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(Government Technology) Sad Good news, victims of Agent Orange. The VA has a new initiative to solicit input on a proposed fast-track claims process for exposure during Vietnam. You'll be long dead before this ever happens, but hey   (govtech.com) divider line 61
More: Sad, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Agent Orange, good news, military service, Vietnam, Vietnam veterans, veterans, Parkinson's disease  
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1661 clicks; posted to Main » on 11 Mar 2010 at 7:56 PM   |  Favorite    |   share:  Share on Twitter share via Email Share on Facebook   more»   |    Get this fabulous T-Shirt and impress the methane out of your friends! shirt it!



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2010-03-11 05:13:02 PM
My dad is a Vietnam vet who was exposed to Agent Orange, so he's getting a kick from all the health problems he has had.
 
2010-03-11 05:53:14 PM
I'm still waiting for them to admit they gave us the wrong anti-malaria pills when they sent us to the Philippines.

/Spanish-American War.
 
2010-03-11 06:04:25 PM
I nearly lost a crown in the pit with them!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ1RecSXXZ8 (new window)
 
2010-03-11 07:15:19 PM
Nothing burns like fire in the rain.
 
2010-03-11 07:22:33 PM
Wow. To Veterans activists, that smells...that smells like victory.
 
2010-03-11 07:40:22 PM
I'm happy for the vets who get compensation, but not unlike every other intersection between science and politics, the VA is still not operating on firm scientific footing. They're going to pay for a bunch of conditions to which there has never been shown a dioxin link. Ischemic heart disease? Ummm, it's got "ischemic" in the damn name! Maybe that's all reasonable considering the complete denial of the science for so many years, but it's still an example of politics trumping science.
 
2010-03-11 08:03:34 PM
interested:

commentarytrack.files.wordpress.com

/just the guy from the first one, not the over-the-top, never reloading super hero from the sequels
 
2010-03-11 08:03:50 PM
FIL has agent orange exposure and is covered in skin lesions.
 
2010-03-11 08:07:03 PM
cretinbob- Nothing burns like fire in the rain.

No no no- that's napalm. (JK)

But on a serious note- I met a guy who was one of the first American service members on the ground after both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. He's suffered countless cancers and tumors. He hasn't recieved a red cent from Uncle Sam. I'm sure his family will get a nifty plaque or something when he dies. This is not how you treat people who, in good faith, risk their lives for their country. If my nephew even talks to a recruiter I'm going to kick his ass and then I'm going to drag him down to the VA and let him see how much America really loves her heroes.
 
2010-03-11 08:08:40 PM
Hmmmmm, let's see:

Peak years of Vietnam battle: 1967-1970;

Average age, soldiers: 18-22;

Average age today: 60--65;

Average time to die from Agent Orange: 5-15 years;

Average time this would have been worth anything: 1972 to 1985.

'Scuse me, I think I'm going to throw up.
 
2010-03-11 08:08:42 PM
*Insert witty reference to "Trading Places" here*
 
2010-03-11 08:16:34 PM
But I thought all chemicals for killing plants, bugs, and whatnot were perfectly safe! You're telling me they might cause adverse affects on human health? How bizarre.
 
2010-03-11 08:16:57 PM
What about all those Korean War vets who are suing the gov't because all that saltpeter they fed them in boot camp finally started to work?
 
2010-03-11 08:22:41 PM
redsquid: cretinbob- Nothing burns like fire in the rain.

No no no- that's napalm. (JK)

But on a serious note- I met a guy who was one of the first American service members on the ground after both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. He's suffered countless cancers and tumors. He hasn't recieved a red cent from Uncle Sam. I'm sure his family will get a nifty plaque or something when he dies. This is not how you treat people who, in good faith, risk their lives for their country. If my nephew even talks to a recruiter I'm going to kick his ass and then I'm going to drag him down to the VA and let him see how much America really loves her heroes.


If he has not filed a disability claim since about 2006 he needs to go find a rep. to file a new one. The VA finally pulled their heads out of their asses in recent years regarding many things they used to deny. Find him a rep through the VFW or Legion to push his case for him.

If anyone knows of an older vet who should be getting VA benefits and is not for fark sake help them do so. Contact a service organization and ask for help.
 
2010-03-11 08:24:33 PM
Yay just in time for most of the soliders who were exposed to more than likely be dead by now.

Work in a bank and I have a customer whose husband just passed away. He had parkinsons and severe dementia. All of his doctors said it was as a result of Agent Orange exposure. Saddest part is, he died two days prior to the military granting Agent Orange victims full benefit status. Poor guys wife had already spent upwards of a half-million out-of-pocket on long-term care, meds etc. Needless to say she is none to happy about how the military has treated her.

/Cool story bro?
//not so much this time..
 
2010-03-11 08:30:02 PM
Bohemian: redsquid: cretinbob- Nothing burns like fire in the rain.

No no no- that's napalm. (JK)

But on a serious note- I met a guy who was one of the first American service members on the ground after both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. He's suffered countless cancers and tumors. He hasn't recieved a red cent from Uncle Sam. I'm sure his family will get a nifty plaque or something when he dies. This is not how you treat people who, in good faith, risk their lives for their country. If my nephew even talks to a recruiter I'm going to kick his ass and then I'm going to drag him down to the VA and let him see how much America really loves her heroes.

If he has not filed a disability claim since about 2006 he needs to go find a rep. to file a new one. The VA finally pulled their heads out of their asses in recent years regarding many things they used to deny. Find him a rep through the VFW or Legion to push his case for him.

If anyone knows of an older vet who should be getting VA benefits and is not for fark sake help them do so. Contact a service organization and ask for help.


My FIL was contacted by the VA and asked to come in for a checkup in regard to his exposure. He hemmed and hawed, hoping to delay it because his wife is very ill. The VA was really forceful in trying to get him in and checked out thoroughly. He's now on 100% disability, service connected.
 
2010-03-11 08:34:43 PM
See, government-run healthcare works.
 
2010-03-11 08:34:45 PM
olddinosaur: Hmmmmm, let's see:

Peak years of Vietnam battle: 1967-1970;

Average age, soldiers: 18-22;

Average age today: 60--65;

Average time to die from Agent Orange: 5-15 years;

Average time this would have been worth anything: 1972 to 1985.

'Scuse me, I think I'm going to throw up.


N-n-n-n-nineteen.

Nineteen.
 
2010-03-11 08:35:28 PM
I am just wondering what is gonna come up with the current conflict...

some of the buddies who were with me overseas are suffering from a variety of weirdness. They told us during out processing that if we claimed anything was wrong with us we might be kept in country or at least away from the US in germany till they had us all checked out. There was no way we were going to say anything, we didna wanna risk not going home.
 
2010-03-11 08:38:57 PM
The_Sponge: *Insert witty reference to "Trading Places" here*

1.bp.blogspot.com

Agent Orange
 
2010-03-11 08:39:53 PM
JQPublic: See, government-run healthcare works.

Aaaan the flamewar starts.
 
2010-03-11 08:40:38 PM
buffalosoldier: I am just wondering what is gonna come up with the current conflict...

some of the buddies who were with me overseas are suffering from a variety of weirdness. They told us during out processing that if we claimed anything was wrong with us we might be kept in country or at least away from the US in germany till they had us all checked out. There was no way we were going to say anything, we didna wanna risk not going home.


Really? That sucks. My father-in-law had some weird health issues post Gulf War. The VA finally put him on disability after some bureaucratic delay.

I hope you're OK.
 
2010-03-11 08:42:39 PM
Curse you, Veterans Affairs! *shakes fist*
 
2010-03-11 08:43:04 PM
Whores in Calcutta don't have it very good.
 
2010-03-11 08:43:33 PM
His name was Eric. He was a Marine.
 
2010-03-11 08:50:54 PM
atomic-age: FIL has agent orange exposure and is covered in skin lesions.

My dad used to get lesions on his hands. They'd start off small, grow, then connect, and shortly thereafter, he'd lose most of the skin on both hands. As a kid, I'd have to help him replace bandages a couple times a day to prevent the gauze sticking. We'd have to do the fingers individually to keep them from growing together.

The VA was steadfast in their statement that this was not due to Agent Orange, despite his three years in the jungle and constant exposure. Eventually, after seeing a half a dozen specialists, they chalked it up to something akin to athletes' foot. By the mid-80s, this stopped, afaik. So, I guess it has a happy-ish ending.
 
2010-03-11 08:52:03 PM
h2oincfs: olddinosaur: Hmmmmm, let's see:

Peak years of Vietnam battle: 1967-1970;

Average age, soldiers: 18-22;

Average age today: 60--65;

Average time to die from Agent Orange: 5-15 years;

Average time this would have been worth anything: 1972 to 1985.

'Scuse me, I think I'm going to throw up.

N-n-n-n-nineteen.

Nineteen.


I hated that song
 
2010-03-11 09:05:23 PM
My Father was in Nam and exposed to Agent Orange. Back in the 80's he was flown out to New Mexico by the VA so that they could do tests related to the exposure. He has told me that he read some charts about the birth defects and other "complications" that have been attributed to exposure. One of the reports he read claimed that the personnel that handled the chemicals (loaded them on planes, transported them from ships, etc) had a rate of something like 98% developing cancer. Very scary stuff.

Thankfully he has not developed any problems other than some really painful foot problems (cracking and bleeding of callouses) that may or may not be related to agent orange. As far as I am concerned every one of those service members exposed should be compensated and apologized too from the government. Of course that will never happen. So I guess a little bit of something is a whole lot better than a great big nothing.
 
2010-03-11 09:08:14 PM
Considering my father's exposure killed him in 1997, he's not exactly getting a kick out of this.
 
2010-03-11 09:13:20 PM
netflowninjas.typepad.com
 
2010-03-11 09:25:58 PM
ClintonKun: - Hubert J. Farnsworth.jpg

How'd it take that long?

good jorb....
 
2010-03-11 09:31:36 PM
Farking...now?

Really?

Fark them.
 
2010-03-11 09:35:33 PM
4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to Agent Orange, resulting in 400,000 deaths and disabilities, and 500,000 children born with birth defects.

And you are paying health care benefits to the murderers that were there to USE the chemical, instead of to the victims?
 
2010-03-11 09:43:30 PM
almafuerte: 4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to Agent Orange, resulting in 400,000 deaths and disabilities, and 500,000 children born with birth defects.

And you are paying health care benefits to the murderers that were there to USE the chemical, instead of to the victims?



Eat shiat. You're either a troll, or a lame ass moonbat who has never met a Vietnam vet.
 
2010-03-11 09:49:56 PM
The_Sponge: almafuerte: 4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to Agent Orange, resulting in 400,000 deaths and disabilities, and 500,000 children born with birth defects.

And you are paying health care benefits to the murderers that were there to USE the chemical, instead of to the victims?


Eat shiat. You're either a troll, or a lame ass moonbat who has never met a Vietnam vet.


This.
 
2010-03-11 09:55:12 PM
almafuerte

4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to Agent Orange, resulting in 400,000 deaths and disabilities, and 500,000 children born with birth defects.

And you are paying health care benefits to the murderers that were there to USE the chemical, instead of to the victims?


The murderers heroes will be dead by the time the issue gets settled according to this: "In the case of the Vietnam vets, a common phrase used is, 'Sure, they will start paying for 'X' illness when we are all dead,'" Mary Lou McNeill, Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 500 executive director, said in an e-mail. "And in many cases, that is true. For instance, with the new presumptive illnesses added, how many have died after 40-plus years or suffered from the effects without appropriate compensation all of this time?"
 
2010-03-11 10:02:27 PM
What an orange victim might look like:

i146.photobucket.com

/hot
 
2010-03-11 10:10:53 PM
www.montrealmirror.com

I don't remember them being that dangerous...
 
2010-03-11 10:15:49 PM
You want government health care, go pay a visit to the VA hospital and see if you like it.

Death Panels are ridiculous and won't happen?

Ask the agent orange victims.
 
2010-03-11 10:23:42 PM
Shilldog: My dad is a Vietnam vet who was exposed to Agent Orange, so he's getting a kick from all the health problems he has had.

THIS. My favorite uncle suffers from exposure to Agent Orange. He's partially paralyzed, but I'm glad he's still alive.
 
2010-03-11 10:31:57 PM
Nocens: You want government health care, go pay a visit to the VA hospital and see if you like it.

Actually, if you ask around, you'll find that the VA has gotten a LOT better in recent years. My dad hates them with a passion, but he has commented recently that they've really gotten their shiat together.

When I was a kid, we used to spend literally hours in waiting rooms full of angry Vietnam vets. Even when we had appointments, we waited for hours. They were massively understaffed and underequipped, and they were dealing with a lot of guys who were really messed up, physically and mentally. It was a pretty horrible place for a 9-year-old to spend his weekends.

I think all the reports on Walter Reed and the huge outpouring of support for the troops has had a big impact on how things are now. Every patient gets a "team" of doctors, and they seem to be handling their appts with military accuracy all of the sudden. My dad went in for a way-overdue physical, and they've treated him for diabetes, hypertension, and nicotine addiction, and they've given him 2 CTs and tried to give him 2 MRIs. It's so different from the way it was in the 80s, that you can't believe it's run by the same gov't.

Unfortunately, this may be the result of the fact that most of the WWII vets have died by now, and a lot of the Viet vets, too, so the patient load may be lighter. I don't know if Iraq and Afghanistan are messing people up fast enough to replace them.
 
2010-03-11 10:40:27 PM
TheyCallThisWork: Actually, if you ask around, you'll find that the VA has gotten a LOT better in recent years.

I'd never been in one before 2008. I was honestly expecting a depressing and horrible place, but it wasn't. It was efficient, clean and seemed to be well run.

The Boy has absolutely no complaints with any of the care he's received at the VA.

He had some sort of mysterious ouchie in his leg, walked in, got Xrays and some sort of nuclear bone scan (Puntin jokes) thingie, a diagnosis, his prescriptions filled and a schedule of PT appointments.

In comparison, I sprained my wrist and it took over 36 hours for someone to read my Xray. I work in a hospital.
 
2010-03-11 10:41:50 PM
buffalosoldier: I am just wondering what is gonna come up with the current conflict...

some of the buddies who were with me overseas are suffering from a variety of weirdness. They told us during out processing that if we claimed anything was wrong with us we might be kept in country or at least away from the US in germany till they had us all checked out. There was no way we were going to say anything, we didna wanna risk not going home.


It took them over a year to process my paperwork. Meanwhile, the Army was doing everything they could to reduce my rank, and as a result my severance and disability payments, while I was in the precursor to what they are now calling the WTU (warrior transition units). Basically they keep you in a high stress environment and demand you perform to standards you can't possibly meet so when you inevitably fail they can article 15 you a few times and save money.

I'll tell you about my botched VA surgeries another time.

/End rant
 
2010-03-11 11:14:05 PM
Man, when you least expect it...
 
2010-03-11 11:19:19 PM
olddinosaur: Hmmmmm, let's see:

Peak years of Vietnam battle: 1967-1970;

Average age, soldiers: 18-22;

Average age today: 60--65;

Average time to die from Agent Orange: 5-15 years;

Average time this would have been worth anything: 1972 to 1985.

'Scuse me, I think I'm going to throw up.


dude,you make me want to puke,your statistics came stright outta yer axe and dont even begin to consider anomolys. and thats to say nothing off the folks who just went ahead and died without saying anything. you young farkers are gonna be crying about your exposure for years and you just thunk you can write off those that have SERVED before you? fer christs sake,what happened to society and taking care of those who served before?
you young farks act like everyone should die at thirty.
im gonna enjoy every social security chack i can get when i start to collect in a couple years and im gonna say "oh yea. not yours".
and you know what?
you made me that way.
 
2010-03-11 11:37:03 PM
A relative of mine was in the Navy during the Vietnam war. From what he has been told, Navy ships that were on the gun line filtered their drinking water from coastal waters. The coastal waters were highly polluted with Agent Orange run-off. Consequently, Navy personnel who were never sprayed with Agent Orange were exposed to it every day.
 
2010-03-11 11:37:29 PM
The government is only now starting to do something? That stuff is poison to damn near everything.

Issues like this really show how well veterans are treated.
 
2010-03-12 12:01:49 AM
redsquid: cretinbob- Nothing burns like fire in the rain.

No no no- that's napalm. (JK)

But on a serious note- I met a guy who was one of the first American service members on the ground after both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. He's suffered countless cancers and tumors. He hasn't recieved a red cent from Uncle Sam. I'm sure his family will get a nifty plaque or something when he dies. This is not how you treat people who, in good faith, risk their lives for their country. If my nephew even talks to a recruiter I'm going to kick his ass and then I'm going to drag him down to the VA and let him see how much America really loves her heroes.


One of the saddest days of my life was when I was doing door to door non-profit canvassing. The first house was a really nice gentleman who just lost his wife of 60 years. I stayed with him a half hour just talking before I reluctantly left.

An hour or two later, I'm talking to a guy who seems fine but a little detached. I go through my whole spiel, and right about at the end when I'm doing the 'what issue is most important to you' survey, he says "you know, my son died three days ago". I kind of stammer that I'm sorry. He then tells me how he (his son, his only child) signed up for the Army after 9/11 and went to Afghanistan. Came back with depression and PTSD. Started drinking heavily and smashed up his car. Didn't hurt anyone, but it was enough to make him realize he needed help and he went to the VA. Where they told him that they couldn't help his depression/PTSD until he stopped drinking... which was a direct result of his depression/PTSD. I think he tried one or two more times to get help and got nowhere. I saw a friend try to find a sliding scale psych to help him with his, and every single f--king one said they didnt' know how to handle 'combat' PTSD. So if the VA doesn't help you and you don't have decent insurance or a lot of spare cash... But anyway. He hung himself, in their bathroom, three days before I got there. Which I could see from the front door.

The father I was talking to apologized for telling me the whole story, but said he wanted to do what I was doing but for advocating better mental health services for vets. Wanted to channel his grief and anger into something productive. So other kids could be helped and other parents wouldn't have to go through what he was.

Pathetic. Sad and pathetic. How his son was treated. Not the father, although he kept saying that he wished he could have done more to help his son... I kept trying to tell him, over and over, that it wasn't his fault. Christ, that poor man. That was a few years ago... I hope he's okay. The system sure as f--k hasn't gotten much better although I've *heard* they're taking depression and PTSD a bit more seriously. I hope that's more than just PR releases, and I hope they aren't forgetting about vets...

And Hiroshima for f--k's sake. Certain workers at Hanford who were exposed got $150,000 for their exposures, and we can't compensate people on the f--king ground after the bombs? Jesus f--king Christ.
 
2010-03-12 12:07:57 AM
Thanks, assholes. This will really help my uncle a good 20 years too late.
 
2010-03-12 12:14:28 AM
PS

One of my state senators is particularly decent on advocating for vets, but I still sent both a letters after the one-two punch of hearing that guy's story and watching my friend trying to get any sort of help from the VA.

It really doesn't take that long to write a short letter to your Senators or Rep. Email is okay, but I've heard directly from staffers (at the state level, at least) that letters are far more effective. It's easy to delete an email or shoot an auto-reply. You still might get a generic "I care about your concerns..." letter back, but a physical letter from a constituent carries a bit more weight.

Just a thought.

List of addresses, phones, and emails for members of the Senate.

It's worth a few minutes. If you're gonna express outrage on this thread, you might as well take a few more minutes and channel it somewhere where it might, might possibly do something. Sending another quick note myself.
 
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