24 January 2014
–
Death by VA
Hospital
Congress has
finally passed a spending bill for the rest of 2014. It approaches what
Congress should have been doing for the last five years. Sadly, our
lawmakers’ spending cuts on veterans’ benefits show their ignorance -- or
cowardice -- to prioritize spending based on fundamental governmental
obligations. A true story illustrates what I mean:
My father spent
the last years of his life in and out of the Veteran’s Administration hospital
at Fort Harrison, Montana. Drafted into the Army in 1940, he was wounded
in the battles for the Aleutian Islands. Until his death in 1963 at age
40, his body hurt and his mind suffered the effects of the war on top of the
normal pressures of life. The government responded by putting him into a
VA hospital.
I was too young
to visit my father on the hospital ward. When Mom went out to “The Fort,”
we kids often went along and stayed in the car. I remember my father
waving to us from his third floor window around back of the hospital.
One time, in late 1962, I was allowed to go inside and sit in the
ward’s day room. The day room was full
of young men in their twenties, thirties, and forties, and I shall never forget
them, their faces and bodies. They were missing arms, legs, hands, and parts of
their faces. Canes, crutches, and wheel chairs were everywhere.
These men watched television, talked among themselves, played cards, and paid
little attention to a small boy in their midst. One man in a thin, light-blue
robe and slippers sat looking out the window, living somewhere else than in
that day room. He did not move a muscle the entire time I was
there. The experience was overwhelming. I looked to a passing
orderly for some insight. He surprised me by saying bluntly that these
men were WWII and Korean War veterans waiting to die.
I have never
forgotten that moment. Because of it, and later, after being forced
through illness to stay in that same place, I vowed I would never die in a VA
hospital.
Who had the responsibility
to ensure that these soldiers were taken care of and rehabilitated? Like
all military members, these men signed an “unlimited liability” contract with
the government. They agreed to risk life, limb, and heart acting as the
human part of the nation’s military instrument of national power. In
exchange, the government contracted to pay them while on duty, give them
pensions when they qualified, and, most important, take care of their medical
needs when they returned less than intact from the battlefield. This agreement
is the most important and sacred contract the US government can make with any
of its citizens. Its fulfillment must take precedence over any
entitlement and any benefits to anybody else at any time, in any place.
This governmental
obligation is just as important today as it was in 1962. The three
longest wars the US has ever fought have been prosecuted since then:
Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The last two were fought with far smaller
total forces than any competent planner would recommend. The length of
the wars and the size of the forces available for any theater of war demanded
that the finest-trained warriors in the history of the world serve three, four,
five, even six combat tours. Patriots that they are, my fellow soldiers,
marines, airmen, and sailors have answered the call.
Few can endure
this type of abuse without significant damage to body and soul. Our
political leaders of the last two decades poorly structured and then poorly
used our nation’s military instrument of national power. In so doing,
they ground real men and women into the dirt. Now, these same political
leaders are showing signs that they may renege on their fundamental
obligation—their promise—to adequately pay and rehabilitate these patriots.
History may indeed show that the greatest waste of our last wars will not be
the billions of dollars of equipment left on the battlefield or the failure to
effect lasting change on the world scene. It will be the thousands of disabled
and struggling warriors who seem to have been forgotten, and whose care and
well-being have been ill-funded by a self-serving government.
Senators, Congressmen, Mr. President: Is that the legacy
you want to leave? You are putting today’s generation of soldier in front
of the window in the day room on the third floor of the VA hospital.
Now, take care of him.
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