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Ask a Vet
Author: TriSec    Date: 08/10/2010 10:35:29

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,701st day in Iraq and our 3,217th day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do, with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing wars, courtesy of antiwar.com:

American Deaths
Since war began (3/19/03): 4414
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4275
Since Capture of Saddam (12/13/03): 3953
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3555
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 186

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,220
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 770
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,457
Journalists - Iraq: 338
Academics Killed - Iraq: 437

We find this morning's cost of war passing through:

$ 1, 063, 350, 400, 000 .00



Perhaps you've been following the fire stories out of Russia with interest. Moscow has been shrouded in smoke for days....the wheat crop is failing due to the ongoing drought, and most dangerous of all, the forested areas around the Chernobyl nuclear accident site are under threat of burning, which may or may not release more radiation into the atmosphere.



It's a far different fire threat than the one faced by our soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq. What do you suppose happens to all the waste and trash generated by the American military in a war zone? Most of it is burned, in the open, in vast 'burn pits'.

But what do you think happens to the troops working the trash fires? Like everything else about these wars, soldier safety seems to be an afterthought.


Hundreds of military service members and contractor employees have fallen ill with cancer or severe breathing problems after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, and they say they were poisoned by thick, black smoke produced by the burning of tons of trash generated on U.S. bases.

In a lawsuit in federal court in Maryland, 241 people from 42 states are suing Houston-based contractor Kellogg Brown & Root, which has operated more than two dozen so-called burn pits in the two countries. The burn pits were used to dispose of plastic water bottles, Styrofoam food containers, mangled bits of metal, paint, solvent, medical waste, even dead animals. The garbage was tossed in, doused with fuel and set on fire.

The military personnel and civilian workers say they inhaled a toxic haze from the pits that caused severe illnesses. Six with leukemia have died, and five are being treated for the disease, a cancer of the blood and bone marrow. At night, more than a dozen rely on machines to help them breathe or to monitor their breathing; others use inhalers.

"You'd cough up black stuff, and you couldn't seem to catch your breath. And your eyes were burning," said Anthony Roles, 33, a father and Air Force retiree from Little Rock, who was told that he had a blood disorder shortly after returning from Iraq in 2004. "I can still smell it to this very day."

Roles said there was a nickname for the symptoms: "Iraqi crud."



But that's OK...why do we need to provide any medical support for our troops, anyway? Jesus can cure them. This story is just beyond what I can write here. Our friendly chaplain needs to go out on patrol in a regular old Humvee without body armor. Jesus can protect him, too.


Many Christians believe faith in Jesus Christ can cure almost anything: alcoholism, cancer, homosexuality, even the Son of Sam. But can it cure post traumatic stress disorder in troops returning from Afghanistan and Iraq? The Army Reserves' top chaplain for military policemen believes so, and published his prescription on the Army Reserves' official Web site for everyone to see, in an act a watchdog organization argues is unconstitutional and dangerous when soldiers continue to kill themselves at an alarming rate.

In a nearly 11,000 word essay, "Spiritual Resiliency: Helping Troops Recover from Combat," Command Chaplain Col. Donald W. Holdridge of the 200th Military Police Command at Fort Meade, Maryland, argues belief in Jesus Christ and Bible reading, particularly King David's Psalms, can help cure a soldiers' PTSD. "Combat vets need to know that most of these [PTSD symptoms] do fade in time, like scars," writes Holdridge, a professor at the Baptist Bible College, as the Army Reserves banner hangs from the top of the Webpage. "They will always be there to some degree, but their intensity will fade. What will help them fade is the application of the principles of Scripture."

The tone of Holdridge's essay only gets more unapologetically evangelical as the chaplain's initial wading in a Christian sea slides into more brackish waters, evangelizing soldiers with PTSD that their service was part of a larger theological plan and dangerously merges church and state. "Military and law enforcement personnel bear the additional burden of contending with evil by acting as an arm of the state to punish those who have no respect for human life (Rom.13:4)," he writes. "It is messy business, but necessary in a fallen world. If the military member knows Christ as savior, they can be assured that Jesus is with them until the end of the age (Mt.28:20)." (If this doesn't seem offensive or incendiary for a military Website to publish this, replace "Christ as savior" with "the Prophet Mohammed" and "Jesus" with "Allah.")



There is the old saying "there are no atheists in foxholes", but this one seems a bit much.


 

42 comments (Latest Comment: 08/11/2010 02:18:02 by Raine)
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Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 12:55:09
Good Morning, once again our dear old friends from KBR are killing people I see...

Comment by wickedpam on 08/10/2010 13:03:21
Morning

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:11:59
Watching Chris live, but I think they have to do some work with the sound.



Comment by wickedpam on 08/10/2010 13:15:39
I've always found that song kinda sad

Comment by wickedpam on 08/10/2010 13:16:01
Quote by Raine:

Watching Chris live, but I think they have to do some work with the sound.







and they need to focus

Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 13:26:09
Maybe the chaplain needs to work the fire pits - that should give him a pretty good feel for what Hell is like..

Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 13:27:47
From the "I should have seen this coming" file, the Palin scourge continues. When politics, reality TV and TMZ-style celebutard fascination collide

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:30:04
Quote by wickedpam:

Quote by Raine:

Watching Chris live, but I think they have to do some work with the sound.







and they need to focus


I'm sure they will get the kinks worked out.



Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:31:30
Quote by BobR:

From the "I should have seen this coming" file, the Palin scourge continues. When politics, reality TV and TMZ-style celebutard fascination collide






This country is going to hell in a handbasket

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:33:12
The palins are like cicada swarms.

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:35:24
Former Senator Ted Stevens may be on a plane that crashed in Alaska.



This is the picture Google news picked to go with the story tease.



AWKwaaarrrd...

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:47:18
BEST TWEET OF THE DAY!!!!



@delrayser After Gibbs made his "professional left" comments, he grabbed two beers & slid down the emergency slide outside his window


Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 13:53:26




She really takes her chicken nuggets seriously....

Comment by TriSec on 08/10/2010 13:57:47
Grumble, grumble, GRUNT!



School starts in 3 weeks, people!





Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 13:59:48
Quote by Raine:





She really takes her chicken nuggets seriously....


Good gawd - I wonder where this occurred?

Comment by Scoopster on 08/10/2010 14:07:46
Quote by Raine:

Former Senator Ted Stevens may be on a plane that crashed in Alaska.



This is the picture Google news picked to go with the story tease.



AWKwaaarrrd...


Some moron dropped a FB comment blaming liberals for him even being on the plane (he should've been in DC, damn phony ethics complaints, etc.)



Idiots.

Comment by wickedpam on 08/10/2010 14:09:29
then they are no longer childern

Comment by Scoopster on 08/10/2010 14:18:21
Oh ah mornin' all!

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 14:22:58
Quote by BobR:

Good gawd - I wonder where this occurred?
Toledo.









Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 14:24:28
Quote by Scoopster:

Some moron dropped a FB comment blaming liberals for him even being on the plane (he should've been in DC, damn phony ethics complaints, etc.)



Idiots.




Said idiot is aware the Senate is on August recess, no???



Comment by TriSec on 08/10/2010 14:46:51
Apropo to nothing....



Musing on the "anti-Mosque" people.



We've got this in a white-bread western suburb of Boston. (Sudbury, MA). I've driven by it many times; it's quite a handsome building.



Funny thing is, it's across the street from this.



Allah Hu-Akbar, indeed!



Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 14:48:58
Oh dear. While my thoughts are with Ted Stevens and those aboard that plane...

I find it strange that his first wife died in a plane crash.

Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 15:04:55
Quote by TriSec:

Apropo to nothing....



Musing on the "anti-Mosque" people.



We've got this in a white-bread western suburb of Boston. (Sudbury, MA). I've driven by it many times; it's quite a handsome building.



Funny thing is, it's across the street from this.



Allah Hu-Akbar, indeed!



this beautiful temple opened in a particularly old white protestant section of an Atlanta suburb.

Comment by TriSec on 08/10/2010 15:10:47
TRMS is making me all depressed this morning.



Especially the bit about the Chinese businessman on the Maglev reading about how we're no longer paving roads in some states.





Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 15:25:15
Quote by BobR:

Quote by TriSec:

Apropo to nothing....



Musing on the "anti-Mosque" people.



We've got this in a white-bread western suburb of Boston. (Sudbury, MA). I've driven by it many times; it's quite a handsome building.



Funny thing is, it's across the street from this.



Allah Hu-Akbar, indeed!



this beautiful temple opened in a particularly old white protestant section of an Atlanta suburb.




I grew up being taught in my Church that tolerance was something God and Jesus wanted.



It was a Lutheran Church.



Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 15:25:25
Quote by Raine:

Oh dear. While my thoughts are with Ted Stevens and those aboard that plane...

I find it strange that his first wife died in a plane crash.


He definitely was on the plane, but it's unclear whether he was killed - apparently, there were survivors...

Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 15:26:35
Quote by Raine:

Quote by BobR:

Quote by TriSec:

Apropo to nothing....



Musing on the "anti-Mosque" people.



We've got this in a white-bread western suburb of Boston. (Sudbury, MA). I've driven by it many times; it's quite a handsome building.



Funny thing is, it's across the street from this.



Allah Hu-Akbar, indeed!



this beautiful temple opened in a particularly old white protestant section of an Atlanta suburb.




I grew up being taught in my Church that tolerance was something God and Jesus wanted.



It was a Lutheran Church.



The typical southern Baptist is taught that only Southern Baptists are going to heaven - the rest are heretics at best.

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 15:36:54




What the hell is this guy talking about?





I am waiting for him to yell, "get off of my lawn"

Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 15:46:49
Aisha Tyler is hilarious - great guest!

Comment by TriSec on 08/10/2010 15:48:33
The thing that's lost in all the religious noise machine is the fact that we're all following the same God.



It's the different prophets that might be the issue.





Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 15:49:33
Quote by Raine:





What the hell is this guy talking about?





I am waiting for him to yell, "get off of my lawn"


a-HA!

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 15:52:04
Quote by BobR:

The typical southern Baptist is taught that only Southern Baptists are going to heaven - the rest are heretics at best.




That is sorta sad.



But I think it is important to realize that in Christianity, there are different sects.

I would say that Southern baptists are far more fundamental than other versions of Christianity.



YOU could say that about EVERY other world religion. Not only could you say say that, it would be a fact. I find it disgusting that so many people are lumping all of Islam into one barrel. Somehow I don't think Christians would like that done to them.



And I want to make something clear that often seems to get lost in this mosque/9-11/honoring the victims debate.:



These 9-11 murderers attacked this nation because of the disdain they had for western culture. NOT for religion. They could have been Christian, Like Timothy McVeigh, to be honest.



People seem to forget that fact. YOU can be a Born Again Christian, a Southern Baptist, a Muslim or Jewish -- it doesn't matter. They attacked this nation for our culture.



America is trying to turn this back to them as a religious debate. It was never about religion, unless you consider the uber fringe of belief as the mainstream of theology and ideaology. I do not.



I refuse to lump all beliefs in the same pot. People need to stop thinking this is a religious war.







Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 15:57:32
HE likes to be black when it works for him!!!



I Ms. Tyler!!!!!

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 15:58:17
I might eat a cracker or 2 tonite... I LOVE crackers!





Comment by livingonli on 08/10/2010 16:00:36
Good morning everyone.



Interesting how the reich-wing especially the Fundie wingnuts do give justification for those who believe that we're there to re-enact the crusades. Especially that one screechy woman who seems to lump all of Islam with the Taliban and don't understand (or don't want to understand) the difference. How should we feel if we lumped all Christians with abortion clinic bombers and the KKK (which does profess itself to be a Christian group).

Comment by wickedpam on 08/10/2010 16:05:59
back to house stuff, I'll be lurking around though

Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 16:37:28
Comment by livingonli on 08/10/2010 17:41:48
Comment by Raine on 08/10/2010 18:35:28


CNN confirmed it, so now it's true...









Comment by BobR on 08/10/2010 19:00:08


Equating relativity with moral relativism shows how dumbed down the discourse has become.

Comment by Will in Chicago on 08/10/2010 19:12:37
Hello, bloggers!!



TriSec, thanks for a great blog. Sadly, it seems that our soldiers will be impacted by waste from our wars and by people who believe that they can do anything.



On a positive note, I think that my interview yesterday went very well. I should know later this week if I go back for a second interview.



Also, Nicole Sandler will be off tomorrow for her program Radio or Not. Kenny Pick and I will be on the entire two hours. You can chat with us on the U-Stream chat or at least find one of us at Democracy Interactive, Nova Exile or the Hartmann chat.

Comment by Raine on 08/11/2010 02:18:02
Quote by BobR:



Equating relativity with moral relativism shows how dumbed down the discourse has become.






*ding*'