If Jared Hagemann was suspected of taking his own life by getting drunk and driving to his death (which many service members and veterans have done), I could see the hair splitting. But Jared Hagemann died from "a gunshot wound to his head." What are we trying to see here, AP? Are you drawing up a list of suspects?
Oh, the army hasn't decided yet. Oh. I didn't realize that in a civilian society that army was the final word. And I always assumed that when a person took a gun to their head and shot themselves and their surviving spouse called it a suicide, it was okay for everyone to call it a suicide and there was no need to tip-toe around the issue.
It's a shame that a surviving spouse, one still dealing with grief, takes second seat to a faceless bureaucracy. Good to know AP's concerning itself with something other than the pursuit of truth.
On the subject of suicide, Rhonda B. Graham (Delaware News Journal) notes:
Consider Major John Ruocco, a classic archetype of a loyal Marine. By 40, the decorated Cobra gunship pilot had racked up a stellar service record in the Iraq war, including 75 commissioned flights and serving three callback tours of duty.
Yet after returning stateside in 2005, Ruocco hanged himself in a hotel room. Within view of Camp Pendleton, Calif.
But unlike the families of other soldiers, whose deaths are not directly attributable to the physical and psychological violence of combat, Ruocco's wife, Kim, and two boys did not hear word one from the White House.
The new policy doesn't cover John Rucco. His family receives no letter because he had left combat duty weeks prior. Graham notes how unfair the policy is and how it fails to recognize the long term effects of combat which might not manifest themselves until years after the fact.
All sorts of things can emerge after the 'safe' return. J. Malcolm Garcia's "Smoke Signals" (Oxford America) reports:
Strange to think about it, the black smoke.
As it turns out, the eventual killer of Billy McKenna was lurking in the photographs he snapped in Iraq. Billy wrote captions beneath some of his photographs: typical day on patrol reads one. The photo is partially obscured by the blurred image of a soldier’s upraised hand. Brown desert unfurls away from a vehicle toward an empty horizon, and a wavering sky scorched white hovers above. Off to one side: Balad Air Base and the spreading umbrella of rising dank smoke from a burn pit.
Billy told his wife, Dina, in e-mails from Iraq that the stench was killing him. The air so dirty it rained mud. He didn’t call them burn pits. She can’t recall what he called them. He didn’t mean killing him literally. Just that the overwhelming odor was god-awful and tearing up his sinuses. He didn’t wear a mask. It would not have been practical. In heat that soared above a hundred degrees, what soldier would wear one?
The burn pits. Which exposed US soldiers and contractors to toxic fumes. They weren't warned, they weren't properly informed. And now veterans and contractors back 'safe' in the United States struggle with the symptoms and many have died. And contractors like KBR cleaned up. They cleaned up while breaking every rule possible. Even when their own investigators visited sites and found violations, KBR rolled on through with using and misusing the burn pits. It doesn't appear Americans will ever receive compensation from KBR; however, those toxic burn pits may not be in use anymore but they are in Iraq and maybe twenty or thirty years on down the line, an Iraqi family or the Iraqi government itself will successfully sue KBR.
An NPR friend asks me to note that immigration is explored today on All Things Considered which looks at deportation in the emerging age of marriage equality. (That's my wording.) The following community sites -- plus Antiwar.com and Cindy Sheehan -- updated last night:
- THIS JUST IN! BAD NEWS FOR BARRY!1 hour ago
- Princess gets some bad news1 hour ago
DONATE TO REVCOMS OR BUST
6 hours ago
Plus Ruth's "Boiled frogs?" and Mike's "Tired." Joan Wile is the founder of Grandmothers Against the War and author of Grandmothers Against the War: Getting Off Our Fannies and Standing Up for Peace and we'll close with her latest article.
- Crusty Lips says what?8 hours ago
- 6 men, 2 women8 hours ago
- The economy8 hours ago
- Faux protesters8 hours ago
- The coverage8 hours ago
- Carole Lombard8 hours ago
- Mahdi needs your help.9 hours ago
Plus Ruth's "Boiled frogs?" and Mike's "Tired." Joan Wile is the founder of Grandmothers Against the War and author of Grandmothers Against the War: Getting Off Our Fannies and Standing Up for Peace and we'll close with her latest article.
AFGHAN PEACE YOUTHS FEEL HOPELESS
Say Conditions are Worsening
By Joan Wile, author, "Grandmothers Against the War: Getting Off Our Fannies and Standing Up for Peace" (Citadel Press)
On Sunday, Aug. 21, I had the privilege of speaking via conference call with several young people from the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers. It was the occasion of what they have termed the "Global Day of Listening," during which the kids spoke with supporters and sympathizers all over the world for approximately 5 and a half hours.
Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers, Bamyan Province, Afghanistan
I was immensely saddened to hear that they are discouraged about the prospects of peace in their beleaguered country. The kids stated more than once that things are worse than they were the last time they held the conference call a few months ago, and that their hopes for peace have dwindled down to almost zero. This was in marked contrast to earlier conversations in which I participated, when they projected a sense of ebullience and hope. I had the impression in those past talks that they felt confident that they could make a difference through their admirable efforts to end the conflicts within their nation.
Yesterday, they expressed their belief that the Afghan people desire that our troops leave their country in a responsible manner as soon as possible, that our military presence there essentially contributes to the decreasing potential for peace. Yet, they see little chance of our withdrawal in the foreseeable future.
The publication recently of a report in numerous Online publications that an agreement is about to be signed which would allow thousands of U.S. troops to remain in Afghanistan until at least 2024 certainly reinforces the young peoples' despair. US Troops May Stay in Afghanistan Until 2024 | Common Dreams
The group (AYPV) of mostly teen-agers is located 100 miles to the north of Kabul in a mountainous province called Bamiyan. Their lives are extremely difficult. By contrast, an average middle-class American youngster's life seems like a rhapsodic fantasy. One of the younger ones, for instance, walks miles daily to obtain fresh water for his family. School is a luxury oftentimes, given that some must work the farms or market potatoes full-time to help support their families. The landscape is desolate, and there is a lack of warm clothing to protect against the extreme cold. Despite their hardships, though, this group of juveniles manages to devote themselves to the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers. Among their many activities, they cleared through substantial debris to create a Peace Park, in which they planted trees and shrubs.
They have made a number of beautiful short videos very effectively urging peace. (See below.) They've traveled 100 miles through difficult and even perilous terrain to Kabul for their periodic Global Days of Listening.
Their mentor and interpreter is Hakim, a doctor from Singapore, who has spent several years organizing the AYPV, writing eloquent articles promoting their cause, creating and producing their videos, and interpreting in several languages, including excellent and fluent English, for their global conference calls. Influenced by Gandhi and Noam Chomsky's writings, Hakim gave up his private medical practice to focus on leading the young Afghans to pursue peace.
I tried to help them feel more positive as best I could, telling them I had lived many, many years and learned that things often change, even when you don't expect them to. I urged them to keep up their wonderful and inspiring actions, and that we peace grannies (the Granny Peace Brigade, Grandmothers Against the War, Grandmothers for Peace International, and the Raging Grannies, among many) would do the same.
But, they need so much more solace and stimulation than I or any one person could provide. I hope readers of these words will be moved as I was by the plight of these kids we threaten with our instruments of war. Please contact them by writing journeytosmile@gmail.com. They are very heartened by words of encouragement from people from other locales, particularly the United States, a principal cause of the chaos they must endure. Ask to be notified of the various ways you can help them
Finally, please watch this very brief video made by the youngsters. They will steal your heart.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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