Friday, August 5, 2016

It's another Friday

        Another Friday morning, no early tee time, sitting at the kitchen counter watching/listening to GMA and doing the Soduku (easy today), the Jumble (easy today), and the crossword (snotty today, because whoever made it had such a cutesy-poo sense of humor), and it hit me. "Holy shit, my tooth enamel won't last forever!!!" Actually, I knew that, as almost any sentient adult should, but ya see, there was this commercial........! This late 20s/early 30s  young woman had just apparently gotten the aforementioned bad news from her dentist, and rather than commit suicide (I mean, she was really upset!) decided to use Pronamel instead. Wow, disaster averted. Really?

        In another story, I see the eldest Obama daughter, Natasha (Sasha)  is working a summer job as a waitress at a seafood restaurant on Martha's Vineyard for several weeks. Bravo! I'm just waiting for the trolls to complain because she  has Secret service coverage.  At least, her detail would be covering a wonderful young woman trying to have as normal a life as possible while being under the public microscope, vice trying to ditch the Secret Service and use illegal ID to get shit faced, as both 19 year old underage Bush daughters were known to do! If you were unaware, read this:  http://www.salon.com/2013/03/27/my_%E2%80%9Chypocrisy%E2%80%9D_about_the_bush_daughters/

        My pick for person of the Olympics before even opening ceremonies have begun? Elena Delle Donne.  Here's why:

        Finally, for this morning, David Huddleston has died at 85. I know many won't know the name, but, he was one of those reliable character actors who had great comedy chops in any setting, from 1974's "Blazing Saddles" as  Olson Johnson ("aw. prairie shit!"  and ...."authentic frontier gibberish")  through the title role in 1998 classic, "The Big Lebowski." to the Judge who sent Max and Leo off to the pen in 2005's "The Producers." Along the way he made over 30 movies and appeared in at least 30 different  TV programs, which doesn't count numerous repeating roles. A life well lived and a job well done.

       If there is ever a Hall of Fame for great character actors, David Huddleston deserves a place beside Martin Balsam, Jack Warden, Warren Oates, Anthony Quayle, David Strathairn, and the rest of those actors who we  see and muse...."Oh, I  remember him from ...?"  I realize I have just scratched the surface and forgive me if I omitted your favorite.


       And so, off to clean the litter pans (yeah, 3 cats, 3 pans!)

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Another day, another bias

Another day, another misguided and fallacious comment on the political scene, in this case a parting shot at President Obama and all "liberals" in general; and by the way. I'm really, really tired of the word "liberal" being used almost as a curse word by persons who truly don't understand the concept, but  judge all progressives by their own twisted, imaginary standards based on what they (the Far Right) assume all progressives believe. Accordingly I shall, in this essay, address some of those misconceptions, even though I've done so before.

        One friend's favorite saying is that they oppose the current administration because "They want to give away things to people who don't deserve them."  In the case of this individual that position is transparently based on race. The individual stated in 2008 that they could "never vote for Obama," which in the context of the conversation actually meant "never vote for a person of color."   There are several observations needed here. First, the race issue is key to this individual, since they also obviously believe the majority of welfare recipients are Black  (they're not) and even more indicative of personal bias, since the president is Black, obviously he would unfairly favor  Black Americans. This is, in fact an indicator of the racial bias and favoritism of the critic and, by projection,  its assumption that the President would exhibit the same social pathology. In fact, absolutely the only change to the 1996 (Republican majority in both Houses) Welfare Reform Act during the last 8 years has been to allow states more flexibility. It was done at the request of five states, three of them with Republican governors at the time.

        Another friend, in a semi-rant some time ago, used the term "Obama Phones."  He simply refused to believe me when I pointed out that the program giving low cost cell phones to low income individuals was incepted by FDR, and signed into law by ...wait for it....Ronald Reagan! The first actual free phone was distributed by the Bush administration, whose economic collapse, by the way, made many more Americans eligible for one. President Barack Obama has had absolutely nothing to do with this program , except, of course, get "blamed" for it by morons of the Right.

        In conversation on the golf course, the subject of  the Zika virus outbreak in Florida came up, as well as discussion of  the potential for tourism to take a hit. I opined that we (Congress) should already have allocated funds to the CDC to accelerate  development of a vaccine but that the President's request for 2 billion was stalled when Congress decided that this would be a good time to defund Planned Parenthood in the same bill. In a truly weird twist of facts, this was batted back to me as being the President's fault. I got nuthin' here, it just staggers the mind.


   

Monday, August 1, 2016

The twisted logic of James Woods

I would have found it hard to believe that there was any other public figure as vile and mean spirited as Donald Trump, but James Woods' recent and not so recent tweets have me wondering.

        I have a friend who from time to time will send me politically oriented things which are from his Far Right point of view, and recently among them was a (forwarded, as always, never original) meme of Woods replete with some of his more pungent statements, almost all extremely derogatory to our President,  Barack Obama. (Boy I love to write that!) The conclusion was that 1:  Because Woods was studying Political Science when he dropped out of college, he's pretty smart, and 2: That (I guess) studying Poly Sci makes one an authority on matters political, regardless of one's eventual occupation. 

                Without my bothering to actually cite much of them, the gist is : Woods bitches about taxes and what really seemed to trigger his bile was the 2013 government shutdown, which apparently only Woods and Ted Cruz think was Obama's fault. Moreover his rants re: taxes seem misadvised because while Reagan (a Woods icon) was in the Oval Office, tax rates were higher than at present, even after the lapsing of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy! Add to that Woods' apparent efforts to make himself an object of pity by stating, as if he were St. Stephen facing rock throwers,  that he'd "probably  never work in Hollywood again"
, notwithstanding the fact that he's a truly unattractive 66 year old man in a young man's business for the most part.

        So let's judge him in his own words. In 2008 and 2009, Woods managed just one minor movie role in each year, actually being billed below Gary Coleman  in 2008's "American Carol" (Obama was just a candidate then, so....?.) in 2009, his sole industry effort was an uncredited cameo as a security guard in one episode of iCarly (It is worth mentioning that this was already shot before Obama took the oath of office). So, he'd have to sink pretty fast to fare worse than he already was!

         In 2013, after 4 years of  Obama (not) jinxing his career, Woods was in 4 films and  was a semi regular on a TV series, Ray Donovan . Get this clear; he worked five times as often in 2013 than 2008 or 9! In 2013 he also began trolling the President on a semi daily basis spewing vile and racist comments at will, claiming that "he wouldn't be able to work anymore", presumably  because "they" (liberals in Hollywood, I assume)  wouldn't hire him. In 2014 Woods had a starring role (first since 2006) in "Jamesy Boy", a highly regarded Indy film. Throughout this period he has also done lots of voice acting roles. Woods currently has one animated feature  in the can and is a regular voice actor in a new series in production. Apparently "they" haven't heard. Or perhaps more likely, "they" just don't care in the same way that progressives didn't boycott Eastwood after his RNC empty chair performance. Can you say Paranoid?


        Oh, but wait how about the outcry over Bradley Cooper attending the DNC? How could he do that, after portraying everyone's favorite decorated  hero and pathological liar, Chris Kyle? Now, let's be honest here. who's objective and who succumbs to railing  sycophants spewing hatred and venom? It sure isn't "them" in Hollywood.
       Woods just seems to get more bitter as his face sags further. As for my friend's claim that we should consider Woods credible "because he studied Political Science," I would caution, after I stop laughing, that the following also studied Political Science: Both Clintons, President Obama, Vice President Biden, Condoleeza Rice, Christopher Hitchens, Woodrow Wilson   and many others who actually completed their degrees vice dropping out. But lest we  pull a Trump and use labels indiscriminately, here are some more Poly Sci majors: Jerry Springer, Rupert Murdoch, Bernie Maddoff, Alec Baldwin, Mia Hamm, Larry (toe tapper) Craig (ex- Senator),Riz Ahmad (comedian), Vinny Guadagnino (cast of Jersey Shore), Elizabeth Shue, and others. So, my friend, if a Poly Sci major  makes anyone an authority or someone to be admired, why not pick Bernie Maddoff? At least we know where he is all the time.  

Primary Pooh slinging!

Per the usual, Monday morning's Good Morning America  and accompanying local adverts and news provided grist for the blogosphere's mill.

        We in Florida have been "blessed?" with a cast of Senate wannabees worthy of a Tarantino flick. Let's start with little Marco (I only show up for work 7% of the time) Rubio.  This guy, while rarely there to do his job during the last 5 years, did actually make an effort to craft some meaningful legislation re: immigration reform.  His reward for this was to be thrust under the bus by fellow Tea Partiers. Of course, in his own right he has criticized Mrs. Clinton's endorsement of "The disastrous Iran Deal," even though the term is simply an opinion based on ???(nothing)" Running against Rubio for the Republican  nomination we have one Carlos Beruff.  Beruff apparently assumed he was the sole candidate when Rubio announced he wouldn't run for Senate again in 2016, but little Marco,  seemingly touched by the Pulse nightclub shootings in Orlando and driven by a deep (albeit tragically brief) sense of compassion for the LGBT community, which he has, up until very recently, disdained, disrespected and legally opposed in the quest for equality under the law, decided to run again.

Now in TV ads, these two primates have recommenced hurling verbal feces at one another. Follow this next closely, because it amazes me.  Beruff actually supported former Florida Governor, Charlie Crist (Republican turned Democrat) in the gubernatorial race of 2010 against Rick (Voldemort) Scott, our current governor. A current Rubio TV spot charges Beruff with being a "Charlie Crist Republican,"  which would imply a moderate point of view ascribed to Beruff.  Rubio, apparently in an epic case of crossed wires, is portraying  Beruff as a "soft" moderate.

        Meanwhile, Rubio, a Tea Party darling until he actually acted like an adult on the immigration reform issue, has come out directly anti-Trump in new TV spots, even though he had sworn to support Trump after dropping out of the Primary Presidential race, which would make him (I guess) more a centrist than Tea Bagger, while Beruff, in his own ads, has strongly endorsed Trump.

        It is a bit interesting that they disagree on so much even though their backgrounds are almost identical, in that they are both the sons of  Cuban immigrants. Their current status, is another story.  Beruff is rich, possibly because Beruff, who vows to cut taxes if elected (as any good Republican always does) , avoided paying $235,000 in  taxes in 2015 alone for his business holdings. He did it by claiming that 1,884 acres his companies bought to develop in the future are agricultural land because they are leased to cattle companies or have planted pine trees or other crops. 

      Rubio, on the other hand has lost a house to foreclosure and, if not for his slavish and misguided support of Big Sugar, in the personage of the Fanjul family and Norman Braman, Miami auto billionaire, would probably be broke. Braman is a supporter of Rubio, and was ready  to spend anywhere between $10 million to $25 million in support of his 2016 presidential campaign. During Rubio's financial woes,  Braman has employed Marco Rubio's wife, Jeanette Dousdebes Rubio, at Braman Family Charitable Foundation. I have documented Rubio's love affair with Big Sugar and the Fanjuls here: definitely worth a read!

 (http://bubblehead1026.blogspot.com/2016/07/tis-pity-hes-whore.html)

      So Rubio, after initially vowing to support Trump, now has abandoned him, while "softy" Beruff, a Charlie Crist Republican, remember) has embraced him. Politics makes such strange bedfellows.

       On the other side of the aisle we have lantern jawed, bigamist (yeah, really, he recently divorced his previous wife who, it turns out had never been divorced from her first meal ticket) Alan (Hulk) Grayson. Grayson's claim to fame may well be his propensity for raving,  a la Trump, from time to time during his tenure in the US House. One of his best quotes,  elegant in its simplicity, was a heartfelt "STFU"(Shut the F**k Up!)  leveled against former  VP Cheny during an appearance  on MSNBC's "Hardball."   Grayson's other claim to fame may well be as winner in the "Who can name their kids worse than Sarah Palin?" contest. Track, Trig, Bristol, Willow and Piper Palin,  meet Sage, Skye, Star, Stone and Storm Grayson. Really?

       Grayson's opponent is Congressman Patrick Murphy, who ousted accused war criminal Alan West in 2011. West,  a true legend in his own mind, was "allowed" to resign his Army commission after doing things in Iraq which would probably have seen an enlisted man face a court martial. West was criminally charged with violating the uniform code of military justice, found guilty of three counts of aggravated assault, and relieved of his command. The final Army report: West "'performed illegal acts, merited court martial." Instead, West was allowed to resign as a  LtCol  on a pension for life of $58,000 annually, plus healthcare!

        Murphy, has been savaged in Republican sponsored  TV spots of equally questionable nature. One example would be the statement that Murphy "claims to be a CPA , but was never licensed in Florida" which implies, of course that Murphy lied. In truth, he was licensed and practiced in Colorado, before moving to Florida, where for a time he continued working  as an auditor !  Another example of "selective quoting." Accuses Murphy of lying about his role in Gulf Spill cleanups, stating that Murphy's company "never had a contract for Gulf cleanup" which is true, but omits the rest, which is that they subcontracted to a larger company which did have those contracts and eventually bought that company out, effectively owning the contracts. The last claim the Murphy "never owned a small business" is equally misleading, in that Murphy was a co-director and stockholder of several companies, which technically he didn't "own" -  but never claimed to own, simply characterizing himself as a "small businessman."   

        Of course, as always in our fair state, there is also in the case of both Grayson and Murphy, the allegations that they supported  the current President.  So good luck sorting this mess out,  come primary time.

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Au H2O

Some words from a conservative icon which should make modern "conservatives" shrink in shame. I'll tell you at the end who the speaker was.   

        "You don't need to be straight to fight and die for your country. You just need to shoot straight. The big thing is to make this country, along with every other country in the world, quit discriminating against people just because they're gay. You don't have to agree with it, but they have a constitutional right to be gay. And that's what brings me into it.!" "Having spent 37 years of my life in the military as a reservist, and never having met a gay (I'd bet  he did, but didn't realize it)  in all of that time, and never having even talked about it in all those years, I just thought, why the hell shouldn't they serve? They're American citizens. As long as they're not doing things that are harmful to anyone else... So I came out for it."

Compare this to the hateful rhetoric of the modern Republican party!

       "Those who seek absolute power, even though they seek it to do what they regard as good, are simply demanding the right to enforce their own version of heaven on earth. And let me remind you, they are the very ones who always create the most hellish tyrannies. Absolute power does corrupt, and those who seek it must be suspect and must be opposed."

Donald Trump, anyone?

        "My faith in the future rests squarely on the belief that man, if he doesn't first destroy himself, will find new answers in the universe, new technologies, new disciplines, which will contribute to a vastly different and better world in the twenty-first century.  To my mind the single essential element on which all discoveries will be dependent is human freedom."

This would include stem cell and environmental research, I'll bet!

        "Mark my word, if and when these preachers get control of the Republican party, and they're sure trying to do so, it's going to be a terrible damn problem. Frankly, these people frighten me. Politics and governing demand compromise. But these Christians believe they are acting in the name of God, so they can't and won't compromise. I know, I've tried to deal with them." " Someone should kick Falwell in the ass!"

Pat Robertson, Rick Santorum,  Ted Cruz or Mike Huckabee, anybody?

      "There is no position on which people are so immovable as their religious beliefs. There is no more powerful ally one can claim in a debate than Jesus Christ, or God, or Allah, or whatever one calls this supreme being. But like any powerful weapon, the use of God's name on one's behalf should be used sparingly. The religious factions that are growing throughout our land are not using their religious clout with wisdom. They are trying to force government leaders into following their position 100 percent. If you disagree with these religious groups on a particular moral issue, they complain, they threaten you with a loss of money or votes or both."   "The religious factions will go on imposing their will on others unless the decent people connected to them recognize that religion has no place in public policy. We have succeeded for 205 years in keeping the affairs of state separate from the uncompromising idealism of religious groups and we mustn't stop now. To retreat from that separation would violate the principles of conservatism and the values upon which the framers built this democratic republic.


        And this guy was chided and characterized as "too conservative."  He lost the election of 1964 to Lyndon Johnson, who, although he ran on a "war scare" platform (remember the TV ad with the little girl and the mushroom cloud? ),  proceeded to escalate the Vietnam War, from which his predecessor had planned to withdraw. Of course he was 5 term AZ senator, Barry Goldwater.  Modern far right hate mongers ought to reflect on how far they have strayed.   

Saturday, July 30, 2016

A Higher Standard?

       Want to know why there is tension at times between Law enforcement and the populace? Here's one admittedly narrow, but very real, example of the double standard in place, especially at the county levels in Florida, where sheriffs wield immense power.

       The following is from the Ocala (Fl) StarBanner, but in truth could likely have come from any of several Florida counties. Everything herein is public record and has received much media coverage. This is not an opinion piece except for the last paragraph.
       
       "Marion County Sheriff Chris Blair was being booked at the Marion County Jail on charges of perjury and official misconduct.  A court document states that he was indicted Thursday by a grand jury on allegations that he made a false statement, which he did not believe to be true, under oath in an official proceeding in regard to a material matter.

           This grand jury had been investigating the conduct of deputies of the Marion County Sheriff's Office for using excessive force in making arrests. The grand jury was to determine if these events were "systemic in nature" and the grand jury investigated "the policies and actual practices of the Sheriff's Office and actions or inactions of the Sheriff and his subordinates, which may have created an atmosphere in the agency of ignoring or tolerating improper use of force."

         Chris Blair was subpoenaed to testify before the grand jury concerning this investigation, and when he did, he "knowingly testified falsely in that while testifying in regard to Dustin Heathman."  Blair faces two separate charges of perjury in an official proceeding and a third charge of official misconduct. They are all third-degree felonies. If convicted, he could face up to five years in prison on each count and $5,000 in fines on each count. In regards to Heathman, one question posed to Blair was: "So you saw him coming out of the patrol car while he was being treated by the medics?" "I saw the back of him," Blair stated. "You saw his back? So you didn't have an opportunity to see his face or any injuries he might have had? Blair's answer was, "No, absolutely did not." "He was surrounded by numerous people."

       According to the indictment document, Blair knew this statement was false because while Dustin Heathman was handcuffed, dressed in his underwear, escorted by two deputy sheriffs and with apparent injuries to his face, he was led in front of Chris Blair so close that Chris Blair had to step back to let Dustin Heathman and the deputies pass by."  http://www.ocala.com/article/LK/20160520/NEWS/605209835/OS/
        When it comes to "excessive force" accusations, this is far from Blair's first rodeo. On his watch a significant number of deputies have been terminated for excessive force, drug usage and other malfeasances.  (http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/02/24/multiple-florida-deputies-from-marion-county-fired-and-indicted-within-one-year/)  
          Each time there were allegations of a departmental culture of  excessive force tolerance, in spite of the fact that on several occasions,  after video showed otherwise, Blair was quick to  throw the offenders under the bus and off the force.

        Fast forward  to the present. Faced with two counts of perjury, and possibly a third,  on July 29, 2016 Blair took a plea deal. Here, before we discuss the "deal" is the relevant law:

837.02 (Florida Statutes) Perjury in official proceedings.
(1) "Except as provided in subsection (2), whoever makes a false statement, which he or she does not believe to be true, under oath in an official proceeding in regard to any material matter, commits a felony of the third degree"

"For perjury occurring as part of an official proceeding, state laws permit the prosecutor to pursue a third degree felony charge. Upon conviction, the defendant may receive a sentence of imprisonment for up to five years, a fine in an amount up to $5,000, or both."    (http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0800-0899/0837/Sections/0837.02.html)

        So, you're asking, what "higher standard was Chris Blair held to? Ok, hold on here's the brutal punishment he agreed to accept: First, Blair, who is 63 and, by his own deposition, worth $1.56 million (who says crime doesn't pay?) has agreed NOT TO RUN FOR REELECTION! Wow. Forced to retire at 63. As if you thought that was enough, he will also, being in the DROP (Delayed Retirement Option Program)  take a lump sum payout of $448,000 . Finally, he will be forced to eke out an existence on his $8,220 monthly guaranteed pension.  For the math challenged, that's $98,640 annually, guaranteed for life in pension alone, never mind the more than $2 mil nest egg. (Villages daily Sun, July 30, 2016)
Sure beats the hell out of 5 years in jail and a $5,000 fine, huh?


I would maintain that when those whom we entrust and charge and pay to uphold the law evenly and with fair handedness, break that law, especially with intent, they should be held to a higher standard, not  given preferential treatment.  And before you northern readers go all "attitudy Judy" on me re: "redneck justice", this guy is from Baltimore, which, on reflection, explains a lot!

Friday, July 29, 2016

A Matter of Priorities

         I remember in Animal House, a classic movie, (show your college age kids as a training film - just kidding) when the lads screwed up and were placed on "double secret probation." Of course the secret was that no one knew what the rules are. I'm finding the same wall of silence/secrecy in my current quest for data  prior to writing a planned essay.

        The essay will undoubtedly anger some readers, who only consider planar data and can't or won't think dimensionally. The topic is the Veteran's Administration, and the still present carping about wait times, etc. I find myself a bit torn here, simply because I had an uncle by marriage and a brother, both of whom served less than four years in the military, both of whom were discharged with absolutely no service connected disability but both of whom passed away while under the VA's care. There is no question that either one received anything less than the best possible care. In the uncle's case, it was hospice care, and  in my brother's case it was several cancer  surgeries, chemo and radiation therapy. My contention, however, is that neither should have been a VA patient.

       Right up front, I say this because I believe they both should have been recipients of Universal National health care, but that's a subject for another time, and one which actually, I have rehashed several previous times on FaceBook and in my blog. Not all countries maintain a distinct veterans’ health care system. In England, for example, veterans obtain care through the National Health Service (NHS) like everyone else. They have priority when there is a waiting-list for services, and there are some programs within the NHS to address veterans’ special needs, but there is no separate system.

       My concern with the VA is based on a simple proposition: That we should provide, in fact that we owe, every service person who was injured while in the service of the nation, care related to  physical or emotional issues connected to that service for as long as they live. Meanwhile, The Department of Veterans Affairs' Office of Inspector General on July 27, 2016  confirmed that more than one-third of the people thought to be seeking eligibility for VA benefits are deceased, and said many of them have been dead for more than four years! First, we must look at what is, before discussing what should be.

       World War I ended in late 1918 , and after the cheering died down, several things became apparent in the USA. The Wilson administration had no clue and no plans for how to cope with returning service personnel returning to the civilian workforce. Even as the war continued , in 1917, there were violent race riots in St. Louis  and other northern industrial cities,  as blacks who had willingly migrated North to fill wartime jobs were pushed out when white workers struck. The result was worthy of the KKK at its worst. Post war, major problems at the end of the war included labor strikes, more race riots, and a lag in the economy due to farmers' debts. The Red Summer of 1919 saw an increase in violence in over two dozen cities, as returning veterans (both white and African-American) competed for jobs. In the 1920s, anti-Communist sentiment rocked the United States, as some activists pointed to this economic misery as capitalism's legacy.

       While World War II was still being fought, the Department of Labor estimated that, after the war, 15 million men and women who had been serving in the armed services would be unemployed.  Roosevelt and VP Harry Truman were both well aware of history and understood ,as well that there would be about 3 1/2 times as many returning veterans after armistice was signed with Germany and Japan, than after WWI.  To reduce the possibility of postwar depression brought on by widespread unemployment, the National Resources Planning Board, a White House agency, in June 1943 recommended a series of programs for education and training. This  became the Serviceman’s Readjustment Act and sailed through Congress. The bill unanimously passed both chambers of Congress in the spring of 1944. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed it into law on June 22, 1944, just days after the D-day invasion of Normandy.

        Most simply called it "the GI Bill of Rights,” as it offered Federal aid to help veterans adjust to civilian life in the areas of hospitalization, purchase of homes and businesses, and especially, education. This act provided tuition, subsistence, books and supplies, equipment, and counseling services for veterans to continue their education in school or college. It also kept those in college out of the work force! Over the following 7 years, approximately 8 million veterans received educational benefits. Under the act, approximately 2,300,000 attended colleges and universities, 3,500,000 received school training, and 3,400,000 received on-the-job training. The number of degrees awarded by U.S. colleges and universities more than doubled between 1940 and 1950, and the percentage of Americans with bachelor degrees, or advanced degrees, rose from 4.6 percent in 1945 to 25 percent a half-century later.   

        Of course, as many will have realized by now, this is unrelated to the VA. I only point it out for the casual reader who may never have considered the difference. The point to be made here is that the GI Bill was a "temporary" (although some features still exist) fix to a temporary problem .

       The Veteran's administrations and predecessor entities is an ongoing program of support. How ongoing, you ask? Post Revolution and war of 1812, some states voted pensions for vets of those conflicts. My own great grandmother was the last surviving widow to draw a War of 1812 pension when she died in, believe it or not, at the age of 104 in the early 1930s! In 1890, Congress enacted a new law that paid a pension to any Union veteran of the Civil War who served for at least ninety days, was honorably discharged, and suffered from a disability, even if not war-related. In 1904, (Republican) President Theodore Roosevelt, himself a veteran of the Spanish-American War, ruled that old age itself was a disability(!), thereby increasing the number of eligible veterans for pension payments.

       At its peak, the Civil War pension system consumed approximately forty-five percent of all federal revenue and was the largest department of the federal government (other than the armed services). One reason for this was the political power held by Union veterans’ groups like the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), which had been founded in Illinois in 1866.After the Civil War, a succession of Republican presidents continued awarding not only (Union) Veterans, but widows of veterans, and even adult children of veterans  a series of increasing pensions, in what everyone knew was a massive vote getting scheme.

        The first national effort to provide medical care for disabled veterans in the United States was the Naval Home, established in Philadelphia in 1812. This was followed by two facilities in Washington, D.C. -- the Soldiers’ Home in 1853 and St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in 1855. Post WWI in 1921 Congress created the Veterans’ Bureau to consolidate veterans programs managed by three agencies — the Bureau of War Risk Insurance, Public Health Service and the Federal Board of Vocational Education.

        President Hoover, in his 1929 State of the Union message, proposed consolidating agencies administering veterans benefits. The following year Congress created the Veterans Administration by uniting three bureaus — the  Veterans’ Bureau, the Bureau of Pensions and the National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. The new agency was responsible for medical services for war veterans; disability compensation and allowances for World War I veterans, Army and Navy pensions; and other minor issues.  From 1931 to 1941, the number of VA hospitals  increased  from 64 to 91, and the number of beds  from 33,669 to 61,849.

        Now that we have the data, here's my "take" on it. We (Congress) have continually expanded a program which was originally intended to take care of persons who served in the military, most of them draftees during some expansion phases. The original mission, primarily the care of veterans with service connected medical issues and/or disabilities, has grown to include people who should, in my opinion, not be the government's responsibility  after separation from the military. Again, before you get angry, these  are not people, with disabilities or medical conditions which in any form are related to their military service!

       The first group, and one which should seem obvious, is those persons who served several years and for whatever reason decided to leave the military. If these persons have no service connected disability or on- going medical problem, there is, in my opinion , no reason that we should be responsible for them for the next 50 or so years. The idea that we are all responsible for a two year member who leaves the service healthy and then, after smoking for forty years, develops lung cancer is beyond my comprehension. That was precisely the case with my uncle.  A working life after service of 45 years ought to leave an individual with healthcare safeguards. Of course, at present this group still includes some draftees who were forced to serve. I would recommend that since we are now in an all volunteer era, those who enlist as a career choice should have no more or no less than any other employee of any other organization, that being, if injured and separated with a disability  -  full health care under at the VA for life. If separated without disability - a year at most of  health insurance  coverage, unless, of course that  VA re-evaluation determined that the former member's current medical issue is, in fact, service related, not simply a poor lifestyle choice.          

        The second group, of which I am a member, is the relatively large group of military retirees (with no service related health issues at time of separation) who have Medicare and Tricare (a superb Medicare supplement) who also, by law, pay Medicare part B, and yet, for whatever reason, go to VA facilities for routine medical care, even though their coverage would allow them to go at no cost to any doctor they choose in the community. This is especially troublesome in  areas with high concentrations of retirees, such as Florida and Arizona. (Here comes the hard to find stuff, and, in my opinion, the real reason the VA is jammed with "customers.")   Florida had over 7% of the veteran population in 2013. What troubles me is that the number of VA Health Care System enrollees who are actually disabled (as defined by the VA, which is very liberal with 10% disability ratings) is far fewer than half of the total Florida veterans enrolled and receiving services. Let's rephrase that: Some, if not most,  of those clogging the VA Health Care System , especially military retirees, have other healthcare options as a result of their service which, if used, would free up more needed beds, appointments, consults, etc. Of these, as of 2010 in a nationwide VA survey of all veterans,  40% using the  VA clients had Medicare, 39% had in force employer or other insurance, 7% had Tricare or other, and  just 9%  of those seen by the VA were indigent or had no insurance !

       If even one service related disabled vet ( physical, emotional, whatever) can't get help, it's a national disgrace. The system has bloated to proportions which were never intended. In a final fact barrage, consider this. It is now possible for a retired disabled veteran to get Social security disability, full retirement pay and full disability pay all at the same time!   

        While most Americans aren’t able to collect Social Security disability payments if their income is at least $13,000 a year,  Social Security rules don’t treat military retirement or VA disability payments as regular income, which means veterans can collect tens of thousands of dollars from the Pentagon and VA and still get money from Social Security.  With the Social Security Disability Insurance trust fund predicted to run out of money in two years, this fact raises serious  questions about whether disability benefits are getting to those whose livelihoods depend on them. The VA says it “generally agrees” with a recent GAO  report’s conclusions, while . Social Security officials had no comment.  Social Security’s disability trust fund is expected to run out of money in 2016, and  cracking down on double dippers could help extend the program’s life somewhat.
About 3 percent of military retirees collect all three benefits right now, GAO investigators said. Most of them have a VA disability rating of 50 percent or higher, though just 17 percent of the disabilities are combat-related.  Of the $3.5 billion spent in 2013 on the triple dippers, $1.4 billion came from the VA, $1.2 billion came from the Pentagon, and $937.4 million came from Social Security.

        As for the individual veterans, the GAO identified 101 who earn more than $150,000 a year in triple-dip benefits. Another 2,200 veterans earn between $100,000 and $150,000. Investigators pulled seven cases at different benefit levels for further study, and in all but the lowest two, the veterans were making more as retired disabled than their salaries would have been if they’d still been in the service! Remember, this is cash in hand, medical care is esentially free for these persons!

       A 54-year-old who retired in 1997 after 20 years in the military, who had lung disease, vascular disease and lost use of his feet (non-service related and non-compliant diabetic), collected $122,887 in benefits (plus free medical) in 2013 — nearly three times the $43,808 someone of his pay grade would have made in the military. Meanwhile, a 59-year-old who retired in 2004 after 26 years, who lost his feet (diabetes again), is blind in one eye and has renal problems, collected $152,719 in 2013 — more than twice the $72,824 salary of someone at his final military pay grade. Most of his benefits — $85,958 — came from VA disability, while $46,396 was military retirement, and $20,365 was from Social Security.

        Both these men as retirees, whether their disability was service related or not,  have better health insurance than most of us will ever have. It seems to me that something is wrong when the way to make more money is to get sick.

        I reiterate, this isn't about disabled vets whose disability is in any remotely connected fashion, service related. It is primarily, simply my assertion, based on what data is available, that there are a significant number of persons using VA medical facilities who should not be, for reasons I enumerated in the essay.

        If you disagree, please comment, but please be objective. For those who don't know me, as a reminder, I am a 26 year veteran  retiree who uses Medicare and Tricare, even though we have a VA clinic where I live. I do so because I believe the VA was designed for persons who need it, not those who consider it as just a convenience. And finally, and a partial reason for writing this,  I do know people who do use the VA yet have two retirements (one civil service, the other military retirement)  and  have Medicare and Tricare, yet go to the VA taking up staff and Physician's time and resources.