DRACO–HCV GODSEND?

I found this in a magazine and immediately did a lot of research on it. DRACO stands for  Double-stranded RNA Activated Caspase Oligomerizers. It was touted as a killer of HIV and innumerable other viruses-some as lethal as Ebola.  What was not mentioned was HCV. I assume that, as a single-strand RNA, it would be just as susceptible to the DRACO slayer. What remains unspoken is if it would cause the “suicide” of the remainder of my few liver cells still functioning. This might be the silver bullet for those of us who haven’t progressed to Stage 4 and cirrhosis and then it may be that we can still avail ourselves of it, too.

What is obvious is that we are on the cusp of a new dawn in drugs-one that will revamp our thinking on all diseases including cancer. If DRACO can induce the suicide of a misbehaving cell producing malignancies, we may all live to a ripe old age. Check it out. The timeline to production looks like it might well be past my shelf life sticker. I wish to volunteer. Having nothing to lose, I should be considered a viable candidate for a guinea pig.

Posted in HCV Health, Medical News | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Forgotten “92%”

According to the VA, about 8% of Veterans are female, which would make about 92% of Vets male.

About 1 in 5 female Vets are victims of MST.

This means men outnumber women in the military by better than 10 to 1.    Of course, the next question is “why”, since we have an all volunteer military, that men make a military commitment ten times as often as women.

I wonder if this would have anything to do with the number above, suggesting that 20% of military women were  sexually assaulted or the recipient of unsolicited amoral attention from superiors.

So, why would women want to join the military, when, after training, the were likely to be working in a largely male organization?

Apparently, they dont.  Less than one in 10 Vets are female.  Can’t say as I blame them.  I wont be joining ballet lessons any time soon, for similar reasons.

I digress.  So, what about the “other 92%”?   I realize that womens’ vote is critical this time of year.  Guess what?  I am not up for election, and am not worried about their vote, so I am not promising to improve health care for 8% of the Veteran population.   Before the women readers start throwing tomatoes at their computer screen, I am not advocating lowering the standards for women Vets health care to meet that of men.   Instead, how about raising the standards for mens health care at the VA, and stop rationing Vets health care in general-regardless of gender?

A few weeks ago, I went to the VAMC with wifey, who also has “VAMC priveleges”. Her waiting room was tastefully decorated, not crowded, and with a minimal wait time.

A pleasant voice calls her by name, and leads her to her medical appointment.  She is in there more than an hour.  It reminds me of when I had insurance and could afford private health care.

I go back to the “men’s” overcrowded VA waiting room.  At least 60 Vets are there, many of them with wheel chairs, and even some moaning in pain. Some are standing, even on crutches, because there are not enough chairs in the waiting room.  They are “hard” chairs, not easy chairs like in the womens waiting room.    The wait is very long.  When you do get to see the doc,  he makes it amply clear you better have what is wrong with you memorized and don’t waste their time with things like a small lump on your back. That one will go away.  “Just the big stuff”.    Was that lump pre cancerous?  We wont be finding out..there is just no time, as the “men’s” side has to see 400 patients per day.   Men should feel lucky if they get to see the doc 4 whole  minutes.    Dont even think of asking for a referral for your arthritis. Just no time for that.

So, your doc, who probably did not speak English as his “first language”, prescribes you some pills, and you begin the two hour wait and multilevel complex process for your prescription at pharmacy, and he tells you to make another appointment in 3 months.  Yea right.

I went to “optical” to make an appointment.  The secretary explained, since there were “no appointments available” in the next 30 days, I would have to “call back the beginning of next month” to try to get an appointment for that month before they get all used up.    Is this not what they call “rationed” health care?  Only so many calls can be taken at once, so if the line is busy..you try to call back the next day..and…you guessed it, all the appointments are taken for the month already.  Try again next month.   Its even worse for Ortho.

It seems my VAMC computers wont schedule an appointment for more than 30 days ahead, so when those are used  up, (usually by the 2d or 3rd of each month) you have to keep calling back to make an appointment, competing with other Vets for those few spots left, when another Vet cancels out.

Wifey had called yesterday, and got an appointment the next day.   I am one of the “other 92 %”   I wish we could vote on health care issues.   If we could, some of those hour long time slots, reserved for females, would be utilized for destitute, or homeless Vets.

Asknod notes:

I, too have encountered the phenomenon known as “Sorry, the computer won’t let us schedule more than a month out.” I have tried for three consecutive months to get an appointment at the Dental clinic for teeth cleaning. Each time I was met with the “Sorry. All filled up. Oddly, when I called the 1st of August at 0700, I got through on the very first try. Imagine my surprise to find out after only 4 minutes in computer time, that the very first date for a cleaning was September 17th at 0715.  Assuming someone isn’t pulling my leg and the computer cannot schedule more that 30 days into the future, I should have ostensibly been on terminal hold for half an hour to be pushed down the calendar to the 17th.

As for the dichotomy between genders, I haven’t encountered that. I decided the last time there to give up on their brand of medical care except for the dental offered. The “hepatologist”, an ARNP, is oblivious to my plight and keeps trying to induce me into the new Teleprevir/IFN/ Ribavirin cocktail even though my records forbid me to be in the same room with Interferon. My regular doctor is so compromised by staff shortages, he sees me twice a year and spends 15 minutes trying to catch up with the problem list. There’s no room for a discussion on my deteriorating condition. He’s worried because I haven’t had a colonoscopy in 3 years. I explained my chances of contracting  something evil was highly probable until they figured out a way to clean them after use. I got the blank stare. He must not read much.

Joe was worried this might offend women Vets. I see it the other way. Perhaps they will recognize they are golden right now. vA is bending over backwards to accommodate them now after decades of neglect. I remember one telling me of the recently converted women’s restroom in 2008 which had a wall urinal in it. Only at the vA, Shirley. Only at the vA. Perhaps for the transgendered? I asked her to get me a picture of this as we know they are worth a thousand words. True to her word, I received this several weeks later. The proximity to one another intrigues me but I know the vA has a reason for everything they do.

Posted in All about Veterans, Guest authors, Medical News | Tagged , , , , | 8 Comments

“If you haven’t figured it out yet, we’re here to talk about jet injectors.”

More excerpts (in italics) from the FDA public hearing on jet-guns 8/9/05

FDA Presenter:  Jason Lipman.  Lead Reviewer. General Hospital Devices Branch.

Definition?

“These devices typically have a large medicinal vial that fills an injection chamber after each subsequent injection. Reusable fluid path injectors are also known as multi-Use Nozzle Jet injectors or MUNJIs, for short.”

How do they work?

“Jet injectors must create high pressure, usually by the use of springs or compressive gas. This high pressure forces the medicinal product out of an injection chamber through an orifice and into the body.”

Let’s skip to the disadvantages of MUNJI-use.

“The focus of our presentation today is the first one, the potential for blood cross-contamination or disease transmission. The second is the potential for laceration injury from improper technique. And this can occur since the jet stream has such a high velocity of jet stream that if you were to actually lift it off the skin prematurely, you could lacerate the skin from that high velocity jet.
There has been one documented case of cross-contamination. This was in California in 1985 at a weight loss clinic. It resulted in a hepatitis B outbreak. In addition to that outbreak, there have been in vivo animal studies and bench laboratory studies that also link these devices to disease transmission.

Just one case of cross-contamination? Quite remarkable when considering that thousands of Veterans have documented HCV infections. And only one common denominator–MUNJI vaccinations.

“So I want to talk about how the cross-contamination occurs. It can occur, as we heard before, about blood actually the skin contacting surface on the injector or that blood or serum can actually go up into the fluid path. And there are a couple of theories as to how that can actually occur.

One is splash-back. Again, the high velocity jet can actually bounce back off the body and back through the small orifice. Or there’s also a thought that the injection, the pocket of fluid in the body is pressurized and pressurizes the tissues…”

Was that a tremble in your weasel-voice? Can or does blood splash back? Are we finally getting some facts? What about the new “improved” jet guns?

“Manufacturers have attempted to mitigate that risk of cross-contamination. The primary design of the mitigations are single-use patient contacting components, such as caps, spacers or sheaths. But there have been no validated methods to assess the effectiveness of these components.
So the challenge of evaluating the potential for disease transmission exists because there’s no consensus on the amount of blood contamination that can potentially transmit disease, and there’s no validated test method for detecting blood cross-contamination....There is global concern about using these devices, the new devices as well, the new MUNJIs. The World Health Organization recommends against MUNJIs use.”

A senseless and abrupt ending:

“I just want to talk a little bit about the purpose of today’s meeting. We’re here to discuss the cross-contamination risk associated with MUNJIs and to discuss the methods that might be used to assess this risk. This concludes my presentation.”

Did he say that no MUNJI-testing at the FDA took place, and if not, why not, given WHO’s position alone? Or just that there was no validated test method–a nod and semi-admission to MUNJI-testing.

Miscellaneous accidental strokes of bad luck?  Or dirty medical devices? Where does the evidence massively point?

Posted in Guest authors, HCV Health, Medical News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

CAVC–CLINE v SHINSEKI–3.156(c)(2)–WELL,NOT EXACTLY

Have you ever been suckered into buying or selling something where you read all the fine print, filled out all the forms and jumped through the hoops? When you were finished, did you then find the “not exactly” clause? Or the Thursday clause as in “Yeah, but we only give that discount on Thursdays, buddy, and this is Monday. Sorry”

Phillip G. Cline hit this wall last year at the BVA. Like Mr. Fred J. Vigil and Mr. Samuel L. Mayhue   who went before him, Mr. Cline discovered the inexorable erosion of our rights that change every moment.

A history of 38 CFR § 3.156(c) is in order. Long ago, we had a regulation hidden in 38 CFR §3.400(q) which provided for the fact that you could, and often did, get denied because of sloppy record keeping. The regulation simply created a narrow exception to the rule and allowed you to submit new and material evidence in the form of existing service records that had never seen the light of day.  If the records were instrumental in proving your case, you won. Period. No ifs, ands, or Thursday rules. More importantly, if you had filed in 1979 for something (and been denied) and the records just came to light that proved your contentions, this would allow you that earlier filing  as your date of entitlement. This could be worth untold thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. The only other way you could go back in time was a CUE filing which is a very arduous path.

After the advent of the PTSD claim and numerous failures by Vets to prove their cases,  the vA decided to modify 3.400(q), move it over to 3.156 and give it its own niche under (c). Also included in this move was a little-noticed codicil (c)(2) that said:

Paragraph (c)(1) of this section does not apply to records that VA could not have obtained when it decided the claim because the records did not exist when VA decided the claim, or because the claimant failed to provide sufficient information for VA to identify and obtain the records from the respective service department, the Joint Services Records Research Center, or from any other official source.

Mr. Vigil got the Texas necktie party from VASEC Peake on this because he failed to show several things at the BVA level:

Mr. Vigil challenged this decision arguing that upon receipt of the USASCRUR records his
initial claim should have been reconsidered pursuant to 38 C.F.R. § 3.156(c) to determine if he was entitled to an effective date earlier than January 25, 1989, the date on which he filed to reopen his PTSD claim. In the decision on appeal, the Board determined that § 3.156(c) did not apply because (1) the USASCRUR records received by the RO had not been misplaced or erroneously omitted from the initial determination and therefore were not the type of record contemplated by the regulation, and (2) there was no diagnosis of PTSD in the record at the time of the original decision denying his claim. Having determined that § 3.156(c) was not for application, the Board declined, pursuant to 38 C.F.R. § 3.400(q)(1)(ii) (2005), to set Mr. Vigil’s effective date for service-connected
PTSD at a date earlier than the date of his claim to reopen. Vigil v. Peake (2008)

The Court tossed that bogus legal reasoning out and gave Mr. Vigil his earlier effective date as well they should have. Mr. Vigil had told them about the incident that provoked his PTSD but they a) ignored him and b) didn’t investigate it. When they finally did, they granted his claim but refused to go back to the earlier date of his first filing. Baaaad idea Dr. Peake. Thus USASCRUR became “acceptable and viable proof ” that had never seen the light of day. While not specifically “Official Military Service Records” per se, they did describe actions from official military records that would support a scrambled eggbrain defense-or any other for that matter.

Sam Mayhue arrived on the heels of Fred Vigil’s win. His circumstances, while being dissimilar in some respects, nevertheless closely paralleled the 3.156(c) case and controversy. Sam’s predicament foundered on the rocks for a number of years because he did what so many of us have done- he let the appeal lapse without pursuing it. When he finally returned and won, vA dutifully told him to go piss on a flat rock. He won his earlier effective date because vA actually had everything needed to grant his claim right there at their fingertips and didn’t bother to tell him about it. You or I would probably go to jail for a stunt like that. At the vA, they promote you and send you up to the Central Office to some exalted high-paying job with a cushy office overlooking Lafayette Square and the Army-Navy Club. I know. I was born in D.C.

Which brings us to Mr. Cline. After getting their collective teeth kicked in twice on this §3.156 thing, you’d assume the 027 General Counsel krewe would look long and hard at the jurisprudence before signing up for a new arm-wrestling competition over it. Not. Like a moth to a bright light, the vA just cannot bring itself to granting retroactive funds in large quantities for any reason. They have gone to great lengths to prevent or ameliorate the practice. We don’t need to look any further than the abortive attempt to hornswoggle us with the Extraordinary Awards Procedure of 2007. Read the Macklem decision if you need to get up to speed on that one.

I’m helping a Vet (member WynWn) who just won her long battle with the vA over a CUE screwing in 1979. She’s won but the non-adversarial vA we’ve all come to know and love like our own parents is now trying the knick-knack, paddy-whack, give the girl a 10% bone and send her rolling home. She’s beginning to suspect they might not be as Veteran-friendly as their PR flacks insist. You’ll hear much more about her travails soon. She has a long, hard road ahead full of Fenderson potholes. Hopefully we at Asknod will be able to show her a path through the maze that is both short and productive. “We” at Asknod is a compendium of dogs, ponies, and goats with a topping of feral cat. They serve too, who only stand and woof, whinny and meow.

Mr. Cline has fallen afoul of the (c)(2) tripwire vA enacted in 2006 when they revised 3.400(q) and moved it over to 3.156(c). You have to understand vA’s mentality. In order to formulate a good denial, they have to construct a palpable story that will permit them to think the way they do.  By carefully laying the groundwork via M 21, any rational investigation would lead down the same road and others following later would agree that they, too would have done the exact same thing under the circumstances. When Mr. Cline filed in 1993, his PTSD stressor questionnaire was rather vague. With no specific instructions to help fill it out, he was left to his own devices. His answers, though vague, raised more important questions- questions that were never asked.

In response to the question, “Did you have any civilian friends killed, wounded,
or executed,” Mr. Cline stated that a “friend drowned” while Mr. Cline was stationed with the 25th Infantry, 3rd Squadron, 17th Air Cavalry, but he did not identify the friend by name. Record (R.) at 1920. In response to the question “How many civilians were involved,” Mr. Cline wrote zero.  Cline v. Shinseki 2012

Allow me to point this out now. Mr. Cline just gave all the information needed to ascertain the stressor here (in 1993).  A man drowned to death. Phil was in Vietnam. And the man was not a civilian. Ruling out alien abduction, vA took the path least-expected and looked at it as a civilian death at home in America that had no bearing on PTSD due to combat in Vietnam. No effort was expended to discover the truth. Nothing was done to illuminate the statement such that a stressor could be developed from it. In the vA’s narrow view, this was proof, submitted by the applicant, in his own words, that the drowning had no bearing on the claim for PTSD. Thus Phillip Cline inadvertently started down the very same road Sam Mayhue did. This whole thing could have been cleared up in short order by the Joint Services Center for Unit Records Research JCURR) investigating and asking a few questions. vA doesn’t work this way. Allow me to rephrase that. vA is not proactive. They are not self-starters. You, the claimant, or your duly appointed representative must lead them to water. Sometimes you have to sit on their heads to get them to drink.

And, much like Mr. Mayhue, Phil finally got around to refiling and doing it by the book this time.  “This time” was 1999. Gee. Sound familiar? I’ve heard of a vA backlog but this was 13 years ago. Things must have been stacking up far worse than the files in Winston -Salem’s RO and none of us knew it.  At any rate, justice and Phil slowly wended their way through the system with repeated denials and lots of trees harvested for their paper.

Which one did you say was Cline”s?

In August 2003, the Philmeister finally noted the omission of a name to tie to the drowning he mentioned in 1993 and promptly submitted it. In March 2005 (yep-19 months later) vA got around to sending it out to JCURR for an assessment on this N&M evidence. Lo and behold, in February 2006 (yep-11 months) the vA acknowledged that the Philster was SC and gave him a whopping 30% for his bent brain syndrome. And then the Fenderson staged-rating party began…

In January 2008, after several interim decisions, the regional office ultimately issued a Statement of the Case granting an effective date of May 6, 1999, for the initial award of benefits for post-traumatic stress disorder, assigning a 50% disability rating for that condition effective from that date, and assigning a 70% disability rating from January 22, 2007. Mr. Cline appealed to the Board.

Cline v. Shinseki supra

vA was more than willing to grant SC for the pretzel brain-make no mistake about it. What they weren’t going to do was go way back a la Vigil and Mayhue. Having learned nothing from these seminal cases, they proceeded to trot out the (c)(2) codicil and wave it gaily in the air. They even dragged in a second argument that tried on the retroactive effect on this as his claim straddled both sides of the 2006 changeover of 3.400(q) into 3.156(c). Their myopic view was that he landed on the wrong side of it. This is where you hear the ghostly echo of Jim Nabors’ voice saying “Surprise. Surprise. Surprise, Sgt. Cline!”

The Court held this up to the light and viewed it from every different angle available and didn’t see what Uncle Eric felt was established law. In fact, they took Vigil and Mayhue apart like automobile engines and viewed their components minutely.  VASEC flunked the audition. In 2006 (then) VASEC Jimbo Nicholson had this to say about his proposed revamping of 3.40o(q):

As the Secretary explained, “[t]his limitation would allow VA to reconsider decisions and retroactively evaluate disability in a fair manner, on the basis that a claimant should not be harmed by an administrative deficiency of the government, but limited by the extent to which the claimant has cooperated with VA’s efforts to obtain these records.” 70 Fed. Reg. at 35,388 (emphasis added). The amendments to § 3.156(c) became effective on October 6, 2006, and were not expressly made retroactive. See 71 Fed. Reg. 52,455 (Sept. 6, 2006).  Consequently, prior to October 2006, the effective date of the amended regulation, there was no limitation on VA’s ability to reconsider previously decided claims in light of the submission of new and material service department records.

Cline v. Shinseki supra

Those guys at the Court like to do the hoist on one’s own petard thing. Then the Court pulled out the old post hoc rationalization game plan and explained why that’s against the law.

The Court in Mayhue expressly declined to address the question of retroactivity squarely raised by Mr. Cline in this case because it found that the information that VA ultimately relied upon to obtain the service department records that formed the basis for granting Mr. Mayhue’s claim had been in Mr. Mayhue’s claims file all along. The Court, therefore, also did not consider whether the addition of § 3.156(c)(2) amounted to a substantive change in regulation.  Id. (“Even assuming the Secretary’s view that § 3.156(c)(2) . . . codified VA’s long-standing practice of limiting reconsideration of claims based on a claimant’s lack of cooperation–the view least favorable to the veteran–the Court finds that § 3.156(c)(2) was not for application in this case.”).[this  was from Mayhue v. Shinseki]

We will now do so.

Cline Supra (emphasis mine)

So here’s the (heavy music, please) DOM DA DOM-DOM. I always like the “gotcha” moment when they let the cat out of the bag.

Here, although the Secretary asserted at oral argument that the addition of subsection (c)(2) was merely intended as clarification of past practice, there is simply no evidence that this is so. In proposing the addition of subsection (c)(2) [in 2005], the Secretary wrote:

We propose in § 3.156(c)(2) to limit the application of this rule by stating that it
“does not apply to records that VA could not have obtained when it decided the claim
because the records did not exist when VA decided the claim, or the claimant failed
to provide VA sufficient information for VA to identify and obtain the records from
the respective service department, the Center for Research of Unit Records, or from
any other official source.” [non adversarial? benefit of the whatchamacallit?] Reconsideration based upon service department records would not be available in cases where the claimant did not provide information that would have enabled VA or another federal agency to identify and search for relevant records. This limitation would allow VA to reconsider decisions and retroactively evaluate disability in a fair manner, on the basis that a claimant should not be harmed by an administrative deficiency of the government, but limited by the extent to which the claimant has cooperated with VA’s efforts to obtain these records.

70 Fed. Reg. at 35,389 (emphasis added). There is no indication in this statement that it had been VA’s regular practice to decline to reconsider prior claims where claimants were found to have provided incomplete evidence. In fact, the use of the auxiliary verb “would” indicates what VA anticipated would happen in the future because of this change.

Cline v. Shinseki supra

So, pilgrims, what we have is a right protected by statute being denigrated in the name of “Well, we always did it that way so we just passed a regulation saying as much. What’s the big deal?” The big deal is it screwed Mr. Cline and any number of Vets following in his footsteps out of some serious walking around money. This mission creep philosophy suffuses all the jurisprudence that emanates from the General Counsel. The habit of trotting out post hoc rationalizations for farting in church on Sunday continues unabated. You would think at some point they’d at least run it by themselves to see how inane and uneducated they’re going to sound when they try to moonwalk this past a bunch of savvy jurists like the Court.

So. What just happened? Precedence was set  according to the Gospel of Saints Hagel and Davis. St. Lance dissented. They have given us a clean decision here- one that rationally throws out the retroactivity interpretation vis a vis JSCRUR records. §3.156(c)(2) may require a slight rewrite to incorporate this for future reference so the General Counsel remembers it. Additionally, this decision was not about just PTSD, but all injury/illness. You could just as easily substitute hemorrhoids, ingrown toenails, or HCV and you’d have the same net effect. It also defined what the meaning of “would” would mean from here on out in (c)(2).

We inhabit a special judicial niche that should always reflect Veterans’ contribution to society and the freedom of our Country. The fact that the one appointed to this task takes a decidedly anti-Veteran position that is invariably wrong and overturned on appeal gives pause for thought. Just how “non-adversarial ” is this process?

Next? Now serving CAVC-16 at Window 3.

Posted in Important CAVC/COVA Ruling, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

COMMUNICATIONS FAILURE

Member Cal sends us this wisdom:

The wife left a note on the fridge “It’s not working, I can’t
take it anymore!! Gone to stay with my Mother.”

I opened the fridge, the light came on and the beer was
cold………What the hell is she talking about?

What? What?

 

Posted in Humor | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

CDC–TIME FOR YOUR CHECKUP, BOOMERS

In a surprising announcement which I just discovered on my facenovel from Pen Lutt Astronutt, the CDC has decided it’s time for a Boomer physical to see how we fared all these years vis a vis HCV. Yes, they are finally getting around to saying we may be in danger of infection. Just now? 2012? Hellloooooo? McFly????

Posted in HCV Health, Medical News | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

VETERANS MEMORIAL MUSEUM–CHEHALIS, WA.

In a rare moment of spare time, I opted to make a one and a half hour run south from Gig Harbor, Washington to Chehalis to the Veterans Museum. It was well worth the journey.

These ladies and gentlemen, and they all are of the highest calibre, gave me a warm welcome. I remodeled a house for a couple 12 years ago. Cupcake happened to run into them at Chez Depot the other day and she mentioned my new book. Scott and Jean said her dad Ernie was a volunteer at the museum on Thursdays so I opted to run down there with some book materials and a poster. Unfortunately Chip Duncan, the Museum director, wasn’t in so my request for a little space was not immediately addressable.

On to the museum. The displays begin with the Revolutionary War and move forward through America’s history touching on most of our spats over the decades. The World War 2 exhibit is especially poignant as it encompasses both my father’s and my uncle’s service.

The Vietnam War exhibits brought back many raw moments. I thought I was immune to these feelings after 40 years. Seems I was wrong. As for displays, rarely have I seen a collection so complete in every regard with attention to accuracy of detail. Few remember, but we had three-pronged tips on our barrels then. I did see one Car-15 (shortened carbine version of an M-16) with the full shroud, but some of those were reported to have that. They had a nice A1 Air Force version with no bolt assist on the right side as well.

M-14 (top) with an A1 Air Force “smoothie” (no bolt assist) below; Bottom is a big favorite of mine- the M-79 we called “Thumper”

Unexpectedly, they have many demilled, DEWATs including two-count them-two M-79 thumpers and a like new M-60. I also spotted a lovely old friend- the venerable G3 .45 grease gun. There must have been a million of those left over from WW2 because they were all over up in Laos. I found an AK displayed in the Afghanistan cases and an old Russian SKS in another cabinet with some Spanish American rifles.

Russian SKS

M-60

Another 40 Mike Mike thumper-this one looks like New In Box

The glare on the cabinet was nasty but here’s a couple of shots of a battle weary old friend. This is the original with the “organ grinder ” handle of the G3. The G3A1 had the more recessed version slotted in on the receiver.

Original G3

G3 .45 cal.

They have no RPG-2 launcher so I agreed to take mine down there when the books arrive next week.

As I mentioned, this is quite possibly the premier destination for Vet Dads this summer.  Here’s the web site and information on it. Rarely do you get this much under one roof in one place. Their collection of old M-2s and Model 1918 HMGs is tremendous. And in addition to guns, they have some beautiful period dress and uniforms from as far back as the Civil War.

This probably isn’t going to be the wife’s cup of tea unless she’s a hardcore vet too, but the sheer volume of artifacts is enough to boggle the imagination. I spent almost two hours in the exhibits. The museum was completed in 2005 and looks like it was built yesterday. The gift shop is well-stocked with all sorts of “gotta haves” as well. If you live up in the northwest corner of the Left Coast, this would be a valuable stop on your way through Chehalis. It’s a hop, skip and a jump off the freeway with a super-easy return. Add in that it’s not on a busy boulevard with a gaggle of people and it makes for a enjoyable outing.

Admission is cheap, too. $5.00 for the 8 percenters and $6.00 for Cupcakes. You can join for $20.00/year and support a wonderful cause, too.

Posted in All about Veterans, From the footlocker | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

FROM MY FACEBOOK

I was sent a private message from one of our illustrious  English”VFW”s abroad in Britain (name withheld to protect contributor Rory and Post 9 of the Falmouth Welsh Guard Vets). Apparently some of the recent returnees of the Afghan “Stripes 4 Wounds” Olympics in Helmand Province were pub surfing and heard several “plus-size women” as Rory so politely put it, discoursing in  a heavy accent. Being a decent chap and having had a few, Rory politely asked “Pardon but are you ladies from Ireland?”

One politely chirped ” It’s Wales, you friggin’ idiot.”

Rory, never to be put off by a momentary awkwardness, looked down, collected himself and said “Right. Sorry, mum. Are you two whales from Ireland?”

Rory’s nose will heal without any visible scars. The left eye will probably never track in unison with the right, somewhat like Marty Feldman’s, but his vision will be unimpaired for the most part.

TY4YS Rory.

 

Posted in All about Veterans, Humor | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Breaking the cycle of Severe VA Claims Folder Hoarding (SVCFH)

“Severe hoarding disorder and disorganization among VA administrators and employees are a black-eye for the agency. We need to do a better job keeping these employees  focused so they aren’t a danger to themselves,” said Ernest Ernest., a Winston-Salem Veteran and founder of the Veterans’ Claims Hoarding Program (VCHP). Working to assist VA employees who, although intelligent and capable, are unable to recall where they put Veterans’ claims folders,VCHP has founded a free National Call Center for VA Claims Folder Hoarder Administrators and Employees.
“Claims hoarders typically suffer from anxiety, anger and depression, have difficulty getting started, staying on task, and keeping their work environment clean and organized. This is a serious, chronic problem and we need to explore the pathological psychology behind this phenomenon from the top down,” said Dr. N. Exus. “These workers are in constant danger of falling through collapsing floors, tripping, bruising, bug bites, respiratory infections and more. They also become delusional because they think they are getting work done, ” he continued. “They have hit rock bottom and many don’t even know it.”

VCHP is planning an event to distribute personal care kits with aspirin, tissue, dust masks, gloves, eye-wash; Limited vouchers for hard hats and adjustable back support braces, wrist and ankle supports are also available for those seeking help.

According to a report by the VA Office of Inspector General, 37,000 C-folders are currently being hoarded in Winston-Salem. “that’s probably just the tip-of-the-iceberg,” Dr. N. Exus added. But with assistance from VCHP, partner organizations, outreach, education, referral, case management, and a few lawsuits, “the end of SVCFH can become a reality,” said Mr. Ernest. “The VA thinks we Veterans are bonkers but sadly, it’s the other way around–as the photographs plainly show.”

The above is a parody but the situation in Winston-Salem is no laughing matter unless you think pathological behavior is funny.

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vA–GSA HAS NOTHING ON US

This just in from Houston and the ever-watchful eye of WGM. In all fairness, he spotted it on Ben’s Blog so we must be honest.

In a show of one-upsmanship, the vA transported 1800 of its employees to the Marriott World Center for a four-day seminar in spa technique-not once but twice- to the tune of $5 mil.  They also set aside $4 million more for future HR events of this caliber.  Very far-sighted indeed.

 

This on the heels of the GSA’s paltry $823,000.00 extravaganza in Las Vegas, was a classic example of “Our agency is better than your agency and we spend way more”. Yes, in a show of extreme gratitude, the vA let down their hair and relaxed their stance towards drinking on the job. And what better way to bitchslap Veterans?

In an interview with a Decision Review Officer  from the Waco RO who wished to remain anonymous, he was ebullient about his experience: ” Dude- we were Extremely Trashed or Hammered the whole time we were there. Get it? ETOH?  My friends were playing golf and they took the cart into a water hazard. Awesome! I even got a tattoo on their dime.”

A good time was had by all

In lieu of the need for these training sessions on a fairly regular basis, Congress is rumored to be eyeing an increase to cover them. The President said he feels they are essential to unit cohesion and promote a more relaxed and better understanding of the rating process. “Good raters are happy raters and we want 98% accuracy”. said the VA Secretary at the news conference announcing the future seminars. We at Asknod concur wholeheartedly. Even money says the Undersecretary for Veterans Benefits Denials was a keynote speaker on the subject of Denial Motivation.

For this, we feel the monthly Alfred E. Neuman “What? Me worry about Public Opinion? Award should be shared co-equally by Aunt Allison and Uncle Eric. Their selfless devotion to duty and a desire to make sure each and every one of us get what’s coming to us is indeed heartwarming.

Next Year it’s Mazatlan, dude.

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