iced out

daily dos

wed 6/25/2008

 
daily-dos-iced-out

(image by soldiersmediacenter via flickr)

U.S. journalists stationed in Iraq say it has become increasingly difficult to get stories about the Iraq war on the air. ABC, CBS and NBC have only shown 181 weekday minutes of Iraq coverage this year, compared with 1,157 minutes in 2007.

 
 

kickin' it

daily dos

wed 6/11/2008

 
Ballsy. A yellow Adidas ball with the Euro 2008 logo.

(image by Gerej via flickr)

In a recent meeting, Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki that the U.S. occupation of Iraq is the "main obstacle in the way of the Iraqi government and nation."

 
 

Iraq war veterans and post-traumatic stress disorder

war

fri 5/16/2008

 
"Some gave all." A memorial for fallen soldiers located near a VA hospital.

Thomas Insel is worried. He's the nation's top mental health official and he believes "the suicides and psychiatric mortality of this war could trump the combat deaths.'' In other words, in the coming years, more soldiers could die from mental health problems at home than died in combat.

According to a report by the RAND corporation, 300 thousand of the 1.5 million troops – one out of five – who served in Afghanistan and Iraq suffer from depression or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Veterans with PTSD have a hard time sleeping, feel disconnected from reality and their loved ones, and can have terrifying flashbacks. For some, it leads to breakdowns and even suicide.

While PTSD can be treated, experts warn not enough veterans are being treated. Some government officials and veteran advocacy groups warn that the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) does not have enough resources – money, doctors, and hospitals – to take on this growing mental health crisis. A lawsuit filed against the VA by attorney Arturo Gonzalez on behalf of two veterans' rights groups alleges that the military is aware of the problem and attempted to hide it. Internal VA e-mails revealed that an estimated 1,000 veterans (including WWII and Vietnam) attempt suicide every month.

The VA counters it has increased its mental health budget (from $3.2 to $3.5 billion) and recently hired nearly four thousand specialists to deal with PTSD and related illnesses. Senior military official Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff acknowledged the severity of PTSD: "It's way past time, some seven years into this war, that we recognize the toll it's taking inside our minds, as well as outside our bodies."

 
 

no dumping

daily dos

tue 3/25/2008

 
I'm broke. A broken white toilet.

(image by borges, via flickr)

Four soldiers were killed by a bomb blast in Baghdad, bringing the death toll in Iraq past the 4000 mark. White House officials called the milestone a "sobering moment."

 
 

g.o.p. unit

daily dos

thu 1/24/2008

 
Gee, oh. A rear-view mirror shows two elephants walking behind a car.

(image by exfordy via flickr)

According to a joint study by the Center for Public Integrity and the Fund for Independence in Journalism, President Bush and administration officials falsely claimed that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction or had links to al-Qaida or both on at least 532 occasions before the war.

 
 

touch tones

daily dos

wed 12/12/2007

 
Ring my bell. A black rotary speaker phone.

(image by flattop341 via flickr)

 
 

guns and roses

daily dos

thu 10/25/2007

 
Take a whiff. A rose made out of $1 bills.

(image by kissthis via flickr)

The cost of funding wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could reach $2.4 trillion over the next 10 years – nearly $8,000 per man, woman and child in the U.S. – according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office.

 
 

wheels and deals

daily dos

thu 8/30/2007

 
The hub. Two tires that belong to a pink bus.

(image by iboy_daniel via flickr)

President Bush will ask Congress for an additional $50 billion for the war in Iraq, bringing the 2008 defense budget to a total of $510 billion dollars.

 
 

vested interests

daily dos

mon 8/6/2007

 
Ctl +Alt + Smash A broken computer is left on a sidewalk.

(image by Rich Anderson via flickr)

The U.S. Military has lost 190,000 weapons in Iraq, according to a government report released last week.

 
 

welcome to the 'hood

daily dos

fri 7/13/2007

 
Golden Balls. David Beckham appears in a large advertisement.

(image by Brian Harrington Spier via flickr)

For the third time this year, the House of Representatives has voted to end U.S. military involvement in Iraq.

 
 
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