Friday, December 31, 2010

Lawsuit Demands Misdiagnosed Veterans Receive Benefits, Melissa Ader, Dahr Jamail

Talk Nation Radio for December 30, 2010
Lawsuit Demands Misdiagnosed Veterans Receive Benefits, Melissa Ader, Dahr Jamail
Melissa Ader, Yale Law Student, Dahr Jamail

In their lawsuit, veterans represented by the ACLU say the U.S. Military wrongfully discharged them as having personality disorders. They lost their benefits and are now trying to cope with their real medical problems, PTSD or TBI. (See our interviews here and here with Chuck Luther, founder of the web site, Disposable Warriors. In their lawsuit the ACLU has asked the Military to provide records on some 26,000 Veterans. (Connecticut news reports in The New Haven Advocate here and The New Haven Independent here.

(See part one here

TRT:29:04
Produced by Dori Smith
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here Or at Radio4all.net and Archive.org

We’re joined by Yale Law school student Melissa Ader who is working on a lawsuit involving veterans of the Iraq and Afghan Wars, and journalist Dahr Jamail, author of the book, Will to Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. He discusses his latest reports to Al Jazeera about Military Sexual Trauma. In the first part of our discussion we talked about this problem as a symptom of a dangerous moral decline within the U.S. Military, likely due to protracted wars and intense often brutal training methods. We asked him about the difficulties veterans are having trying to obtain records that could help them obtain benefits.

Taylor Asen is another Yale Law Student working on a case involving veterans. The ACLU has filed a lawsuit over claims of MST, Military Sexual Abuse.

Officially, the number of American and coalition forces killed in action is 6,000. The military lists 32,000 US soldiers as wounded. But 2001 through 2011 have been years of constant stress, and statistics on war trauma are soaring.

According to Yale’s Melissa Ader, the military should include many more soldiers in their list of wounded to include veterans who say they were wrongly discharged by the military. They were quickly diagnosed with having personality disorders and promptly discharged without benefits. Later their real medical problems were diagnosed as PTSD or TBI, traumatic brain injury. These wounds are serious enough to be major obstacles for veterans trying to keep their families together, find work, or even just live their lives safely.

As of the 29th the ACLU told us that the Military has yet to provide anything useful in terms of the records they requested in their FOIA request.

In another case where a FOIA was filed by the same group plus S.W.A.N, the Service Women’s Action Network. There too Yale Law Students like Taylor Asen are working to help victims of Military Sexual Trauma obtain information that might help them to gain benefits.


SEE:
Blumenthal backs veterans' personality disorder discharge lawsuit
December 28, 2010|By MARK SPENCER, mspencer@courant.com, The Hartford Courant,
Connecticut’s Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, has endorsed the efforts of veterans diagnosed with personality disorder, to get information from the Defense Department about wrongful discharges. Blumenthal was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010, replacing Chris Dodd.

See the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, 2007 Press Release: “Personality Disorder”: A Deliberate Misdiagnosis To Avoid Veterans’ Health Care Costs!, here.

GI Rights Hotline Coverage on MST case here.

The Department of Defense (DoD) has violated the law by failing to release records showing that it has wrongfully discharged nearly 26,000 service members on the basis of so-called "Personality Disorder." This Personality Disorder designation has prevented disabled veterans from receiving the disability compensation and other benefits they have earned. Vietnam Veterans of America and its counsel, the Veterans Legal Services Clinic of the Jerome N. Frank Legal Services Organization at Yale Law School, hope that the records they obtain through this lawsuit will convince Congress to mandate a systemic review of these discharges and compel DoD to repair the harm it has caused.

Talk Nation Radio for December 31, 2010
Lawsuit Demands Misdiagnosed Veterans Receive Benefits, Melissa Ader, Dahr Jamail

Produced by Dori Smith, Storrs, CT
Download at Pacifica here or at Radio4all.net and Archive.org

Yale Law school student Melissa Ader talks about the lawsuit she and others at Yale are working on. Veterans of the Iraq and Afghan Wars seeking to regain benefits lost after they were diagnosed with personality disorders. Later even the VA diagnosed them with PTSD and or TBI, Traumatic Brain Injury. These are the hallmark injuries of these wars.

Then journalist Dahr Jamail comments on the problems veterans are having obtaining their records. His December 2010 articles in Al Jazeera focus on cases of MST, Military Sexual Trauma. The problem has reached crisis proportions, and here too the Military has been letting veterans down. Perpetrators of sexual abuse in the military have been getting away without devastating legal consequences. Often they outrank their victims.

Dahr Jamail is author of the books, Will to Resist, Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan; and Beyond the Green Zone, Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq.

Intro: Officially, the number of American and coalition forces killed in action is 6,000. The military lists 32,000 US soldiers as wounded. But 2001 through 2011 have been years of constant stress, and statistics on war trauma are soaring. According to Yale’s Melissa Ader, the military should include more soldiers in their list of wounded, to include the 26,000 veterans who say they were wrongly diagnosed by the military. They were quickly diagnosed with having personality disorders and promptly discharged without benefits. Later their real medical problems were diagnosed as PTSD or TBI, traumatic brain injury. These wounds are serious enough to be major obstacles for veterans trying to keep their families together, find work, or even just live their lives safely.

We spoke with Mellisa Ader on December 17th, and as of the 29th the ACLU has told us that the Military has yet to provide anything useful in terms of the records they requested in their FOIA request. In another case where a FOIA was filed by the same group plus S.W.A.N, the Service Women’s Action Network. There too Yale Law Students like Taylor Asen are working to help victims of Military Sexual Trauma obtain information that might help them to gain benefits.

Headline News, Update, CT AG Supports Veterans Trying to use the Courts in an Effort to Obtain Records.
See Hartford Courant story here. Connecticut’s Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, has endorsed the efforts of veterans diagnosed with personality disorder, to get information from the Defense Department about wrongful discharges. Blumenthal was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010, replacing Chris Dodd.


Headline News Update: CT AG Supports Veterans Trying to use the Courts in an Effort to Obtain Records.
See Hartford Courant story here. Connecticut’s Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, has endorsed the efforts of veterans diagnosed with personality disorder, to get information from the Defense Department about wrongful discharges. Blumenthal was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2010, replacing Chris Dodd.

Stephen Soldz, article, Military using personality disorder diagnoses to cheat soldiers out of lifetime benefits, here.

Historical: May 2008, "Norma J. Perez, PTSD program coordinator at the Olin E. Teague Veterans’ Center in Temple, Texas, tells staff “given that we are having more and more compensation seeking veterans, I’d like to suggest that you refrain from giving a diagnosis of PTSD straight out.” -- Instead, she advises “consider a diagnosis of Adjustment Disorder.” --- Veteran Affairs staff “really don’t ... have the time to do the extensive testing that should be done to determine PTSD,” Perez wrote."

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Happy New Year


Everyone have a fun and safe New Year's Eve and a great and prosperous New Year! Hail!

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Feast Of The Beast Holiday Edition


Hail All! I read recently that pork ribs are a traditional holiday food in Norway, so I figured I'd try to cook some up. This is the first time I've ever done ribs (not sure why, just never have), but they turned out pretty damn good, if I do say so myself.


It was about 39 degrees on this Texas morning when I fired up the coals...





Fire good.













Pork ribs, with some Stubbs BBQ Rub on them.














I put 'em on the outer edges of the fire, so they would cook slowly and not get burned.











I let them cook for a while, maybe 20-30 minutes, just enough to get a good grillin' on the outsides. Then, I took them inside, wrapped 'em in foil, and put them in the oven on 225 degrees for about three hours.









The finished product...they were super-tender. I may add some more spices to the rub next time, but otherwise, it was pretty good. Had some Stubbs BBQ Sauce, rolls, potatoes, and veggies on the side. Good eatin'! Hope you all had a good holiday today! Hail!


















































Thursday, December 23, 2010

Happy Holidays!


Hello all ! Here's to everyone having a safe and happy holiday season! Hail!


Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Dahr Jamail on BP then Veterans with Military Sexual Trauma

Talk Nation Radio for December 22, 2010
Dahr Jamail on BP then Veterans with Military Sexual Trauma

We hear about Dahr Jamail's most recent reports to Al Jazeera on the BP oil spill in the gulf and illnesses that are starting to become life threatening for residents. Plus Military Sexual Trauma in the Military.



TRT:29:02
Produced by Dori Smith in Storrs, CT
Airing on WHUS Radio FM 91.7 Wed. 5 PM
Music by Fritz Heede
(Coming up extended interviews with the Yale Law School students working on cases involving the Military.)

Download at Pacifica's Audioport here or at Radio4all.net and archive.org

Journalist Dahr Jamail joins us to talk about his latest reports in Al Jazeera. He has been focusing on the BP oil spill and also writing Military Sexual Trauma. He says residents and first responders to the spill continue to get sick, many are being tested for toxicity due to both oil and the chemical dispersant that helped sink it to the ocean floor.

Contacts: The Service Women's Action Network, S.W.A.N. Vietnam Veterans of America Miles Foundation, SAAM Public Policy Initiatives, Yale Law School, litigation, VVA,ACLU/Swan, Case, Sergeant Chuck Luther, New Haven Independent story by Lisa Chedekel, December 15, 2010, re litigation, Yale Law Students,

Dahr Jamail's Web Page www.dahrjamailiraq.com here See story, Rape Rampant in the Military, December 21st, 2010 | Al-Jazeera

Statistics and soldiers’ testimonies reveal a harrowing epidemic of sexual assault in the US military.

The numbers of rapes and other types of abuse within the U.S. Military are staggering, according to Dahr Jamail. Victims continue to say that both their commanders and the Department of Defense in general has been ignoring pleas for help.This is part one of a two part special. In part two we hear from Yale Law Students who are helping try cases for soldiers denied benefits because the military wrongly classified them as having "personality disorder" when in fact they have other problems like PTSD or TBI. And MST, in both cases the students are involved in two landmark cases to demand that the military provide information that would be useful to the soldiers in obtaining their rights, and benefits. Many remain out of work due to the military's inaction..

Dahr Jamail is author of two recent books, “Beyond the Green Zone, Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq”, and “The Will To Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan”.

Headlines of Note: Our special centers on the state of the U.S. Military. We are also tracking the breaking news that the Obama administration and DOD are now broadening the scope of the Afghan war, heading further into Pakistan border regions, and maintaining a force in Iraq; the damage is rising in the form of killed and wounded soldiers and civilians.

See: Democracy Now Headlines for December 21, 2010, "U.S. Seeks to Expand Military Raids Inside Pakistan" and:
"The New York Times reports senior U.S. military commanders in Afghanistan are pushing to expand special operations ground raids inside Pakistan. The Times reported the proposed escalation amounts to the opening of a new front in the nine-year-old war. U.S. forces have been engaged in a secret war inside Pakistan for years, but the Pentagon appears ready to openly expand its role. One senior American officer said, “We’ve never been as close as we are now to getting the go-ahead to go across.” "

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Friday, December 17, 2010

Information is Democracy for Iran Policy or Military Sexual Trama Cases: Gareth Porter, Jordan Flaherty and Taylor Asen, Yale Law Veterans Clinic

Talk Nation Radio, for December 16, 2010
Information is Democracy for Iran Policy or Military Sexual Trama Cases
Gareth Porter, Jordan Flaherty and Taylor Asen, Yale Law Veterans Clinic


TRT:29:19
Download at Pacifica Network here then at archive.org and radio4all.net
Produced by, Dori Smith, Storrs, CT and syndicated nationally with Pacifica Network
First broadcast on WHUS Storrs, FM 91.7, a Pacifica Affiliate Station in Connecticut
Wed. 5 PM EST

We’ll hear the second half of our interview with journalist and historian Gareth Porter. He writes for Inter Press Service News and other media outlets and is author of several books including, Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam. Then Taylor Asen, of the Yale Law Veterans Clinic explains why he and other students at Yale Law school filed a FOIA and ultimately a lawsuit to obtain the military records of victims of MST, Military Sexual Trauma. The lawsuit was filed December 15, 2010 with the Connecticut and national ACLU and SWAN, The Service Women’s Action Network. (Case PDF file) And Jordan Flaherty, author of the book, Floodlines, Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six, explains why one group is being called the Wikileaks of New Orleans.

Last time Gareth Porter explained that New York Times reporters including David Sanger had ignored some key information about Iranian missile capabilities while reporting that Iran had acquired a long-range missile from North Korea that could be used to target Europe. We’ll play Gareth Porter’s detailed explanation of what the Wikileaks documents really said about Iranian missile technologies, showing where the New York Times and also Washington Post cherry picked the data. David Sanger and former CIA Director Admiral James Woolsey were interviewed by NPR about this story, and they were also asked to comment on their interpretation that the Wikileaks cables showed that Gulf Arab states were worried enough about Iranian nuclear and missile technology to want the U.S. to attack Iran. Woolsey has been a frequent guest on American radio and TV stations as a commentator on the Middle East, especially Israel and Iran, and Iraq during the start of the Iraq War. (Note article about the Ames affair, and Woolsey's eventual resignation.)

In Israel, the newspaper Haaretz has revealed that Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barack set a kind of deadline for an attack on Iran. Cables released by Wikileaks showed that Barack said he was concerned that unless the attack took place before the end of 2010, collateral damage would be quote unquote, unacceptable. Is war against Iran a possibility for 2010? What might the impact be of letting the hard right wing use cherry picked cables from the Wikileaks documents released recently?

With so much at stake the media has not worked hard enough to get the story straight according to Gareth Porter. He has identified flaws in many reports on Iranian weapons technology, and we’ll hear more about the way the science was dismissed by Russian officials.

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Gareth Porter Debunks NYT Claims of Iranian Missile Threat to Europe

Talk Nation Radio for December 2, 2010
Gareth Porter Debunks NYT Claims of Iranian Missile Threat to Europe

TRT: 29:28
Produced by Dori Smith
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here Or at Radio4all.net and Archive.org



Gareth Porter joins us to talk about this story. He is author of the book, Perils of Dominance, Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam, and writes for Inter Press Service on U.S. policy toward Iraq and Iran.

A few days after the Wikileaks documents appeared online the New York Times reported that they contained indications that Iran had fortified their missile capability with the help of North Korea. Their new missile could reach Europe, the NYT report indicated. But our guest, journalist and historian Gareth Porter, suspected it was yet another Judith Miller, aluminum tubes type story from the Times. His Russian sources were at the same meetings attended by those who spoke about the alleged threat in the leaked documents, and their take on this hypothetical discussion about an Iranian missile threat was very different.They refuted the U.S. claims to Gareth Porter.

See the story by William J. Broad, James Glanz, and David E. Sanger, 'Iran Fortifies Its Arsenal With the Aid of North Korea', 11/28/10, and compare it to Gareth Porter's story in Inter Press Service News, 'Russians Refuted U.S. Claim of Iranian Missile Threat to Europe' 11/30/10).

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