09-07-2010, 07:26
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#1
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 15,370
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Thousands Strain Fort Hood's Mental Health System
About every fourth soldier here, where 48,000 troops and their families are based, has been in counseling during the past year, according to the service's medical statistics. And the number of soldiers seeking help for combat stress, substance abuse, broken marriages or other emotional problems keeps increasing.
{snip}
• Fort Hood counselors meet with more than 4,000 mental health patients a month.
• Last year, 2,445 soldiers were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), up from 310 in 2004.
• Every month, an average of 585 soldiers are sent to nearby private clinics contracted through the Pentagon's TRICARE health system because Army counselors cannot handle more patients. That is up from 15 per month in 2004.
• Hundreds more see therapists "off the network" because they want their psychological problems kept secret from the Army. A free clinic in Killeen offering total discretion treated 2,000 soldiers or family members this year, many of them officers.
• Last year, 6,000 soldiers here were on anti-depressant medications and an additional 1,400 received anti-psychotic drugs.
Thousands Strain Fort Hood's Mental Health System
USAToday, 23 Aug 2010
http://www.usatoday.com/news/militar...m?csp=obinsite
And so it goes...
Richard
__________________
“Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whisky bottle in the hand of (another)… There are just some kind of men who – who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one, and you can look down the street and see the results.” - To Kill A Mockingbird (Atticus Finch)
“Almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.” - Robert Heinlein
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Richard is offline
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09-07-2010, 07:28
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#2
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Occupied America....
Posts: 4,740
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard
• Last year, 6,000 soldiers here were on anti-depressant medications and an additional 1,400 received anti-psychotic drugs.[/I]
[Richard[/COLOR] 
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...regardless of whether or not they actually work. We'll just make them not care that they have a problem.
__________________
"There are more instances of the abridgment of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations"
James Madison
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Ret10Echo is offline
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09-07-2010, 07:48
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#3
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Tampa
Posts: 2,520
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It is unfortunate that now every disciplinary problem, leadership issue, failure to follow instructions or failure to train now begs a psych consult and invariably gets some sort of diagnosis related to "stress".
Gee friggin' whiz...shouldn't soldiers be able to handle a fair amount of stress? I would wager that of all those yahoo's clogging the system, they are preventing adequate care and rehabilitation of the 5-10% of the people who actually NEED to be seen for a REAL Dx of PTSD.
PTSD has become a "chic" diagnosis in the military. "No one wants another Fort Hood"...I hear that statement repeatedly when I call psy services for soldiers who come into the ER with "I have thoughts of hurting myself or someone else"...and in the two hours of medical clearance screening I have to do before psych accepts the patient, they talk on their phone, text, play games on their PSP, bullshit with their "escort" from the unit etc.
Psych is overwhelmed....but it isn't their fault. Some soldiers have PTSD and other real mental health issues....that isn't THEIR fault....but the US Military no longer has the backbone to uphold a standard and make people accountable for their actions. Instead, there has to be some "reason". There must be "someone or something to blame" other than the soldiers lack of intestinal fortitude or moral character. Hence, they get dumped to psych.
We are doing our troops a disservice.
Eagle
__________________
Primum non Nocere
"I have hung out in dangerous places a lot over the years, from combat zones to biker bars, and it is the weak, the unaware, or those looking for it, that usually find trouble.
Ain't no one getting out of this world alive. All you can do is try to have some choice in the way you go. Prepare yourself (and your affairs), and when your number is up, die on your feet fighting rather than on your knees. And make the SOBs pay dearly."
The Reaper-3 Sep 04
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Eagle5US is offline
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09-07-2010, 18:49
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#4
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Area Commander
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: VA
Posts: 1,149
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Why don't we screen some of these weak asses out of the process BEFORE they join the military?
There are a good number of them that are getting the ideas (much like welfare) from family and friends that a "military medical disability" is a gold mine. It's time to start paying outside services to start weeding out the fakes from the ones who really need help. Most of these kids are just lazy and looking for easy money and a way out. One form of welfare to another.
I'll gladly render my services to the military to start bringing fraud claims against some of these people. There are a lot of "disabled" folks that have no disability except laziness and it pisses me off to no end. I am tired of seeing healthy young folks climbing into huge SUV's with military sticker parked in handicapped spots.
People disgust me.
__________________
The question is never simply IF someone is lying, it's WHY. - Lie To Me
We must always fear the wicked. But there is another kind of evil that we must fear the most, and that is the indifference of good men - Boondock Saints
Iraq was never lost and Afghanistan was never quite the easy good war. Those in the media too often pile on and follow the polls rather than offer independent analysis. Campaign rhetoric and politics are one thing - the responsibility of governance is quite another.
- Victor Davis Hanson
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AngelsSix is offline
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09-07-2010, 19:00
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#5
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Arizona
Posts: 5,279
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I agree with the assessment of the 'chic' new way to go...
If you want some time off, an out, or just something fun to do then ante up for 'PTSD'.
This stuff is pushed and GI's are smart enough to figure out that this is a 'pass' for tons of shit.
The active Army and the VA is pushing this crap.
Some need it, got it, but probably can't get a fair shake because of all the posers.
This crap is going to cost billions in disability for all of us and I'd bet 95% that'll get it just went for the gravy train ride.
I have my own experience with the VA shrink trying to get me to sign up and I went to the VA for some education bennies...she screened DD214's for anyone that had been wounded and told them/me that we had to have PTDS. It was a given as far as she was concerned.
What crap.
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PRB is offline
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09-07-2010, 20:33
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#6
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Guest
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PRB
I agree with the assessment of the 'chic' new way to go...
If you want some time off, an out, or just something fun to do then ante up for 'PTSD'.
This stuff is pushed and GI's are smart enough to figure out that this is a 'pass' for tons of shit.
The active Army and the VA is pushing this crap.
Some need it, got it, but probably can't get a fair shake because of all the posers.
This crap is going to cost billions in disability for all of us and I'd bet 95% that'll get it just went for the gravy train ride.
I have my own experience with the VA shrink trying to get me to sign up and I went to the VA for some education bennies...she screened DD214's for anyone that had been wounded and told them/me that we had to have PTDS. It was a given as far as she was concerned.
What crap.
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PRB - my wife, (before we divorced), thought I had PTSD because I couldn't sleep some nights. I simply told her I had worries about my employment, my oldest child starting the 1st grade, my parent's health, generally life's challenges. While she could not sleep for several weeks after she was rear-ended by a drunk.
While I might get teary eyed some days when I begin thinking about a brother who is no longer with us, or a memory enters my dreams, I tend to sleep well, rarely feel angry and rely upon my strength to overcome, adapt and survive.
I believe PTSD is very real for some, and not so real for others. Maybe one could get VA claims for "survivor guilt" or "stress by proxy". I've been wanting to return to school for some time now.
Last edited by wet dog; 09-07-2010 at 23:40.
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09-07-2010, 21:24
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#7
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Asset
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Ohio
Posts: 26
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I can add that my abnormal psych textbook said that 30% of those in any traumatic experience should meet the diagnosis for it, but I had a prof tell us that anyone who goes through trauma will meet the diagnosis for it initially and that we should consider those who heal on their own to be an exception, not the norm. I can't count the number of people who when I have said I want to study PTSD and severe trauma have piped up "I have PTSD from (insert random civilian life event here.) Ancidotally it seems very much in vogue, everywhere.
Not to mention, if the people writing the DSM-V listen to some of the loudest voices, PTSD will be made easier to qualify for, not harder. Under some of the proposed updated guidelines, almost anyone would qualify.
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Revise...V.-a0215844764
"The new proposed Criterion A is: 'The person experienced or was exposed to an event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of self or others. Exposure may be indirect if it involves a close relative or friend or being confronted with aversive details of unnatural death , serious injury, or serious assault to others."
Under these new criterion, all you would need to do is have a friend who had been mugged in an alley and then claim the highly subjective effects of PTSD in order to get the diagnosis.
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SparseCandy is offline
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09-07-2010, 23:35
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#8
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Arizona
Posts: 5,279
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I guess the military world is just catching up with California culture and we all need our own 'therapist'.
We all react dif to stress and 'shell shock' exists, but it does not exist to the extent it's being marketed and sold.
Someone seeking counselling for stress does not nec have PTSD but that's the normal conclusion today.
Wonder how many shrinks the Spartans had at their disposal.
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PRB is offline
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09-09-2010, 00:15
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#9
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Quiet Professional (RIP)
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Carriere,Ms.
Posts: 6,922
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wet dog
PRB - my wife, (before we divorced), thought I had PTSD because I couldn't sleep some nights. I simply told her I had worries about my employment, my oldest child starting the 1st grade, my parent's health, generally life's challenges. While she could not sleep for several weeks after she was rear-ended by a drunk.
While I might get teary eyed some days when I begin thinking about a brother who is no longer with us, or a memory enters my dreams, I tend to sleep well, rarely feel angry and rely upon my strength to overcome, adapt and survive.
I believe PTSD is very real for some, and not so real for others. Maybe one could get VA claims for "survivor guilt" or "stress by proxy". I've been wanting to return to school for some time now.
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wet dog,
As usual we are on the same page together!..............
Big Teddy
__________________
I believe that SF is a 'calling' - not too different from the calling missionaries I know received. I knew instantly that it was for me, and that I would do all I could to achieve it. Most others I know in SF experienced something similar. If, as you say, you HAVE searched and read, and you do not KNOW if this is the path for you --- it is not....
Zonie Diver
SF is a calling and it requires commitment and dedication that the uninitiated will never understand......
Jack Moroney
SFA M-2527, Chapter XXXVII
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greenberetTFS is offline
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09-09-2010, 00:37
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#10
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Quiet Professional (RIP)
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Carriere,Ms.
Posts: 6,922
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard
About every fourth soldier here, where 48,000 troops and their families are based, has been in counseling during the past year, according to the service's medical statistics. And the number of soldiers seeking help for combat stress, substance abuse, broken marriages or other emotional problems keeps increasing.
{snip}
• Fort Hood counselors meet with more than 4,000 mental health patients a month.
• Last year, 2,445 soldiers were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), up from 310 in 2004.
• Every month, an average of 585 soldiers are sent to nearby private clinics contracted through the Pentagon's TRACER health system because Army counselors cannot handle more patients. That is up from 15 per month in 2004.
• Hundreds more see therapists "off the network" because they want their psychological problems kept secret from the Army. A free clinic in Killeen offering total discretion treated 2,000 soldiers or family members this year, many of them officers.
• Last year, 6,000 soldiers here were on anti-depressant medications and an additional 1,400 received anti-psychotic drugs.
Thousands Strain Fort Hood's Mental Health System
USAToday, 23 Aug 2010
http://www.usatoday.com/news/militar...m?csp=obinsite
And so it goes...
Richard 
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Richard,
In your original medical training which I believe was in the early 70's,did you receive any training in spotting early detection of PTSD?...........
I don't know how many of my SF brothers went through PTSD after Vietnam,
but I'd bet my life it's nothing even close to the numbers experience here......
Big Teddy
__________________
I believe that SF is a 'calling' - not too different from the calling missionaries I know received. I knew instantly that it was for me, and that I would do all I could to achieve it. Most others I know in SF experienced something similar. If, as you say, you HAVE searched and read, and you do not KNOW if this is the path for you --- it is not....
Zonie Diver
SF is a calling and it requires commitment and dedication that the uninitiated will never understand......
Jack Moroney
SFA M-2527, Chapter XXXVII
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greenberetTFS is offline
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09-09-2010, 12:27
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#11
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Georgetown, SC
Posts: 4,204
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I've never been in combat. I have many friends who have (most from RVN times). I have found that the guys who were in the deepest shit seem to be the most well-adjusted. They may have "issues" - but they deal with them.
Back then, beer was the drug of choice for dealing with it. Often, it was administered at Friday night or Saturday night "beer calls" after Reserve meetings, with those who could share the load.
__________________
"I took a different route from most and came into Special Forces..." - Col. Nick Rowe
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ZonieDiver is offline
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09-28-2010, 05:03
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#12
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Asset
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Dallas Texas
Posts: 2
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Honestly...
I was in the Army for 7 years. I was a 21B (Combat Engineer). I went to Iraq in 2003 and saw what some call the "worst" during the invasion.
Several years back I had to go to ASAP Counseling for getting drunk and starting a fight at a bar. The damn system is pressing it upon our soldiers to be posers. Everyone in my ASAP group was "Diagnosed with PTSD". Sad fact though, I was the only one there that had been deployed, and most of the "PTSD" cases came from people who just had a too-weak of a wing to fly in the military, and had problems like "my dog died". Seriously, there was a soldier in there for that crap.
My counselors constantly stated that I "must have PTSD" due to the way I acted when I was drunk, and kept testing me for it. When the truth was, I acted drunk when I was drunk...
I simply stated every time that, I have no issues, dreams, or flashbacks about Iraq, and they kept telling me that I was exhibiting signs of PTSD.
I am starting to think that the curriculum that these doctors and counselors are being taught is to blame... The professors in which "know" that it is all related to PTSD!
I look before I cross the street to avoid being hit by a car (as what happened to me once as a kid), but the professionals will say that "this is a form of PTSD". WTF? Seriously?!
[Lack of accountability for ones self, aka Pathway Through the Secret Door (Adjective) = P.T.S.D.]
I do not doubt that there are real forms of it, but I can not even believe that, for one second, most of these claimants are being at least 90% accountable to themselves.
My story, I fucked up, I paid for it, and I corrected it. I didn't blame anything but the person who propagated my actions, me.
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Nystagmus is offline
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09-29-2010, 00:20
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#13
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: OCONUS...again
Posts: 4,702
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nystagmus
My story, I fucked up, I paid for it, and I corrected it. I didn't blame anything but the person who propagated my actions, me.
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Good job there!
Stay safe.
__________________
“It is better to have sheep led by a lion than lions led by a sheep.”
-DE OPPRESSO LIBER-
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Guy is offline
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09-29-2010, 05:57
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#14
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Area Commander
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: VA
Posts: 1,149
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ZonieDiver
I've never been in combat. I have many friends who have (most from RVN times). I have found that the guys who were in the deepest shit seem to be the most well-adjusted. They may have "issues" - but they deal with them.
Back then, beer was the drug of choice for dealing with it. Often, it was administered at Friday night or Saturday night "beer calls" after Reserve meetings, with those who could share the load.
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I second this....
__________________
The question is never simply IF someone is lying, it's WHY. - Lie To Me
We must always fear the wicked. But there is another kind of evil that we must fear the most, and that is the indifference of good men - Boondock Saints
Iraq was never lost and Afghanistan was never quite the easy good war. Those in the media too often pile on and follow the polls rather than offer independent analysis. Campaign rhetoric and politics are one thing - the responsibility of governance is quite another.
- Victor Davis Hanson
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AngelsSix is offline
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09-29-2010, 05:59
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#15
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Area Commander
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: VA
Posts: 1,149
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nystagmus
I was in the Army for 7 years. I was a 21B (Combat Engineer). I went to Iraq in 2003 and saw what some call the "worst" during the invasion.
Several years back I had to go to ASAP Counseling for getting drunk and starting a fight at a bar. The damn system is pressing it upon our soldiers to be posers. Everyone in my ASAP group was "Diagnosed with PTSD". Sad fact though, I was the only one there that had been deployed, and most of the "PTSD" cases came from people who just had a too-weak of a wing to fly in the military, and had problems like "my dog died". Seriously, there was a soldier in there for that crap.
My counselors constantly stated that I "must have PTSD" due to the way I acted when I was drunk, and kept testing me for it. When the truth was, I acted drunk when I was drunk...
I simply stated every time that, I have no issues, dreams, or flashbacks about Iraq, and they kept telling me that I was exhibiting signs of PTSD.
I am starting to think that the curriculum that these doctors and counselors are being taught is to blame... The professors in which "know" that it is all related to PTSD!
I look before I cross the street to avoid being hit by a car (as what happened to me once as a kid), but the professionals will say that "this is a form of PTSD". WTF? Seriously?!
[Lack of accountability for ones self, aka Pathway Through the Secret Door (Adjective) = P.T.S.D.]
I do not doubt that there are real forms of it, but I can not even believe that, for one second, most of these claimants are being at least 90% accountable to themselves.
My story, I fucked up, I paid for it, and I corrected it. I didn't blame anything but the person who propagated my actions, me.
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Good on you for manning up! I am sick of kids today blaming all the shitty attitudes and bad behavior on everything else but themselves!
__________________
The question is never simply IF someone is lying, it's WHY. - Lie To Me
We must always fear the wicked. But there is another kind of evil that we must fear the most, and that is the indifference of good men - Boondock Saints
Iraq was never lost and Afghanistan was never quite the easy good war. Those in the media too often pile on and follow the polls rather than offer independent analysis. Campaign rhetoric and politics are one thing - the responsibility of governance is quite another.
- Victor Davis Hanson
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AngelsSix is offline
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