120 War Vets Commit Suicide Each Week

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May 13, 2002
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Summary:

There is something so smugly superior in the way we talk about suicide bombers and the cultures that produce them. But here is an unsettling thought. In 2005, 6,256 American veterans took their own lives. That same year, there were about 130 documented deaths of suicide bombers in Iraq. Do the math. That’s a ratio of 50-to-1. So who is it that is most effectively creating a culture of suicide and martyrdom? If George Bush is right, that it is despair, neglect and poverty that drive people to such acts, then isn’t it worth pointing out that we are doing a far better job?​

By Penny Coleman
Republished from AlterNet
The military refuses to come clean, insisting the high rates are due to "personal problems," not experience in combat.

Earlier this year, using the clout that only major broadcast networks seem capable of mustering, CBS News contacted the governments of all 50 states requesting their official records of death by suicide going back 12 years. They heard back from 45 of the 50. From the mountains of gathered information, they sifted out the suicides of those Americans who had served in the armed forces. What they discovered is that in 2005 alone — and remember, this is just in 45 states — there were at least 6,256 veteran suicides, 120 every week for a year and an average of 17 every day.

As the widow of a Vietnam vet who killed himself after coming home, and as the author of a book for which I interviewed dozens of other women who had also lost husbands (or sons or fathers) to PTSD and suicide in the aftermath of the war in Vietnam, I am deeply grateful to CBS for undertaking this long overdue investigation. I am also heartbroken that the numbers are so astonishingly high and tentatively optimistic that perhaps now that there are hard numbers to attest to the magnitude of the problem, it will finally be taken seriously. I…
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DubbC415

Mickey Fallon
Sep 10, 2002
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#3
very interesting, and not at all surprising. Once again we want to point the finger and ridicule other people, all the while we're being hypocritical and dont give two shits about what happens here. Im interested in seeing if most of the vets were homeless, or what their financial status was. Im sure the government really gives a shit about what happens to these vets (as is evidenced by the amount of homeless vets)
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#4
very interesting, and not at all surprising. Once again we want to point the finger and ridicule other people, all the while we're being hypocritical and dont give two shits about what happens here. Im interested in seeing if most of the vets were homeless, or what their financial status was. Im sure the government really gives a shit about what happens to these vets (as is evidenced by the amount of homeless vets)
I've posted a few articles in the past about the alarming number of homeless vets in amerika. very sad.

This reminds me, I was locked up with this guy that served in the first gulf war. He told me how fucked up his health has been ever since he got back and he had terrible nightmares every night, very bad rage, he would trip over the smallest things but prior to the military he was a laid back guy, trouble breathing, bunch of other shit. He said no one would offer him any help, no medical insurance, nothing. Government denied he had post traumatic stress or whatever. Couldn't hold a job because of his problems, wife divorced him because she couldn't deal with him, has no family. Next thing you know, he's living on the streets and committing petty crimes to survive. I never talked to him since but it wouldn't surprise me if dude ended up offing himself. Shits fucked up.