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Some Iraq war vets go homeless after return to US
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The nightmare of Iraq was bad enough for Vanessa Gamboa. Unprepared for combat beyond her basic training, the supply specialist soon found herself in a firefight, commanding a handful of clerks.
"They promoted me to sergeant. I knew my job but I didn't know anything about combat. So I'm responsible for all these people and I don't know what to tell them but to duck," Gamboa said. The battle, on a supply delivery run, ended without casualties, and it did little to steel Gamboa for what awaited her back home in Brooklyn. When the single mother was discharged in April, after her second tour in Iraq, she was 24 and had little money and no place to live. She slept in her son's day-care center. Gamboa is part of a small but growing trend among U.S. veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars -- homelessness. On any given night the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) helps 200 to 250 of them, and more go uncounted. They are among nearly 200,000 homeless veterans in America, largely from the Vietnam War for full article... http://today.reuters.com/news/newsAr...lso_on_reuters |
Single moms have access to all kinds of money (TANF, etc.)
That this lady doesn't seek out those benefits seems questionable. Also, that she doesn't have a job is also questionable. Clearly she's a capable person, so why no job? The article here only tells us as much as it wants us to hear. |
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I don't necessarily disagree with you, but I definitely have that nagging thought that the United States doesn't do enough to take care of its veterans. |
Born on the 4th of July
-Rudey |
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What level of service is enough for vets? This article seems to take the position that we should be giving them additional services even thought they do nothing for us as ex-soldiers. I don't buy that a stint in the military entitles one to a lifetime of gimmees. |
Not so sure I agree here ktsnake.
If a soldier comes back and they have a problem with physic or desease from a conflict, they should be taken care of with the best care that can be given. Korea was worse as There Was no War, jsut a Police Action. For years, after the Viet Nam Conflict The US denied there was a problem of saying Angent Orange had anything to do with problems.:( My Dad never asked for any benefits from WWII, but, on the other hand, I have many Vets who come into My store and I hear horror storys about The VA. I beleive "Con-grose" has cut benifits over the years. One of My Customers Husband just lost both legs, I hope that The Govt. helps Him to get back on His feet so to speak and become available in the work force. |
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That's why we have the V.A. They're supposed to do that. Of course, we're not talking about that. We're talking about a single mom who for whatever reason has decided to live out of her car instead of finding a job or going to school. Quote:
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Will find out later and I pray that You are right on!:)
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I think the article does a poor job of laying out its position, and I think it provides a poor example.
There's part of me that thinks that this woman knew what she was getting into when she entered the armed forces, and that she should have planned ahead for when she came home (or had something set up so that her children would be well taken care of). I think veterans are entitled to some extra benefits, don't get me wrong. I think there should be mechanisms in place for them to get acclimated back into society, and support as they get back into the workplace and the community as a whole. I just don't know how far it should go. I've never been in the armed forces, so I can't understand what it feels like to come back from war/service and go back to square one. Most of what I know is information I've heard from my dad; he's a veteran of Vietnam, and he's told me how there was some help in place, but basically he got back from Vietnam, had a week to gather himself, and started work almost right away. I'm wondering how many people now are planning for that reality, and how many don't even think about that when they go overseas. |
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I also think that recruiters do a really good job of convincing people that they will leave the military with a marketable skill and this is sometimes true, but often it is not. However, there does seem to be a bit of a Catch 22 here. How do you get a place to live without a job? How do you get a job without an address and phone number for someone to call you? The article did say that she was starting a job, but it didn't sound like one that you can raise a family on. It must be a psychological challenge to go from Iraq to home almost overnight too. I feel for them. |
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VA benefits are pretty decent, but not if it's your only means of support. My father is a Vietnam-era veteran who has a serious Agent Orange-related illness. The VA hospital is great with free prescriptions and general check-ups, but he still has to use his private insurance to see specialists related to this condition; fortunately his employer held his position and paid his regular salary while he was recovering. Some vets don't have those safety nets in place, and that's where they start suffering. At the very very least, the VA should provide for complete care of service-related injuries. |
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The "average" grunt in Vietnam was 19 years old, likely to have a high school education or less, a minority and probably drafted soon after high school. That doesn't give you a whole lot of preparation for life. As the article says, the vast majority of homeless who are former soldiers are from the Vietnam era. Finally, the troops returning from Vietnam were hardly greeted as heros as our troops today are. That men and women who served in our Armed Forces end up homeless is terrible -- but it is hardly a new thing. |
It depends on the way that the lady was discharged as to wether or not she would be elegible for benefits or not. If she was dishonourably discharged, it would explain a lot, as I'm not sure as to wether benefits are available if that happens.
As a supply clerk though, at the very least she should of been able to of found a job at a transport company, or if she was really finding it hard: re-enlist, requesting a state-side position in supply, due to her young child. |
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I do stand by my assertion that the kids from earlier war eras--if only because their fathers and grandfathers served--had a slightly better idea of what they were getting into. The kids who are serving now can't remember a time when the US was in a major war. I mean, in early 2001, my cousin enlisted out of HS because he wanted to marry his girlfriend right away. Do you think anyone did that in 1966? 2. Not every soldier was spat upon when he/she returned from SE Asia. Back to the case with Daddy Munch, who returned to a military hometown. For the most part, the people tended to be just as welcoming then as they were now. Not everyone came back to towns like Berkeley or Ann Arbor. |
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I'll agree with you on the other point too - there are less and less people going to war who can get first-hand experience accounts from their parents and grandparents. On a slightly different note: Judging from the stories I've heard from my dad (and you've probably heard from your dad), they might not want the whole story. When I was considering West Point in high school, my dad made sure to give me a clear picture of what he went through; not to scare me, but more to educate me. |
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