Do something about it

Comments

[this is good]
This is an important request and we often don;t know what our veterans are going through and what they go through for years after service. The fellow who tried to commit suicide in my home yesterday was a vet and we believe the incident at Fort Hood last week set him off. Like so many mentally ill people and vets he simply felt no one on base could help him. Sadly that is not true, but the system is difficult for many to navigate and they had him addicted to morphine to manage his hip pain as he waited for surgery to be scheduled. Ironically he was given a date the day before Fort Hood and would have only had a 2 months to wait. I can never imagine the anguish he must of been going through all these years since serving his country.

Well said EF!
[this is good]
I will definitely check it out. It's hard to believe that our veterans get shafted so often when it comes to any kind of health care.
[this is good]
Great post. Thank you for the information.
[this is good]
Well said, EF. Hate the war. Help the vets.
[this is good]
Excellent! Thank you for the info! By all accounts, this is good bill and it is necessary.
The senator holding it up is a total prince: "The American people and our veterans understand that our spending problem has become a national security problem." O Rly? Sure, maybe the money we've spent on blowing stuff up in other countries has become a National Security problem - but helping our vets,too...? Madonn'. That's disgusting.
[this is good]
Excellent post and I totally agree with supporting our people in uniform, while also being against war.
Thanks SO much for these important links!!!

Sen. Coburn and his ilk are also the first to accuse those who have been and continue to questions the war(s) as being 'unpatriotic' and 'against the troops'. during the Bush administration, whenever a bill came through to shovel more and more billions into Halliburton et al. anyone who dare question it or ask for any accountability was barraged with 'dont' care about the troops', etc. gah.

thanks for linking to S 1963. its passage is desperately needed.


Fundamentally as a country, we abhor mental illness. It is a weakness that must be hidden in the shadows and ignored as long as possible...until one of us loses it and decides to take others with.

Good post.

Thanks for shining the light on Senator Coburn (or should I say Senator Cockroach?)

[c’est top]
Excellent. Instead of kvetching, offer an alternative -- and snuff the party-poopers before they poop. Well played, EF!
[esto es genial]
Very well said, EF. My dad was in the Army for 26 years, and I'm proud of his service to our country. I do not support this war at all. I don't like how our troops are being used and seen as cogs in the machine of war, and not people who need help. Great post!

Very well written.

I love how you open my eyes deeper with every single sentence.

[this is good]
Good post. Thank you. I will check it out.
[this is good]
hear, hear!
Thanks, Austin. The VA system is very hard to navigate and I can understand why your former tenant felt he didn't have support there. I hope that more people will get involved and help make the promise of the VA a reality for our vets. All of them, including those from previous wars, need support and they need it from peers and professionals who get them on a level most of us never will. I am glad he is getting help now and I am especially glad this story didn't end differently.
Thanks, Cranky! It's so unfortunate that people are citing the cost of healthcare as a reason to deny it for our vets. Outrageous! If this isn't the prime example of why we need healthcare reform, I don't know what is.
Thank you, Snowy.
Thanks, D. I had thought about going on a tirade about Sen. Coburn's argument, but I don't want to alienate people and I think his press statement speaks for itself. It is unbelievable to me that a senator, who enjoys great comfort because of his position, could argue that mental healthcare (and other healthcare) for our veterans is just too expensive. I don't see him arguing for troop withdrawal or reduction in the number or duration of tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Multiple tours + no time off + no safe zone when in combat + an inability to distinguish between combatants + no mental health care = collosal national security problem. In my opinion, he is being unreasonable and his stance is anti-veteran. How do you expect them to manage all of these things and turn around and deny them healthcare because it's too expensive?
It might be time to turn that around on him. He enjoys world-class healthcare on the taxpayers, he won't support troop withdrawal or limits on tours of duty, and veteran's healthcare is just too expensive. Doesn't sound particularly patriotic to me.
Thanks, Karen. I agree with your assessment of our general approach to mental illness. I have wondered for a long time what it would take to reduce the stigma, but I am not sure anything will. Once someone does act out and harm someone else, then they are seen as some sort of monster. Journalists quickly look into their background and dredge up whatever they can to show that this was always in the cards, which I suppose reassures people that it can't happen to them. Working in the intersection between mental health and the law, I've seen how people are criminalized because we don't want to provide care. That actually costs more money and then there is the societal impact to consider as well. I could go on for ages about it, but I'm unsure what good it will do, so I will just stop by saying, "I concur."
Thanks, rogue. I do like to snuff the poopers pre-poo. ;)
Thanks! Kudos to your dad for his service, and to you for surviving it. One of these days, I hope the military considers the mental health impact of military life on the kids. But, that's a topic for a whole other post.
Thank you, Jenn.
I'm stealing the links out of this to write up a thing for veterans day on my FB. thanks again for all of the great info!!

I was just tweeting about this and thought I'd share it. Here is Politico article published yesterday where Reid called out Coburn for this "illogical" move -supporting the war but essentially abandoning the troops now. It makes for great Veterans' Day fodder.

Well dear, Fundamentally as a country, we abhor mental illness. It is a weakness that must be hidden in the shadows and ignored as long as possible...until one of us loses it and decides to take others with.

Post a comment

Already a Vox member? Sign in

About Me

electric firefly
United States
"Keep a green tree in your heart and perhaps a singing bird will come."

Neighborhood

Explore friends, family, friends & family, or entire neighborhood.

Archives

  • Powered by Vox