HAPPY 237TH BIRTHDAY, MARINES

 

Here’s a good one for the Few, the Proud, the Type A personalities of the military. Marines. God’s gift to the Barbary Pirates. Why they were not present recently at the Benghazi Barbecue and Chili Cook off is a mystery. Perhaps (Gen.) Director David Petraeus could illuminate us on this. Oh. That’s right. He’s no longer employed there and cannot be called to testify to much other than the Fifth Amendment now.  Which is a terrible shame as they did yeoman service at Tripoli back in 1805. Hell, they even put it to music. Look up “Wild and crazy guys” in the dictionary and you’ll find this.

 

Semper Fi  and Happy Birthday guys from the gentlemen who are too lazy to walk. Our motto…

WHY WALK

THROUGH IT

WHEN YOU HAVE THE 

TECHNOLOGY TO FLY OVER IT?

Posted in All about Veterans | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

HCV–GILEAD/ABBOTT IN RACE FOR HCV CURE

Picked this up off the HCV network. Saturday Abbott tried to cut in front of Gilead on Interferon-free HCV cure. The Ribavirin might still be a dealbreaker for the Autoimmune Disorders Crowd like me. We shall see.

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NATIONAL ANTHEM–MADISON RISING

In this day and age few things arouse my spirituality or move me like my love for America and Veterans (even those wild and crazy Navy pukes). The Star Spangled Banner always moved me as a child. As a Cub Scout, being allowed to bear the colors was akin to being given the keys to an F-100. That exhilaration could in no way be captured by mere words.

On the cusp of Veterans Day, it intensifies. While Memorial Day commemorates those who have borne the battle and fallen, Veterans Day thanks those who have heard that all but inaudible call to serve. I talked (email) recently with WGM about one thing or another and we reminisced about 40 years ago. He mentioned seeing Jimi Hendrix in concert before departing for the land of kimchee. I was also fortunate to have heard Jimi Hendrix as well as his version of the Anthem on Monday, August 18th, 1969 at a small music and arts festival in upstate New York.  I was preparing to return south to Virginia the next day for my inevitable AFEES date with the military and I had no idea he would perform it. He completely mesmerized the audience which was no small feat. In fact, virtually everyone around me rose to their feet and stood-something that is often sadly lacking in this day and age.

My faith in America has never been a flash in the pan. As an Air Force brat, I perennially got heavy doses of patriotism. There were always parades, the Thunderbirds aerial displays, and other gatherings that celebrated America’s greatness and military might.

The Fourth Stanza, to me, epitomizes what should be the First-most especially in the post-9/11 era. It would be interesting if celebrities memorized this one and sang it at NFL venues simply to put America on notice that there actually are multiple Stanzas to the greatest song ever written. Wouldn’t it be refreshing to hear…

O thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved home and the war’s desolation.
Blest with vict’ry and peace, may the Heav’n rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation!
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In God is our trust.”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

Perhaps in the brave, new, politically correct world of today the above would be too controversial because of its numerous references to God. This proclivity to avoid offending everybody is becoming obnoxious and overbearing.

Brownwater Jim sends us this new rendition of the world’s most well-known Anthem by a band named Madison Rising. The gentle beginning belies the raw power of the music and lyrics midpoint.  It arouses that same inner warmth of my childhood Cub Scout days. America is going through a period of self-doubt and confusion. I don’t think the current powers that be comprehend what is now needed to resurrect our Country’s supremacy in the world. My personal belief is that America just needs to get back to her roots that brought us the National Anthem in the first place. It was no fluke that Francis Scott Key’s memorable 1812 composition became our touchstone. It was written specifically to inspire us to become great and it admirably served its purpose. With America now seemingly drifting before the wind, perhaps it will provide direction once again. Our fate has always been inextricably intertwined with our strong belief in a higher Power as evidenced in this song’s innumerable mentions of Him. Perhaps it’s time to return to those roots and worry less about “offending” others’ religion. It seems the eastern world has no problem whatsoever denigrating our beliefs. Besides, our current foreign policy seems to be missing the mark.

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BVA–173RD AIRBORNE AT DAK TO–NO HCV

So. The old man has a claim in for Hep and cirrhosis. No dice. He starts to figure out what he needs and wham! Too late to even investigate a bucket list. His busy wife puts the claim together and assembles all the parts and pieces. She gets his vAMC crew to write up good nexus letters and off she goes. Not. All this carefully assembled evidence was gathered AFTER he passed. Sorry Charlene. No accrued bennies. No Dollar Drive.  She’s headed for Penny Lane . Forget that the old man was up to his knees in blood at Dak To with the 173rd Airborne getting his ass shot off. Forget that there is good documented evidence in his favor plus he gets the 1154(b) combat consideration. But he forgot to dot an i and several ts. No nexus= no dice. Claims denied. So much for valorous service. Boy, this just makes me all warm and fuzzy inside about how my vA does so much for me.

In this case, prior to his death, there was no such competent evidence of a relationship between the Veteran’s in-service combat activities and his hepatitis C and cirrhosis of the liver. The Board notes that the RO has awarded service connection for the cause of the Veteran’s death by way of an April 2010 rating decision, thereby acknowledging that his hepatitis C and liver cirrhosis are of service origin (and are likely related to his combat activities, his exposure to blood in particular); however, the Board is precluded from relying upon the evidence upon which that rating decision was based because it was not of record at the time of the Veteran’s death.

So Charlene has to go back to St. Pete and start over if she hopes to get any traction on this. The RO did grant for her but that can only be used in a new filing. This one’s toast. YessireeeBob. No adversarial chuckleheads around here. Everyone’s pro Vet. And just as soon as you refile, you can sit back and wait a couple of years to fix this stupidity.

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vARO– ERRORS? WE DON’T CARE. APPEAL IT.

Finally, a truthful answer to a vexing question. We know vA is error prone. All we are arguing these days is just how much so. The va is in deep denial and maintains that just maybe it’s 14% of the time. The BVA says 30% for sure and maybe more. The vA has admitted to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court that it is at least 60%.

So Vets will love this one.

In a deposition related to a federal discrimination complaint filed by Fox, the then-head of the Oakland VA regional office where she worked, Lynn Flint, said that “it didn’t matter if the decision (to deny Roundtree’s claim) was right or wrong.”

In proceedings related to Fox’s wrongful-termination suit, Flint and Fox’s supervisor, Kim Yarbrough, argued that Fox had exceeded her authority by advocating for additional review of Roundtree’s case, lowering her productivity to unacceptable levels.

If Roundtree disagreed with the denial, Yarbrough said, he could always appeal.

Pretty ugly, huh? We’re the vA. We don’t need no stinkin’ badges.

BADGES?

WE DON’T NEED NO

STINKIN’ BADGES

P.S. Here’s a good link to youtube on this

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ALMOST A VET

Great humor. Dude, like I was gonna serve, you know and like, wow, there it was-an opportunity to be like, you know, a pizza delivery guy. How could I pass that up? It was like. you know, fate calling me.  I was going to be like a fighter pilot or a general or somebody big, but like, you know, it just wasn’t in the cards. But I wanted to serve. It’s just that I never got around to it. People shouldn’t hold that against me. That’s sooooooo bogus, you know what I’m saying? That’s like, so totally judgmental and I don’t do judgmental. People should like me for who I am, dude.

 

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CAMP LEUKEMIA BREAST CANCER IN MEN

Who would have imagined men could get breast cancer? I was nonplussed in 2010 to discover my left breast had the least bit of my right after I escaped the clutches of the vAMC death squad in Seattle. They promptly scheduled me for a mammogram  Yes, gentle reader. You read that right.

My wife and numerous other women have described the unpleasantness, indeed the pain, of a mammogram but I could not appreciate their distaste for this until my appointment at the Carol Milgard Breast Cancer Center in Tacoma. There I sat among five or six women who stared at me for a moment thinking I might be there to pick up a female acquaintance. When I was called to go in, the looks among them ratcheted up several notches to disbelief. Fortunately it was Gynecomastia (a side-effect of my extreme illness and hospital incarceration for a year) and it subsided over time. That in no way ameliorated the pain I,too, experienced when my breast was squeezed as flat as dollar pancakes.  The Spanish Inquisition doesn’t hold a candle to the Carol Milgard Center nor did they have instruments of torture commensurate with modern medical science.

Peter Devereaux was not so lucky. Please read the following. If you had the misfortune to be assigned to the Camp of the Young( Le Jeune is French for “the young”) and even think for a moment that something is amiss medically, I admonish you to get a checkup pronto.

October 31, 2012

Former Marine battling breast cancer

By Cheryl Lecesse STAFF WRITER The Salem News Oct 31, 2012, 04:30 AM EDT

PEABODY — Peter Devereaux didn’t even know men could get breast cancer.

So when his doctor called to give him the news, Devereaux thought he had called him by mistake.

“I said, ‘Doc, it’s Peter Devereaux,’” he said, thinking his doctor would apologize and hang up.

He didn’t, and within days Devereaux was back at the hospital, getting a bone scan and chest X-ray to see how far the cancer had spread within his body.

A Peabody native and North Andover resident, Devereaux, 50, was diagnosed with stage 3B invasive ductal carcinoma in January 2008. For the past 41/2 years, he has been battling the disease, which doctors discovered had spread to his hips, ribs and spine in 2009.

He is one of 82 men who have been diagnosed with male breast cancer believed to have been caused by water contamination at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina.

“It’s the largest cluster ever recorded,” Devereaux said.

Devereaux signed up for the Marines after graduating from Peabody High School in 1980. He served until December 1984, and in that time spent 16 months at Camp Lejeune.

“On average, you’re 19 years old in the service, you work out like crazy, you work hard, you’re drinking water by the quarts,” he said. “None of us knew about the contaminated water.”

In 2008, Devereaux said he received a letter telling him he may have come in contact with contaminated water. By then, however, he had already found a lump in his chest.

After his diagnosis, Devereaux underwent a mastectomy followed by numerous rounds of chemotherapy and radiation. Doctors removed 22 cancerous lymph nodes.

“It makes you appreciate a lot of things in a hurry,” he said.

In 2009, after he began experiencing shooting pain up his spine, doctors discovered that his cancer had metastasized. He’s still fighting, currently undergoing chemotherapy to beat the cancer.

In the meantime, Devereaux is doing all he can to be an advocate, to raise awareness of male breast cancer. There’s still a perception that breast cancer is a women’s disease, and many men don’t think it can happen to them.

“It’s difficult for a lot of guys to come to grips with having, at the bottom line, a women’s disease,” he said. “We’ve still got a long ways to go, we’ve still got work to be done.”

Fortunately for Devereaux, family and friends have rallied around. One of seven children, Devereaux said his family, his wife and his 15-year-old daughter have been incredibly supportive.

“One thing you learn early on: All my friends, all my family, we all have it. It’s not just me,” he said. “Cancer’s not an individual sport, it’s a team sport.”

Among his biggest supporters has been a group of men with whom he used to play pickup basketball games. Last year, they approached him about organizing a tournament to raise money for breast cancer awareness. It was a success, and this year, the second annual Turkey Shootout, a four-on-four tournament, is scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 24, at 8:30 a.m. at Boston North Fitness Center in Danvers.

This year, all proceeds from the tournament will go to Art, because, a Massachusetts-based organization with a goal to discover breast cancer’s environmental causes.

A former ultra-marathoner and Golden Glove boxer, Devereaux said he’s happy now just being able to walk two or three miles. And as he’s had to make life changes, his friends have adapted, too. Where they used to go out for a drink after work, now they hit the juice bar for a shot of wheatgrass.

“I tell people I’m one of the richest guys I know,” he said.

For more information about Devereaux, visit www.peterdevereaux.com. To register for the Turkey Shootout, email Devereaux at peter_devereaux@yahoo.com.

Cheryl Lecesse can be reached at  978-338-2664 or clecesse@salemnews.com.

Mark my words. vA and the Marines will probably go into a huddle on this. If it appears there will be too many claims filed for boob cancer, they’ll pull the plug on it or declare it’s not been proven to be linked to MEK , Acetone etc.. As for the wives and daughters of servicemen stationed there who should have this misfortune befall them, I can almost guarantee the long face and the Adobe Acrobat denial response in tortured English with dangling participles…

Candygram for Mrs. Mongo!

” We reviewed the facts and evidence of your claim and have come to a decision. While the claimant may sincerely believe that their ailments are attributable to chemical contamination of Camp Lejeune’s water supply, nothing in medical literature support his hypothesis. Breast cancer cannot be dispositively associated with exposure for any the chemicals discovered because breast cancer is so prevelant in all walks on life. Thus this claim must be denied.”

Posted in Camp Lejeune poisoning | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

BVA– HCV BEFORE SERVICE? WHAT ABOUT ESPIRITU?

FROM THE VERNON W.

HOWELL MEMORIAL VARO

IN WHACKO, TEXAS

Before I begin, let me say that this decision is flawed for any number of reasons. The definition below is for RPR, a diagnostic tool for syphilis. In no way shape or form does it pertain to HCV or any hepatic infection. Notice the spelling of reagin versus vA’s version.

Rapid Plasma Reagin (RPR) refers to a type of test that looks for non-specific antibodies in the blood of the patient that may indicate that the organism (Treponema pallidum) that causes syphilis is present. The term “reagin” means that this test does not look for antibodies against the actual bacterium, but rather for antibodies against substances released by cells when they are damaged by T. pallidum.

In addition to screening for syphilis, an RPR level (also called a “titer“) can be used to track the progress of the disease over time and its response to therapy.

Trust those vA examiners to get to the bottom of this one. I do hope the gentleman drops the DAV and gets real legal help before he goes to the Court.

The Veteran’s service treatment records reflect that on the Report of Medical History portion of his January 1974 enlistment physical examination, he answered “don’t know” with regard to whether he had a history of jaundice or hepatitis. There is no discussion of hepatitis in the examination report, and it is noted that serological tests were “non reactive.” There was no diagnosis of hepatitis in service. On the Report of Medical History portion of his separation examination in April 1977, the Veteran answered “yes” to the question of whether he had a history of jaundice of hepatitis.” The examiner at that time noted that the Veteran “has hepatitis agent, notice 1972, NCNS.” A rapid plasma regain (sic) (RPR) test was noted to be non reactive.

So. The Veteran answered yes to a question as to whether he had “hepatitis” in 1977 during his separation physical.  He mentioned as much again in 2007. These are not supported by medical records and, as such, are just hearsay. If you came into court with this at Judge Judy’s, you’d be rode out on a rail. Hearsay. Supposition. Conjecture. All these words come to mind. Do you see the words “under oath” anywhere in all that? I reported the same thing in 1973 on my discharge physical. vA ignored it and said it was “history” unsupported by fact. Johnny must have been more morally upright than I was back then. They pretty much believed everything he said.

In 1992, Mrs.  Jovita Espiritu came to town and put forth an interesting proposition about the etiology of her dead husband’s diseases/injuries incurred in service. Neither she , nor any of her neighbors were doctors yet they tried to make medical diagnoses on numerous occasions over the course of the claim. Thus Jovita was rightfully ensconced in the COVA Hall of Fame along with Norman Gilbert and the others. What Johnny Whacko has done is no more than the same. Perhaps less. All he has testified to is that he”thought he had hepatitis in 1972″. As he isn’t graced with an MD after his name this is simply a subjective assessment with no corroborating evidence to support it. Here’s the the gist of the basis for the necktie party.

 At a September 2007 RO hearing, the Veteran answered “yes” to his representative’s question as to whether he was diagnosed with hepatitis in 1972, prior to entering service. The Veteran further testified that he did not have any flare of or receive any treatment for hepatitis in service. He indicated that he was not aware that he “really had hepatitis, other than, the, I guess the virus,” until six months to a year after service when he attempted to donate blood and was told he had hepatitis.

This says much. It informs us that he was diagnosed with “some form of hepatitis’ detectable by the only test in the western world at the time-the ambiguous Hepatitis Australian Antigens (HAA) one. If it was positive, you had HBV. Negative was taken to mean HAV.  Diagnosis was impossible for HCV. However, if you had visible symptoms and Liver Function Tests (LFTs) that revealed a raging, ongoing jaundiced adventure, it was often said you had Non-A, Non-B hepatitis (NANB). Strangely absent from this medical misadventure is any mention of testing to determine if he has antibodies to HAV or HBV which might illuminate what disease was active in 1972 to the present. Absent this analysis, a doctor (or vA examiner) would be hard pressed to say otherwise. Since Johnny is being accorded so much knowledge, its seems axiomatic that he should be able to opine as to which flavor it was, too. Isn’t that what vA is purporting to hypothesize?

He does a credible job of shooting himself in the foot over his extracurricular activities prior to service but that cannot be considered willful misconduct if it preceded service. Very poor life choices are just that. Until he held up his hand and said I do, he was not violating  38 CFR 3.301 or the UCMJ. He was never arrested for it or had any documented medical proof of disease prior to service so it’s –yep- hearsay. Elevating it to sworn, documented history in the contemporaneous record  doesn’t whitewash it and make it admissible.

He reported at a December 2010 VA examination that prior to his military service, he “never missed a party” and used a lot of drugs, to include intranasal drugs and intravenous drugs. In contrast, he does not recall or identify any similar risk factors in the military. He denies sharing razors or toothbrushes in the military. The Veteran recounted the same history to the examiner of learning he had hepatitis when he attempted to donate blood after service.

So what? I told everyone I was related to Santa Clause when I was 19.  It was a good throw away line for picking up babes. All we have here is a party animal who claims to have shot and snorted a bit prior to service. Nevertheless, he was declared fit for service and,  his vague assertions aside, unsure if he did or didn’t have the dragon prior to service.

 The Veteran’s service treatment records reflect that on the Report of Medical History portion of his January 1974 enlistment physical examination, he answered “don’t know” with regard to whether he had a history of jaundice or hepatitis. There is no discussion of hepatitis in the examination report, and it is noted that serological tests were “non reactive.” There was no diagnosis of hepatitis in service. On the Report of Medical History portion of his separation examination in April 1977, the Veteran answered “yes” to the question of whether he had a history of jaundice of (sic) hepatitis.” The examiner at that time noted that the Veteran “has hepatitis agent, notice 1972, NCNS.” A rapid plasma regain (RPR) test was noted to be non reactive.

The examiner here is referring back to the 1974 statement in the entrance physical. NCNS stands for No complications, No sequelae. “Hepatitis agent” is not a recognized medical term. He concluded that no less than three physicians in 1977 pointed to hepatitis (no particular flavor) based not on medical evidence but on a self-reported history. Would that it was so easy to recite our past to vA and be believed with absolutely nothing to substantiate it. Even more amazing is that Johnny Whacko is now a doctor. Jovita has nothing on him. And, of course, he doesn’t have any evidence of syphilis according to the RPR test. In fact, there is absolutely no mention of syphilis in this whole thing so why the big RPR hoopla?

Even more amazing is the ability to utilize the DeLorean with Mr. Fusion,  capable of venturing back in time and figuring out that this wasn’t any normal hep but the dreaded C.  “How did do do dat?” as my son used to say when he was knee high to a nine inch bottle of Schlitz.

The Board finds that the Veteran’s hepatitis clearly and unmistakably preexisted service based on his own testimony that he was told he had hepatitis in 1972 prior to service; the notation on the April 1977 in-service examination that the hepatitis agent was noted in 1972; his self-report at the December 2010 VA examination of high risk behavior before service; and the December 2010 VA examiner’s conclusion that hepatitis clearly and unmistakably preexisted service.

We see evidence every day of the perfidy and outright pretzel logic utilized to deny claims. I have to admit this is one of the better thought out ones but it reaches too far. If they expect him to never appeal it to the CAVC, then they can rest assured it’s bulletproof. If he appeals, this whole thing is going to come down like the two houses of the legendary pigs under a little huffing and puffing. This is the essence is “absence of evidence is negative evidence”. Worse they take the absence of evidence and build a complete house out of a phrase from a Veteran untrained in the medical arts. Johnny is now a noted gastroenterologist with F.A.C.S. hepatic credentials and credible in all his recollections. vA  seems content to fill in where he gets fuzzy on the etiology.

The only evidence indicating that the Veteran may not have had hepatitis prior to entering service is his own statement on the enlistment examination that he “did not know” whether he had a history of jaundice or hepatitis. His subsequent statements, both as sworn testimony at the RO hearing and as made to the December 2010 VA examiner, are to the contrary.

Any time you or I mangle the timeline of facts in our recitations of memories forty years old, we are called poor historians and our testimony is declared compromised and of little probative value. The more vague Johnboy becomes in his recollections, the more credible his testimony in their eyes-the antithesis of  vA’s usual shtick. How can it be that he knows nothing at entrance to service and gradually is flush with the art of opining  over time? How come Jovita was not accorded similar treatment?  Remember Ben Layno?  The Court  told him categorically that his observations were limited to his five senses (hearing, sight, smell, touch and taste). Thus the mere mention of “Well… I’m not sure, exactly. What does jaundice mean?” would be a good indicator that Johnny Whacko wouldn’t have a clue what hepatitis of any flavor was if it came up and bit him on the ass in 1972-or 2012.

Admittedly, Johnmeister arrived without the nexus somehow. We all know how that works.

a) The dog ate it.

b) Nobody at DAV told him he needed one.

c) Being a doctor, he can provide his own

d) The vA, being standup guys, offered to provide one free of charge because Dr. Bash wanted $6,000.00 for his.

e) All of the above

Nevertheless, after all is said and done, they explicitly believe all he said in 1974, the 2007 discussion (not under oath) with the vA caregiver and the RO hearing in 2010 . How can it be that the BVA comes to this misguided analysis? One might think they had an agenda.

 The Board has considered the Veteran’s testimony and other submitted statements. The Veteran candidly concedes he engaged in high-risk behavior prior to his military service, but that he did not know he had hepatitis until after his military service. To the extent the Veteran himself is opining that his hepatitis C was incurred in or aggravated by service, the Board does not find his opinion probative as he lacks the medical training to offer an opinion with regard to etiology. See Layno v. Brown, 6 Vet. App. 465, 469-70 (1994); see also Visser v. Packer Engineering Assoc., Inc., 924 F.2d 655, 659-60 (7th Cir.1991).

Well, his opinion is highly probative- right up until it isn’t. This pretzel looped back on itself three times before heading south. The Johnster has provided much of the hemp needed for his new Western-style, Bolo tie but suddenly becomes suspect when he says the ” it musta happened in service” phrase. Notice he doesn’t point to any risk? Notice DAV is holding his coat and letting him carry the water? Notice the lack of any meaningful legal help? Johnbo had until August 5th to get his NOA in to the Court. Let’s hope he did and that he finds this.

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BVA–“INTERFERONS” FOR PORPHYRIA CUTANEA TARDA?

This one is too tragic for words. AMLEG is repping this guy and they can’t even get him the right rating. They’re trying to do it under DC 7815 for Porphyria but miss the mark. DC 7704 (Polycythemia Vera) is the only rating for phlebotomies (40%) and everyone knows this. Well, almost everyone, apparently. Hell, the Vet can get an additional 10% for the scarring on top of the 40%.  AMLEG is clueless.

What is spooky is they decided to remand this to find out if he’s getting “Interferons” for this condition. What if he was? Besides being sicker than a dog, I doubt it would have any bearing on the subject-or effect on the PCT for that matter.

What’s worse, if you are getting phlebotomies every three months to control the PCT, how in Sam Hill is the PCT ever going to materialize to such a level as to provoke “bullous pemphigoids” (blisters)?

Knock-knock.

Who’s there?

Logic .

Logic who?

vA logic. Stop the phlebotomies and let’s make your liver trip the metal detector at the airport because of the iron buildup. So what if it provokes early cirrhosis? We need to know.

So here we go. Let’s endanger the Vet’s health and discontinue the phlebotomies with the sure knowledge that:

The examiner indicated that the Veteran’s PCT began when he was 22 years old, and that the Veteran experienced severe skin reactions when he did not get routine phlebotomies. The Veteran had a pint of blood withdrawn every three months as routine treatment for his PCT. The examiner indicated that no eruption was noted during the examination.

Jez. Where’d you park the squad car, Dick Tracy? You don’t just suppose the reason the Vet’s lack of skin disorder has anything to do with phlebotomies?  Round up the usual suspects, Jacques.

Posted in AO, BvA HCV decisions, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

BVA–DUDE, WE LOST THE TAPE RECORDING OF THE HEARING

Gosh. Don’t you hate this when it happens? It’s like when you reach down into the sink drain for the fork that fell in and your wife absentmindedly reaches over and turns on the garbage disposal. Jez, I just hate that when that happens. Similarly, don’t you hate driving 90 miles with no travel pay one-way to do your Board hearing and some gomer calls you up fifteen months later and asks if, perchance, you have the cassette tape of the hearing?

So, five years into it from 2007, and it’s back to the drawing board hearing reschedule in 2013. Wow, this never happens, sir. We’re speechless-literally. Doesn’t anyone check this stuff prior to the Form 8 insertion and the hand off to the Pony Express? Oh. I see. The VSO…

Bummer, dude. Sounds like they may have been checking out those tasty Denver mile-high buds before they were legalized.

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