baldeagle wrote:I wrote about Vietnam veterans this morning, because I know those statistics off the top of my head. I didn't write about younger veterans, because I wasn't as sure. Now I am. Suicide rates among younger vets are no different than the general population.
http://archive.redstate.com/stories/war ... g_veterans" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
There are a number of issues with stories about vet suicides. First of all, there's an implied "understanding" that serving in combat drives one crazy. It just has to, doesn't it? I mean, how can anyone kill another person and still be normal? Yet, among Vietnam vets, the ones who served in combat are MORE stable, not less, than the ones who didn't. Liberals (and by that I mean, in this case, journalists) have a belief that serving in war does things to a person that makes them forever different, forever scarred. They are convinced that serving in war leads to mental problems, adjustment issues and a host of other issues that they like to bring up periodically. NONE of them are true, and this can be proven statistically. That doesn't matter. They still trot out these stories every time the DoD releases its statistics on military mortality (active and veteran).
I've been reading these breathless stories about poor veterans who are so beset with their awful memories that they simply can't go on with life since I first picked up a newspaper. They never change. And they're always grossly overblown, completely misleading and easily proven false. As with any population, all the usual human maladies afflict vets just as they do everyone else. But combat is not the cause. Human frailty is.
While I agree with you just about all your points here, there are two, that I personally do take a little different view on.
1. Serving in a conflict zone DOES make you forever different, and I'm not talking about the guys/gals that never once left the wire in 12 months. Thats not to say its a bad thing, and in the overwhelming and vast majority of cases it isn't bad. It causes an individual, at least in my case, to take a very different view on life and society. That change is usually a good one. Now for the small percentage of those that it affects in a negative way you are correct that the media and journalists like to blow it way out of proportion, thats just their MO and always will be. I have issues with super large crowds, cars that are overloaded in the trunk (squatting), loud, unexpected noises, and moderate size fireballs produced from semis hitting a jersey barrier on I35 (I lost it on a family trip when this happened at 2am 2 lanes to my right and a few car lengths in front of us). Are these adjustment issues? Yea, I believe so but I deal with them rationally and calmly as most vets of a combat zone do. However, the same can't be said for everyone. My point is seeing combat does present people with these types of issues regardless of what
official statistics say. Why? Those statistics are skewed because people like me would/do deny on record that those issues exist for fear of being labeled by a government agency/entity.
2. Some individuals that face combat ARE beset with awful memories that they are unable to handle. Everyone will react different when placed through the stresses that combat produces. The larger issue here is the unwillingness or incapability of those vets (or active) to attain help in dealing with those memories. Lets face it, the VA is joke and there is no way around that fact. Barry made it a point in 2008 to claim that vets and fixing the VA were at the top of his priority list, there has been absolutely no ground made on that promise and in fact it's easy to say the VA is worse now than it was pre Jan 09.
On a side note: Sgt. Downing is a complete genius. Its not like anyone with Internet access doesn't also have the ability to find the same knowledge of how to build IEDs and defeat LE techniques. The amount of critical thinking he possess is awe inspiring