As the National Veterans' groups maintain their reactionary ideologies not pro-active in full support of those they say they fight for, all of us military veterans'!
July 22, 2013 - When Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki spoke before the Veterans of Foreign Wars annual convention last summer, he closed his remarks with a series of one-year promises and the statement “I intend to be here to update you again next summer.”It was a surprising announcement, since many veterans insiders has assumed the secretary would step down after the November 2012 elections. Last month, he became the longest serving VA secretary in American history, and on Tuesday he returns to the VFW conference again to follow up on those promises.
So far, it’s a mixed report card.
In his speech last year, Shinkseki outlined progress thus far on three major goals: eliminating the veterans benefits backlog by 2015, ending veterans homelessness by 2015, and increasing veteran access to department services. read more>>>
Then, when we started a second simultaneous war in another country, we gave ourselves a second huge round of tax cuts. After that second war started. The wars, I guess, we thought would be free, don`t worry about it, civilians. Go about your business." 23 May 2013
July 23, 2013 - TranscriptMELISSA BLOCK, HOST:
More than two million Americans fought in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the vast majority of U.S. veterans, about 20 million, served in earlier wars - World War II, Korea, Vietnam. And they are the vets who filled up the hall today at the annual convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
JOHN HAMILTON: Comrades, I present to you a fellow combat veteran.
BLOCK: That's Vietnam vet John Hamilton, the head of the VFW, introducing another Vietnam vet.
HAMILTON: The recipient of two Purple Hearts and three Bronze Stars for Valor, the former chief of staff and now the secretary of Veterans Affairs, Eric Shinseki.
(APPLAUSE)
BLOCK: Secretary Shinseki used today's speech to talk about one of the biggest challenges facing the VA: the backlog of medical claims.
NPR's Quil Lawrence reports. read more>>>
These present wars have yet to be paid for, rubber stamping and rapid deficits rising started before 9/11 and continued with same for the wars. But especially in the early some six years of extremely little was added to the Veterans Administration budgets by those Congresses, and since obstructed by same war rubber stampers, as to the long term results of War, DeJa-Vu all over again. Keeping the VA under budgeted causes problems and of many grow worse, which costs more to correct much more, which is the goal of those seeking to privatize Government Agencies as they attack the people of and which was created by their own incompetence and ideologies, but doing those served will! The only government branch constantly doing what they can, federal and states and they don't make the budgets, is the executive branch and it's cabinet, when those agencies can, labor, housing etc., from inception and continue to!
No comments:
Post a Comment