Friday, November 16, 2007

US War Veterans Committing Suicide in Record Numbers.

Think about it.................and ask "why"? Is it because of what they have seen in Iraq? Is it because they needed mental health intervention from the VA and did not receive it (again why do they need it so much, WHAT is going on here?) Is it because of what they have been trained to do, have done or seen and cannot live with it? Is it because of the EXTREME burden the military puts on military families? Just ask "why", and REMEMBER that over one million Iraqis have been killed since the US invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Please go to this website "Killology Research Group: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill"

120 US war veteran suicides a week

Article from: Agence France-Presse

From correspondents in New York

November 15, 2007 09:47am

THE US military is experiencing a "suicide epidemic" with veterans killing themselves at the rate of 120 a week, according to an investigation by US television network CBS.

At least 6256 US veterans committed suicide in 2005 - an average of 17 a day - the network reported, with veterans overall more than twice as likely to take their own lives as the rest of the general population.

While the suicide rate among the general population was 8.9 per 100,000, the level among veterans was between 18.7 and 20.8 per 100,000.

That figure rose to 22.9 to 31.9 suicides per 100,000 among veterans aged 20 to 24 - almost four times the non-veteran average for the age group.

"Those numbers clearly show an epidemic of mental health problems,'' CBS quoted veterans' rights advocate Paul Sullivan as saying.

CBS quoted the father of a 23-year-old soldier who shot himself in 2005 as saying the military did not want the true scale of the problem to be known.

"Nobody wants to tally it up in the form of a government total,'' Mike Bowman said.

"They don't want the true numbers of casualties to really be known.''

There are 25 million veterans in the United States, 1.6 million of whom served in Afghanistan and Iraq, according to CBS.

"Not everyone comes home from the war wounded, but the bottom line is nobody comes home unchanged,'' Paul Rieckhoff, a former Marine and founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America said on CBS.

The network said it was the first time that a nationwide count of veteran suicides had been conducted.

The tally was reached by collating suicide data from individual states for both veterans and the general population from 1995.

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