Thanks. From what I have read on the net. If a applicant signs off for someone else to handle their affairs and finances, or their spouse already handles paying the bills etc. They get on the "list"
Quote from....
http://www.military.com/daily-news/2...reporting.html
The VA can decide that a veteran is no longer mentally fit to handle benefits and finances and will then appoint what is called a fiduciary, often a family member but sometimes an outside party who manages their affairs.
"Under the current practice, a VA finding that concludes that a veteran requires a fiduciary to administer benefit payments effectively voids his Second Amendment rights -- a consequence which is wholly unrelated to and unsupported by the record developed in the VA process," the senator wrote. I also read the Glenn Beck stated a few years ago for vets not to sign off on the form. It may come down to (read before you sign)