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Friday,
 April 27, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue,  the prosecution says 
they don't have to establish that Bradley Manning's actions resulted in 
any harm to go after him, the political crisis continues in Iraq, a 
State of Law flunky disses Biden, and more. 
  
Starting
 in the US where perceived whistle blower Bradley Manning and his 
defense have been in pre-court martial hearings this week.  The judge 
has issued a ruling.  AP reports 
 Col Denise Lind announced yesterday that she would not toss "aiding the
 enemy" allegation the government has made against Bradley.
  
  
Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released US military video  of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters  journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010 , the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported 
 in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of 
violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his
 personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized 
software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight 
counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified 
information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported 
 that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges 
including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could 
result in the death penalty if convicted.   The Article 32 hearing took 
place in December.  At the start of this year, there was an Article 32 
hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced that the government would be
 moving forward with a court-martial. 
  
  
  
Manning's
 attorney, David Coombs, argued that the charge should be dropped for 
two reasons. First, the prosecution failed to show intent in the way the
 charge is worded, he argued. Second, Coombs said, the charge is so 
vague and broad that it's unconstitutional. 
Coombs
 argued the charge is "alarming in its scope." He told the judge that if
 he accepted the government's argument, "no soldier would ever be 
comfortable saying anything to any news reporter." Coombs said they 
could even be charged after posting something on a family member's 
Facebook page.   
 
  
Trent Nouveau (TG Daily) notes
 that Maj Ashden Fein, prosecutor for the United States government, 
states that the government isn't required to prove that any damage took 
place, "Just because a damage assessment might say damage did occur or 
didn't occur, it's completely irrelevant to the charges.  That 
tomorrow's effect is somehow relevant to the charges on the crime sheet 
is irrelevant."  
  
That's certainly a curious 
take on the law.  If there's no injury, what's the point? If Bradley 
Manning is guilty -- he's thus far entered no plea -- and there were 
huge damages, the judge would certainly be encouraged by the prosecution
 to keep that in mind.  The government has not only declared him guilty 
-- that includes US President Barack Obama who truly does not know the 
law if he thought pronouncing the accused guilty before a trial was how a
 president conducts themselves -- they've insisted repeatedly that 
tremendous damage was done. 
  
Having used that 
to drive the press coverage, the government now wants to claim that the 
level of damage -- if any -- doesn't matter?  The court-martial has been
 set for September 21st.  The Center for Constitutional Rights  Michael Ratner  retweets:
  
  
  
 
  
  
In Iraq, violence continues.  Erik West (Australian Eye) reports 
 an Abu Garma home invasion in which 3 children (ages ten to fifteen) 
were shot dead along with their mother when a killer or killers broke 
into the home around three in the morning.
  
KUNA notes
 that Joe Biden, Vice President of the United States, met with Hussein 
al-Shahristani, deputy prime minister for energy, yesterday at the White
 House and that Biden "reaffirmed U.S. commitment to work with Iraqi 
leaders from across the spectrum to support the continued development of
 Iraq's energy sector."  While Joe was making nice, al-Shahristani was 
showing his ass.  Alister Bull (Reuters) explains , "A
 simmering dispute between Iraq's central government and the 
semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan is an internal affair, a top Baghdad
 official said on Thursday, in an implicit rebuff of U.S. efforts to 
broker a compromise between the two sides. "  
  
Thursday Erbil witnessed what some news outlets are calling a historic moment.  Press TV reports 
 on Moqtada al-Sadr's visit to the KRG  to meet with KRG President 
Massoud Barzani and the press conference Moqtada held in Erbil.  They 
quote him stating, "I came here to listen to their (Kurds') points of 
view (on issues related to Iraq's political situation).  In fact, I 
adovcate getting closer to the Iraqi people and protecting the Iraqi 
people before protecting our parties and blocs.  All sides have to pay 
attention to the public interest and the Iraqi people. The oil of Iraq 
is for the people and no one has the right to claim it for himself and 
exclude others. . . . Dialogue is the only solution to end former and 
current political disputes and all other issues."  Margaret Griffis (Antiwar.com) notes , "During talks with Kurdish President Massoud Barzani yesterday, Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr mandate insisted 
 that there would be no support for an overthrow of the government, but 
he did suggest the possibility of not renewing Prime Minister Nouri 
al-Maliki's mandate as premier. Barzani and Sadr have both called Maliki
 a dictator in recent weeks, and the increasingly marginalized Sunnis  mostly agree with them."  At Foreign Policy, journalist James Traub examines  Nouri al-Maliki:
  
  
Nouri
 al-Maliki, the prime minister of Iraq, has a remarkable ability to make
 enemies. As Joost Hiltermann of the International Crisis Group puts it,
 "Personal relations between everyone and Maliki are terrible." This 
gift was vividly displayed in March, when the annual meeting of the Arab
 League was held in Baghdad. Although the event was meant to signal 
Iraq's re-emergence as a respectable country after decades of tyranny 
and bloodshed, leaders of 10 of the 22 states, including virtually the 
entire Gulf, refused
 to attend out of pique at Maliki's perceived hostility to Sunnis both 
at home and abroad, turning the summit into a vapid ritual. The only 
friend Iraq has left in the neighborhood is Shiite Iran, which seems 
intent on reducing its neighbor to a state of   subservience. 
  
[. . .] 
But
 one can be agnostic about Maliki's motivations and still conclude that 
he is doing harm to Iraq's own interests. No sensible Iraqi leader would
 pick a fight with Turkey, as he has done. Back in January, when 
Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, suggested that Maliki 
should not be waging war against the Sunni opposition at home, Maliki accused
 Turkey of "unjustified interferences in Iraqi internal affairs," adding
 for good measure that Erdogan was seeking to restore Turkey's Ottoman 
hegemony over the region. This in turn led to another escalating round 
of insults and a mutual summoning of ambassadors. 
 Moqtada
 was attempting to address the ongoing political crisis. Briefly, March 
2010 saw parlimentary elections.  State of Law (Nouri al-Maliki's slate)
 came in second to Iraqiya (led by Ayad Allawi).  Nouri did not want to 
honor the vote or the Constitution and refused to allow the process to 
move forward (selecting a new prime minister).  Parliament was unable to
 meet, nothing could take place.  This is Political Stalemate I and it 
lasted for over eight months.  In November 2010, Political Stalemate I 
finally ended.  What ended it?
 
 The US-brokered Erbil Agreement.  
This was a written document where everyone made concessions and everyone
 got something out of it.  Nouri got to be prime minister.  He was 
loving the Erbil Agreement then.  And as soon as he was named prime 
minister-designate, he began demonstrating he wouldn't honor the Erbil 
Agreement.  He had called for a referendum   and census on Kirkuk for 
December 2010.  He was supposed to have done that by the end of 2007.  
But he refused to even though Article 140 of the Constitution demanded 
it.  But as he was trying to get everyone to agree to the Erbil 
Agreement, he was trying to appear resonable and scheduled the 
referendum and census.  After being named prime minister desisngate, he 
called off the census and referndum.  It's still not taken place all 
this time later.  He was also fully on board with the idea of an 
independent national security commission and it being headed by Ayad 
Allawi.  But then he got named prime minister-deisgnate and suddenly 
that was something that couldn't be created overnight but would take 
time.  17 months later, it's still not happened.
 
 
 Nouri used 
the Erbil Agreement to get a second term as prime minister and then 
trashed the agreement.  He used everyone's concession to him but refused
 to   honor his concessions to them.
 
This is Political 
Stalemate II, the ongoing political crisis in Iraq and, no, the 
political crisis in Iraq did not start December 19th or 21st as Nouri 
went after political rivals from Iraqiya (Iraqiya came in first in the 
2010 elections).  From Marina Ottaway and Danial Kaysi's [PDF format 
warning] "The State Of Iraq "  (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace): 
  
 
 
 
Within
 days of the official ceremonies marking the end of the U.S. mission in 
Iraq, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki moved to indict Vice President 
Tariq al-Hashemi on terrorism charges and sought to remove Deputy Prime 
Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq from his position, triggering a major political
 crisis that fully revealed Iraq as an unstable, undemocractic country 
governed by raw competition for power and barely affected by 
institutional arrangements.  Large-scale violence immediately flared up 
again, with a series of terrorist attacks against mostly Shi'i targets 
reminiscent of the worst days of 2006. 
But there is 
more to the crisis than an escalation of violence.  The tenuous 
political agreement among parties and factions reached at the end of 
2010 has collapsed.  The government of national unity has stopped 
functioning, and provinces that want to become regions with autonomous 
power comparable to Kurdistan's are putting increasing pressure on the 
central government.  Unless a new political agreement is reached soon, 
Iraq may plunge into civil war or split apart.  
 
 
  
Kitabat reports
 Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani declared today in Karbala that the Erbil
 Agreement should be published.  The Ayatollah noted that there are 
disputes about whether or not it was implemented.  He says the way to 
end the dispute is to publish the agreement and that the people can then
 decide for themselves whether the agreement was carried out, whether or
 not it was Constitutional*, whether or not it represented the best 
interests of Iraq.  The agreement and the Constitution? There's nothing 
in the Constitution that allows for the Erbil Agreement.  There's also 
nothing in the Constitution that bars the Erbil Agreement.  The White 
House and the State Dept examined that at length before it was put into 
writing.  They brokered the agreement and did so to end the 
eight-month-plus gridlock (Political Stalemate   I).  The agreement is 
clearly extra-constitutional and we warned about that in real time.  But
 it is not forbidden by the Constitution.  After getting what he wanted 
from the agreement, Nouri and his lackeys began to insist that it 
couldn't be honored because it was unconstitutional.  It's not.  If it 
is unconstitutional then the Parliament needs to vote on a PM because 
they haven't freely done that, they've allowed Nouri to become prime 
minister-designate (and then prime minister) in spite of the 
Constitution.  An argument can be made that the only known aspect of the
 Erbil Agreement that might be unconstitutional would be Nouri being PM 
since the Constitution is specific on how you become prime minister 
designate (Nouri didn't meet those qualifications and he knows it, 
that's why he implemented the eight month stalemate) and since it is 
specific on how you then move to prime minister.   For those 
who've   forgotten, a prime minster-designate is judged to be competent 
to be prime minister by forming a Cabinet in 30 days.  That is 
nominating the people and get the Parliament to vote on each one.  A 
Cabinet is a Cabinet.  The Constitution doesn't allow for half Cabinets 
or partials.  Nouri was unable to name a full Cabinet in 30 days 
(actually more than 30 -- as usual Jalal Talabani broke the Constitution
 for Nouri thereby allowing him more than 30 days).  The Constitution is
 clear that if you do not form a Cabinet in 30 days, a new person is 
picked to be prime minister-designate. Nouri failed.  Among the 
posts empty when he was wrongly and unconstitutionally moved to prime 
minister were all three of the security posts.  He had no Minister of 
the Interior, no Minister of Defense and no Minister of Natioanl 
Security.   For those who want to claim that a full Cabinet 
wasn't what was intended, that's a flat   out lie.  The Constitutionw as
 written in 2005, not 80 years ago, not 100.  There is only one 
requirement to move from prime minister-designate to prime minister: 
building your Cabinet.  And for those who still can't grasp that 
this means every seat, every post, then at least have the brains -- if 
not the integrity -- to grasp that there is no way in hell that the 
Constitution ever intended for Minister of the Defense (army) or 
Minister of Interior (police) to be empty posts. When Nouri 
refused to announce them in December 2010, "critics" (so labeled by the 
press) turned out to be prophets.  They stated that Nouri wouldn't fill 
them in the next few weeks (as the press claimed), they siad it was a 
power grab.  All this time later, these posts are still not filled. Which is why Jason Ditz   (Antiwar.com), reporting on Moqtada's visit to Erbil, observes ,
 "Removing Maliki could be harder than it seems, however, as he is not 
only the prime minister but the acting Interior Minister, Defense 
Minister, National Security Minister and chief of military staff. This 
gives him de facto control over the entire national army and police 
force." 
  
Massoud Barzani has stated that a 
solution must be arrived at by the start of September (or the Kurds may 
include choices on the ballots of their provincial elections).  Barzani,
 Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and Speaker of Parliament Osama 
al-Nujaifi are calling for a national conference to address the 
political crisis.  Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi tells AFP ,
 "We could enjoy a prime minister from the Shiite national alliance on 
the ground that he is committed to power sharing ... and he keeps all 
Iraqis equally according to the constitution.  This is all what we are 
dreaming, this is all what we are looking for."
  
  
  
Turning to the United States . . . 
  
Senator Jon Tester: There is a stigma in this country -- and probably in the world 
 -- but definitely in America, in the United States, attached to mental health  
issues -- injuires.  There are  -- I have multiple stories about folks who won't  
go get treatment because they're afraid it wll be on their record,  of afraid they  
won't be able to get a job, afraid it might impact the job they do have,  
perception by family, friends, colleagues.  Does the VA have an active education  
pogram to try to reach out to those folks,  to let them now that this part of --  
this is -- as Major General [Thomas S.]  Jones says, it's increasing, it's present,  
it's growing and it's not uncommon. Is there -- Is there some kind of education or  
outreach going on? 
  
William Schoenhard: Yeah.  Yes, Senator.  There's Make The Connection  
Initiative that has just been undertaken. I think it gets back to the primary  
care integration of mental health where we're able to screen for PTSD.  And  
the other aspect of care that we haven't mentioned today is the vet centers -- 
  
Senator Jon Tester: Yes. 
  
William Scoenhard:  -- who are also ways veterans can approach for help if they  
have -- for whatever reasons -- reluctance to access the traditional system. 
  
That's
 from Wednesday's Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing.  Appearing 
before the Committee was the Dept of Veterans Affairs' William 
Schoenhard and Mary Schoh, Iraq War veteran Nick Tolentino who testified
 about what he observed while working for the VA, Outdoor Odyssey 's
 retired Major General Thomas Jones and VA's Office of Inspector General
 was represented by Linda Halliday and John Diagh.  Four senators 
participated including Committee Chair Patty Murray, acting Ranking 
Member Scott Brown, Senator Jon Tester and Senator Jerry Moran.  What 
was the hearing about?
  
  
Chair
 Patty Murray: Today's hearing builds upon two hearings held last year. 
 At each of the previous hearings, the Committee heard from the VA how 
accessible mental health care services were.  This was inconsistent with
 what we heard from veterans and the VA mental health care providers.  
So last year, following the July hearing, I asked the Department to 
survey its own health care providers to get a better assessment of the 
situation.  The results as we all now know were less than satisfactory. 
 Among the findings, we learned that nearly 40% of the providers 
surveyed could not schedule an appointment in their own clinic for a new
 patient within the 14 days. Over 40% could not schedule an established 
patient within 14 days of their desired appointment.  And 70% reported 
inadequate staffing or space to meet the mental health care needs.  The 
second hearing, held in November, looked at the discrepancy   between 
what the VA was telling us and what the providers were saying.  We heard
 from a VA provider and other experts about the critical importance of 
access to the right type of care delivered timely by qualified mental 
health professionals.  At last November's hearing, I announced that I 
would be asking VA's Office of Inspector General to investigate the true
 availability of mental health care services at VA facilities. I want to
 thank the IG for their tremendous efforts in addressing such an 
enormous request.  The findings of this first phase of the investigation
 are at once substantial and troubling.  We have heard frequently about 
how long it takes for veterans to get into treatment and I'm glad the IG
 has brought those concerns to light. 
  
If there's any confusion, McClatchy Newspapers are featuring an editorial by the editorial board of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram (one  of the newspapers McClatchy owns).   It notes the VA problems that were addressed in the hearing. Excerpt: Even
 though the Veterans Health Administration reported in 2011 that 95 
percent of veterans received a comprehensive mental exam within 14 days 
of requesting one (the time frame in agency policy), the actual number 
was 49 percent, the inspector general reported this week. It took an 
average of 50 days to provide a full evaluation for the rest, the report
 said. "VHA does not have a reliable and accurate method of 
determining whether they are providing patients timely access to mental 
health care services," the inspector   general said.Part of 
the problem is with the way records are kept: Schedulers don't always 
follow the rules, and the lag between referral by a primary care 
physician and the evaluation might not be reflected properly.Part
 of the problem is a shortage of personnel, particularly psychiatrists. 
Officials knew the data-keeping was problematic; the inspector general 
pointed it out in reports in 2005 and 2007.They also knew of 
the growing staffing needs and, in fact, increased personnel 46 percent 
from 2005 to 2010, the report said. But in an informal survey of VA 
mental-health professionals, requested by Congress, 71 percent of those 
responding said their centers didn't have enough people to keep up. A 
veteran seeking treatment at the VA medical center in Salisbury, N.C., 
for instance, had to wait 86 days to see a psychiatrist, the IG said.
  
We covered the hearing in Wednesday's snapshot .  Kat  offered her take and conclusions in "Fire everyone at the VA ."    Ava  covered it at  Trina 's site with "Scott   Brown: It's clearly not working (Ava) "
 and what she emphasized was the exchange between Brown and Schoenhard 
with Brown growing more and more irritated at Schoenhard who did not 
want to answer questions and did not want to own the problem.  From 
Ava's report, this is when Brown tried to get answers as to why there 
were delays in care but referrals outside the VA were not being 
utilized.
  
  
Again, it had 
long ago been established that only 2% had been referred out last year. 
 But Schoenhard wanted to insist on top of the referral issue that the 
VA was providing veterans with immediate care.
 Before we go further, grasp that the IG report already demonstrated that Schoenhard's claim was false.  Grasp that.
 Senator Scott Brown: But they're not.  But they're not.
 William Schoenhard:  They should be.
 Senator Scott Brown: But they're not. But they're not!
 William Schoenhard:  We have an obligation to be sure that they are.
 
 Senator Scott Brown:  But they're not!Then Schoenhard wanted to argue that the VA can provide the best care.
 
 Brown responded, "Sir, with all due respect, that's not happening. That's why we're here.  It's clearly   not working." Wally
  covered the hearing at  Rebecca 's site with "VA paid out nearly $200 million in bonuses last year (Wally) " and he emphasized Brown's shock over the vast amount of money VA's paying out in bonuses.  Excerpt. 
  
  
Brown's
 other big issue was that the country's in a fiscal nightmare.  And yet 
the VA -- which has had one scandal after another -- is handing out 
bonuses. 
There's been the failure to send 
out the GI Bill checks.  There's the alarming suicide rate of veterans. 
 There's lying about the time wait for appointments.  We could go on and
 on.  So the point is, bonuses are being handed out. 
You might not think it's a big deal.  Do you know how much the VA gave out last year in bonuses? 
Remember
 this is on top of the salary and wages they paid.  In 2011, Brown noted
 that the VA paid out $194 million in bonuses.  Nearly $200 million 
dollars.  Brown asked what the average salary was for someone receiving a
 bonus and the VA's William Schoenhard wanted to take that for the 
record. 
On top of that, Schoenhard felt the
 VA deserved credit for keeping the number so low.  Brown was shocked 
and asked if Schoenhard was saying that in years prior to 2011 over $200
 million was paid in bonuses?  Yep. 
  
  
Again,
 only four Committee members were present.  Moran used his time mainly, 
as he noted, to allow someone to talk about a program that was working 
-- a non-VA program. Since I didn't note Moran Wednesday, we're going to
 include a little of  that today. 
  
  
Senator
 Jerry Moran:  Part of my interest in this topic is coming from a state 
as rural as Kansas in which our access to mental health professionals is
 perhaps even more limited than more urban and suburban states.  And we 
need to take advantage of the wide array of professional services that 
are available at every opportunity.  And so I'm here to encourage you --
 now that you've made that announcement, let's bring it to fruition. And
 thank you for reaching the conclusion and getting us to this point.  I 
want to direct my question to General Jones. I thank you very much for 
your Semper Fi Odyssey
 efforts. I had a Kansan visit with me in the last month who has 
organized a program -- I don't know whether it's modeled after what 
you're doing -- it's   the same kind of focus and effort.  And it's 
somewhat related to the conversations and questions of Senator Tester 
about the stigma or lack of willingness to admit that one needs help, 
the lack of knowledge of what programs are available, how to connect the
 veteran with what's there.  I wanted to give you the opportunity to 
educate me and perhaps others on what it is that you've been able to do 
to bring that veteran who is not likely to know of the existence of your
 program or programs like yours.  And, secondly, what can be done to 
overcome the reluctance of military men and women and veterans to access
 what is available -- such as your program. 
  
Major
 General Thomas Jones:  Thank you, sir.  Well first off, I think that 
the Semper Fi Fund that I've been a board member of is --  provides the 
ability for these veterans to come. Admittedly, most of the veterans 
that come back to the case workers of Sempre Fi Fund have some problems 
or they wouldn't be there. I mean, they've had a difficult time making 
the transition. So when they arrive in western Pennsylvania for one of 
the weeklong sessions, they arrive with a major degree of skepticism and
 very tentative and we try to restore them to what was really the 
strength of their experience in the Marine Corps: the team, the 
cohesion, team building and basially restoring their trust.  I would say
 -- trust in the system and trust in others.  I think my work through 
the Semper Fi Odyssey because of the mental health professionals that 
have come in and really bought into the program and really   advertised 
the program and allowed me to speak to other groups led me to a project 
I'm doing with the Institute of Defense Analysis, sponsored by OSD, that
 looks at best practices.  So, you know, I was a Marine for a long time,
 we never talked much about mental health issues until recently.  As a 
Vietnam platoon commander, we never talked about it.  But now there are 
programs in the Marine Corps and I would say the army too -- 
Comprehensive Soldier Fitness in the army; Marine Corps' program is 
Operational Stress Control and Readiness.  It's a great program. But 
it's not easy to overcome the stigma and the program really rests on the
 strength of the NCO. No Major General's going to ride into  a Marine 
Corps squad or platoon or company and build immediate trust.  It's going
 to come from the NCO. So overcoming that skepticism, that chasm of 
trust, is difficult but it's happening -- especially those units that 
have   deployed four and five times, young NCOs, young officers are 
seeing the power of what a squad leader or a platoon commander can do to
 identify problems when they're still in the category of combat stress 
injuries and haven't migrated to combat stress illnesses. I think that's
 the strength of the Marine Corps program. I think the problem -- this 
is only my opinion now -- of the army program is that it's very well 
built, the application is not focused on the young NCO as is the Marine 
Corps program. And I don't say it because I'm a Marine.  I just sense 
that the NCO identifying in Iraq or Afghanistan, if there's a problem, 
you can start the dialogue right then, you can start the reconciliation 
process right then.  You don't have to wait six months after he returns 
and he's got this problem in his mental wall locker and he pulls out 
then when he's by himself. So we try to restore and very successfuly 
restore because all these veterans have   come in and actually 
volunteered their services.   
  
   
So
 in one form or another, the above and the work by Kat, Ava, Wally and 
the Wednesday snapshot have covered the bulk of the points raised in the
 hearing.   
  
  
   
The things that I have done that I regret 
The things I seen, I won't forget 
For this life and so many more 
And I'm trying to find my way home 
Child inside me is long dead and gone 
Somewhere between lost and alone 
Trying to find my way home 
Iraq War veteran Rick Collier (with No Soldier Left Behind) shares his PTSD story at The Oregonian .  Excerpt:  My
 time in country left me with traumas and exposures no human should see 
or be a part of. It also created an environment in which hazing and 
death threats were part of my ritual coming from my NCO. Without knowing
 it, PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) soon became my reality and at 18 I started to lose control of my life. Shortly
 after my return my best friend Daniel Parker died in Iraq. I was the 
lead pallbearer for his military funeral. After losing Daniel, I felt I 
lost everything. I struggled with lack of family and support upon my 
return and found   Daniel's death, combined with my PTSD, set me over 
the edge. I tried getting help from my command. I spoke with 
my NCOs in charge and even a Sgt from another platoon. I couldn't take 
the harassment from my NCO both in country and at home, topped with PTSD
 and the loss of my best friend. With lack of help I began to drink and 
numb my pain. My suicidal ideation grew and I began to lose sight of who
 I was. I ended up going UA (unauthorized absence) with suicide in mind.When
 I was brought back to base by Marine Corps Chasers I soon found myself 
in the brig again with no help from my command. I was left to deal with 
PTSD in a cell, like a POW. After a couple months in the brig I was 
court martialed and given a Bad Conduct Discharge. All I needed was 
help, I never wanted out.After being discharged, I was 
released from duty and sent on my way. Here I was a combat vet, a kid, 
just left out on the street to fend for myself. Not   once did I get 
mental health treatment. It took me two years after my discharge to 
finally figure out I had PTSD. It took me doing my own research, trying 
to help myself, to put all the pieces together from symptoms I was 
showing. It hurt having to do it alone.
 And then Collier got 
help, right?  Wrong.  That's when he begins a long struggle to get the 
treatment he needs.  That involved the VA, getting a discharge upgrade 
and much more.  His experience and wanting to assist in others in the 
same situation led to his founding No Soldier Left Behind .  
  
  
  
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
  
April 27, 2012 
  
  
Feminist Majority Board Member Dolores Huerta to Receive Presidential Medal of Freedom 
  
  
Feminist
 Majority President Eleanor Smeal, Executive Vice President Kathy 
Spillar, and Chair of the Board Peg Yorkin issued the following joint 
statement on the announcement that Board Member Dolores Huerta will be 
awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom:The Feminist 
Majority Foundation and its board salutes our colleague and friend 
Dolores Huerta for all of her historic achievements for social justice 
and equality. We are very proud that she will be awarded by President 
Barack Obama the highest civilian award.
 
 In response to the 
announcement, Chair of the Board Peg Yorkin said, "No one deserves this 
honor more than Dolores Huerta. She has worked tirelessly on behalf of 
those who work the farm fields of this country and has been an 
incredible advocate for women and girls' empowerment."
 
 President 
Eleanor Smeal said, "For some 25 years, we have worked very closely with
 Dolores Huerta in our fight for women's   equality, civil rights, and 
worker's rights. Dolores is an inspiration to all of us at all times. 
She is dedicated to win equality for women in the state house and 
Congress and she has significantly increased the number of Latina women 
running for office."
 
 Executive Vice President Kathy Spillar 
praised Dolores' work, saying, "It has been my great honor to work with 
Dolores for nearly 25 years to empower women and girls and secure our 
fundamental rights. I have learned enormously through her example. 
Despite the hardship she has seen and the difficulties she has endured, 
she is the single most optimistic person I have ever known. There is 
nothing that can't be done when Dolores Huerta is involved."
 
  
  
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