SLEEPLESS IN PUEBLO

Member Randy sent me this today and it burns me up for any number of reasons. We live in the greatest country on the planet and we cannot provide for our own. We ship boatloads of money overseas to Muslim countries like Egypt and Pakistan who are noticeably hostile to our endeavours. Let’s set that aside for a moment and dig deeper.

The article mentions “affordable ” housing for Vets but misses the mark. Is that a description for marginal housing-a toilet and a hot plate? Affordable to me implies the Veteran will be paying for it out of his or her pocket. The article mentions that the Pueblo Housing Authority reclaimed these boarded up buildings and fashioned 16 units specifically for homeless Vets. This begs many questions. Did they do a census of homeless Vets and arrive at the magic figure of sixteen individuals county-wide who would benefit from this largesse? What happens if the numbers are far higher? Do they have provisions for a lottery in place in the event the numbers of Vets exceeds the available units? Is the prognostication of eventual usage predicated on single occupancy or are they planning on packing them in dormitory-style six deep to a unit? While I admire the munificence of what they are doing in Pueblo, Colorado, I question the implementation.

As most of us know, these things metastasize over time. Eventually the administrators’ paychecks overwhelm the fund set aside for this purpose. One homeless person ends up being supervised by three or four $80,000+ per year salaried “homelessness facilitators”. I see many similarities with the vA’s system. They begin by arriving at some magic number of souls who need saving. Next, they formulate a snappy sounding acronym to “brand” it and launch it to great fanfare. How about STARME? Special Team to Assess Recent Military Employees. Instead of hiring more raters to reduce the backlog, they hire Senator Snakebite’s son fresh out of college with a degree in Humanomics and give him a desk at the Central Office. Naturally, he has enormous debts from all his Pell grants so he must be remunerated at “the going rate” of $80+K/year or more. He’ll need assistants, office space and a large budget to flit from city to city to ascertain the depth and breadth of the problem first hand. By the time they get around to apportioning monies out for the Vet who is home-challenged, there is little or none left that can be tapped. More’s the pity. They tried.

Remember Star Wars V when Yoda admonished young Skywalker the padewan after his failure to raise his X-wing out of the swamp? “To try implies defeat. Do. Or do not.” A very simple concept and one the vA is sadly unable to fathom. Congressman Filner aptly stated this to the Hon. Allison Hickey when he defined the definition of insanity as “someone who tries the same thing over and over in hopes of seeing a different outcome.” I think that sums it up.

Oddly the article mentions neither the contributions of our veterans Administration nor the those of the Colorado Department of Veterans Affairs (assuming there is one). After parsing Posada Inc. all over the internet, I found a reference to an outfit that specializes in Bed and Breakfasts in Vermont! I assume it’s the same one that Pueblo’s finest partnered with. How fitting. Who better than a trendy Bed and Breakfast consulting firm with twenty employees to design and supervise the conversion of 16 units into affordable housing for those who shall have borne the battle? Well, let’s see. Did anyone check to find a Veteran-owned construction company who might be interested? Volunteers? Funding from the very Administration tasked with this responsibility?

Once again, we see the Good Ol’ Boy Network hard at work making money for the 1% and paying lip service to the 99%. However in this case its the grand poohbahs of Pueblo who go to Vermont to find a cure for Veteran homelessness in their own front yard. I’m sure the Pueblo folks meant well and I am heartened that some effort was expended towards this worthy goal. I am also reminded of the treatment I and my brothers received after coming home after the war. I ended up on food stamps and Medicaid  in the winter of 1973 after a hepatitis relapse. My story isn’t one of desperation akin to the travails of the Afghan/Iraqi Vets today. They will have it far, far worse than us. Their numbers are swelling daily like the vA backlog and guess who doesn’t have a STARME plan formulated or even a clue of the brewing storm? Remember-they are still myopically engrossed in the present homelessness imbroglio and fail to acknowledge this new threat building. Woe is vA. You can never rest on your laurels in this business.

P.S. Mark my words. When funding for this initiative dries up, Pueblo’s Veterans will be homeless again. This is often the case. A grand gesture is made with no supportive follow through.

Posted in All about Veterans, HOMELESS VETERANS | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

LAST REQUESTS

Member Bob is not getting much work done today but he is emailing an incredibly large number of good jokes out.

The Lone Ranger’s Last Request

The Lone Ranger was ambushed and captured

by a hostile Indian War Party.

The Indian Chief proclaimed,

“So, YOU are the great Lone Ranger”…

“In honour of the Buffalo Hunt,

YOU will be sacrificed in three days.”

“Before we kill you, I grant you three requests”

“What is your FIRST request?’

The Lone Ranger said,

“I’d like to speak to my horse.”

The Chief nodded and Silver was brought

before the Lone Ranger who whispered in

Silver’s ear, and the horse galloped away.

Later that evening, Silver returned with

a beautiful blonde woman on his back.

As the Indian Chief watched,

the blonde entered the Lone Ranger’s tent

and spent the night.

(Picture redacted for obvious reasons)

The next morning the Indian Chief admitted

that he was impressed.

“You have a very fine and loyal horse,”

but we will still kill you in two days.”

“What is your SECOND request?”

The Lone Ranger again asked to speak

to his horse.

Silver came to him,

and he again whispered in the horse’s ear.

As before, Silver took off and disappeared

over the horizon.

Later that evening, to the Chief’s surprise,

Silver again returned,

this time with a voluptuous brunette,

even more attractive than the blonde.

(this picture redacted for same rationale)

She entered the Lone Ranger’s tent

and spent the night.

The following morning the Indian Chief

said:

“You are indeed a man of many talents,”

“But we will still kill you tomorrow.”

“What is your LAST request?”

The Lone Ranger responded,

“I’d like to speak to my horse – alone this time.”

The Chief was curious, but he agreed,

and Silver was brought to

the Lone Ranger’s tent.

Once they were alone,

the Lone Ranger grabbed Silver by both ears,

looked him square in the eye and said,

Listen Very Carefully! FOR…THE…LAST…TIME…

“BRING POSSE!”

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AIR CAV FOREVER

A SHORT DISSERTATION

ON THE THEORY OF FLIGHT

Back in the early 70s when I took my summer vacations in sunny Southeast Asia, we were constantly taken aback by fanatics of rotary wing aircraft. Being Air Force and sane, we couldn’t comprehend how anyone would trust their life to something that defied the laws of common sense. If it didn’t require parachutes, it had no business being in the air.

There are two schools of thought on flight. The dominant, sane one was founded on the Wright Brothers’ concept. The other, flat earth society concept was dreamed up by several and popularized by Igor Sikorsky. Most understand the theory of flight(normal) but are unsure of the other. Simply put, it’s referred to as rotary wing. Yes, Virginia. They took the wing and attached an engine to it. Silly, huh? Sillier still, they decided to trust their lives to it. That’s the Army for you.

After Col. George Custer’s (brevet Maj. Gen.) debacle with the Sioux up in Montana, the Army started investigating new ways to get the cavalry into battle (and out) more rapidly. Voilà! The chopper concept was born. The Army claimed exclusive rights to own and operate this abortion and  got no argument from higher ups. The Air Force, for the most part, had no desire to own and operate rotary wing aircraft and politely acquiesced when given the chance. This was a valuable consideration and gave us more leverage to bargain with them on Forward Air Control later on down the road. Besides, who needs to land in the middle of nowhere? It’s uncivilized. They rarely serve Tanqueray, the tonic water is flat and ice is scarce.  Add in the deficit that good-looking women don’t tend to congregate in these locales and the reason for being there gets murky. Besides, Army types tend to cheat on the tonic water and grind up their quinine pills as a substitute. This may cut down on malaria but is simply not done in civilized circles-even in war.

Most importantly, what everyone in the Army seems to ignore is the obvious aerodynamic deficiency associated with a rotary wing concept. I speak, of course, of the proclivity of a chopper to either spiral down or drop precipitously when power is no longer transferred to the wing overhead. This phenomenon is known to occur when the power plant or its hydraulics ingest pieces of metal-perchance small arms fire. Fixed wing aircraft, when faced with this predicament, tend to glide when power is interrupted. This permits the introduction of parachutes to the formula, an orderly egress and a safe descent back to earth.

Army types have developed all manner of techniques to counter this problem. The most frequent is the auto-rotation ploy. Disengaging the drive for a suitable time until altitude has been lost, they engage the rotor just before impact and arrest the free fall of the aircraft. This has also been describes as a controlled accident. Some actually walk away from it unscathed. Most choppers don’t fare well and the extraordinary number of bent skids on Hueys were testimony to the fact that this technique was dicey. Army types think you can buy anything but gravity is not on that list. Army types are also loathe to point out that this is not always feasible when the tail rotor has been shot away. Their desire to own and operate Edsels is legend. Perhaps rotary wing is just an extension of that mental defect.

Nevertheless, there are a select group of groundpounders cum wannabe airmen who will always choose to ride into battle astride a workhorse. With the demise of the traditional cavalry and the advent of Air Cavalry, they got their wish. Once bitten, there was and is no cure.

To emphasize my point, witness this aberation on the ceiling of what is undoubtedly the home of a former 173rd Airborne member…

We in the Air Force were fond of our Army brethren back in those days and undoubtedly still are. They were adept at capturing enemy airpatches and allowing us an opportunity to bring in the finer things of life like fine Scotch and Cuban cigars to barter with them after the hostilities were concluded. Hell, that’s what comrades in arms do for one another.

I can’t wait to see where the next step in rotary wing (the Osprey) will lead us but if gravity is a portent, their days are numbered too. The Osprey is a classic example of trying to cross an Edsel with a Pinto and put recalled ATV retreads on it. Why not a venerable, proven workhorse like the old PC-6 Porter VSTOL?  They’re virtually indestructible unless you stall out at 300 feet. Even then, you can still walk away from it. I’m living proof.

What isn’t mentioned is that if Jack hadn’t had a hangover and had been watching his airspeed, said tree would not have reached out and hit him. From my perspective and that altimeter in my stomach called the sinking sensation, it was my considered opinion that the airframe contacted the tree moments before it’s inexorable descent into the forest (and the rest of the trees adjacent to it). But that is just conjecture as I didn’t have a rating.

Giving credit where credit is due, member Bob emailed the ceiling artwork to me. Being one of those lovers of all things rotary wing , I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s on the ceiling of his man cave. He probably has a lifetime supply of quinine pills and an Edsel, too.

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HOUSE VA D&P SHOW

Here’s the latest on the vA’s attempt to explain their myriad problems in vAspeak. I admire retired Brig. Gen. Hickey’s vain attempts to convince all that an elephant can indeed disappear up it’s own ass.

P.S. One thing I took away from this is that blondes are living proof that Hydrogen  Peroxide causes brain damage. 98 metrics for bonus awards indeed. Perhaps there should be bonuses for exceptionally disabled Vets?

P.P.S. OMG! 23 million Vets? Our numbers shrank. The census said it was 26 million. If they can’t find 3 million Vets, does this mean they shredded them? Misplaced them? Maybe they’re homeless and don’t count them.

P.P.P.S. They finally realized there’s a problem with DBQs (no place for the nexus). Princess Allison says she put defective DBQs out there that way just to get things rolling. Now we have to reprint the damn things as soon as vA “sees” the problem and fixes them. “We’re working on it” solved everything here. At least the VFW reads this website and noticed the nexus area was absent.

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VA CLAIMS BACKLOG DIRECTLY LINKED TO ERRORS

I finally feel vindicated. The Emperor is acknowledging, or will soon after the dressing down in Congress yesterday, that the reason for the humongous backlog is the high error rate. If the errors promulgated at the VARO were severely reduced or eliminated, the need for the subsequent appeals to remedy the mistake would subside and hence the large number of judicial actions needed to resolve this crisis.

It is axiomatic that Veterans are going to appeal an unwarranted denial of a claim regardless of vA’s rationale. We are far more intelligent and informed in 2012 than we were in the 70s to the 90s. The advent of the internet has given us this knowledge and voice. I’m sure that the vA is less than enchanted at our new-found knowledge and wishes they could live in the splendid isolation they occupied in the past.

This article, again sent in by member Bob who sleuths these things out for a living, is the smoking gun. vA has a plethora of excuses readily assembled and prepared for dissemination every time Congress or Veterans groups assault the gates. They dutifully trot out former Brig. Gen. Allison Hickey, Undersecretary for Veterans Benefits who issues something to appease the media for another week until more bad news crops up. This must be getting embarrassing for her. I do hope they are compensating her for the increased expenditures for makeup for all these “Meet The Press” events. Ah!. Silly me. The bonuses cover that.

It will be interesting to see how vA chooses to counter this assessment. I’m sure it will be richly worded and salted with many references attributing the blame to Veterans.

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IMPORTANT HEALTH TIPS

Member Bob (that irascible scalawag from mosquito country)finds yet another morsel of sage mental, emotional advice. How would we manage without him:

A Doctor was addressing a large audience in Tampa…

‘The material we put into our stomachs is enough to have killed most of us sitting here, years ago. Red meat is awful. Soft drinks corrode your stomach lining..

Chinese food is loaded with MSG. High fat diets can be disastrous, and none of us realizes the long-term harm caused by the germs in our drinking water.

However, there is one thing that is the most dangerous of all and we all have eaten, or will eat it.

Can anyone here tell me what food it is that causes the most grief and suffering for years after eating it?”

After several seconds of quiet, a 75-year-old man in the front row raised his hand, and softly said,
‘”Wedding Cake.”

Only a veteran could ferret out these things we need to know and live by. We commend you on your perspicacity, Bob. A grateful readership turns its collective head towards you in hopes of receiving more of these altruisms.

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AO CLAIMS ALMOST COMPLETE

This just in from member Shawn-vA claims they are virtually caught up with the AO backlog caused by Congress’ addition of the new presumptives on AO. They act like they built the Eiffel Tower overnight from the way it’s reported. Shawn reports. You decide. I don’t see it. Guys like me are going to keep coming back to file as some of these nasty boogers show up-not before. I did go out and get a complete IHD workup from my Cardio doc. (clean). I didn’t trust vA to give me an unbiased QTC C&P.

And so, Veterans, here’s your Grimm’s Faery tales story for the evening. And the hairy cell leukemia lived happily ever after.

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GRANDPA REMINISCES

Member Cal sends us this salty dog. I apologize for the expletive, but in keeping with my desire to avoid censorship, I relent.

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VARO CORRUPTION AGAIN

What should my wondering eyes set upon in this morning’s fishwrap? Why, yet another diatribe about vA personnel scamming the system. Times are hard in this new economic dilemma we find ourselves in. Apparently it is breeding a new paradigm among those grossly under-paid employees among the lower echelon of the vA. How sad that they would choose a life of crime over voting with their feet to find a new job with a higher rate of remuneration. Continue, gentle reader.

The Tacoma News Tribune. page A4, /Wednesday, June 20th, 2012:

Two Veterans  Affairs employees, including a Kent man,were arrested Tuesday on suspicion of of submitting fraudulent claims totaling more than $100,000, according to the U.S. Attorney’s office.

Keischjuan Daniels, 32, of Kent and Nick Hall, 46, of Seattle worked as travel clerks for the VHA in Seattle, processing veterans’ travel  reimbursements to medical appointments.

Prosecutors allege the men recruited five veterans to submit phony vouchers for appointments in eastern Washington and Oregon between January 2011 and May.

The veterans who were given fraudulent payments were charged with conspiracy. Charged were Montez Cornelius of Federal Way; Terazze Taylor of Richland; Timmy Joe Taylor of West Seattle; William Thornton of Normandy Park and Aaron Adams whose hometown was not listed.

If convicted on all charges, Daniels and Hall face up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

How sad. Everyone knows stealing from the government is the worst entity to defraud. Their prosecutorial assets are bottomless (and legend). The pilot I flew with in Laos had one bit of sage advice I have never discarded. Any conspiracy involving more than one person is doomed from the outset. Start with two disgruntled vA employees and stir in a cast of five disabled rocket scientist Veterans. What you have is a recipe for disaster. $100,000.00 dollars? A mere pittance in the scheme of things. As the vA is both pound and penny foolish, pursuing these fellows was a logical progression of what the IG involves itself in. I certainly don’t mean to denigrate their efforts but it seems they are always in pursuit of some worthy goal-only to abandon it and sail off to a new one. This would be notable if it were an aberration. I doubt it is. Chances are the offenders will be quietly transferred to Salt Lick City, rehired and paid a travel allowance for moving there. vA will brook no embarrassments.

All’s well. Everyone relax. No flies on us. Nevertheless, those five Veterans are in deep doo-doo for going along with this and splitting the take. You can take that to the bank. Unfortunately they won’t.

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VA DOG AND PONY SHOW IN DETROIT JUNE 26-28

This was just tweeted to me. It’s priceless. Wow. We can get instant access to everything–except a job. What kind of tobacco have they been smoking? Next thing they’ll be handing out prophylactics too. How about lollipops with “I’m a VA sucker” on them.

Posted in General Messages, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments