The country loves wars right or wrong and most are wrong policy decisions that create long destructive occupations, as long as they can send others to fight in them, very few others who actually serve. They also don't mind graft and corruption as they pony up more and more, and fighting to not cut but continue adding to that, into the defense budgets especially for more wmd's the modern term while shrugging off what the veterans of are saying and their long term needs. Easier to blame the agency the population funds when not funding to it's full needs especially in those times of these wars. And now they love them some parades, ask the First Gulf War vets especially suffering from the many long term symptoms and debilitating physical ailments of Gulf War Syndrome how they worked for them, makes them feel less guilty, if any guilt is even there, remnants of our Deja-Vu's of Vietnam that continues into today's time's. A decade plus of No Sacrifice, and that includes some from the veterans ranks supporting that, added to the previous decades, and when the care and needs of the Veteran may be brought close by it's NIMBY, DeJa-Vu all over again with the added new symbols of 'support', magnetic ribbons, lapel flag pins and them patriotic words and meme's, with No Demands to Sacrifice!
03/06/12 - My Afghanistan and Iraq veteran buddies who write the official Veterans Affairs blog continue to fight a rear guard battle against continued vilification of veterans in the media, something I experienced when I returned home from service with the Marine Corps in Vietnam.Kate Hoit, who served with the Army in Iraq in 2004 to 2005, has an excellent post today, "The 'Dangerous' Veteran: An Inaccurate Media Narrative Takes Hold," which shows that whacko veteran stories have real world consequences.
Hoit takes a look at the controversy that has erupted in San Diego over plans to open a 40 bed residential facility for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and mild traumatic brain injury near an elementary school in that city's upscale Old Town neighborhood, a 15 minute walk from the only institution of higher learning I ever graduated from, the Marine Corps Recruit Depot. read more>>>
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