Discounted Casualties
Part I On the Wrong Side of a Superpower
Laws Enacted for Veterans
Akira Tashiro
Serious Health Problems Inadequate Treatment and Compensation
Fifty minutes northeast from New York by train, I got off at the unmanned station at Darien, Connecticut, and was greeted by a genial Robert Newman  (69) carrying the umbrella I was to look for.
     "I promised to work as an aide to Congressman Shays for two years to study the Gulf War veterans' health problems. It's been five years now and I'm still commuting between here and Washington."  Newman told me this with feeling as he drove the short distance to his home.
A Heartfelt Appeal
It was 1995 when Christopher Shays (54), the Republican congressman from Newman's district, was elected to chair a subcommittee on "Security, Veterans Issues, and International Relations," and asked Newman, a retired journalist, to help him.
     "The Congressman was receiving a disturbing number of letters and e-mails from sick veterans in his district complaining that, when trying to get treatment at veterans hospitals, they were told, 'It's all in your head.'  They weren't getting any help."
     It was hard to believe that veterans, who had given so much to their country, were being treated this way.  Angered, Congressman Shays turned to his friend Newman for help.  "I want my subcommittee to hold hearings and find out what's going on.  Please help me with this investigation." Newman, a Korean War veteran, accepted immediately.
     In March 1996, they invited the veterans themselves to the first hearing, which was followed by 14 more over a period of 20 months.  During that time, the committee heard testimony from more than fifty veterans struggling with illnesses, as well as family members, doctors, nuclear physicists, chemists, and experts in a variety of fields.
Medical Records Vanish 
"These hearings were quite revealing.  For one thing, we learned that the medical records of nearly all the veterans had disappeared,"  Records that had been entered into computers were sent in hard disks to the Military Record Center in Tampa, Florida.  For some reasons, they were all lost.
     Without medical records from their time in service, it was impossible to establish the cause of the current illnesses.  As a result, veterans were frequently turned away at the door of VA hospitals.
      "For the five years or so that it took congress to launch this investigation, the Defense Department and Veterans Administration took their time responding to veterans who sought treatment or compensation.  In the end, the requests were refused.  At best, they took folks in but insisted the symptoms were just due to stress." As he learned more, Newman found himself unable to pull himself away from this work.
Radiation and Other Factors Blamed
As they listened to the testimony of veterans and scientists, the 14 Republican and Democratic congressmen and women serving on the subcommittee became convinced of two things: 1) the veterans' illnesses were caused by radiation or chemical substances they encountered in the course of their service, such as PB and the untested vaccines they were forced to take, and 2) the federal government was treating those veterans badly.  The subcommittee report led to the passage of two laws the following year, in October 1998.
     "The gist of those laws is this.  One stipulates that even without medical records, the illnesses of Gulf War veterans must be recognized as due to their service in the Middle East, and the Defense Department and the Veterans Administration are required to offer prompt and appropriate treatment and compensation.  The other one addresses a right taken for granted with respect to the general public.  It prohibits the administration of any experimental drugs to soldiers without their consent."  The enactment of these laws was good news for the veterans and their families, but when it comes to application, Newman laments, "They're absolutely inadequate." This is because full treatment and compensation would mean a vast sum of money.
     "My task now is to monitor the Veterans Administration and make sure the laws are properly obeyed," Newman worries that in ten years the incidence of cancer of neurological disorders will claim even higher.  "It'll be unforgivable if we just abandon them."
     Newman spoke with determination.  Behind his words lay the firm belief that "We need to take good care of the people who carry the burden of defending our nation."
 
This is also done at the expense of the people of Hawaii especially when children are exposed to isotopes in Waianae.  All in the 'defence of ' ones nationhood that is preempted on the part of greed and pure cowardly ignorance. 

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  • I don't have time to deal with Richard Kinney's complusive sickness of destroying women and children on DHHL lands. He will continue his cruelty until the end of his life. All that I ask that you not let his nastiness get in the way of communication.

    We need to say all the things we need to say against the Akaka Bill and not against each other.

    I don't need credit or happy faces--just to focus on the details of the issues.

    I needed the time element to connect to Keala Kelly's work
  • Veterans don't have to be old decrepted and behave like an ugly old fool in the face of telling stupid lies and pitting the bloodquantum against the nationalist. It's a stupid design to pit one group against each other. The military is very much part of the Akaka Bill and it's all based on Veterans loyalty to their nationhood of mankind.
    • For your information, Kaohi there is no Blood Quantum in a Hawaiian Kingdom National. Just as there is no Blood Quantum in ALOHA. As it was more important to be of the Spirit in being Hawaiian then in Blood. Yes Kaohi the military is part of the AKaKa Bill and so are you. Your Hate for the Military is that of a LuLu Bell, Kaohi. Get Real, We are all know who you are, Luwella Leonardi. o Pomai
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