WHY WE HAVE AN ARMY

One of the reasons we keep a standing army is to protect our populace from threats within. While rare, they still occur. We need look no further than Hurricane Katrina. Below is one of the reasons Nigeria keeps a standing army-to protect their villagers.

When a village is being decimated one by one, worries about Imperial entanglements and violations of the Posse Comitatus Act seem to pale. This gives a new meaning to “It takes a Village”…

Posted in General Messages | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

PTSD INFO FROM THE VVA

Here’s an intriguing read on how the vA and by extension, the military shortsheets the Vet’s bed. It’s almost criminal. Wait. It is criminal. It’s been going on as long as I can remember. I know because I got a General Discharge and a Shiny DD257 Certificate of Appreciation showing my participation in the BE All You Can Be contest held in SEA.

Casting Troops Aside- The US Military’s Illegal Personality Disorder Discharge Problem

Look, Ma! Third place in the Vietnam Olympics and a neatsy-keen PTSD  personality disorder adjustment disorder to go with it.

Posted in All about Veterans, Gulf War Issues, PTSD, Uncategorized, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

DM2–TIPS AND TRICKS FOR 40%

This was recently sent to me by Member Bob from mosquitoland up north. vA has an ugly habit of denying that leap from 20% to 40% when you ask for it. In fact, they are downright ornery about raising it. See the attached and read and heed. It will make the difference and we all know what happens when we go over 30%-Cupcake and the rugrats are compensated. This isn’t cheating-it’s just smart.

DMII Advice for claim

Excerpt from VA Decision Denial of Increase for Diabetes

P.S. Here’s a late addition from Rocky Mountain High member Randy  on the correlation between HCV and DM2. Valuable info to add to any claim:

Posted in Nexus Information, Tips and Tricks, Veterans Law, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

BVA–BVATION FROM THE NORM

Saturday morning arrived with sunshine. The barking dogs signaled the arrival of the lady with the dog biscuits and the mail. As expected, my big brown envelope from the BVA arrived as well. What I least expected was what was contained therein.

I was prepared for a possible denial of the CUE because the Board is big on writing long tomes like their brethren above. What they are short on is logic or, more particularly, logic that defends their argument. When facts impede the orderly path to said denial, the proper method is to ignore them and talk loudly about the other failures to prove the case. As often as BVA cites to precedental cases to defend their position, they are loathe to employ the stance of Devil’s advocate. Hence, one reads of all the reasons why one hasn’t made his case for CUE and nothing about two Colvin violations where the Board made medical decisions. Judges, like you and me, are not doctors. When they opt to play Ben Casey, they run afoul of Veterans law. They know this. They hope we don’t.

Similarly, the Board was hasty in glossing over the fact that the AF doctors were unable to find anything wrong with my back physically although they acknowledged there was something amiss. This is called the Wilson doctrine. The mere noting of a medical issue in service is sufficient to document what might be a problem later. The phrase is “Symptoms, not treatment are the essence of any evidence of continuity of symptomatology”. I have an unbroken medical record with a small hiatus shortly after service, of back and hip pain. The Board has tried to employ the Maxson ruling to overcome that. Unfortunately, that concept of vA law did not surface until 1999.

The final error that the Board cannot overcome was the presumption of soundness. This is called the Bagby presumption. You were examined from head to toe by doctors  before you entered to prevent what I am trying to do now. If there was something wrong with me in 1969, it would have shown up. They found me healthy and happy then and not so much when I departed. The trick to that is to state that it was “acute and transitory” and resolved before separation. One small defect in the argument pops up when they have to explain why an ortho consult was on the books for March 1973 on my back/hips. I separated in February 1973. Their post hoc rationalization is that God healed me the day before my discharge.

The Board bifurcated my claims into two separate ones. Thus I have one for the CUE on my back/hips and one for Hepatitis/PCT/Tinnitus.

As to the Hepatitis claim, it’s simple. They insist I never mailed in any New and Material Evidence after the SOC. They are right. I mailed it in with my NOD. That is within the one year window of my denial. Semantics are the vA’s greatest weapon against you. They make a grand statement that is unarguably true but distorts the fabric of the claim. Read these highlighted portions:

If you are blind, click on it twice and it will magnify. Now, they had all my records and the C-file shows it all. I know because I have a copy of it. Semantically, the Judge is correct in the second highlighted paragraph. I submitted nothing after the SOC. However, look at the NOD filed December 2nd, 1994:

If I submitted nothing, then why would they tell me they had received my new and material evidence and were promulgating a new decision? Here’s the SOC on Jan. 5th, 1995:

The new decision states quite clearly that I “asserted that an earlier effective date was warranted as he had submitted additional evidence following the issuance of the January 1995 statement of the case”. Now how can anyone screw that up so badly? The records clearly show I submitted the new evidence with the NOD, the SOC said they had it and here is a page from my Form 9 appeal that basically reiterates the same thing:

I often ask myself and others here how the RO and the Board can consistently make errors of this magnitude when they are in possession of all the evidence. The documented error rate is 60+% but no one can fathom why. Prior to this I would have conjectured that it was simply inattention to detail.  Here the evidence leads to only one conclusion and it certainly isn’t what they arrived at. Where did they come up with this tortured interpretation? The answer is obvious.

I have written about one Leroy Macklem and his travails with the RO and the BVA. Granted, his claim had no legs but he was disenfranchised by a little know claim buster dreamed up by the wunderkind at the Head Office. I refer to the Extraordinary Awards Program or EAP as it was know during its brief lifespan. The EAP came to life in a back room without benefit of Congressional approval and said that any decision granting more than $25,000.00 dollars had to be “reviewed” again for errors. That’s vAspeak for revised downward to denial or 0%. It was declared illegal. I submit it is alive and well in an unwritten format. This decision alone, had it been granted, would have set the vA back over $150,000.00 samoles. Add in the CUE on the back and it would have inevitably gone over $200 K.

This means I’m off to see the Wizard on Monday. Filing a Notice of Appeal promptly will get me a docket date sooner. I foresee another year of waiting-interest free of course. I feel this is a gross deviation from the norm for the BVA. Most of these types are approved as it’s easy to see the paper trail and prove it. Here’s the case law as expressed in BVA decisions. It’s buttressed by VAOPGCPREC 9-97:

http://www.va.gov/vetapp98/files3/9826124.txt  Read the introduction

http://www4.va.gov/vetapp99/files3/9927507.txt

http://www.va.gov/vetapp99/files3/9927507.txt

http://www.va.gov/vetapp99/files3/9923709.txt This one occurred in the same time frame as mine.

http://www.va.gov/vetapp99/files3/9926971.txt

The CAVC had this to say recently on the subject:

Section 3.156(b) is intended to be a veteran-friendly provision that allows for the assignment of an effective date of the date of the original claim when certain requirements are met.  72 Fed. Reg. 28,778 (May22, 2007) (explaining that §§ 3.156(b) and 3.400 “provide a claimant-friendly effective date rule for awards based on evidence received while a claim is on appeal or before the appeal period expires”).  To accept the Secretary’s position that the Board correctly determined that the September 1996 RO decision was final would be to allow VA to ignore  this claimant-friendly provision.  It would also create the possibility that VA, by not considering evidence submitted during the one-year appeal period following the RO decision and simply waiting for the RO decision to become final, deprived the appellant of the earlier effective date associated with his December 1995 claim.  This would be antithetical to the nonadversarial, claimant-friendly nature of VA proceedings. See Sanders v. Nicholson, 487 F.3d 881, 889 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (noting “VA’s uniquely pro-claimant benefits system”);    Young v. Shinseki (2009)

Why the Judge and his munchkins failed in their due diligence can only be seen as a desire to avoid the inevitable. Were I not to appeal up to the Big House, they would be Scot free.

I refuse to fall for the ploy of a Motion for Reconsideration or a plea to vacate the decision. This would be akin to a DRO review. They have dug their heels in and are not going to change their minds soon. Any new motion in that venue will simply get more egg on my face. I’m pretty naive. I honestly thought I was dealing with a Veteran-friendly VLJ. In retrospect, it’s fairly obvious who writes his paycheck. We know what that fellow was ordering him to do.

This claim will be decided on one precept-equitable estoppel. I print the definition of it here:

Under the doctrine of equitable estoppel, “he who by his language or
conduct leads another to do what he would not otherwise have done, shall
not subject such person to loss or injury by disappointing the
expectations upon which he acted.” Dickerson v. Colgrove, 100 U.S. 578,
580 (1880). “An essential element of any estoppel is detrimental reliance 
on the adverse party’s misrepresentations.” Lyng v. Payne, 476 U.S. 926,
932 (1986).

I relied on the RO to readjudicate my claim based on the submission of new evidence. This they did not accomplish.  The list of regulations mandating them to do so are numerous. To wit: 38 CFR  §§ 3.156(b), 3.160(c), 19.26, 19.31, 19.32, 19.37(a), 20.302(b)(1994),20.800 and 20.1304(c). Too bad I’m too old to go to law school.

Posted in BvA Decisions, BvA HCV decisions, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

AO COVERUP REVEALED

With all the chicanery and classified secret ops we were running in SEA, it comes as no surprise that this coverup has been suppressed for so long. Our military often operated sotto voce without even a rudimentary oversight by Congress while we were embroiled in the Vietnam Boundary Dispute. New technology in the form of defoliants was all the rage in the late 50s and early 60s. Because of the nascent Green movement and approbation of NIMBY, many new chemicals were effectively precluded from experimentation on US soil. Where better to find out than someone else’s back yard? Hellooooo, Okinawa.

What I find incongruous is that this is still being suppressed by the U.S. as in “Gosh. I don’t know what you’re talking about.” The cat’s out of the bag and all concerned are staring at the ceiling and pretending ignorance or practicing for their denial speeches.

What we don’t know is how many more of these “non-events” will surface in the future. Don’t be surprised to find dioxins mixed in with the Xylenol and Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) down at Camp for the Young (Camp Lejeune) soon. Dow chemical was rather proud of their invention in 1957-so proud that they did very little testing to determine  the long term effects of dioxin or picloram. Hell, they didn’t even test for the short term effects other than how well it killed vegetation. From the standpoint of humans, it was probably considered a plus for collateral damage. Here was a defoliant cum chemical agent that could be deployed without consequence world wide. The military could utilize plausible denial to say they had no idea it might be toxic to humans. Now that there is no defense for that excuse, the next best thing is to dig a deep hole and bury the evidence.

Michelle Gatz must be one tenacious babe. She has succeeded in unearthing everything that the government hoped to keep under wraps. The good news is that tens of thousands of Marines and AF Vets will now get the presumptive. With a little more excavation, those who served in Thailand will eventually get theirs. I’m sure the paper trail will eventually reveal Guam and a host of other sub-tropical environs that had rapid vegetation growth issues.

Ladies and Gentlemen Vets-the unveiling of yet another coverup.

Posted in AO, Medical News, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

CDC–Houston, We Have A Problem…

Those funny guys down at the CDC are so perceptive it scares me. It’s as if they are prescient and realize a problem is brewing. Buried on page A-16 of my local Tacoma fishwrap in a small sidebar, they dutifully report that there may be a problem among baby boomers. That’s right-HCV. Apparently this sneaky little RNA virus can infect you and silently destroy your liver for years without detection. GTFOOH! Who would have thunk it?

In a effort to head off this insidious disease, baby boomers are admonished to get tested for this as it seems America is experiencing an uptick in reported cases. Gee, I guess the CDC and the vA, in spite of being fellow government agencies, are lacking “cross-functional capabilities” that vA stresses they are famous for. Too bad they didn’t do that study to see if jetguns could transmit bugs.

In any event, due to recent medical studies and statistics showing a larger number of reported infections, it behooves civilians between 45 and 60 to get tested. Vets probably don’t need to do this. It is suggested that if they have had any interactions with vA, they probably were tested for it but not told. Those individuals should get a copy of their medical records from ROI and find out themselves because the vAMC is horrendously overworked and backlogged on medical requests of all types currently. They do state they are working towards a 125-day testing model that will be 85% accurate by 2015, but I personally suggest doing it now rather than waiting six-nine months for them.

The speediest way is still to simply go to your local blood bank and donate. They’ll actually tell you in a New York minute if you’re HCV positive which seems to be something the vA is unwilling to do. If you are a Vet and have never been tested, I strongly suggest doing so. The newer commercial tests’ accuracy has improved vastly since the inception of the older methods in the nineties.

Posted in HCV Health, Medical News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Does the VA retaliate?

Often Veterans ask, “Does the VA retaliate”, or is the VA just another ineptocracy:

(in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers.

Of course there are two “schools of thought”…I mean, this is our government, there is no conspiracy to retaliate on Veterans.    The VA didn’t inappropriately shred Veterans evidence in 41 out of 57 Regional Offices.    Well, ok, yes they did that, according to the VAOIG,  but wasnt that the Veterans’ own fault for applying for benefits too many times in too many regional offices?    After all, isnt it going to look bad for politicians as a “non adversarial, pro claimant” VA?

Some would think the VA does, indeed, retaliate.  For example:

http://www.veteranstoday.com/2008/09/08/does-va-have-policy-of-retaliation-against-veterans-advocates/

Or this one:

http://www.uppitywis.org/node/1352/view?destination=taxonomy%2Fterm%2F207%3Fpage%3D2

Or how about this one, that alleges multiple incidents of retaliation?

http://www.vawhistleblower.com/

According to this site, the VA paid out 3.5 million for retaliation:

http://www.navapd.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=602

The last one is more than a bit disturbing.   I would like to know where does the 3.5 million come from?   Does the budget submitted to congress include millions per year for “retaliation lawsuits”?   I tend to think this probably does not come out of the VA Execs’ salary.    Here is an example of why:

http://www.military.com/news/article/2011/vet-organizations-hit-va-executive-bonuses.html

So, does the VA retaliate?  I dont know for sure, but I’m just a “Joe Average Vet”, and it would appear that the VA is long overdue to “take out the trash”, and our politicians havent been getting it done.  I wonder if its time for the VA system to stop having its own “police force” with its own VAOIG.  Maybe we should ask why the fox is guarding the hen house?

Posted in All about Veterans, Complaints Department, Guest authors, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Hyperdrive Fences

Ever had an electric fence? Ever bumped into one? This one, sent in by Member Robert is absolutely the best one I’ve read in years. The title on the email said I’d laugh until I cried. He wasn’t lying.

If you have ever used an electric fence or know someone who has one you should read this. The language used is a bit salty, but ‘he tells it like it is’ without cursing.

If you don’t laugh hysterically at this,….CHECK YOUR PULSE…this is funny….and true. This was sent by a retired dentist, and forwarded by a retired Navy Captain

 


We have the standard 6 ft. fence in the backyard, and a few months ago, I heard about burglaries increasing dramatically in the entire city. To make sure this never happened to me, I got an electric fence and ran a single wire along the top of the fence.

Actually, I got the biggest cattle charger Tractor Supply had, made for 26 miles of fence. I then used an 8 ft. long ground rod, and drove it 7.5 feet into the ground. The ground rod is the key – the more you have in the ground, the better the fence works.

One day I’m mowing the back yard with my cheapo Wal-Mart 6 hp big wheel push mower. The hot wire is broken and lying out in the yard. I knew for a fact that I unplugged the charger. I pushed the mower around the wire and reached down to grab it, to throw it out of the way.

It seems as though I hadn’t remembered to unplug it after all.

Now I’m standing there, I’ve got the running lawnmower in my right hand and the 1.7 giga-volt fence wire in the other hand. Keep in mind the charger is about the size of a marine battery and has a picture of an upside down cow on fire on the cover.

Time stood still.

The first thing I notice is my pecker trying to climb up the front side of my body. My ears curled downwards and I could feel the lawnmower ignition firing in the backside of my brain. Every time that Briggs & Stratton rolled over, I could feel the spark in my head. I was literally at one with the engine.

It seems as though the fence charger and the piece of shit lawnmower were fighting over who would control my electrical impulses.

Science says you cannot crap, pee, and vomit at the same time. I beg to differ. Not only did I do all three at once, but my bowels emptied 3 different times in less than half of a second. It was a Matrix kind of bowel movement, where time is creeping along and you’re all leaned back and BAM BAM BAM you just crap your pants 3 times. It seemed like there were minutes in between but in reality it was so close together, it was like exhaust pulses from a big block Chevy turning 8 grand.

At this point I’m about 30 minutes (maybe 2 seconds) into holding onto the fence wire. My hand is wrapped around the wire palm down so I can’t let go. I grew up on a farm so I know all about electric fences … but Dad always had those piece of shit chargers made by International or whoever that were like 9 volts and just kinda tickled.

This one I could not let go of. The 8 foot long ground rod is now accepting signals from me through the permadamp Ark-La-Tex river bottom soil. At this point I’m thinking I’m going to have to just man up and take it, until the lawnmower runs out of gas.

‘Damn!,’ I think, as I remember I just filled the tank!

Now the lawnmower is starting to run rough. It has settled into a loping run pattern as if it had some kind of big lawnmower race cam in it. Covered in poop, pee, and with my vomit on my chest I think ‘Oh God please die …. Plueeeeaze die’. But nooooo, it settles into the rough lumpy cam idle nicely and remains there, like a big bore roller cam  351 Cleveland waiting for the go command from its owner’s right foot.

So here I am in the middle of July, 104 degrees, 80% humidity, standing in my own backyard, begging God to kill me. God did not take me that day…. he left me there covered in my own fluids to writhe in the misery my own stupidity had created.

I honestly don’t know how I got loose from the wire ….

I woke up laying on the ground hours later. The lawnmower was beside me, out of gas. It was later on in the day and I was sunburned.

 

There were two large dead grass spots where I had been standing, and then another long skinny dead spot where the wire had laid while I was on the ground still holding on to it. I assume I finally had a seizure and in the resulting thrashing had somehow let go of the wire.

Upon waking from my electrically induced sleep I realized a few things:

1 – Three of the fillings in my teeth had melted.

2 – I now have a permanent cramp in the bottoms of my feet and my right butt cheek (not the left, just the right).

3 – Poop, pee, and vomit when all mixed together, do not smell as bad as you might think.

4 – My left eye will not open.

5 – My right eye will not close.

6 – The lawnmower runs like a sumbitch now. Seriously! I think our little session cleared out some carbon fouling or something, because it was better than new after that.

7 – My nuts are still smaller than average yet they are almost a foot long.

8 – I can turn on the TV in the game room by farting while thinking of the number 4 (I’m not sure I understand this).

That day changed my life. I now have a newfound respect for things. I appreciate the little things more, and now I always triple check to make sure the fence is unplugged before I mow.

The good news, is that if a burglar does try to come over the fence, I can clearly visualize what my security system will do to him, and THAT gives me a warm and fuzzy feeling all over, which also reminds me to triple check before I mow.

Posted in All about Veterans, Humor | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

LIMA SITES FROM THE FOOTLOCKER

We had funny names for where we were in Laos. Our base was called Alternate, LS 20 A or LS-98. When you were in country you were “over the fence” or up country. We also referred to it as the “extreme western boundary of the DMZ”. The country was dotted with Lima sites abbreviated as LS. Larger fields were denoted simply as L like Vientiane (L-08) or Luang Prabang (L-54). Some of these air patches traded hands frequently between the Pathet Lao and the Hmong. One had to have an up to date dance card so as not to land in the wrong place. The “Customer” was the CIA- also known as a CAS or controlled American source. CASs had names like Mr. Brown, Mr. Jones and Mr. Smith. UNF was Unknown Nationality of Forces. We carried lists like these that were updated by the Customer every morning.


I found these online shortly after I learned how to turn on a computer. I was trying to find where I was when I got the silver BB. I can’t believe anyone saved them.  Another thing is I don’t know why there are so many marked closed. I personally know we landed at a lot of these to insert/pick up “tourists”. To better view them, click on them twice to magnify.

Posted in From the footlocker | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

MILITARY CANINE ADOPTION PROGRAM

Member Chip just sent this in. He acquired his last month and crime in his neighborhood has decreased markedly.

Nod–

Due to a rise of crime in our neighborhood, we just acquired a guard dog to protect our house.  With the recent military cuts overseas, the US government has developed a new program whereby citizens can apply to adopt retired military canines.  The nice part is he is a year old and already fully trained by the US Marine Corps.

I’ve attached some photos of our new family member below

For your safety, UPON ARRIVING AT OUR HOME please call me from the driveway and REMAIN IN YOUR CAR!!!

I don’t know about you guys but I’m going online and get one of these puppies. I wonder if they come with guns?

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