Lose your step, fall out of grace.
And the radical he rant and rage, Singing "someone got to turn the page"
And the rich man in his summer home,
Singing "Just leave well enough alone"
But his pants are down, his cover's blown
And the politicians are throwing stones
So the kids they dance they shake their bones
Cause its all too clear we're on our own
Picture a bright blue ball just spinning, spinning free
It's dizzying, the possibilities. Ashes, Ashes all fall down.


Comment by livingonli on 03/15/2011 18:16:51
Thom debating another teabag right-winger who is trying to deny that he is in the pocket of the Koch brothers as he supports their agenda.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 18:30:19
Quote by livingonli:
Thom debating another teabag right-winger who is trying to deny that he is in the pocket of the Koch brothers as he supports their agenda.
It's too much for me to listen to these people.

I've been listening to the local news until Randi.

I appreciate what thom is trying to do, but I don't need to watch/listen to him try to convert people.


Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 18:52:14
Well Former Senator Chris Dodd is now a quasi lobbyist -- but not in the industry I think I recall Thom saying he would enter.
The choice stirred some controversy. He's barred by law from lobbying Congress for the next 22 months, and Dodd told the Connecticut Mirror in August four months before leaving the Senate that he would do "no lobbying, no lobbying."

Yet the MPAA job is considered one of Washington's plum lobbying positions.

Dodd said he won't actually be lobbying, and Fox's Gianopulos noted that the individual film companies are well represented in Washington on their own.

"We were looking for leadership, direction and consensus-building," he said.

MPAA spokesman Howard Gantman noted that the job encompasses much more than lobbying Congress, since the agency deals with issues at the state and local levels as well as with Washington's executive branch.

Dodd will head a global organization with about 200 employees and regional offices in Brussels, Singapore, Sao Paulo, Mexico City and Toronto. The MPAA also works with content-protection groups and organizations in over 30 countries.



Comment by TriSec on 03/15/2011 19:07:05
Well gang...I think my av-dorkery is in need of an intervention.

Listening to "Checkflight Gustav" right now....with "Black 6", the world's only flying ME-109 with the original DB-605 engine.



Comment by Scoopster on 03/15/2011 19:25:04
Say gang, am I an oddball if I still believe that despite its disastrous downsides, nuclear power is still extremely safe when properly done?





Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 19:44:15
Quote by Scoopster:
Say gang, am I an oddball if I still believe that despite its disastrous downsides, nuclear power is still extremely safe when properly done?



No, Scoop -- You are not.
I think this is a serious discussion that should be had.

We are past peak oil (IMO) we have not set up a solar and wind infrastructure that will provide us with energy needs.

That leaves nuclear energy. I have been reading that Uranium might not be the only alternative for nuclear energy.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 19:45:51
Here, is what I was reading about: Thorium.

Comment by BobR on 03/15/2011 19:53:00
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Scoopster:
Say gang, am I an oddball if I still believe that despite its disastrous downsides, nuclear power is still extremely safe when properly done?



No, Scoop -- You are not.
I think this is a serious discussion that should be had.

We are past peak oil (IMO) we have not set up a solar and wind infrastructure that will provide us with energy needs.

That leaves nuclear energy. I have been reading that Uranium might not be the only alternative for nuclear energy.

That said - how long does it take to get a nuclear plant approved, built, and on-line? How long does it take to build a wind farm or solar array of comparable output? Also - what are the comparable costs?

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 19:57:22
Quote by Scoopster:
Say gang, am I an oddball if I still believe that despite its disastrous downsides, nuclear power is still extremely safe when properly done?



It seems to me that all the power we require needs to be made FAR more safe.

Oil, Coal and Nuclear. Look at how many people have died -- directly or over the long term.

Sadly, We don't have the political willpower to get Solar and wind power in place, and the reason why is that the political willpower needed seems to rely up the damn free-market.

Energy is money.





Comment by BobR on 03/15/2011 19:57:36
Quote by Raine:
Here, is what I was reading about: Thorium.

fascinating!

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 20:01:33
Check it out: Thorium



Comment by trojanrabbit on 03/15/2011 20:12:17
Quote by Raine:
Check it out: Thorium



b-b-b-but we need Thorium to make vacuum tubes.

Yes they still do.

For guitar amps and "audiophile" amps

Comment by trojanrabbit on 03/15/2011 20:16:30
The wife's laptop is back in its usual spot and she's "happy".

At least her email, photos and iTunes library are saved off.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 20:18:11
Quote by trojanrabbit:
Quote by Raine:
Check it out: Thorium



b-b-b-but we need Thorium to make vacuum tubes.

Yes they still do.

For guitar amps and "audiophile" amps
Wow.


Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 20:38:40
This dude on Randi sounds like he is reading from a script.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 20:40:33
Quote by Raine:
This dude on Randi sounds like he is reading from a script.
I only say that because the Dude endorsed Archer Daniel's Midland. Ethanol is not bad as a standalone energy source, but I'm pretty sure it not as easy as he said.

Comment by BobR on 03/15/2011 20:54:14
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Raine:
This dude on Randi sounds like he is reading from a script.
I only say that because the Dude endorsed Archer Daniel's Midland. Ethanol is not bad as a standalone energy source, but I'm pretty sure it not as easy as he said.

It's renewable, but still requires resources to grow and harvest, and takes away land for food. I would call it a stop-gap energy source, but not a good long term one.

Comment by livingonli on 03/15/2011 21:01:15
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Raine:
This dude on Randi sounds like he is reading from a script.
I only say that because the Dude endorsed Archer Daniel's Midland. Ethanol is not bad as a standalone energy source, but I'm pretty sure it not as easy as he said.

Monotone: I am not a paid shill, I am a genuine caller with a genuine concern. Reads from script: I am not making this up.

Comment by trojanrabbit on 03/15/2011 21:19:43
Quote by Raine:
Quote by trojanrabbit:
Quote by Raine:
Check it out: Thorium



b-b-b-but we need Thorium to make vacuum tubes.

Yes they still do.

For guitar amps and "audiophile" amps
Wow.


Primary production is in China, Russia and other former Soviet Bloc countries. The Russian tubes are of very good quality, the Chinese ones are hit or miss. There is one factory in the US making a new samples of the venerable Western Electric 300B - designed in 1937, using much of their production processes. Used in lots of hi-end amplifiers for home, theater, and industrial uses. A matched pair (required if you want the best sound) goes for $1200. That will give you about 20 watts of sound power.

Comment by Raine on 03/15/2011 23:20:11
Quote by trojanrabbit:
Primary production is in China, Russia and other former Soviet Bloc countries. The Russian tubes are of very good quality, the Chinese ones are hit or miss. There is one factory in the US making a new samples of the venerable Western Electric 300B - designed in 1937, using much of their production processes. Used in lots of hi-end amplifiers for home, theater, and industrial uses. A matched pair (required if you want the best sound) goes for $1200. That will give you about 20 watts of sound power.


:) I don;t know what you said, (snaps gum) but I love that you said it.


I cannot go into an antique store with checking out radios these days!