This is absurd!!!!!!!!!!!

by oldflame 23 Replies latest social current

  • oldflame
    oldflame

    This is so bad people, why are we sitting on our arses and doing nothing about things like this. This young man gave his life, he will probably never have a wife and family for the rest of his life and this is how they are treated ? This administration should be ashamed of themselves and I mean down right on their knees ashamed. Our government is absolutely pathetic and it really pisses me off!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    WASHINGTON, Illinois (CNN) -- Ty Ziegel peers from beneath his Marine Corps baseball cap, his once boyish face burned beyond recognition by a suicide bomber's attack in Iraq just three days before Christmas 2004.

    Ty Ziegel, a Marine, was badly wounded in Iraq. He battled the VA over disability benefits when he returned.

    1 of 3 Click to view next image more photos » alt

    He lost part of his skull in the blast and part of his brain was damaged. Half of his left arm was amputated and some of the fingers were blown off his right hand.

    Ziegel, a 25-year-old Marine sergeant, knew the dangers of war when he was deployed for his second tour in Iraq.

    But he didn't expect a new battle when he returned home as a wounded warrior: a fight with the Department of Veterans Affairs.

    "Sometimes, you get lost in the system," he told CNN. "I feel like a Social Security number. I don't feel like Tyler Ziegel."

    His story is one example of how medical advances in the battlefield have outpaced the home front. Many wounded veterans return home feeling that the VA system, specifically its 62-year-old disability ratings system, has failed them. Watch Ziegel display his model skull »

    "The VA system is not ready, and they simply don't have time to catch up," Tammy Duckworth -- herself a wounded veteran who heads up the Illinois Department of Veteran Affairs -- told the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee in March.

    VA Acting Secretary Gordon Mansfield said cases like Ziegel's are rare -- that the majority of veterans are moving through the process and "being taken care of." He also said most veterans are fairly compensated.

    "Any veteran with the same issue, if it's a medical disability, ... it is going to get the same exact result anywhere in our system," he said.


    Saturday and Sunday, 8 p.m. ET see full schedule »

    More than 28,500 troops have been wounded in Operation Iraqi Freedom, including about 8,500 that have needed air transport, according to the U.S. military. See photos of these Iraq war heroes »

    A recent Harvard study found that the cost of caring for those wounded over the course of their lifetime could ultimately cost more than $660 billion.

    In Ziegel's case, he spent nearly two years recovering at Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas. Once he got out of the hospital, he was unable to hold a job. He anticipated receiving a monthly VA disability check sufficient to cover his small-town lifestyle in Washington, Illinois.

    Instead, he got a check for far less than expected. After pressing for answers, Ziegel finally received a letter from the VA that rated his injuries: 80 percent for facial disfigurement, 60 percent for left arm amputation, a mere 10 percent for head trauma and nothing for his left lobe brain injury, right eye blindness and jaw fracture.

    "I don't get too mad about too many things," he said. "But once we've been getting into this, I'm ready to beat down the White House door if I need to."

    "I'm not expecting to live in the lap of luxury," he added. "But I am asking them to make it comfortable to raise a family and not have to struggle."

    Within 48 hours of telling his story to CNN this summer, the Office of then-VA Secretary Jim Nicholson acted on Ziegel's case. The VA changed his head trauma injury, once rated at 10 percent, to traumatic brain injury rated at 100 percent, substantially increasing his monthly disability check.

    Don't Miss

    Duckworth, the Illinois VA chief, knows exactly what Ziegel and other severely wounded vets are going through. She lost both her legs when a rocket-propelled grenade struck her Blackhawk helicopter on November 12, 2004. Her right arm was also shattered. Watch how Duckworth's wounds changed her life »

    She told CNN she received "incredible care" at Walter Reed for 13 months, but soon realized the transition to the VA wouldn't be as smooth.

    "I started worrying about the fact that maybe this country won't remember in five years that there are these war wounded," Duckworth said.

    Garrett Anderson with the Illinois National Guard, for example, has been fighting the VA since October 15, 2005. Shrapnel tore through his head and body after a roadside bomb blew up the truck he was driving. He lost his right arm.

    The VA initially rejected his claim, saying his severe shrapnel wounds were "not service connected." Watch Anderson describe "my arm was hanging there" »

    "Who would want to tell an Iraqi or Afghanistan soldier who was blown up by an IED that his wounds were not caused by his service over there?" said Anderson's wife, Sam.

    After pressure from Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the VA acted on Anderson's case. He has since been awarded compensation for a traumatic brain injury.

    "It upsets me that the VA system operates in a way that it takes people of power -- and who you know and what you know -- to get what you want," said Anderson, who is now retired.

    When asked about Anderson's case specifically, the VA's Mansfield said such cases make him "more dedicated" to fixing the system.

    In July, President Bush and a commission appointed to review the care of veterans returning from war announced the need for a complete overhaul of the disability ratings system, which dates back to World War II. The VA is now considering action on the commission's recommendations.

    Ziegel eventually won his battle. Still he feels for so many others he believes are getting cheated by the system.

    "We're feeding the war machine, but you never think of the war machine that comes home and needs, you know, feeding back home," he said.

    His family hopes they don't have to fight the VA again. In August, Ty Ziegel's brother, 22-year-old Zach Ziegel, was deployed to Iraq.

    "I want to make the VA system better because if he has to go through anything I went through, that's really going to upset me. That'll make my fuse real short and hot," Ty Ziegel said. E-mail to a friend

    All AboutU.S. Department of Veterans AffairsIraq WarWar and Conflict

  • oldflame
    oldflame

    Hey everyone who lives in other countries that had soldiers fight in Iraq ? Are your soldiers being treated like this also or is it just this country ?

  • ozziepost
    ozziepost

    We had similar experiences downunder following the vietnam War. It's taken years (decades) to finallt see the vets get the recognition that's rightly due to men (and women) who've sacrificed much of their lives in service of their country for a cause, unpopular though it was.

  • darkuncle29
    darkuncle29

    The way beurocracy treats humans makes me .

  • *summer*
    *summer*

    This breaks my heart:-(

    Karma is real. Some people will have to pay...big time!!!

    And payback is a bitch!!!

  • BFD
    BFD

    This is outrageous and unforgiveable. Someone else posted a link to this story earlier this week. It makes me sick!

    BFD

  • ninja
    ninja

    and its okay for bush to swagger about like some hero with his pilot suit on.......in future those who declare wars on anyone should be in the front line leading the troops....that will test their mettle

  • White Dove
    White Dove

    This is so wrong!

  • RisingEagle
    RisingEagle

    Unfortunately for our vets situations like those above are not unusual and not exclusive to the current war. I showed the picture of the young marine vet to my wife and read her the article. She told me that her uncle, a decorated Vietnam honorably discharged vet, had to to sue the V.A. twice in cases that lasted over 7 years, to receive the benefits he now has. Sad and shameful!

    Eagle

  • MsMcDucket
    MsMcDucket

    Yep! We've been fighting the VA for my husband's benefits for years. They hope that the veteran will die. They drag the cases out for years and years and years! My husband was in the Army for 15 years including combat in Viet Nam and a tour guarding the Panama Canal. He just happened to be active duty when he got the malignant schwannoma ( A Agent Orange related disease.). Due to this, he was medically retired from the Army.

    More stories at: www.hadit.com

    And help!

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