Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Is America Getting Over Keith Olbermann

Dear Keith,
When no one was talking about the men and women deployed into Afghanistan and Iraq, you were.
When the reason they were sent into Iraq was finally being reported, you were doing it.
When they were not getting the equipment they needed, you reported it.
When they were not being treated properly by the DOD or the VA, you reported it.
You reported on the increase in homeless veterans, had on many advocates for the veterans and showed how much you cared.
These reports of your's were not about politics, but about doing the right thing. You were passionate about the men and women in the military as well as the National Guards and Reservists.
Over the years you've reported on many things that regular Americans face and we knew there was someone caring about all of us and not just politically connected.
You also did Oddball with a lot more stories and managed to usually have something from Florida in that part of your show.

The thing is Keith, I haven't been watching your show lately either. While it is important to report on what is going on in Washington and get the truth out, there are more stories out there you used to report on. That's the thing you need to return to. Be passionate! When something big happens in politics, report it but don't let that be the only thing you talk about. We've had enough being put into boxes by FOX telling the majority of Americans they are not worthy to watch their shows while constantly being attacked and to have Countdown do the same makes people turn to CNN. FOX is FOX and seen in every part of the country. So is CNN. As I travel, I usually can't find MSNBC on hotel feeds. Your show will do fine if you return to what made people watch you in the first place. You're smart, well informed, trying to make a difference but above all, you really do care, so put that care into good use and limit the rants that divide instead of talking about what just human/Americans need talked about.


Is America Getting Over Keith Olbermann?
By JEFF BERCOVICI
Posted 5:57 PM 01/29/10 People, Media
Keith Olbermann was already a renowned sportscaster when he rose to prominence as a political commentator. This was during the Bush Administration, when the left was badly in need of a forceful voice to rally around. Such was his popularity that MSNBC reoriented its entire primetime lineup around it.

But now the Democrats control Congress and the White House, and there are creeping indications that the world may not have quite as much need of -- or patience for -- Olbermann and his shtick as it once did.

Ratings for Olbermann's Countdown have been soft recently, and the 8 p.m. shows on CNN and HLN have narrowed the gap. In the important demographic of adults 25 to 54 -- the group advertisers are looking to reach -- Countdown was down 44% year-over-year in January. It averaged 268,000 viewers in that demo, only 3,000 more than Nancy Grace's show on HLN, and 12,000 more than CNN's Campbell Brown. Fox News's O'Reilly Factor dominated the hour with 964,000 viewers age 25 to 54, and was the only cable news show in the time period to increase its audience, by 55%.

But there are also more subjective signs that Olbermann's stridency and lack of proportion are alienating some of his natural allies. Quite a few eyebrows elevated last week when Jon Stewart, in a parody of one of Olbermann's "Special Comment" segments, called out the newsman for going way over the top in his denunciations of Republican Senator-elect Scott Brown of Massachusetts. The criticism was all the more remarkable, given that Stewart and Olbermann usually take the same side on most issues, especially when it comes to Fox News and the Republicans.
read more here
Is America Getting Over Keith Olbermann

Repeat tours take invisible toll

This cannot be repeated enough! PTSD is a wound to the spirit/soul. If we dismiss the importance of Chaplains and members of the clergy back home, we are heading to the point where there will be no real return from Iraq or Afghanistan. The bulk of the men and women we send over and over again will live out the rest of their lives adding to the ranks of homeless veterans as well as graveyards. No, this is no melodramatic rant. We've already seen the evidence of this. Suicides have risen every year no matter what the military has tried to do. Divorces among military families have gone up. Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have been adding to the homeless veteran population every year as well as the "couch homeless" sleeping on the couches of friends for as long as they can.


The military has set up "spiritual resilience" campuses at the U.S. bases where soldiers return from deployments. Screened for symptoms of PTSD, they are supposed to begin treatment within two weeks of a diagnosis. The military also has started a suicide hot line with an online chat option. The Minnesota Guard's Beyond the Yellow Ribbon campaign is considered a leader in requiring participation in post-deployment programs intended to address problems like PTSD. In a pioneering study, the Guard is partnering with the Minneapolis VA Medical Center to study PTSD among soldiers deployed from 2006 to 2007, examining them before, during and after their overseas service.




Causes of Mental Illness
What are the causes of mental illness? Although the exact cause of most mental illnesses is not known, it is becoming clear through research that many of these conditions are caused by a combination of biological, psychological, and environmental factors.

What Biological Factors Are Involved in Mental Illness?
Some mental illnesses have been linked to an abnormal balance of special chemicals in the brain called neurotransmitters. Neurotransmitters help nerve cells in the brain communicate with each other. If these chemicals are out of balance or are not working properly, messages may not make it through the brain correctly, leading to symptoms of mental illness. In addition, defects in or injury to certain areas of the brain have also been linked to some mental conditions.

Other biological factors that may be involved in the development of mental illness include:

Genetics (heredity): Many mental illnesses run in families, suggesting that people who have a family member with a mental illness are more likely to develop a mental illness. Susceptibility is passed on in families through genes. Experts believe many mental illnesses are linked to abnormalities in many genes -- not just one. That is why a person inherits a susceptibility to a mental illness and doesn't necessarily develop the illness. Mental illness itself occurs from the interaction of multiple genes and other factors --such as stress, abuse, or a traumatic event -- which can influence, or trigger, an illness in a person who has an inherited susceptibility to it.
Infections: Certain infections have been linked to brain damage and the development of mental illness or the worsening of its symptoms. For example, a condition known as pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder (PANDA) associated with the Streptococcus bacteria has been linked to the development of obsessive-compulsive disorder and other mental illnesses in children.
Brain defects or injury: Defects in or injury to certain areas of the brain have also been linked to some mental illnesses.
Prenatal damage: Some evidence suggests that a disruption of early fetal brain development or trauma that occurs at the time of birth -- for example, loss of oxygen to the brain -- may be a factor in the development of certain conditions, such as autism.
Substance abuse: Long-term substance abuse, in particular, has been linked to anxiety, depression, and paranoia.
Other factors: Poor nutrition and exposure to toxins, such as lead, may play a role in the development of mental illnesses.

http://www.webmd.com/anxiety-panic/mental-health-causes-mental-illness


There are many causes of mental illness, but there is only one way PTSD comes and that is after trauma. It is an invader, attacking the emotional part of the brain regarded as an anxiety disorder.

What Are the Types of Anxiety Disorders?
There are several recognized types of anxiety disorders, including:
Panic disorder : People with this condition have feelings of terror that strike suddenly and repeatedly with no warning. Other symptoms of a panic attack include sweating, chest pain, palpitations (irregular heartbeats), and a feeling of choking, which may make the person feel like he or she is having a heart attack or "going crazy."
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) : People with OCD are plagued by constant thoughts or fears that cause them to perform certain rituals or routines. The disturbing thoughts are called obsessions, and the rituals are called compulsions. An example is a person with an unreasonable fear of germs who constantly washes his or her hands.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) : PTSD is a condition that can develop following a traumatic and/or terrifying event, such as a sexual or physical assault, the unexpected death of a loved one, or a natural disaster. People with PTSD often have lasting and frightening thoughts and memories of the event, and tend to be emotionally numb.
Social anxiety disorder : Also called social phobia, social anxiety disorder involves overwhelming worry and self-consciousness about everyday social situations. The worry often centers on a fear of being judged by others, or behaving in a way that might cause embarrassment or lead to ridicule.
Specific phobias : A specific phobia is an intense fear of a specific object or situation, such as snakes, heights, or flying. The level of fear usually is inappropriate to the situation and may cause the person to avoid common, everyday situations.
Generalized anxiety disorder : This disorder involves excessive, unrealistic worry and tension, even if there is little or nothing to provoke the anxiety.
After traumatic events people will walk away either believing God spared them or just point His finger at them and sent the trauma to them. Our beliefs play an important part of who we are, what we think, how we react and interact, but above all, how we recover from life's events.

The beliefs we have are all called into question and then we question everything.

For the men and women in the military, there was a theory Vietnam veterans developed PTSD because of the way they were treated when they came home. While it may have contributed to the numbers, it was not the cause. WWI and WWII veterans were inflicted with PTSD even though they were welcomed home with open arms, parades, appreciation, housing projects, educational aid and VA healthcare.

It was not that Vietnam veterans were assaulted with PTSD more, but that it was the Vietnam veterans pushing for the research and treatment of it that we noticed it in them more. Older veterans suffered but back then it was a deep dark secret when "shell shocked" men returned home, became workaholics and then drank too much when they were finally home at the end of the day. Their families reported them as being cold, distant, moody, as well as reporting the nightmares. The only real difference was that no one was talking about it. Veterans with severe PTSD were institutionalized or sent to live on farms where they would be taken care of for the rest of their lives, hidden from the public's eye so they would not be reminded the price of war does not end when they come home again.

PTSD came to them. It came because they cared deeply, felt deeply and thus, were wounded spiritually more deeply than others around them. With each event piling onto the others, the wound dug deeper into their spirit. This must begin to be treated spiritually if there will be successful healing. Even though there has been no evidence of curing, there has been centuries of healing, when the healed end up being better than they were before. The key is to address the whole person, medically for the mind and body and spiritually. If the soul is ignored, then the healing can only go so far.

Please read the following, all the pages, if you want to learn more. It's a great piece of reporting.




Montevideo's Sgt. Phil Jensen knows the psychological scars of multiple deployments.

By MARK BRUNSWICK , Star Tribune

Last update: February 1, 2010 - 11:24 PM
CAMP LEATHERNECK, AFGHANISTAN -- Never-ending wars are exacting a price from the never-done warriors.

Diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder after returning from 10 months in Iraq, Sgt. Phil Jensen was nevertheless ruled fit to go to Afghanistan for his latest deployment. Jensen, 25, didn't want to go, but he didn't want to disappoint the soldiers in his new unit.

"After the first or second drill with these guys, I didn't want to let them down," he said. "It's that brotherhood; for me, they're family."

The scrapbook Jensen's mother keeps for him at home in Montevideo includes the picture of the first time he put on the uniform of the Minnesota Army National Guard. It has come to hold pictures of other young men in the eight years since: The New York Guard member with whom Jensen trained who died in Iraq and the Guard member from the Montevideo area who killed himself after returning home. The last pages include a People Magazine photo layout of fallen soldiers that features Specialist George Cauley.

Jensen was several trucks behind Cauley's during an October supply run when a mine explosion blew Cauley out of his vehicle.
read more here
Repeat tours take invisible toll

Monday, February 1, 2010

Island residents sue U.S., saying military made them sick

Island residents sue U.S., saying military made them sick
By Abbie Boudreau and Scott Bronstein,
CNN Special Investigations Unit
February 1, 2010 -- Updated 2103 GMT (0503 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Vieques was one of Navy's largest firing ranges and weapons testing sites
Thousands of residents say testing has made them seriously ill
Government says under "sovereign immunity," residents have no right to sue
See how residents are coping with illnesses on "Campbell Brown" tonight 8 ET
Hear from residents of Vieques, where thousands of people say U.S. weapons testing has made them seriously ill, on tonight's "Campbell Brown," 8 ET

Vieques, Puerto Rico (CNN) -- Nearly 40 years ago, Hermogenes Marrero was a teenage U.S. Marine, stationed as a security guard on the tiny American island of Vieques, off the coast of Puerto Rico.

Marrero says he's been sick ever since. At age 57, the former Marine sergeant is nearly blind, needs an oxygen tank, has Lou Gehrig's disease and crippling back problems, and sometimes needs a wheelchair.

"I'd go out to the firing range, and sometimes I'd start bleeding automatically from my nose," he said in an interview to air on Monday night's "Campbell Brown."
go here for more
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/US/02/01/vieques.illness/index.html

Wounded Warrior: A Story of Survival

Wounded Warrior: A Story of Survival
A Colorado Springs soldier was not expected to survive a critical injury he suffered in Iraq. His recovery was nothing short of miraculous. His family tells 11 News it is a testament to the power of hope. Reporter: David Nancarrow
PLAY VIDEO: Wounded Warrior: A Survivor's Story

Camp Pendleton claims strides in treating injuries to body and mind

MILITARY: Caring for wounded warriors
Camp Pendleton claims strides in treating injuries to body and mind

By MARK WALKER - mlwalker@nctimes.com Posted: January 30, 2010

There were a record 52 suicides among the Marine Corps' roughly 202,000 troops in 2009. The Corps recorded 48 suicides in 2008; 33 in 2007 and 25 in 2006.

He says the nightmares from the four roadside bomb attacks in Iraq are easing.

His memory is improving, so long as he uses a pattern to recall where things are. And the pain in his back is getting better.

But Camp Pendleton's Sgt. Kurtis Foster knows his days as a Marine are nearing an end.

"I can't stay in and do the things I wanted to do when I joined," the 24-year-old machine gunner and native of Oakhurst said last week. "I can't go back to the infantry."

Foster is one of nearly 100 Camp Pendleton Marines assigned to the Wounded Warrior Battalion West, established at the base in 2007 to treat troops injured in battle, training or off-base accidents who don't require long-term hospitalization.

Now fully staffed and about to open a major new facility, the battalion primarily treats troops with post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury.
read more here
Caring for wounded warriors

Documentary with Pennsylvania vets awakens Vietnam demons

Documentary with Pennsylvania vets awakens Vietnam demons

By Craig Smith
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Monday, February 1, 2010
Last updated: 11:18 am

Army Sgt. Lamont B. Steptoe came home to Pittsburgh after fighting in the jungles of Vietnam and bought a gun.

"I was so enraged. ... I was going to go out one day and start shooting everybody I saw," said Steptoe, 60, who now lives in Philadelphia.

Then, reading "A Choice of Weapons," the autobiography of acclaimed photographer Gordon Parks, and the thought of what his mother would face if he carried out his plot, stopped the Peabody High School grad cold.

A poet, photographer and publisher who grew up in East Liberty, Steptoe exorcises his demons from the war through his writing. The author of 11 collections of poetry and three books on Vietnam, he is a 2005 American Book Award winner and recipient of a 2006 Pew Fellowship.

He and other Vietnam veterans from Pennsylvania are featured in "the weight," a three-part, six-hour documentary being completed that chronicles the war experiences of 10 Vietnam veterans and late CBS newsman Ed Bradley. In addition to Bradley, a Marine featured in the film, Jim Downey, has died.
read more here
Documentary with Pennsylvania vets awakens Vietnam demons

Federal review finds errors at Anchorage VA office

Federal review finds errors at Anchorage VA office

The Associated Press

Published: January 29th, 2010 08:17 AM
Last Modified: January 29th, 2010 08:42 AM

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Federal inspectors gave the Anchorage Veterans Administration regional office a poor review for its handling of disability claims - a 29 percent error rate.


The Anchorage Daily News reports that has resulted in delays, underpayments and denials of services for some veterans.

Office supervisors say they are well on the way toward fixing the problems identified in last year's inspection.

Alaska had the highest number of veterans per capita of any state as of the last census, at nearly 18 percent of the population.
read more here
Federal review finds errors at Anchorage VA office

Navy supervisor doctored whistle-blower's records

Navy supervisor doctored whistle-blower's records
Fired after criticizing subpar care for Marines, a psychiatrist finds his good personnel reviews turned to bad
By Mark Benjamin

Internal documents and e-mails show that Navy officials unfavorably doctored a psychiatrist’s performance record after he blew the whistle on what he said was dangerously inept management of care for Marines suffering combat stress at Camp Lejeune, N.C. The internal correspondence, obtained by Salon, also includes an order to delete earlier records praising the work of the psychiatrist, Dr. Kernan Manion, who was fired last September after lodging his complaints.

Now top Navy officials are tangled up in the blackball campaign. Soon after Manion was fired, Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., asked the Pentagon about Manion’s concerns about healthcare at Camp Lejeune. In a Dec. 17 letter to Jones, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus panned Manion’s ethics and professionalism, presumably based on information Mabus received about Manion from Camp Lejeune.

But Salon has obtained internal Navy documents and correspondence that suggest officials at Camp Lejeune altered Manion’s favorable personnel records after he went public with his concerns, adding new, derogatory remarks similar to some of the information in Mabus’ letter to Jones.
read more here
Navy supervisor doctored whistle-blowers records

Living with the wounds of Fort Hood

Living with the wounds of Fort Hood

By DANIEL P. FINNEY • dafinney@dmreg.com • January 31, 2010


The pink surgery scar runs halfway down Staff Sgt. Joy Clark's left arm like a zipper.

Dime-sized dots mar each side of the limb - permanent reminders of a bullet that ripped through her arm during another soldier's Nov. 5 shooting rampage that left 13 dead and 30 wounded at Fort Hood near Killeen, Texas.

Those scars are as obvious as the grimace on the Des Moines native's 27-year-old face as she grips a weight during physical therapy.

Unseen is the ache inside her. Clark survived the attack, but her injuries forced her to stay home while her unit deployed to Afghanistan.

"I know it's not my fault," Clark said in her first extended interview since the tragedy, "but there is this sense of an unfinished mission."



On Nov. 5, Clark waited in line for a routine medical checkup inside a Fort Hood office building.

The exam was her third stop in a necessary but tedious preparation for deployment to Afghanistan scheduled for after Thanksgiving.

The mission was to be Clark's first overseas mission since joining the military in 2001.

Instead, Clark found herself on the front line of what Vice President Joe Biden later would call the worst terrorist attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11, 2001.

At 1:34 p.m., military investigators allege Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan entered the building and opened fire on his fellow soldiers.

The soldier closest to Clark, a man she did not know, was hit. He slumped forward. Clark, a field medic, wrapped her left arm around him and tried to help.

A bullet pierced her left arm. She recoiled and the wounded man she held fell to the ground. He died.

Clark looked at her arm. A bullet had passed through it and there wasn't much blood. She felt no pain. With her good arm, she reached out for another wounded comrade.

"We were unarmed," Clark said. "There were no weapons in the building. There was no way we could defend ourselves."
go here for more and video
Living with the wounds of Fort Hood

PTSD:Casualties At Home

Reading this took me back to when PTSD ruled over my own house. How many conversations did I have to walk away from? How many times did I listen as co-workers were acting as if their life was ending over someone trivial compared to what I was going thru? It happened all the time.

"My husband's snores and it drives me crazy!" I'd hear and then think, my husband is going through hell, can't sleep through the night, has nightmares so severe he breaks out sweating and screaming. Then he spends the night on the couch watching TV after checking every door and window to make sure we were safe.

"All my husband does is talk about sport!" While I thought about how my husband didn't talk anymore unless he had to. How he didn't want to tell me what was going on with him, why he was acting like a stranger, why he couldn't remember a conversation we had moments before or feel as if he owed me an explanation of where he had been.

So many conversations when someone would talk and the listener would understand but how could anyone understand any of this? Would they even listen? Usually not. I had some close friends over the years working for different businesses. Most of them were really great people but even they would change the subject when I tried to talk about what was going on in my house. I stopped talking. There wasn't much of a point to it when the usual well meaning advice I'd receive was to get a divorce.

Why is it so hard to understand PTSD when it is really not that hard to do if someone wants to know? The problem is, they have no desire at all.

Is it because they can't think of what happens in combat or having to have to take a life? Is it because somewhere in the back of their own minds they know PTSD could wound them as well should something traumatic happen to them?

For us, living with PTSD, we need to make it as plain and simple as possible for them to understand. There is nothing to be ashamed of when you live with PTSD in your home. Until the day comes when most people are aware of this, support groups are vital to our survival so that we can share with other people fully aware of what we're going thru. AA works because everyone there has a deep secret in common and there is mutual trust where there is sharing and not judgment. While it's hard to talk to people with no understanding of what PTSD is, talking to other people going thru it is freeing and empowering.

Casualties At Home
February 1, 2010, by Sharon Adams
Sitting in a dentist’s chair, Susan Binnie asks if she can stay after the dentist is through—just so she can soak up the peace. She lives near St. Albert, northwest of Edmonton with her two daughters, aged nine and 14, and her husband, a veteran who has struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for 15 years. Binnie has discovered if one person in the family has PTSD, the whole family suffers.

And so she takes her peace where she finds it.

Angelle Peacock, a mother of two small boys, lives in Morinville, Alta. She is also coping with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Her husband Ted, a serving member of the military, is in treatment, and at times it has been like she has three small children, especially when her husband has had to be reminded to eat or to shower.

Both women describe other instances when typical childhood behaviour has triggered angry outbursts or flashbacks from their husbands. Both are juggling full-time jobs and family issues that demand full-time attention.

These women—and hundreds more across Canada—cannot turn to colleagues at work or chums for support because those who don’t live under the umbra of Operational Stress Injury just won’t understand. “They say, ‘Why don’t you leave?’” says Binnie. Peacock adds: “I’ve woken in the night to find my husband has taken out a window and is in the backyard ‘fighting bad guys.’ How do you go to work the next day, and over coffee say, ‘You know what’s going on at my house?’”
read more here
http://www.legionmagazine.com/en/index.php/2010/02/casualties-at-home/