Category: Veterans Issues

  • Soldier stops robbers (Link fixed)

    From a link posted by Michelle Malkin on Facebook, a soldier who recently moved to Colorado from Fort Hood, TX foiled two thieves when they tried to rob him and his wife on the street.

    The couple was out for a walk in a neighborhood near Fairmont Place and Fairmont Drive when two masked men approached them.

    The man, a soldier, has a concealed carry permit and was carrying a gun, police said.

    The soldier confronted the robbers with the gun, police said. Police tell us one of the robbers pointed what appeared to be a handgun at the couple. That’s when the man fired one shot in the suspect’s direction, police said.

    Armed military veterans walking the streets. The country couldn’t be in better hands.

  • Try again, Junior

    TSO sends the above pictured Navy guy who weeps on the “We are the 99%” website about all of the things that get done to him. Of course, all of those things can be corrected, if he can summon the patience to do something besides bitch about his bad luck. But I guess it’s just easier to write your problems on a piece of paper and show it to the hippies.

    If anyone else has the same problems, contact us and we’ll get something done about it…but we won’t let you publicly humiliate all of us with your willful ignorance and sloth.

  • Colbert Report: The 1%

    Nothing I haven’t already said.

    Thanks to Winter Soldier for the link.

  • Amazon wants to hire vets

    BooRadley sent us a link to a plea from Amazon for veterans;

    Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) today announced that it is seeking military veterans to fill the tens of thousands of permanent and temporary positions in its nationwide fulfillment network. Amazon has long supported military veterans as an employer and was today named the #1 Top Military Friendly Employer by G.I. Jobs magazine.

    In fact, someone emailed me the other day that they’re looking for exclusively veterans who are bilingual to fill some positions in Los Angeles. If you’re looking for work in the LA area and you speak you-know-what, drop me an email and I’ll try to put you in contact with him.

    I don’t want to become a job placement service, but I’ll do whatever I can to get you people off of the streets and into a job.

  • Scott Olsen confirms that which we knew

    Reuters reports that Scott Olsen the former Marine who was injured at Occupy Oakland has issued a statement most of which we already knew, but were excoriated for voicing over the last few weeks;

    Olsen served two tours in Iraq, working as a technician and earning a handful of service medals.

    Friends say he soured on military life after leaving the service and started a now-defunct website called “I hate the Marine Corps” which served as a forum for disgruntled servicemen.

    Olsen received an “administrative discharge” from the service in late 2009, his uncle George Nygaard has said, though the precise reasons for it have not been confirmed.

    Such a discharge can result from any number of behavioral or disciplinary issues.

    Yeah, his discharge probably had nothing to do with the pictures on his Flickr page – those pictures of marijuana plants.

    This should serve as an warning to those fucksticks and all of those hippies writing at the New York Times, the Columbia Journalism Review and the Village Voice – veterans can judge the service of other veterans without official documentation – that’s why Milblogs exist – to school you scumbag journalists who won’t take the time to do your research.

  • Charges dropped against vet

    On Thursday, we discussed the case of David Sturdivant, the 64-year-old Marine veteran who took a shot at a man attempting to rob his shop and was arrested by cops who had been near filming a reality TV show. Byron sends us a link which reports that charges have been dropped against him.

    Prosecutors dropped the charges to a misdemeanor, but Sturdivant refused to plead guilty. He could have left jail two weeks ago but a guilty plead would have resulted in 12 months probation with credit for the seven months served. The deal would have let Sturdivant keep his guns – four rifles and a pistol — as well as his military disability benefits, according to the prosecutor.

    Sturdivant still faces challenges since he lost his business and his home in a fire which the police classify as “suspicious”. I think the prosecutor owes the Marine, who has been in jail since April, more than an apology. In fact, I think Fulton County voters should toss the dick out of office for his behavior in this case. Let the prosecutor lose his job.

  • Corporate America supports Veterans

    In my previous post, I mentioned how Denny’s and Applebees are offering free meals for veterans today. Nucsnipe says that Subway and Chili’s are doing the same. Earlier this week, I got an email from Dominion, the Virginia power company which wants us to know that they’re donating a quarter million bucks to veterans’ causes. I made sure that none of those causes were IAVA. The company rep said they’re donating to;

    Virginia Supportive Housing, Richmond, Va. – has developed eight permanent supportive housing units exclusively for homeless veterans with disabilities. VSH manages these units and provides support services to the residents.

    · National Military Family Association, Alexandria, Va. – recognizes the unique challenges today’s military spouses face in pursuing additional training or education. The funds will support educational scholarships for tuition, vocational training, professional certification and graduate school.

    · Wounded Wear, Chesapeake, Va. – provides modified clothing for wounded warriors that can be worn around prosthetics or medical devices necessary for healing.

    · Virginia Veterans Services Foundation, Petersburg, Charlottesville and Staunton, Va. – supports the Virginia Wounded Warrior Program, which helps veterans, National Guard and Reserves and their families connect to health and behavioral health services and build resilience to cope with the challenges posed from a stress-related injury or traumatic brain injury.

    · Homes for the Brave, Bridgeport, Conn. – establishing “Female Soldiers: Forgotten Heroes,” the first community-based transitional home dedicated to homeless female veterans and their children.

    · Massachusetts Military Heroes Fund, Boston, Mass. – provides support, advocacy programs and referral services to bereaved families of Massachusetts military personnel fallen in service.

    · Valor Home, Akron, Ohio – a new 30-bed transitional housing facility for veterans that will be operated by Family and Community Services, Inc.

    · Community Service Alliance, Cleveland, Ohio – Sacrament House is a new housing program site that will provide 12-14 additional rooms to meet the growing need for short-term housing, and will enable CSA to meet the needs of veterans emerging from homelessness.

    · Mechling-Shakley Veterans Center, Armstrong County, Pa. – provides a community-based residential treatment facility for homeless veterans needing rehabilitation and support.

    · Scott Place Shelter, Fairmont, W.Va. – establishing a shelter exclusively for homeless veterans

    This morning, I got an email from JPMorgan Chase who also wants you to know that they are committed to veterans as well;

    One of the most important things we can do is help transition servicemembers and other veterans to lead successful lives after their military service. After JPMorgan Chase launched the 100,000 Jobs Mission with other major employers in March, we are proud to report we are well on our way to hiring 100,000 transitioning service members and military veterans by 2020. Our dedicated Military Recruiting Team has hired veterans at a rate of about 10 veterans a day, and as of September 30, the coalition firms have hired nearly 2,700 veterans.

    JPMorgan Chase also explains their commitment to veterans and service members at their special Military website.

    Now, I don’t endorse any of these companies, nor do I get paid directly for repeating their advertising messages, but I do want to publicly thank them for their obvious commitment to veterans and I want to encourage other corporations to make the same sort of commitments and if, in some small way this post contributes to that commitment, I’ve done my job.

    So spread the word and do your part.

  • Veterans Day

    Sorry I’m late this morning but I was at Denny’s getting my free Grand Slam breakfast, and I’ll probably eat my free dinner at Applebees tonight. Things sure have changed for veterans in recent years.

    I remember when Veterans’ Day was just another day off from work…well for everyone except veterans. My first Veterans’ Day after I left the military, in 1993, (I was actually on terminal leave at the time) was spent working as a security guard on a construction site…I was working full time while I attended college full time. I happened to pick up a newspaper on the way to work and it contained a column by the late Mike Royko on veterans and I always remembered his sage words.

    Royko was a Chicago reporter and another famous Chicagoan, Matt Burden (Blackfive) remembers Royko’s column.

    I just phoned six friends and asked them what they will be doing on Monday.

    They all said the same thing: working.

    Me, too.

    There is something else we share. We are all military veterans.

    And there is a third thing we have in common. We are not employees of the federal government, state government, county government, municipal government, the Postal Service, the courts, banks, or S & Ls, and we don’t teach school.

    If we did, we would be among the many millions of people who will spend Monday goofing off.

    Which is why it is about time Congress revised the ridiculous terms of Veterans Day as a national holiday.

    The purpose of Veterans Day is to honor all veterans.

    So how does this country honor them?

    By letting the veterans, the majority of whom work in the private sector, spend the day at their jobs so they can pay taxes that permit millions of non-veterans to get paid for doing nothing.

    As my friend Harry put it:

    “First I went through basic training. Then infantry school. Then I got on a crowded, stinking troop ship that took 23 days to get from San Francisco to Japan. We went through a storm that had 90 percent of the guys on the ship throwing up for a week.

    “Then I rode a beat-up transport plane from Japan to Korea, and it almost went down in the drink. I think the pilot was drunk.

    “When I got to Korea, I was lucky. The war ended seven months after I got there, and I didn’t kill anybody and nobody killed me.

    “But it was still a miserable experience. Then when my tour was over, I got on another troop ship and it took 21 stinking days to cross the Pacific.

    “When I got home on leave, one of the older guys at the neighborhood bar — he was a World War II vet — told me I was a —-head because we didn’t win, we only got a tie.

    “So now on Veterans Day I get up in the morning and go down to the office and work.

    “You know what my nephew does? He sleeps in. That’s because he works for the state.

    “And do you know what he did during the Vietnam War? He ducked the draft by getting a job teaching at an inner-city school.

    “Now, is that a raw deal or what?”

    Of course that’s a raw deal. So I propose that the members of Congress revise Veterans Day to provide the following:

    – All veterans — and only veterans — should have the day off from work. It doesn’t matter if they were combat heroes or stateside clerk-typists.

    Anybody who went through basic training and was awakened before dawn by a red-neck drill sergeant who bellowed: “Drop your whatsis and grab your socks and fall out on the road,” is entitled.

    – Those veterans who wish to march in parades, make speeches or listen to speeches can do so. But for those who don’t, all local gambling laws should be suspended for the day to permit vets to gather in taverns, pull a couple of tables together and spend the day playing poker, blackjack, craps, drinking and telling lewd lies about lewd experiences with lewd women. All bar prices should be rolled back to enlisted men’s club prices, Officers can pay the going rate, the stiffs.

    – All anti-smoking laws will be suspended for Veterans Day. The same hold for all misdemeanor laws pertaining to disorderly conduct, non-felonious brawling, leering, gawking and any other gross and disgusting public behavior that does not harm another individual.

    – It will be a treasonable offense for any spouse or live-in girlfriend (or boyfriend, if it applies) to utter the dreaded words: “What time will you be home tonight?”

    – Anyone caught posing as a veteran will be required to eat a triple portion of chipped beef on toast, with Spam on the side, and spend the day watching a chaplain present a color-slide presentation on the horrors of VD.

    – Regardless of how high his office, no politician who had the opportunity to serve in the military, but didn’t, will be allowed to make a patriotic speech, appear on TV, or poke his nose out of his office for the entire day.

    Any politician who defies this ban will be required to spend 12 hours wearing headphones and listening to tapes of President Clinton explaining his deferments.

    Now, deal the cards and pass the tequila.

    – Mike Royko

    I’d add that no one should be able to say “Happy Veterans’ Day” like it’s Christmas or Easter. I hope you have a Thoughtful Veterans’ Day…and by the way, that free Grand Slam at Denny’s makes up for all of those C-Rat Spaghetti and Meatball breakfasts I choked down. I hope you go get yours…you deserve it.