Posted on 02.20.2017

Plight of the Brave in the Land of the Free

Although there is some disparagement of opinion in the exact number, there is unanimity among everybody that the number of American veterans who commit suicide every day is a travesty, totally unacceptable and needs desperate and immediate attention by the Veterans Administration and every other government entity that could possibly be of help.

The numbers are truly heart breaking, 20 to 22 veterans take their lives every day and the media pays more attention to how many four-letter words were said at the women's march on Washington than they do this catastrophic loss of some of America's finest and most loyal young people.

Congress discusses the trivial and wastes the taxpayers� money on meaningless drivel and are quick to take up the cause of transgender restrooms or bringing poorly vetted groups of refugees into the country, but not one politician has emerged to champion the prevention of veteran suicide.

After decades of being around veterans from several wars, I have come to the rock-solid conclusion that there is no way for a civilian to put themselves into the shoes of a soldier who has served in a combat capacity. I don't think anyone understands except the ones who have experienced war first hand.

We can't possibly understand the pressures, the loneliness, the isolation and the trauma our troops go through and how different it is for them to suddenly walk back into a society that is totally incapable of any kind of affinity or comprehension and how truly alone they must feel.

Please don't get me wrong here, when I say society doesn't understand I include myself. I have never served in the military and, though I have many close associations with those who have, I can by no means understand what drives a person to the edge, where they feel as if they can't stand one more minute of life and ends it all.

I only know that the numbers of veterans who choose to put a permanent end to what should be a temporary problem are heartbreaking and should have been addressed by the powers that be a long time ago.

Whose job is it to address it?

From my point of view, it is the job, no, the obligation of the government who sent them off to war to make veteran suicide a top priority, devote whatever resources and personnel it takes to find a solution, and I believe there are solutions to be found.

This is not a new problem and a concerted effort is long overdue.

There are a lot of devoted medical professionals in the VA, dedicated people who feel their goal in life is to deliver the very best medical treatment available to the men and women who serve in our nation's military.

But - as in the case of any bureaucracy - it is bogged down with career bureaucrats, bean-counters and politically affiliated employees who are more bent on upward mobility than reaching out and efficiently delivering the health care our veterans so desperately need.

We've all heard the stories, veterans with serious conditions put on months long waiting lists, the wasting of one hundred million taxpayer dollars on art to decorate facilities where veterans are dying because of neglect.

I hope and pray that President Trump will be as good as his word, he has promised to take care of our vets and drain the swamp.

In my book, you can't do one without the other.

What do you think?

Pray for our troops, our police and the peace of Jerusalem.

God Bless America

� Charlie Daniels

PLEASE READ BEFORE YOU POST

Feel free to comment on Charlie's soapboxes, but please refrain from profanity and anonymous posts are not allowed, we need a name and you MUST provide a valid email address. If you provide an email address, but leave the name as "Anonymous" we will pick a name for you based on your email address. No one other than website administrators will see your email address, not other posters. If you post without a valid email address, your comment (whether positive or negative) will be deleted. � TeamCDB

Comments

Soapbox today
"You can't do one without the other" yup Charlie I'm agreein' with ya.
Posted by bernadette
Plight of the Brave in the Land of the Free
It seems there is a select few in high positions who totally disregard the price that our men and women pay with their heart, mind and soul to help protect and support our Nation and freedoms that we enjoy. Then they do very little in initiate programs that will help them recover from the atrocities that they experienced and exposed to on the battle field. Oh they have psych meds and psycho-therapy counseling sessions which makes it look they our government is engaged to help our heroes. It all looks good on paper however in the end it is a smoke screen that has absolutely no impact. I appreciate Charlie Daniels who stands in the gap for fighting men. God Bless you Mr. Daniel's, never allow them trolls to discourage you.
Posted by Michael
Veterans Suicide
I am a Veteran. Peacetime so I have no idea what the other Vets are going through. I was suicidal for other reason. I was extremely lucky to call the Veterans suicide line and get a wonderful case worker. She got the problem that I had with the VA resolved. There are some very caring people in the VA. But most of the people there really only care about policy. Jennifer Hamilton was that special person that really saved my life. The VA needs the policy followers out of the VA. They also need to get the process of getting those vets paperwork for compensation put through quicker. It takes 3 to 5 years to get through the process. First attempt they deny. Second attempt they give service connected status but 0% rating. Third attempt they give the not so correct % rating and their compensation money so they can start to pay their bills. By then the Vet feels alone and has already committed suicide. That is just one of the problem. Others are timely appointments. The list goes on and on. I have dealt with the VA since 1981. It was much better back then.
Posted by Christopher
Amen
Amen, Amen & Amen Charlie, you could not be more right about a subject. I have read a lot about the Veteran suicide problem because I have lost more than one friend from it, however, the consensus on it is wider than the Mississippi at flood stage. I personally believe that the VA itself is the biggest part of the problem. I think this because the VA wait times leave many in physical pain that they feel that is unbearable. I think also that the VA uses psychotic drugs that only mask the true problem while the drug increases suicide thoughts in the individual who takes it.Finally anyone who has looked at the use of depleted uranium in our weapons knows that we are only seeing the tip of the iceberg in the cost of human life, pain and suffering from these wars that are being fought without the thought of winning. nuff said God Bless Plowboy
Posted by Plowboy
Veterans
I also hope President Trump follows through on his promise to care for our Veterans. They have more than earned it.
Posted by Julie
Right on, Charlie!
As always.
Posted by Scott
Vet suicide
There is help out there, Mission22 is one such avenue. I am a disabled veteran and starting May 1st am kayaking solo from Quoddy Head Maine to Key West Florida to raise awareness educate about PTSD and to convince vets to serk help. My mantra is one man one mission to save thousands. Acske2017.org
Posted by Joseph
Veteran sucide
Very true and well said we NEED. To provide excellent care for our men and women who have served our country The VA. has provided less than substandard care for veterans Semper Fi
Posted by Patricia
Grace Slick is a better person than you, Charlie
***NOTE**** "John Entwistle," or whatever your real name is, your comment/link did not get posted because it had absolutely nothing to do with the soapbox posted, and if you think Charlie is a bigot (he's not) and Grace Slick is a better person, that is your opinion, and you're welcome to it, but it is irrelevant to the plight os veteran suicide which is what Charlie is addressing. - TeamCDB
Posted by John
Allow veterans access to the natural substances that can help.
As a disabled American veteran recently diagnosed as clinically depressed I urge every patriot to examine the medical research from outside the US on the uses of what we label Schedule 1 narcotics. In fact, when properly administered these substances can be life savers, especially for the suicidal. But in the US the decades necessary to get permission to study them at all are laced with political land mines that have virtually nothing to do with patient health. All I'm asking is for you to do some looking on Google and make up your own mind, because your government is the one group you can't afford to trust.
Posted by Brian
Soldiers Sadness
Charlie, please look into the many many untested, unnecessary vaccines our service members are given. Insane amounts of mercury aluminum and other toxins. It can damage their nervous system. Please watch Trace Amounts. One dtap left this man suicidal. I know it's not all there is but I believe it plays a huge role. President Trump is going to work on these. I wish he knew how many military personnel get. God bless
Posted by Sally
Plight of the Brave in the Land of the Free
Thank you, Charlie, for this message. I can't tell you how much it means to know that someone actually cares. God bless you. Richard
Posted by Richard
Va
💯 agree
Posted by Donna
Veteran Mental Health
I agree that the government is obligated to deal with veteran suicide. But realistically, we cannot rely on the government to do this. I, too, hope and pray that Trump will be as good as his word, but don�t bet on it. And if Trump IS as good as his word, will the government still take care of our veterans after he is president? We need a private sector solution. Hope for the best, PLAN FOR THE WORST. -- Tru Cola
Posted by Tru
When your right your right
Dear charlie Your music was one of the few things my dad and i could agree one. Dad was drafted into vietnam at 18 and struggles his entire adult life with what he had seen and done. I wish he could have found help instead he found the bottle. There were years of my life he was a loving caring dad and there were years he was a mean abusive jerk. He died of a massive heart attack at 56. To this day i still think what impact his time in the army had on me. Because all these vets have families that are impacted by the vets thoughts and decisions. Sucide doesnt just impact the person no longer on earth it impact everyone left behind too. Its hard being the child that cant talk about your expience because you werent the vet. So please remember tge army trains great soldiers but doesnt train tgem how to come back and be parents.
Posted by J