we support the VetsWatch this video--its the best veteran made, acted and produced to ever come on the Net. Watch it to the end   http://watsonrulescom/reveille/reveille.html


O Man! here is a letter from a East Texas Well driller that tells Obama why he thinks that

Joe the Plumber was only the edge. If you read ANYTHING on this site, take to time to read this  real-time letter to The Senator that would be President and do a number on taxes to the very people  that MAKE America strong!!! Read it here= CORY MILLER THE WELL DRILLER


A veteran is someone who, at one point in his life wrote a blank check
Made payable to ' The United States of America ' for
An amount of 'up to and including my life.'
That is Honor, and there are way too many people in
This country who no longer understand it.'



   

Readers since January 2002

This was the largest re-enlistment ceremony ever held in military history. The ceremony was held on the 4th of July, 2008 at Al Faw Palace,  Baghdad ,  Iraq . General David Petraeus officiated. This amazing story was ignored by the 'mainstream' media.
For those who have been in the Al Faw Palace, you'll have a better appreciation of the number of people crammed around the rotunda supporting the re-enlisting soldiers.

American men and women volunteering to stay longer in Iraq, so that when we leave, the new democracy will have a chance of surviving, is the exact opposite of what the media wants you to think about Iraq. If only a bomb had killed 5 civilians in a marketplace - now that's the kind of news the media is eager to tell you about. 

A pizzeria in Chicago donated 2000 pizzas that were made and shipped to  Baghdad, and were delivered on the 4th.  

The media did report that 2000 pizzas were sent to Iraq on July 4th... The only part they left out of the report was the event for which the pizzas were sent. 

 

I can't help but wonder...
What would the opinion of Americans be if they weren't getting such obviously biased 'news?'

 
Pass this on and we will do the work for the Media.

THANKS Joyce A. Of Sattler Tx. For sending this to us!!

From John Powell

Interesting (proven and checked) FACTS about oil;

I hang around educated and talented people.  Each individual has at least one university degree. Most read, watch, or listen  to more than one news
source every day. They span generations with ages ranging from the 20s to the 70s. Yet, not a single person among them knew the answers to some basic questions pertinent to the growing discourse regarding the rising price of oil. A few knew some of the answers, and some knew a few of the answers.

To be fair, I had to look up the answers, or else I would have been among the shoulder shruggers. For instance, how big is a barrel?
Answer: 42 gallons. So, now you know that, when the price for a barrel of crude oil hits $140,  that's the same as $3.33 a gallon.

What nation supplies the most crude oil and petroleum products to the United States?
Answer: The United States.  According to the Energy Information Agency (www.eia.doe.gov) our country supplied 41 percent of the oil we consumed in March of this year.

What nation, other than the U.S., supplies the most crude oil and petroleum products to our country?
Answer: Canada. Our northern neighbor accounts for 12 percent of our nation's oil and 20 percent of all the oil we import.  The rest of the top five include Saudi Arabia (7 percent and 13 percent); Venezuela (6 percent and 11 percent); Nigeria (6 percent and 10 percent); and Mexico (5 percent and 8 percent).

How much oil do we import from Persian Gulf countries?
I'm glad you asked. Persian Gulf countries accounted for only 16 percent of our foreign oil imports each year from 2005 to 2007. In fact, our Persian Gulf imports declined most of this decade, from a 15-year high of a little more than 1 billion barrels in 2001 to 791.9 million barrels in 2007.

What's the difference between crude oil and petroleum products?
Answer: Crude oil provides, among other products, gasoline, diesel and jet fuels, heating oil, lubricants, asphalt, plastics, synthetic fibers, detergents,
fertilizers, ink, crayons, bubble gum, deodorant, tires, and heart valves. One barrel of crude oil (which is 42 gallons, remember?), yields about 19.6 gallons of gasoline. The other 22.4 gallons go into the products just mentioned.
[ Note from PMC - Vaseline was originally a "useless by-product" of petroleum refining until some fellow (who's name escapes me, now) found out that it worked great to help heal/protect the sorely-abused hands of the "roughnecks" on the oil rigs and began marketing it and experimenting with it further. ]

How much of the cost of oil goes into the price of gasoline?
Answer: A bunch. We consumed about 390 million gallons of gas a day last year in our cars, trucks, recreational vehicles, boats, farm implements, and construction and landscaping equipment. Back when crude was $68 a barrel (that was just last year), it accounted for about 58 percent of the price of a gallon of gasoline. The rest of the price came from refining costs (17 percent), federal and state taxes (15 percent), and distribution and  marketing (10 percent). By the way, the price of crude accounts for about 77 percent of the cost of gas at $4 a gallon.

Here's a little something you may not have considered. What products that you buy on a regular basis are sold with tax included?
Answer: Gasoline. For everything else, you add the tax at checkout. The folks in California pay 63.9 cents a gallon in state and federal fuel taxes, the most in the nation. That's just the base, though.  Motorists there also pay an additional 6-percent state sales tax, with some paying another 1.25-percent county sales tax plus applicable local sales taxes. Same in Illinois, where Chicago motorists pay 12.75 cents per gallon on top of the 57.9 cents per gallon in state and federal taxes. Some Illinois motorists also pay a 6.25-percent sales tax. Politicians, pundits, and other TV talking heads don't like to provide these answers, because facts get in the way of positions that pander to the mob. We don't point fingers at Canada, because it's de rigueur to paint the Saudis with the broad brush of blame.  [ And, to use French in Quebec!  PMC ]  Folks float the idea of a moratorium on state and federal gasoline taxes without explaining its minimal impact on gas prices or without mentioning the $3 sales tax some motorists pay on top of a $50 fill up.

Policymakers don't explain that oil trades in the dollar, which is weak vis-a-vis the Euro, because that would require solutions for strengthening the greenback. And, it's easier for simple minds to convince simpler minds to impose windfall-profit taxes on pension funds and owners of Individual Retirement Accounts who invest in oil companies than to take on credit card issuers charging double- and triple-digit interest rates to the millions of people using plastic to pay for food and fuel.
Talk about irony.

Ever heard of the Bakken Formation?

GOOGLE it.  It will blow your mind. 

 The U.S. Geological Service issued a report in April ('08) that only scientists and oilmen knew was coming, but man was it big. It was a revised report (hadn't been updated since '95) on how much oil was in this area of the western 2/3 of North Dakota; western South Dakota; and extreme eastern Montana ... check THIS out:

The Bakken is the largest domestic oil discovery since Alaska ' sPrudhoe Bay , and has the potential to eliminate all American dependence on foreign oil. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates it at 503 billion barrels. Even if just 10% of the oil is recoverable... at $107 a barrel, we're looking at a resource base worth more than $5.3 trillion.

'When I first briefed legislators on this, you could practically see their jaws hit the floor. They had no idea.' says Terry Johnson, the Montana Legislature's financial analyst.

'This sizable find is now the highest-producing onshore oil field found in the past 56 years,' reports The Pittsburgh Post Gazette. It's a formation known as the Williston Basin , but is more commonly referred to as the 'Bakken.' And it stretches from Northern Montana, through North Dakota and into Canada . For years, U.S.oil exploration has been considered a dead end. Even the 'Big Oil' companies gave up searching for major oil wells decades ago. However, a recent technological breakthrough ha s opened up the Bakken's massive reserves... and we now have access of up to 500 billion barrels. And because this is light, sweet oil, those billions of barrels will cost Americans just $16 PER BARREL!

That's enough crude to fully fuel the American economy for 41 years straight.

2. [And if THAT didn't throw you on the floor, then this next one should - because it's from TWO YEARS AGO, people!]

U.S.Oil Discovery- Largest Reserve in the World!
Stansberry Report Online - 4/20/2006 Hidden 1,000 feet beneath the surface of the Rocky Mountains lies the largest untapped oil reserve in the world is more than 2 TRILLION barrels. On August 8, 2005 President Bush
mandated its extraction.

They reported this stunning news: We have more oil inside our borders, than all the other proven reserves on earth. Here are the official estimates:

-8-times as much oil as Saudi Arabia
-18-times as much oil a s Iraq
-21-times as much oil as Kuwait
-22-times as much oil as Iran
-500-times as much oil as Yemen - and it's all right here in the

Western United States .

HOW can this BE? HOW can we NOT BE extracting this!? Because the democrats, environmentalists and left wing republicans have blocked all efforts to help America become independent of foreign oil.

James Bartis, lead researcher with the study says we've got more oil in this very compact area than the entire Middle East -more than 2 TRILLION barrels. Untapped. That's more than all the proven oil reserves of crude oil in the world today, reports The Denver Post.

----
Don't think 'OPEC' will drop its price - even with this find? Think again! It's all about the competitive marketplace, - it has to.
----
[Got your attention/ire up yet?
 Hope so!  Now, while you're thinking about it ... and hopefully P.O'd, do this:

3. Take 10 minutes and compose an e-mail; fax or good old-fashioned letter to all your friends and associates. Alert them to the fact that democrats and 'liberal' republicans have been and will continue to obstruct all plans to make America independent of foreign oil. 


               

 Books by the editor;   EXTRACTION Published 2008 (August) by Xlibris  Action adventure fiction from the Viet Nam era. Air America and Yamashita's gold that reads like Terry & the Pirates. Buy it at discount at;  http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1436351650

   ISBN 978-1-4363-5164-5  softcover  Order from orders@xlibris.com

(read Excerpt  ISBN 978-1-4363-5165-2 hardcover   Close up @ http://www2.xlibris.com/books/webimages/wd/49521

  Next Book out by W.Addison Gast...is,.....                                                               

          

    INTERDICT

                                                                       By

W. ADDISON GAST

 

INTERDICT (Manuscript at publishers, due out in print October 2008) Action adventure fiction from today's headlines. Terrorism and what can happen in America as a result of Islamic teachings to youth in the middle east. follow the parallel lives of a young Iraqi recruited into the army of Osama and a young American Eagle scout that graduates from West Point and joins the homeland security Agency. ( read Excerpt)

Due out on bookshelves October, 2008, reserve your copy now at Xlibris


 Direct Textbook: Compare Prices on New & Used College Textbooks

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   Casualties in Iraq report

IMPORTANT LINK FOR ALL VETERANS--MOST URGENT LINK

Latest Info sheet on Retirement happenings---important must read items for Retiriees
 Vets for Freedom is headed ‘Back to Iraq’

MISSION: Its essential for the American people to know the facts about what is happening in Iraq. Some media outlets, and certain politicians, still fail to assess the situation objectively; so Vets for Freedom is heading Back to Iraq to let them know what has been accomplished, what still needs to be done, and how we should proceed in order to attain sustainable security in Iraq.

Vets for Freedom is sending 8 members back to the very streets they once patrolled in uniform to assess the situation on the ground. These members will be writing for BlackFive.net, Weekly Standard, and National Review Online. Their posts, articles, and videos will also be made available and updated daily on VetsforFreedom.org.

 

 http://www.vetsforfreedom.org/fourmonths/backtoiraq.aspx   BRAVO ZULU Guys!!



Book Reviews for this month  click here

  

                                                                                     http://www2.xlibris.com/books/webimages/wd/49521         

On the Hunt: How to Wake Up Washington and Win the War on Terror

TURKEY AUTHOR (?) OF THE YEAR AWARD GOES TO COLONEL DAVID HUNT. O'REILLY'S DRINKING BUDDY. ON PAGE 122 HUNT SAYS "SINCE I HATE ALL NAVY GUYS...." Nice going Colonel, that'll sell a lot of books!!!   Here is a supreme case of talking about something you know nothing about. Ding-dong here can't find enough bullshit to spin about what he doesn't know about Iraq. so from page 179 to 250 he loads the book with crapy  quality graphics copied from the net. His photo on the front shows him with his arms folded. It should show him with his head up his ass. Of course---We love this---on the back cover O'Reilly says Hunt "lays out a clear strategy for our survival" Jesus I hope not!! This BLIVY ( that's Navy term for ten pounds of bullshit in a five pound bag) IS SUPPOSED TO have "lectured at Harvard University" I'll bet they roared approval in that audience!!! Don't waste $16.95 on the rag                                                                                                                         



Archive of past news.  http://www.wesupportthevets.com/infosheet1.htm  http://www.wesupportthevets.com/archive1705.htm

http://www.wesupportthevets.com/archive19705.htm  http://www.wesupportthevets.com/archive40906.html 

Other archives of  WESUPPORTTHEVETS   Editorials  http://www.wesupportthevets.com/gasttoday.htm



Our Salute to
America's Heros Time to read again this powerful speech made by Major General Mike Lehnert at the commencement exercises  at Stanford University in 2006. This was given over a year ago. As you read this speech and the one given by Tom Brokaw, think how poignant this is relative to our present status in Iraq. 



Souvenir Munitions

The following is presented on behalf of  the Special Assistant to DASA in the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army: Civilians who are unaware of the danger associated with military munitions, or military personnel who have ignored it, often find and keep munitions as souvenirs... Read more about souvenir munitions at:  http://www.dfas.mil/rna-news/dec2007/souvenirmunitions.html.
History worth Reading. Kind of a "Where are they now?" type column. We add to it as space & time permit. click on the Name, or subject for link to the article.

Paul Tibbets, Pilot of the Enola Gay The B29 that dropped the bomb on Japan to end the war.


Major Pappy Boyington  The legendary CO of the "black sheep" squadron VMF214 some references to additional reading and a good background of this hero's life.


Iowa Jima  The story of a meeting at the Iowa Jima memorial when James Bradley {FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS} meets a class of youngsters visiting the memorial. Good rundown on each of the men that raised the flag on Iowa


TEN FUNNIEST VIDEOS and /OR  most interesting -- ON THE NET

Watch these p-47 aircraft do their stuff from ww II gun cameras http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4368250464023128830&pr=googsl
 

Send us an article that you think other vets should see send to; article@wesupporthevets.com

Want to link your site here? linkrequest@wesupportthevets.com   

Researching information that we have previously published?  archive@wesupportthevets.com

SCAM SCAM SCAM the most recent net scams that ar worthy of discussion and caution

2008 July; scam 410  Dying Saundra williams

                    scam 437  White house and UN sending you $$$  they owe you.

                    scam 429  You are now in charge of a 4 million Jap charity

 

The Baguio  News  is reprinted here each month in its entirety because it is one of the most informative and up to date briefings on military concerns for retired.

RAO Bulletin
15 August 2008
 
THIS BULLETIN CONTAINS THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES

== Mobilized Reserve 13 AUG 08 ---------------- (1,106 Decrease)
== Will [02] --------------------------------- (What to Avoid)
== Tricare Deductible [01] ------------------------ (New Rule for RC)
== Medicare Part D [22] --------------- (Dual Eligible’s Drug Cost)
== Medicare Ambulance Coverage] ------ (What is/is not covered)
== Economic Stimulus Package [07] -------- (IRS Issues Reminder)
== Disabled Veterans Memorial [02] --------- ($86 Million Project)
== USERRA [06] --------------------- (Proposed Legislation)
== Death Gratuity [04] ------------ (Electronic Deposit Available)
== VA Use of Religion Lawsuit --------------- (No Legal Standing)
== Military Compensation Review [01] --- (Special/Incentive Pays)
== Military Compensation Review [02] ------- (Retirement System)
== Military Compensation Review [03] -------------------- (Tricare)
== Foreclosure [03] -------------------------- (Vet Protections)
== USFSPA & Divorce [02] --------------------- (Litigation Tactics)
== AO & Prostrate Cancer [01] ----------- (Exposure Double Risks)
== VA Mileage Reimbursement [05] ------ ($0.415/mile Proposed)
== Prostate Problems [06] --------------------- (Screening Age Limit)
== PTSD [23] ----------------------------- (SERV Act)
== VA COLA 2009 --------------------- (Senate Bill Passes)
== Veteran Legislation Status 13Aug 08 ------- (Where we Stand)


MOBILIZED RESERVE 13 AUG 08:  The Army, Air Force and Marine Corps announced the
current number of reservists on active duty as of 13 AUG 08 in support of the
partial mobilization. The net collective result is 1,106 fewer reservists mobilized
than last reported in the Bulletin for 1 AUG 08. At any given time, services may
mobilize some units and individuals while demobilizing others, making it possible
for these figures to either increase or decrease. The total number currently on
active duty in support of the partial mobilization of the Army National Guard and
Army Reserve is 80,778; Navy Reserve, 5,799; Air National Guard and Air Force
Reserve, 11,491; Marine Corps Reserve, 8096; and the Coast Guard Reserve, 740. This
brings the total National Guard and Reserve personnel who have been mobilized to
106,904 including both units and individual augmentees. A cumulative roster of all
National Guard and Reserve personnel, who are currently mobilized, can be found at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Aug2008//d20080813ngr.pdf . [Source: DoD News
Release 691-08 13 Aug 08 ++]


WILL UPDATE 02:  If not planned carefully a will (even if recently updated) could
have undesired consequences.  Following are five flaws that could reshape your
intended inheritances:

1. Not coordinating your will with other documents. Certain assets such as
retirement accounts and life insurance proceeds are not controlled by your will and
go, at your death, to the beneficiaries you named either when you opened the account
or when you last updated the beneficiary forms.

2. Not planning for the worst. What would happen if the people you have named in
your will die at the same time or shortly after you? By not making alternate plans,
your estate could end up in the hands of people you didn't anticipate.

3. Leaving too much to your spouse. If you have an estate worth more than $2 million
in 2008, your estate may pay more in estate taxes if you leave everything to your
spouse. Take advantage of a tax-saving tool—the bypass trust—which protects up to $2
million from being taxed twice, leaving more inheritance for your heirs.

4. Not leaving enough to a spouse. Most states will not allow you to disinherit a
spouse. In fact, typically he or she is entitled to one-fourth to one-half of your
estate, depending on your state's laws. Check with your estate planning attorney to
make sure your spouse is adequately cared for.

5. Trying to control inheritance after you're gone. In some instances, trying to
motivate heirs by placing their inheritance in "family incentive trusts" may
backfire. The trust language needs to be flexible enough to accommodate emergencies
or changes in circumstances, avoiding possible expensive legal recourse.

For more information on the above contact shelleym@moaa.org.  To learn more about
creating a will that meets your needs, consult an estate planning attorney. [Source:
MOAA News Exchange CAPT Shelley Marshall article 13 Aug 08 ++]


TRICARE DEDUCTIBLE UPDATE 01:  Families of some active-duty Reserve and National
Guard members will get a break on paying annual deductibles associated with the
military's health care system, according to a final rule
(http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/E8-18597.htm)   published 12 AUG in the Federal
Register. The rule, which was proposed in AUG 06 and took effect on 12 AUG makes
permanent the Defense Department's authority to waive the annual TRICARE deductibles
for eligible dependents of reservists and Guard members who are called to active
duty for more than 30 days. It applies to those who choose to participate in TRICARE
Standard or Extra, rather than TRICARE Prime. By law, the TRICARE Standard (or
Extra) deductible for active-duty family members is $150 per individual and $300 per
family each fiscal year. For those at the E-4 level and below, the deductibles are
$50 per individual and $100 per family. Dependents are defined as spouses and
children. In addition, the final regulation increases the amount that can be billed
to out-of-network health care providers. "This helps reserve and Guard family
members to be able to continue to see civilian providers with whom they have
established relations and promotes access and clinically appropriate continuity of
care," the notice stated. The rule makes permanent authority exercised by Defense
through the extension of a demonstration project. The fiscal 2005 National Defense
Authorization Act gave the department that authority and waived certain TRICARE
deductibles for active-duty members of reserve components. The Federal Register
notice stated that an independent government estimate concluded that the annual cost
for implementing the rule would be less than $30 million. [Source: GovExec.com Today
13 Aug 08 ++]



MEDICARE PART “D” UPDATE 22:   A new report from the House Committee on Oversight
and Government Reform found that people who get coverage from both Medicare and
Medicaid (a group sometimes called "dual eligible"), pay 30%  more for prescription
drugs under the Medicare prescription drug benefit (Part D) than they would if
Medicaid paid the bill. According to the study released 25 JUL, this discrepancy in
pricing accounted for $3.7 billion in revenue for drug manufacturers during the
first two years of the Part D program. The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement,
and Modernization Act of 2003, which established the drug benefit, required that
Medicare Part D, not Medicaid, cover the cost of drugs for people with both Medicare
and Medicaid. Many nursing-home residents fall into this category. Democrats in the
House say this overpayment is an unjustified burden on the taxpayer, and they seek
to correct the problem through new legislation. But House Republicans have countered
that the new report overlooks important aspects and benefits to dual eligibles
contained in the Part D program. Under Part D, for example, dual eligibles have
access to a greater variety of prescription drugs. [Source: Medicare Rights Center
12 Aug 08 ++]


MEDICARE AMBULANCE COVERAGE:   If it is an emergency Medicare will generally cover
ambulance services, as long as an ambulance is the only safe way to transport you
(medically necessary); and you are transported to and from certain locations.  If
covered, Medicare will pay for 80% of its approved amount for the ambulance service.
You or your supplemental insurance policy will be responsible for the remaining 20%.
 All ambulance providers must accept Medicare assignment, meaning they must accept
the Medicare-approved amount as payment in full. If it is not an emergency, Medicare
coverage of ambulance services is very limited. An emergency is when your health is
in serious danger and every second counts to prevent your health from getting worse.
If the trip is scheduled as a way to transport you from one location to another when
your health is not in immediate danger, it is not considered an emergency. Medicare
will never pay for ambulette services (i.e. use of specially equipped motor vehicles
for transporting convalescing or handicapped people).  Also, lack of access to
alternative transportation alone will not justify Medicare coverage. Medicare may
cover non-emergency ambulance services if:

You are confined to your bed (unable to get up from bed without help, unable to
walk, and unable to sit in a chair or wheelchair); or
You need vital medical services during your trip that are only available in an
ambulance, such as administration of medications or monitoring of vital functions;
or
The hospital where you are receiving treatment is local, or is the closest facility
that can provide the treatment you need; or
The cost of bringing treatment to your home is less than the cost of transporting
you to the hospital and back by ambulance (for frequent trips, Medicare may require
proof that the regular ambulance trips are more appropriate than hospitalization);
or
The ambulance meets Medicare requirements.

     For Medicare to cover transportation by ambulance the service must be provided
within your service area and be medically necessary. If your service area does
not have a facility that is adequately equipped or capable of treating you,
transport to the closest appropriate facility will be covered. The service area
is the geographical region around a facility that contains most of the patients
whom the facility serves. For example, if you live in a town with a small
community hospital and there is a larger urban hospital 20 miles away, the
larger hospital would be part of your service area if it regularly serves
people who live in your town. To find out what facilities are in your service
area, contact your Medicare Part B carrier by calling 800-MEDICARE. Medicare
will cover ambulance services to and from the following locations within your
service area:
From your home, or any other place where the need arose to the closest appropriate
hospital or skilled nursing facility (SNF).
From a hospital or SNF to your home if the facility is the closest appropriate one
in relation to your home.
From a SNF to the nearest medical provider, if the SNF cannot provide you necessary
treatment and the cost of transport is less then bringing the treatment to you, and
back.
From your home to the nearest appropriate renal dialysis facility, and back.
[Source:  Medicare Rights Center 12 Aug 08 ++]


ECONOMIC STIMULUS PACKAGE UPDATE 07:   The Internal Revenue Service wants retirees
and veterans to know that it is not too late to file for an economic stimulus
payment. The IRS plans to send a second set of information packets to 5.2 million
people who may be eligible but who have not yet filed for their stimulus payment.
The packages will contain everything needed by a person who normally does not file a
tax return but who must file this year in order to receive a payment of up to $300 —
$600 for those married and filing jointly. The deadline for filing for the payment
is 15 OCT. For more information call the rebate hot line at (866) 234-2942 or check
the IRS Web site at www.irs.gov/newsroom/ [Source: Veterans Journal article 11 Aug
08 ++]


DISABLED VETERANS MEMORIAL UPDATE 02:   Congress approved legislation which the
president signed into law requiring the U.S. Mint to issue 350,000 silver coins to
raise money for a memorial near the U.S. Capitol honoring disabled veterans. Across
Independence Avenue from the U.S. Botanic Garden are two acres dedicated to the
American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial, but raising the $86 million for
design, construction, maintenance and outreach has been a campaign for supporters. A
$3 million pledge from H. Ross Perot earlier this year put the total collected near
$70 million. The House and Senate authorized the minting of 350,000 $1 coins, which
will be sold with a $10 surcharge. The proceeds of the surcharge will be paid
directly to the Disabled Veterans' LIFE Memorial Foundation. The foundation was
incorporated in 1998, but fundraising did not begin in earnest until 2002. The
memorial will honor 3 million veterans currently living with a disability as a
result of their military service. The design, approved by the Commission of Fine
Arts in 2004, features a star-shaped reflecting pool, an everlasting flame and grove
of trees. The memorial is designed "not just to show all of the veterans how much we
care about them and honor them but also to remind future Congresses that freedom is
not free, that a price is very high when the president calls on our armed forces to
deliver, and when they do, we honor them and will always remember their memory,"
Rep. Mark Steven Kirk, R-Ill., said recently on the House floor. The coins will be
issued in 2010, weigh 26.73 grams, be 1.5 inches in diameter and contain 90%  silver
and 10% copper. For more information refer to http://www.avdlm.org. [Source: EANGUS
Minuteman Update 7 Aug 08 ++]


USERRA UPDATE 06:  Senators Robert Casey (D-PA), Edward Kennedy (D-MA) and Barack
Obama (D-IL) and have sponsored S.3432, the Servicemembers' Access to Justice Act,
with a House companion bill expected soon, which would eliminate state sovereign
immunity and make states subject to USERRA claims if they receive any federal
financial assistance for any program or activity. The bill would also provide
enhanced USERRA remedies against state, federal and/or private employers for
violating USERRA, including damages plus interest for lost wages or actual monetary
losses where wages have not been denied; liquidated damages equal to the wages or
other monetary loss or $10,000, whichever is greater. Members with claims against
state and private employers would be entitled to a jury trial and to punitive
damages in the case of an employer of 25 or more employees whose violation was done
with malice or reckless indifference to the rights of the servicemember. Successful
claimants would mandatorily be awarded attorney fees acquired in fighting for their
USERRA rights.

     The Uniformed Services Employment and Re-employment Rights Act protects family
and medical leave rights of reservists and guardsmen.  Under the Act any person
called up for military service has certain rights in the civilian workplace.
Every employer, from the biggest of corporations to small businesses, must
comply. The act covers people who’ve been absent from work because of:
Active duty.
Active duty for training.
Inactive duty training.
Full-time National Guard duty.
An examination to determine fitness for any of the types of duty mentioned above.
Funeral honors duty performed by National Guard or reservists.
Employers must extend USERRA provisions to anyone in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps,
Air Force or Coast Guard; Reserves and National Guard; Commissioned Corps of the
Public Health Service; or any other group of people designated by the president. For
more information on the USERRA refer to www.dol.gov/vets.  [Source: NGAUS Leg Up 8
AUG 08]


DEATH GRATUITY UPDATE 04:  Death gratuity checks worth $100,000 can now be deposited
electronically. The new measure, which took effect 4 AUG, makes the funds available
to grieving family members within 24 hours. Service personnel designate who they
want to receive the funds on their Page 2 information. “We want to make those funds
available,” said Lt. Karen Eifert, a Navy spokeswoman at the Pentagon. Previously,
the death gratuity checks were only available in paper form, often delivered during
a visit from a casualty assistance calls officer. Eifert said it could take days or
weeks for the funds to clear, resulting, according to recent news reports, in
families not having money available for funeral services while banks held up the
funds. In one case, a man was jailed over a dispute with his son’s check. “That’s
what sprang us into action, to make things easier for families that are grieving,”
she said. “We recommend they take the electronic funds transfer.” The $100,000 death
gratuity is wholly separate from group life insurance available to military members,
she noted. The Navy follows the Army, Air Force and Marine Corps in offering the
electronic check to its members. Paper checks will still be available should sailors
choose that option. [Source: NavyTimes article posted 7 Aug 08 ++]


VA USE OF RELIGION LAWSUIT:   An appeals court has ruled taxpayers cannot sue the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for incorporating religion into its health care
programs for the nation's veterans.  The Chicago-based 7th Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled 5 AUG that the Madison-based Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFFF) and three
of its members have no legal standing to bring the case. The group was trying to end
the agency's practice of asking patients about their religion in "spiritual
assessments," its use of chaplains to treat patients, and drug and alcohol treatment
programs that incorporate religion. It claimed those practices violated the
separation of church and state. But the court ruled that federal taxpayers cannot
challenge those expenditures. It cited a U.S. Supreme Court decision from last year
in which the same group was not allowed to sue over President Bush’s faith-based
initiative. In that case, the court ruled 5-4 that taxpayers cannot sue the
executive branch for expenses that allegedly promote religion. Cases can only be
brought when the questionable expenditures are explicitly authorized in a
Congressional spending bill, the court ruled. Congress never authorized spending on
the chaplain services, pastoral care and other programs challenged, the 7th Circuit
ruled.

     Annie Laurie Gaylor, the group's co-president, criticized the ruling but said
an appeal to the Supreme Court was unlikely. She said the group would look for
VA patients who object to their treatment to be potential plaintiffs but said
such a case would still be difficult to win. "The courts are moving to the
position where government can fund religious activities and endorse religion
without restraint," she said. "It's really very disturbing." The appeals court
decision is the latest in a string of similar rulings since the Supreme Court
decision, George Washington University law professor Ira Lupu said. Federal
courts have dismissed cases challenging legislative prayer in Indiana and the
placement of children in religious foster homes in Kentucky and North Dakota,
he said. "There's quite a powerful trend here in the courts to take the Supreme
Court's decision and really run with it," he said. "I have not yet seen one
case where people have brought up this standing issue where the government has
lost and the taxpayers have won. Every single one has been thrown out. This is
really quite significant."

     Veterans Affairs lawyers did not challenge the group's ability to sue before
the Supreme Court decision, and U.S. District Judge John Shabaz dismissed the
case on its merits last year. He ruled the VA's programs integrate religion and
spirituality but are legal because they are voluntary and serve valid secular
purposes such as helping patients. The foundation appealed, and government
lawyers challenged its ability to sue after the Supreme Court decision came
down. The veterans agency, which treated 5.3 million people at its facilities
in 2005, says it believes spirituality should be integrated into care, but it
allows patients to decide whether that involves religion. Its spiritual
assessments ask patients a series of questions about their faith, such as how
often they attend church and how important religion is in their lives. Agency
officials say the assessments help them determine patients' needs. [Source:
Chicago Tribune AP Ryan J. Foley article 6 Aug 08 ++]


MILITARY COMPENSATION REVIEW UPDATE 01:  The 10th Quadrennial Review of Military
Compensation has suggested a new way of measuring military pay, proposed that more
money be spent on special and incentive pays, and recommended restructuring the
basic allowance for housing. Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Jan D. “Denny” Eakle --
former deputy director of the Defense Finance and Accounting Service -- chaired the
commission and briefed the media on the recommendations 12 MAR.  This was just the
first release of the review, Eakle explained. A second volume, covering retirement
and quality-of-life aspects of compensation, will be released in the summer. Eakle
said that whenever a QRMC convenes, the first question it examines always is whether
military pay is comparable to pay in the private sector. The second is whether
military pay is adequate to maintain the force, she said.  The 9th QRMC, released in
2002, concluded that for pay to be comparable, it had to be at or above the 70th
percentile of the age- and education-matched civilian population, Eakle said.
Military pay followed this guidance through 2006, and targeted pay raises in 2007
and 2008 ensure DoD exceeds the 70th percentile for enlisted personnel. Officer pay
exceeded this goal in 2006 and has kept pace since then, she said.

     Eakle said the current review studied whether the comparability formula is
adequate. “Basically, what we wanted to do is create something which would give
military members a better means of assessing how their pay stacked up in
comparison to civilians,” she said. Regular military compensation was the
measure used in previous QRMCs. This included basic pay, subsistence, housing
and a measure of savings on federal income tax. “But there's a lot more to
military compensation,” she said. The new system begins with regular military
compensation and adds state and FICA tax advantages. Military personnel also do
not pay out-of-pocket health care costs, such as co-pays, she explained, and
all these folded into the panel’s calculations. The new measurement is called
military annual compensation, and it sets the 80th percentile as the standard
for military compensation comparability with the private sector. Pay for
enlisted personnel and officers meets this standard, Eakle said. Congress
revamped the special incentive pay categories from more than 60 to eight, Eakle
said. “That, in fact, was a recommendation of this QRMC, and it was enacted
before the publication of this document, Eakle said. “And so now it's up to the
department to begin the process of drafting out the instructions to adopt
this.” The review recommended increasing the size of the special and incentive
pay budget. “Today we have an S&I budget that, quite frankly, is rather small
in comparison to the size of the other pay accounts,” she said. “And because of
that, it doesn't give the service as much flexibility for arranging pay.”

     The review examined the basic allowance for housing and a previous
recommendation to do away with the without-dependent housing rate. The review
also proposed changes to the partial-BAH program. Because some single
servicemembers are making as little as 52% of the pay their peers who have
families receive, the QRMC recommends raising that floor to no less than 75%
at first, and to 95% over time. But the gap between married and single BAH
should not disappear, Eakle said. The review did recommend changes for singles
living on post or aboard ships. The proposal is a new variable, partial BAH
based on the value of the quarters the servicemembers occupy. The DoD standard
is a one-plus-one dormitory -- meaning each individual having a bedroom and a
shared cooking facility and bathroom. For those living with three roommates,
the review believes they are overpaying for their accommodations by forfeiting
their entire housing allowance, and “we would recommend that they get a rebate
on their BAH.” “The range we are talking about is going from zero for people in
the one-plus-one dormitories, up to a 25% rebate for those who are living in
ships with hot-bunk arrangements,” she said. “So you'd be able to give people
something in recognition of the fact that housing is not at the DoD standard.”

     The review also recommended staying with time-in-service pay tables. A previous
commission, the Defense Advisory Committee on Military Compensation,
recommended replacing the time-in-service pay table with a time-in-grade pay
table. This would reward pay for performance, the commission members believed.
“We looked very seriously at this recommendation, but we've chosen not to
accept it and are not going to endorse the change,” Eakle said. She said it
would exacerbate pay differentials, adding: “We don't think that's in keeping
with our spirit of being fair and equitable to all members.” [Source: AFPS Jim
Garamone article 13 Mar 08 ++]


MILITARY COMPENSATION REVIEW UPDATE 02:  A panel looking at military compensation
has recommended dramatic changes in the military retirement system.  The
recommendations are part of the second volume put out by the 10th Quadrennial Review
of Military Compensation.  The first volume -- released in March -- looked at cash
compensation. Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Jan D. "Denny" Eakle was director of the
panel, and she briefed the press during a Pentagon news conference 5 AUG. Eakle said
critics of the current military retirement system say it is not equitable, it is not
flexible, and it is not efficient.  "There is a perception that the system we have
today is inequitable because only 15%  of all enlisted personnel and less than half
of officers will ever receive anything in the system," she said. Reserve-component
personnel also believe the current system discriminates against them, especially at
a time when reserve forces are being called on more, she said.

     The retirement proposal would offer a defined benefit, defined contributions,
"gate" pays and separation pays.  The defined benefit would be 2.5% of the
average basic pay for the highest 36 months of the individual's career
multiplied by the number of years of service, with servicemembers vested at 10
years of service. Payments to retirees would begin at age 60 for those with
less than 20 years of service and at age 57 for those with 20 years of service
or more.  Servicemembers could opt for an immediate annuity, but the payout
would follow the Federal Employee Retirement System methodology -- a 5% penalty
per year for early withdrawal. The defined contribution portion would be an
automatic government-funded Thrift Savings Plan. Servicemembers would not have
to match any government payment. The government would not put any money in for
the first year, but would put in 2% of base pay for two years of service, 3%
for three and four years of service, and 5%  for five and more years of
service. Again, this would be vested after 10 years of service.

     The military also would make "gate pays" to servicemembers who reach specific
years of service. These would vary by years of service and skills, Eakle said.
"This is a payment made for achieving a particular year of service," she
explained. "And within the services, they would have the flexibility to vary
this by year of service as well as by skill. That way, they could begin to
shape the skills by dragging people further into their career by offering them
an incentive."  Finally, the system would include separation pays to
servicemembers that would also vary by years of service and skills. "The
separation payments would be made available by the service to members that they
wished to entice to leave," Eakle said. This would be a permanent tool services
would have available, she added.

     The panel used a Rand Corporation computer model to test the recommendations,
but Eakle said the panel members would like a large-scale test in the Defense
Department. "Therefore, the recommendation of this QRMC is that the Department
of Defense conducts a multi-year test of this system. The way the test would
work is this: All four services would be asked to identify some skills that
have different types of retention patterns -- some that stay not very long,
some that stay longer periods of time -- and ones they wish to influence. The
test would offer people in those skills in the first eight years of service an
opportunity to volunteer.  If someone was selected for the test, they would be
paid all of the TSP that they should have earned up until that point, and it
will be put in their TSP account for them. The program's vesting rules would in
fact apply to all those individuals. So should they achieve 10 years of service
while they are in the test, they would fully own it. At the end of the test
period, people who are in the new system who wish to revert to the original
retirement system would be allowed to do so.” she said. Any change in the
retirement system would require action by Congress. DoD officials said they
will carefully examine the panel's recommendations and then decide if they
should move forward. The study will take at least six to 12 months, so any
decision would be made by the next administration, DoD officials added.
[Source: AFPS Jim Garamone article 5 Aug 08 ++]


MILITARY COMPENSATION REVIEW UPDATE 03:  The Quadrennial Review of Military
Compensation has recommended fee changes to Tricare, the military's health care
system. The recommendations would mostly affect retirees and will not affect
active-duty servicemembers or their dependents, retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Jan D.
"Denny" Eakle, the director of the study, said in a Pentagon briefing today.
"Retiree fees ought to relate to how much the plan is worth. The ... higher-value
plans should have higher premiums associated with them. The panel believes fees need
to be fair to all retired military members. They ought to reflect how much income an
individual has, so that if they make more money and are therefore better able to pay
for a system, they should do so," she said.  One problem is the fee structure for
Tricare has not changed in 13 years. In 1995, servicemembers paid 27%  of their
health care cost. Today that share is less than 12%. Over-65 military retirees --
those using the "Tricare for Life" program -- have been paying the Medicare Part B
program fee of 25%, but this is due to rise. "Essentially what this says to you is
that we are asking our older retirees, who are in fact the least likely to hold jobs
and therefore have the lowest incomes, to pay the most for their system," Eakle
said.

     But Tricare for Life is a much more generous program than Tricare Prime. Eakle
said, "We believe we need to get some parity between our older and our younger
retirees. The panel wants to redress some of this imbalance.  We believe that
the under-65 retirees should begin paying 40% of the Medicare Part B premium
using the same fee structure that is laid on by the Medicare system, adding
that this should bring the system into a semblance of parity. In addition, we
believe that the under-65 retirees ... who elect to use Tricare Standard and
Extra need to pay a small fee for that. And we would suggest to the department
that that fee be set at 15% of the Medicare Part B. We think the family rate
should be set at double the individual rate and that the premium increase needs
to be phased in over four years."  Other recommendations include using the
Medicare deductible rate -- $135 per person in 2008 -- for Tricare. The panel
also recommended to the department that all co-pays and co-insurance for any
preventative service be provided at no cost to all members and retirees who
have access to Tricare. The final panel recommendation to DoD is to establish
an open enrollment period for Tricare, Eakle said. [Source: AFPS Jim Garamone
article 5 Aug 08 ++]


FORECLOSURE UPDATE 03:  “The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008”, H.R.3221
was recently signed into law (PL 110-289).  To review the full law, go to:
http://thomas.loc.gov/ and type HR 3221 into the search field. This legislation is
designed to help homeowners keep their existing homes and provide first-time buyers
access to affordable housing. Military families should know that there are several
provisions within the Act that uniquely impact service members and veterans. The law
will:
Exclude military housing allowances from counting as income when service members try
to qualify for low-income housing;
Expand the foreclosure protection for service members returning from deployment.
Previously, service members had 90 days of protection from foreclosure, now they
have nine months. This temporary protection expires on December 31, 2010;
Provide a temporary increase until the end of the year for the maximum loan
guaranteed by the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA). The cap can be as high as
$720,750 and as low as $417,000 depending on the median housing prices for the area;

Require the Secretary of Defense to develop a program to provide financial
counseling to returning service members, including credit and home mortgage
counseling;
Provide a moving benefit to service members who are forced to move out of rental
housing if the owner of the housing is foreclosed on;
Increase grants for severally disabled veterans from $50,000 to $60,000;
Make totally disabled service members held on active duty for medical reasons
eligible for VA grants for home alternations before their discharge;
Extend grants for specially adapted housing and assistance to veterans with severe
burns and veterans residing outside the United States; and
Allow veteran benefits received as a lump sum to be treated as monthly benefits for
the purposes of eligibility for Section 8 Housing assistance.
[Source: NMFA Government and You E-News 12 Aug 08 ++]


USFSPA & DIVORCE UPDATE 02:   The USFSPA Litigation Support Group (ULSG) closely
monitors cases filed in state courts where former servicemembers, who are receiving
military retirement pay, are locked in disputes with former spouses when that pay is
converted, by election, to military disability pay under applicable VA benefits.
This is a common move by former servicemembers who receive a VA disability rating
because of the tax advantages of receiving disability pay over retired pay.  Former
spouses usually dispute such an election and demand that foregone share of military
retired pay be rendered to them, even though the former servicemember's only (or
major) source of income is now disability pay. Usually, former servicemembers (and
their lawyers) rely solely on the provisions of the Uniformed Services Former
Spouses Protection Act (USFSPA) which prevents the treatment of military disability
pay as disposable pay for purposes of payments to former spouses.  See USFSPA, 10
U.S.C. § 1408(a)(4)(B).  But state courts continue to ignore that provision and rule
against the interests of former servicemembers.

     It is vital, therefore, that ULSG members and constituents also rely on the
relevant provisions of the Veterans' Benefits Act, 38 U.S.C. § 5301, which
provides that payments of benefits due or to become due under any law
administered by the Secretary [of Veterans Affairs] shall not be assignable
except to the extent specifically authorized by law, and such payments made to,
or on account of, a beneficiary shall be … exempt from the claim of creditors,
and shall not be liable to attachment, levy, or seizure by or under any legal
or equitable process whatever, either before or after receipt by the
beneficiary. Congress recently amended the VBA and this applicable provision
Id. § 5301(a)(1). , to clarify that, in any case where a beneficiary entitled
to compensation, pension, or dependency and indemnity compensation enters into
an agreement with another person under which agreement such other person
acquires for consideration the right to receive such benefit by payment of such
compensation, pension or dependency and indemnity compensation, as the case may
be … such agreement shall be deemed to be an assignment and is prohibited.
Veterans Benefits Act of 2003, Pub. L. No. 108-183, § 702, 117 Stat. 2651, Dec.
16, 2003, codified at § 5301(a)(3)(A).
 
    ULSG members finding themselves in litigation on questions related to this
advisory should instruct their lawyers to brief and argue – from the very
beginning of the case, and at every opportunity thereafter – the  Veterans
Benefits Act (VBA) issue, in support of their position.  While ULSG, LLC cannot
provide individualized legal advice to its members and constituents, or answer
individual queries, ULSG leadership believes that this is a prudent course to
follow in cases such as this. ULSG would appreciate hearing reports on this
issue from those concerned.  They can be reached at Leadership@ulsg.org or by
mail to ULSG, LLC, 20770 US Hwy 281, Ste 108-12, San Antonio, Texas 78258-7500.
[Source: ULSG Advisory 5 Aug 08 ++]
 

AO & PROSTRATE CANCER UPDATE 01:  Veterans exposed to the herbicide Agent Orange are
twice as likely to get prostate cancer as other veterans, UC Davis researchers found
in a study published online by the journal Cancer. Prostate cancer in those men also
comes on earlier and is more aggressive, said Dr. Karim Chaime, chief resident in
urology at UC Davis and the study's lead author. The findings are a clear signal
that men who worked with Agent Orange should be cared for differently, getting
earlier biopsies and more aggressive treatment, he said.  "This is a high-risk
group." Chaime described the study of more than 13,000 Northern California veterans
over eight years as "the biggest study ever done" on Agent Orange effects. It will
be published in the 15 SEP print edition of Cancer, after online publication last
week, and Chaime hopes it soon could lead to new Department of Veterans’ Affairs
treatment standards.

     For Vietnam vet James McKasson, who participated in the study, the findings are
a reminder that no one exposed to Agent Orange should delay prostate-cancer
testing. McKasson, 62, a retired auto mechanic, said he's doing well after
being diagnosed with prostate cancer last year – 40 years after he helped load
Agent Orange onto planes in the 1960s. He worked with both liquid and powdered
forms of the chemical, and "this stuff would slop around; it would drip on
you," he recalled. "You'd walk through it and get it on your shoes, on your
clothes, on your hands. … They didn't give us any protective clothing at all."
For decades, McKasson didn't worry much about studies that linked exposure to
diseases ranging from diabetes to soft-tissue cancer to birth defects in
veterans' children. "I'm an advocate now," he said, telling his "stubborn"
friends to have regular checks for prostate cancer.

     The chemical was used widely during the Vietnam War to defoliate jungle areas
where U.S. forces believed enemies were hiding. It also was used around U.S.
military facilities at home and abroad as early as the 1950s, according to the
Department of Veterans Affairs. About 375,000 men nationwide are on the
military's Agent Orange registry of those exposed, and roughly one-third can be
expected to develop prostate cancer, Chaime said. "This has huge implications
for men, especially in the VA," but also for those treated by private
insurance, whose primary care doctors and urologists may not have seen the
latest data, he added. Of the 13,000 men followed by the study, just under half
had been exposed to Agent Orange. Among the 6,214 exposed, 239 were diagnosed
with prostate cancer over eight years, compared with 124 of 6,930 unexposed
veterans. [Source:  The Sacramento Bee Carrie Peyton Dahlberg article 5 Aug 08
++]


VA MILEAGE REIMBURSEMENT UPDATE 05:   The House overwhelmingly approved a bill
that—among other things—would increase the mileage compensation paid by the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) by nearly 50% to help vets who have to drive
long distances to receive medical care. The increase in mileage compensation—to 41.5
cents per mile—was included in the Fiscal Year 2009 Military Construction and
Veterans Affairs Appropriations Act, which must still be considered by the Senate
and approved by President Bush, said House Appropriations Committee Chairman Dave
Obey (D-WI). The spending bill—which passed 409 to 4—would provide $336 million
above Bush’s FY 2009 budget request for servicemember quality-of-life projects to
improve living conditions and health care delivery. Projects include the
modernization of training facilities, as well as the building of child care centers,
barracks and housing, Obey said. The bill also would address the backlog in
maintenance at VA medical facilities; improve access to health care for vets in
areas where VA does not offer services; increase availability of new generation
prosthetics; substantially increase funding for research into trauma, mental health
and other critical areas; and provide additional case workers and medical services
for homeless vets. [Source: Rep. Dave Obey press release 1 Aug 08 ++]


PROSTATE PROBLEMS UPDATE 06:  In a move that could lead to significant changes in
medical care for older men, a national task force in the United States recommended
that doctors stop screening men ages 75 and older for prostate cancer because the
search for the disease in this group is causing more harm than good. The new
guidelines, issued 4 AUG by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, represent an
abrupt policy change by an influential panel that had withheld any advice regarding
screening for prostate cancer, citing a lack of reliable evidence. Though the task
force still has not taken a stand on the value of screening in younger men, the
shift is certain to re-ignite the debate about the appropriateness of prostate
cancer screening at any age. Screening for prostate cancer is typically performed
with a blood test measuring prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, levels. Because it is
not clear precisely what PSA level signals the presence of cancer, many men
experience stressful false alarms that lead to unnecessary surgical biopsies to make
a definitive diagnosis, which can be painful and in rare cases can cause serious
complications. Widespread PSA testing has led to high rates of prostate cancer
detection.  Last year, more than 218,000 men in the United States were found to have
the disease. About 28,000 die of it, making it the most common cancer and
second-leading cancer killer among men.

     Various studies suggest the disease is "over-diagnosed" - that is, detected at
a point when the disease probably would not affect life expectancy - in 29 to
44% of cases. Prostate cancer often progresses very slowly, and a large number
of these cancers discovered through screening probably will never cause
symptoms during the patient's lifetime, particularly if that patient is older.
At the same time, aggressive treatment of prostate cancer can greatly reduce a
patient's quality of life, resulting in complications like impotence
and incontinence. Past task force guidelines noted that there was no benefit to
prostate cancer screening in men with less than 10 years left to live. Since it
can be difficult to assess life expectancy, it was an informal recommendation
that had limited impact on screening practices. The new guidelines take a more
definitive stand; however, stating that the age of 75 is clearly the point at
which screening is no longer appropriate. The task force was created by
Congress to analyze current medical research and to make recommendations about
preventive care for healthy people. Its guidelines are viewed as highly
credible and often are relied on by practicing physicians in making decisions
about patient care. It is estimated that one out of every three American men 75
and older is now screened for prostate cancer. [Source: International Herald
tribune Tara Parker-Pope article 5 Aug 08 ++]


PTSD UPDATE 23:  In response to the growing number of veterans denied the mental
health treatment needed to address their post traumatic stress who end up in legal
trouble after self-medicating to suppress their anxieties, Sens. John Kerry (D-MA)
and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)on 1 AUG introduced the Services, Education, and
Rehabilitation for Veterans (SERV) Act to create veteran drug treatment courts to
support veterans combat the cycle of alcohol or drug addiction. A similar program is
operational in Buffalo, NY and has already seen great success. The SERV Act would
authorize funds to go to the Office of National Drug Control Policy for the
development and implementation of veteran’s treatment courts or to enhance
operational drug courts to serve veterans. The grants would be administered by the
Department of Justice in consultation with the Department of Veterans Affairs. To be
eligible for funding the veteran’s treatment court or drug court serving veterans
must effectively integrate substance abuse treatment, mental health treatment,
mandatory drug testing, sanctions and incentives, and transitional services in a
judicially supervised court setting with jurisdiction over nonviolent,
substance-abusing offenders that have served in the United States military. Also
included is the authorization for the National Drug Court Institute (NDCI). The NDCI
is a bipartisan supported organization that conducts national, comprehensive
training programs for State and local communities for the purpose of improving the
professional skills of drug court practitioners and enhancing the ability of State
and local communities to expand drug courts to reach all addicted citizens in need

     “These treatment courts will address the specific challenges with drugs and
alcohol too many veterans face when returning home from their honorable service
overseas,” said Senator John Kerry. “For those who have given so much for our
country, we should address the serious issues of drug and alcohol addiction in
an appropriate forum that recognizes that some veterans fall victim to
substance abuse as a way to handle post-traumatic stress. It’s well past time
we offered our veterans services worthy of their sacrifice.” Sen. Murkowski
said, “Some of the brave men and women who have served our country fall victim
to alcohol and drug addiction and end up in our criminal justice system. Drug
courts are an effective way to break this cycle of abuse and help these
veterans re-enter society. The Alaska Court System already has successful drug
courts in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Bethel, Juneau and Ketchikan, and there is a
Veterans Court in Anchorage. This bill would provide additional funding for
some of Alaska’s existing therapeutic court programs and would allow more
nonviolent-offender programs to be developed across the state. The SERV Act is
particularly important for Alaska, which has one of the highest veterans’ per
capita rates in the nation.” [Source:  Military.com AP article 1 Aug 08 ++]


VA COLA 2009:   S.2617, the Veterans Compensation Cost-of-Living Adjustment Act of
2008 intoduced by Senator Akaka, was passed by unanimous consent in the Senate 30
JUL. If passed in the House, it will adjust veterans' compensation rates to keep
pace with inflation effective 1 DEC 08. According to recent data provided by the
Department of Veteran Affairs this increase will go to 2.8 million veterans and over
300,000 surviving spouses receiving dependency and indemnity compensation. The bill
now moves to the House of Representativess for their consideration. While this
year's cost-of-living increase has yet to be determined, the congressional Budget
Office has projected a 2.8% increase.  Last year's increase was 2.3% [source: Sen.
Akaka press release 21 Jun 08 +]


HAVE YOU HEARD:  Ways to Simulate Being in The Navy if you are a Retired Destroyer
Sailor:

Lock all friends and family outside.  Your only means of communication should be
with letters that your neighbors have held for at least three weeks, discarding two
of five.
Surround yourself with 200 people that you don’t really know or like: people who
smoke, snore like Mack trucks going uphill, and use foul language like a child uses
sugar on cereal.
Unplug all radios and TVs to completely cut you off from the outside world.  Have a
neighbor bring you a Time, Newsweek, or Proceedings from five years ago to keep you
abreast of current events.
Monitor all home appliances hourly, recording all vital information (ie: plugged in,
lights come on when doors open, etc).
Do not flush the toilet for five days to simulate the smell of 40 people using the
same commode.
Lock the bathroom twice a day for a four hour period.
Wear only military uniforms.  Even though nobody cares, clean and press one dress
uniform and wear it for 20 minutes.
Cut your hair weekly, making it shorter each time, until you look bald or look like
you lost a fight with a demented sheep.
Work in 19-hour cycles, sleeping only four hours at a time, to ensure that your body
does not know or even care if it is day or night.
Listen to your favorite CD 6 times a day for two weeks, then play music that causes
acute nausea until you are glad to get back to your favorite CD.
Cut a twin mattress in half and enclose three sides of your bed.  Add a roof that
prevents you from sitting up (about 10 inches is a good distance) then place it on a
platform that is four feet off the floor.  Place a small dead animal under the bed
to simulate the smell of your bunkmate’s socks.
Set your alarm to go off at 10 minute intervals for the first hour of sleep to
simulate the various times the watchstanders and night crew bump around and wake you
up.  Place your bed on a rocking table to ensure you are tossed around the remaining
three hours.  Make use of a custom clock that randomly simulates fire alarms, police
sirens, helicopter crash alarms, and a new-wave rock band.
Have week old fruit and vegetables delivered to your garage and wait two weeks
before eating them.
Prepare all meals blindfolded using all the spices you can grope for, or none at
all.  Remove the blindfold and eat everything in three minutes.
Periodically, shut off all power at the main circuit breaker and run around shouting
“fire, fire, fire” and then restore power.
At least once a month, force the commode to overflow to simulate a ‘black water
system’ boo-boo.
Buy a gas mask and smear it with rancid animal fat.  Scrub the face shield with
steel wool until you can no longer see out of it.  Wear this for two hours every
fifth day especially when you are in the bathroom.
Study the owner’s manual for all household appliances.  Routinely take an appliance
apart and put it back together.
Remove all plants, pictures and decorations.  Paint everything gray, white, or the
shade of hospital smocks.
Buy 50 cases of toilet paper and lock up all but two rolls.  Ensure one of these two
rolls is wet all the time.
Smash your forehead or shins with a hammer every two days to simulate collision
injuries sustained onboard Navy ships.
When making sandwiches, leave the bread out for six days, or until it is hard and
stale.
Every 10 weeks, simulate a visit to another port.  Go directly to the city slums
wearing your best clothes.  Find the worst looking place, and ask for the most
expensive beer that they carry.  Drink as many as you can in four hours.  Take a cab
home taking the longest possible route.  Tip the cabby after he charges you double
because you dress funny and don’t speak right.
Use fresh milk for only two days after each port visit.
Keep the bedroom thermostat at 2 deg C and use only a thin blanket for warmth.
Ensure that the water heater is connected to a device that provides water at a flow
rate that varies from a fast drip to a weak trickle, with the temperature
alternating rapidly from -2 to 95 deg C.
Use only spoons which hold a minimum of ½ cup at a time.
Repaint the interior of your home every month, whether it needs it or not.
Remind yourself every day: “It’s not just a job, it’s an adventure!”
Mix kerosene with your water supply to simulate the de-sal plant on the ship picking
up jp5 in the intake—if a lit match thrown into your coffee pot doesn’t ignite it,
add more kerosene.
Stand outside at attention at dawn and have the poorest reader you know read the
morning paper out loud.  Be sure to have him skip over anything pertinent.
Every four hours, check the fluid level in your car’s radiator.  Check the tire
pressure and replace air lost from excessive pressure checks.  Be sure to place red
tag on ignition stating “DANGER:  DO NOT OPERATE” while you perform these checks.
Inform your neighbor as to the results of these checks, have him tell you to repeat
the checks because he did not see you perform them.
Paint your house gray (exterior) include windows except for rooms you do not
frequent, paint your car gray, paint your driveway a different shade of gray.
Wait outside your dining area as a family member eats a meal, then have that person
serve you a meal prepared several hours earlier.
Shut all blinds and doors at sunset.
Clean your house ‘till there’s absolutely not a speck of dust anywhere.
Call on a stranger to come inspect your house.  Ensure stranger sees dust that has
collected in the time it took to find him.  Stranger cannot leave until he finds
irrational fault with your house/belongings.
Hang Christmas lights in June.  When the neighbors ask, say, “deceptive lighting.”
Hang white lights when relatives visit.  When neighbors ask, say, “friendship lights.”


VETERAN LEGISLATION STATUS 13 AUG 08:   Congress is in recess 6 AUG to 4 SEP. Refer
to the Bulletin’s House & Senate attachments for or a listing of Congressional bills
of interest to the veteran community that have been introduced in the 110th
Congress. Support of these bills through cosponsorship by other legislators is
critical if they are ever going to move through the legislative process for a floor
vote to become law.  A good indication on that likelihood is the number of
cosponsors who have signed onto the bill. A cosponsor is a member of Congress who
has joined one or more other members in his/her chamber (i.e. House or Senate) to
sponsor a bill or amendment. The member who introduces the bill is considered the
sponsor.  Members subsequently signing on are called cosponsors. Any number of
members may cosponsor a bill in the House or Senate. At http://thomas.loc.gov you
can also review a copy of each bill’s content, determine its current status, the
committee it has been assigned to, and if your legislator is a sponsor or cosponsor
of it.  To determine what bills, amendments your representative has sponsored,
cosponsored, or dropped sponsorship on refer to
http://thomas.loc.gov/bss/d110/sponlst.html.  The key to increasing cosponsorship on
veteran related bills and subsequent passage into law is letting our representatives
know of veteran’s feelings on issues.  At the end of some listed bills is a web link
that can be used to do that. You can also reach his/her Washington via the Capital
Operator direct at (866) 272-6622, (800) 828-0498, or (866) 340-9281 to express your
views. Otherwise, you can locate on http://thomas.loc.gov who your representative is
and his/her phone number, mailing address, or email/website to communicate with a
message or letter of your own making.  Refer to
http://www.thecapitol.net/FAQ/cong_schedule.html for future times that you can
access your representatives on their home turf.  [Source: RAO Bulletin Attachment 13
Jul 08 ++] 

Lt. James “EMO” Tichacek, USN (Ret)
Director, Retiree Assistance Office, U.S. Embassy Warden & IRS VITA Baguio City RP
PSC 517 Box RCB, FPO AP 96517
Tel: (951) 238-1246 in U.S. or Cell: 0915-361-3503 in the Philippines.
Email: raoemo@sbcglobal.net Web: http://post_119_gulfport_ms.tripod.com/rao1.html
AL/AMVETS/DAV/FRA/NAUS/NCOA/MOAA/USDR/VFW/VVA/CG33/DD890/AD37 member

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Don't miss this one!!!!!!


Since 1957, if you had military service earnings for active duty (including active duty for training), you paid Social Security taxes on those earnings. Since 1988, inactive duty service in the Armed Forces reserves (such as weekend drills) has also been covered by Social Security.

Under certain circumstances, special extra earnings for your military service from 1957 through 2001 can be credited to your record for Social Security purposes. These extra earnings credits may help you qualify for Social Security or increase the amount of your Social Security benefit.

Special extra earnings credits are granted for periods of active duty or active duty for training. Special extra earnings credits are not granted for inactive duty training.

If your active military service occurred

  • From 1957 through 1967, we will add the extra credits to your record when you apply for Social Security benefits.
  • From 1968 through 2001, you do not need to do anything to receive these extra credits. The credits were automatically added to your record.
  • After 2001, there are no special extra earnings credits for military service.

Get more detailed information on this at;

For this benefit to receive it! Soc Sec website:
http://WWW.ssa.gov/retire2/military.htm
<http://WWW.ssa.gov/retire2/military.htm

This is something to put in your files for when you apply for Social
Security down the road. It is NOT just for retirees, BUT anyone who has
Served on active duty prior to January 2002.
FYI - this benefit is not automatic, you must ask for it!