Showing posts with label veterans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veterans. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Very Moving

I won't hype this up, I just think you would do well to go check out this account of a chance meeting between President Obama and a journalist who happened to be visiting the graves of some fallen friends yesterday at Arlington cemetary.

More On Tom Coburn's Fuckery

Rachel Maddow hosted Congressman Joe Sestak, himself a veteran, to talk about the hypocritical asshole that is Tom Coburn. How do you even formulate an argument in your own mind to vote to fund wars putting our troops in harms way with out a way to pay for them and then turn around and put a hold on funding for those same troops' and their families' health care? What kind of self serving, egotistical, ungrateful asshole can pull that trick off and look themselves in the mirror everyday? This is a story that should be reported on, blogged about, and tweeted EVERY FUCKING DAY until this muthafucka stands down.

Real talk!

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Monday, May 25, 2009

Failing To Live Up To Our Responsibilities.

In his weekly YouTube Address President Obama focused on our men and women in uniform on this Memorial Day weekend. He made this statement which a few wingnut commenters found somehow offensive:

“Our fighting men and women – and the military families who love them – embody what is best in America. And we have a responsibility to serve all of them as well as they serve all of us. And yet, all too often in recent years and decades, we, as a nation, have failed to live up to that responsibility. We have failed to give them the support they need or pay them the respect they deserve.”


ThinkProgress has a rundown today on many of the ways we as a nation have failed our returning veterans.

On this Memorial Day, the nation celebrates the sacrifice of veterans who gave their lives in service to our country. A “by-the-numbers” analysis by the Center for American Progress notes that veterans “are still in need of services to improve their quality of life—before, during, and after deployments. This year, the need is even more urgent than ever as the economic crisis hits many veterans and their families hard and these Americans struggle to find jobs, pay their mortgages, and get back on their feet.” Some key stats:

– 338,000 or almost one in five Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are experiencing symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, or major depression as of January 2009.

– Yet only 53 percent suffering from PTSD or major depression have seen a physician or mental health provider.

– 154,000 veterans were homeless on any given night in 2007, and 300,000 were homeless at some point during that year.

– One-third of homeless Americans are veterans, even though only one-tenth of all adults are veterans.

– Foreclosure rates in military towns were increasing at four times the national average in last year.


These are not failures confined to a particular political party or ideology. This is a collective failure as a nation not to honor our responsibilities to those who go out and put their lives on the line to help keep our country safe. This is NOT a political issue but a moral one. We simply can not continue to ask so much of our men and women in the military and their families, and then hang them out to dry when they get back home. If there was ever an issue that should have bipartisan support it would be this one. Improving the lives of our returning veterans should not just be a goal, it should be mandatory.