How does the treatment now compare to past wars- the War Between The States, WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam? Is it worse, the same, or better?AZGrizFan wrote:Any romantic notion that our country "cares" for its wounded warriors should be just about shot by now...
A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This..."
- BDKJMU
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
JMU Football:
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
And if vets aren't getting the care they need and deserve, where is all the $$ going? See the chart on page 4 which shows the explosive growth of the Dept of Vet Affairs budget, which in 2011 $$ more than doubled 2001-2012 and dwarfs what we have spent during any prior time period, including during and after WWII.
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RS22897.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RS22897.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
JMU Football:
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
- ASUMountaineer
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
urrite. dididothatrite?AZGrizFan wrote:And that 1615 would have been 4500 under a McCain presidency, amirite or amirite???
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NO DOUBT ABOUT IT! WE'RE GONNA SHOUT IT! NOTHING'S HOTTER THAN A-S-U!
National Champions: 2005, 2006, and 2007
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NO DOUBT ABOUT IT! WE'RE GONNA SHOUT IT! NOTHING'S HOTTER THAN A-S-U!
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
I am going to have to disagree but I see how some people might perceive that to be the case. If you talk to people of that era and get to understand them, it wasn't a romantic thing. I would call it a patriotic thing or a duty that they knew they had to do. They understood hardship and didn't have to read a history book to know how bad things could be. I knew several WWII vets that weren't even close to 18 when they went in and they did it knowing full well what would happen to them. Our mortality rate in wars prior to Desert Shield/Desert Storm were a lot different than they are today.JohnStOnge wrote:Paradoxically I think the "hero soldier" thing is part of the problem. Our culture romanticizes being in the military and going off to fight. Young people see that and respond accordingly.
I think it should be different. The idea should be that it is a job. A nasty, brutal, difficult job that could end up getting you killed or scarred for life. Not a "I'm going off to be a hero" thing.
Stop this stuff of romanticizing it. It's not romantic. It's needed, no doubt. And it's a way to get to certain goals that might otherwise be difficult to get to if you're in a tough situation. But quit telling people it's anything but what it is.
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
It's better than the treatment in 1866 but it still has a long, long way to go.BDKJMU wrote:How does the treatment now compare to past wars- the War Between The States, WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam? Is it worse, the same, or better?AZGrizFan wrote:Any romantic notion that our country "cares" for its wounded warriors should be just about shot by now...
Turns out I might be a little gay. 89Hen 11/7/17
- mrklean
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
This country has always romantcized the military. Look at the movies of WWII. Forever, fighting for king and country. The first real movie about war was Platoon. That changed my and many young men's out look of the serving in the military during war.JohnStOnge wrote:Paradoxically I think the "hero soldier" thing is part of the problem. Our culture romanticizes being in the military and going off to fight. Young people see that and respond accordingly.
I think it should be different. The idea should be that it is a job. A nasty, brutal, difficult job that could end up getting you killed or scarred for life. Not a "I'm going off to be a hero" thing.
Stop this stuff of romanticizing it. It's not romantic. It's needed, no doubt. And it's a way to get to certain goals that might otherwise be difficult to get to if you're in a tough situation. But quit telling people it's anything but what it is.
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
mrklean wrote:This country has always romantcized the military. Look at the movies of WWII. Forever, fighting for king and country. The first real movie about war was Platoon. That changed my and many young men's out look of the serving in the military during war.JohnStOnge wrote:Paradoxically I think the "hero soldier" thing is part of the problem. Our culture romanticizes being in the military and going off to fight. Young people see that and respond accordingly.
I think it should be different. The idea should be that it is a job. A nasty, brutal, difficult job that could end up getting you killed or scarred for life. Not a "I'm going off to be a hero" thing.
Stop this stuff of romanticizing it. It's not romantic. It's needed, no doubt. And it's a way to get to certain goals that might otherwise be difficult to get to if you're in a tough situation. But quit telling people it's anything but what it is.
Oh, I don't know. The Caine Mutiny and Mr. Roberts were pretty accurate portrayals of the Navy.
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
Kelly's Heroes - a band of treasure hunters gather equipment and go AWOL to steal gold bars from a bank guarded by Germans......mrklean wrote: Look at the movies of WWII. Forever, fighting for king and country. The first real movie about war was Platoon. That changed my and many young men's out look of the serving in the military during war.
- BDKJMU
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
"Paper System, Expanded Benefits Created VA Backlog
It’s like something out of an anxiety dream.
A backlog of veterans claims at the Veterans Affairs center in Winston-Salem, N.C. has led the VA inspector general to warn last year that a floor in the building could collapse from the weight.
The VA operates mostly on a paper system, and that paper load is “compromising the structural integrity of the sixth floor of the facility,” the IG warned. “We noticed floors bowing under the excess weight to the extent that the tops of file cabinets were noticeably unlevel throughout the storage area.”
There’s more. The VA IG saw “files stored approximately two feet high and two rows deep on top of file cabinets” in this center. It found file cabinets “were placed so closely together that file drawers could not be opened completely. We estimated that approximately 37,000 claims folders were stored on top of file cabinets.”
Boxes of files are blocking exits, are stacked too close to overhead sprinklers, and files are falling from the tops of file cabinets onto employees. In fact, “in 2011, one employee experienced a minor shoulder injury when claims folders fell on him from the top of a filing cabinet,” the VA IG has said, possibly leading him to file his own claim.
The fallout? Painfully long wait times for veterans.
The American Action Forum estimates that, after reviewing more than 300 regulatory demands on veterans, returning U.S. soldiers spend 43.4 million hours filling out 613 forms for 18 different government bureaus, which take 3 hours to complete per person, at a total estimated cost of more than $600 million.
Meanwhile, VA delays continue to soar. The forum says the “number of veterans waiting more than a year to receive benefits jumped from 11,000 in 2009 to 245,000 by December 2012.”
Because the VA is largely not computerized, the total “logjam” is now estimated at about 600,000 veterans waiting on VA action. Specifically, the VA has about 592,222 claims, or roughly two-thirds of all claims, pending longer than 125 days. Overall, 833,130 vets are waiting on compensation and pension claims.
One government form, the forum points out, the “Income-Net Worth and Employment Statement,” contains 40 questions and takes vets one hour to complete.
And the AAF found that “four different agencies administer 12 million hours of paperwork related to veterans’ employment and training, imposing 24 different forms, at a cost of $892 million.”
Compounding the problem, the VA tells FOX Business, is that the agency has expanded benefits: “Many veterans are returning with severe, more complex injuries,” plus the agency is working with an aging veteran population.
Moreover, it says VA Secretary Eric Shinseki “made the long overdue decisions to recognize for the first time medical conditions related to Agent Orange, post traumatic stress disorder, Gulf War illness – which has led to a nearly a million new claims.” The majority of claims date back to the Gulf War, Vietnam, Korea, and World War II.
And the VA says that under Secretary Shinseki, the VA “has greatly expanded access to earned care and benefits for veterans of all eras. Over the last four years, over 940,000 veterans were added to the compensation rolls -- more veterans than are on active duty in the Army and Navy combined today.”"
http://www.foxbusiness.com/government/2 ... a-backlog/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
613 forms! 18 different agencies
How fuckin stupid is that?
It’s like something out of an anxiety dream.
A backlog of veterans claims at the Veterans Affairs center in Winston-Salem, N.C. has led the VA inspector general to warn last year that a floor in the building could collapse from the weight.
The VA operates mostly on a paper system, and that paper load is “compromising the structural integrity of the sixth floor of the facility,” the IG warned. “We noticed floors bowing under the excess weight to the extent that the tops of file cabinets were noticeably unlevel throughout the storage area.”
There’s more. The VA IG saw “files stored approximately two feet high and two rows deep on top of file cabinets” in this center. It found file cabinets “were placed so closely together that file drawers could not be opened completely. We estimated that approximately 37,000 claims folders were stored on top of file cabinets.”
Boxes of files are blocking exits, are stacked too close to overhead sprinklers, and files are falling from the tops of file cabinets onto employees. In fact, “in 2011, one employee experienced a minor shoulder injury when claims folders fell on him from the top of a filing cabinet,” the VA IG has said, possibly leading him to file his own claim.
The fallout? Painfully long wait times for veterans.
The American Action Forum estimates that, after reviewing more than 300 regulatory demands on veterans, returning U.S. soldiers spend 43.4 million hours filling out 613 forms for 18 different government bureaus, which take 3 hours to complete per person, at a total estimated cost of more than $600 million.
Meanwhile, VA delays continue to soar. The forum says the “number of veterans waiting more than a year to receive benefits jumped from 11,000 in 2009 to 245,000 by December 2012.”
Because the VA is largely not computerized, the total “logjam” is now estimated at about 600,000 veterans waiting on VA action. Specifically, the VA has about 592,222 claims, or roughly two-thirds of all claims, pending longer than 125 days. Overall, 833,130 vets are waiting on compensation and pension claims.
One government form, the forum points out, the “Income-Net Worth and Employment Statement,” contains 40 questions and takes vets one hour to complete.
And the AAF found that “four different agencies administer 12 million hours of paperwork related to veterans’ employment and training, imposing 24 different forms, at a cost of $892 million.”
Compounding the problem, the VA tells FOX Business, is that the agency has expanded benefits: “Many veterans are returning with severe, more complex injuries,” plus the agency is working with an aging veteran population.
Moreover, it says VA Secretary Eric Shinseki “made the long overdue decisions to recognize for the first time medical conditions related to Agent Orange, post traumatic stress disorder, Gulf War illness – which has led to a nearly a million new claims.” The majority of claims date back to the Gulf War, Vietnam, Korea, and World War II.
And the VA says that under Secretary Shinseki, the VA “has greatly expanded access to earned care and benefits for veterans of all eras. Over the last four years, over 940,000 veterans were added to the compensation rolls -- more veterans than are on active duty in the Army and Navy combined today.”"
http://www.foxbusiness.com/government/2 ... a-backlog/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
JMU Football:
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
- BDKJMU
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Re: A Soldier's Suicide:"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This
48 billion when in 2001 when 9/11 & War on Terror started. Now 140 billion & 300,000 employees. Sounds like one massive, inefficient, clusterfuck.
JMU Football:
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025
4 Years FBS: 40-11 (.784). Highest winning percentage & least losses of all of G5 2022-2025.
Sun Belt East Champions: 2022, 2023, 2025
Sun Belt Champions: 2025
Top 25 ranked: 2022, 2023, 2025
CFP: 2025

