12/18/2011 - The final withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq is a welcome way to conclude 2011. Young Americans will be coming home, and taxpayers will no longer be spending more than $150 million per day on a war begun under false pretenses and pursued under false hopes of bestowing happily-ever-after democracy.But some of the billions Americans are saving needs to go toward helping veterans. It's arguable that we failed the Iraqi people, but we must not fail our own. Men and women who fought for us deserve a bright future at home.
The president and Congress are responsible for this, and it is by no means guaranteed. Veterans' benefits are guaranteed through next year, but lawmakers this fall toyed with reneging on the promise of longer-term help. Yes, the national debt is a problem, but balancing the budget on the backs of veterans would be unconscionable.
Even now the unemployment rate for veterans younger than 24 is almost 40 percent. The soldiers who will be coming home face a challenging job market. They should at least be able to rely on benefits they were promised when they agreed to risk their lives for their nation.
More than 2 million Americans have served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Upon their return, the first order of business should be helping them find jobs with health insurance and other benefits. But those who can't must not be abandoned. read more>>>
Now a decade and counting added to the previous decades of under funding the VA, while the peoples reps Still try and lay blame on the Agency, after rubber stamping wars and costs of and those represented cheer on these wars! While the wealthy and other investors garner their booty, still from both, and many have the chutz·pa to call themselves more patriotic{?} then others wrapped in those false flags, using false slogans and various cheap symbols of!
What part of 'we serve the Whole Country and not groups within' doesn't the country get?! {no need to answer, I already know!}
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