Category Archives: Veterans Benefits

Wall To Wall Ride Raising Awareness For Veterans Services

Jeremy Staat, alumnus and veteran, will be embarking on a Wall to Wall
bicycle ride across the country to raise awareness and support for veteran
services and causes throughout the nation.

The tour will begin at the Wall of Valor in Bakersfield, Calif. on Feb. 19
and stretch 4,623 miles over the course of 100 days to the Vietnam Memorial
Wall in Washington D.C.

Friend and veteran Wesley Barrientos will accompany Staat on the Wall to
Wall tour. Born in Guatemala, Barrientos enlisted in the U.S. Army upon
turning 18 years old. It was during his third tour of Iraq in 2007 that his
military convoy was struck by an explosive device, resulting in the
amputation of both his legs.

Staat, a native of Bakersfield, Calif., attended Arizona State University in
the spring 1996. He soon became a member of the Sun Devil football team,
where he met friend and teammate Pat Tillman.

Of his relationship with ASU alum and fallen soldier Pat Tillman, Staat
recalls, „It was a relationship of brothers. We didn‚t need to hang out or
talk every day. We would just keep each other up to date on what was going
on in each other’s life.‰

After being drafted into the National Football League (NFL), Staat had
stints with the Oakland Raiders and St. Louis Rams. It was while recovering
from a knee injury that he learned of Tillman‚s passing.

„My mom called me and was beside herself. She kept saying, „he‚s gone, Pat‚s
gone,‰ he said. „I lost it and when I got back to my apartment I just sat
there and cried. His death put a lot of things in perspective for me though.

Having already acquired NFL retirement benefits that Tillman urged him to
secure, Staat retired from football and enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps.
He was quickly sent to the Marine Corps Recruiting Depot in San Diego,
California for 13 weeks of basic training.

„They do what they do, not for the money, but for the love of their
country,‰ Staat said. „I loved being part of a team that was making a
difference, and being in the branch of the military that could be anywhere
in the world in 24 hours in an emergency situation.‰

Upon successfully completing basic training with knowledge of the weapons
systems, Staat was eventually deployed to Iraq. Aside from his service in
combat, Staat also managed to donate basic supplies and toys to the children
of Iraq with the help of his friends at local churches in the U.S.

In 2007 when Staat returned from abroad he decided to finish education via
ASU online. In 2009, he proudly received a bachelor‚s degree in liberal arts
and sciences.

„No one can ever take away your education. Getting my degree was one of my
biggest accomplishments, especially since I was battling dyslexia.‰ Statt
said.

The Wall to Wall ride is part of the Jeremy Staat Foundation. Through the
foundation, Staat works as a motivational speaker in classrooms throughout
the nation, recalling the life experiences of himself and others on the
Veteran Speaking Board. The cause runs strictly off donations from the
community to help keep much-needed funds in the classroom.

The ride will make a stop in Tempe, Ariz., March 8 and 9. To learn more
about the tour, please visit http://www.walltowallbicycleride.com or

http://jeremystaatfoundation.com/.

Natasha Karaczan, natasha.karaczan@asu.edu
480-965-6991
Media Relations

Veteran Veritas Has Doubts

I am no Pappa Hemingway, but I think in the terse and laconic way he used his verbs. I have also fought in a war with no glory as did Ernest. What aligns me with him is the lack of potency in the written word, as searing and penetrating as Hemingway was, to alter the behavior of a bellicose nation.  War is a verb on steroids. Survival has no syntax, just symptoms and infinite costs.

The ravages of war and the psychic damage it brings have never in history been so paraded if front of polite society at is has in the last ten years of non-declared wars of assimilation.

T.S. Elliot put it aptly, “how much reality can humankind handle?”

The killings of the homeless men in Orange County by an Iraq combat veteran, were clearly the act of an aberrant man with a parallel life. It matters not that we was a Marine, sailor, soldier or Airman. He is yet another, “Canary,”  in the tunnel of the aftermath of wars. Particularly, wars that ask for 4 and 5 tours of duty.  No soldiers since the Crusades have served in as many campaigns. Why does this just slide by in the middle of the night while we have the “Four Non Horseman,” on stage debating about subjects that are mostly a distraction from the one budgetary item that is breaking the bank in the exact same way that the Russians went broke fighting in Afghanistan?

Why is there not more due diligence background checks on these young warriors prior to their enlistment? The paradoxes are abound. If  the Orange County Marine, Ocampo, was to have  applied for a disability claim based on PTSD, prior to his killing rampage,  it would have likely been denied because of a pre-existing  personality disorder condition. Yet we send them to war and make that very condition worsen to the point of cracking. The Catch-22 of all this would stun even Joseph Heller, the author.

Master Card does more homework than the Department of Defense.  But we need numbers in the volunteer fighting force. Big numbers, were we to ever get entrapped into fighting on multiple fronts. Where will we find the future combatants?  The Four Horseman of the GOP race suggest using illegal immigrants who are in search of citizenship. Is this the way of a proud sovereign nation that has spent the last 10 years demonizing undocumented workers who built 75% of the homes in the southwest?

Now they are good for cannon fodder because we are going to run out of volunteers who can pass background checks? Por mi Dios, what have we become?

Some 50,000 men and women will be returning to our neighborhoods in the next 6 months. 70% are healthy, holy, happy, proud and balanced veterans of war. Some 30% will be lacking the equanimity and oars to get them ashore in an economy that cannot take care of its existing work force.  They are also entering the radio talk show America that is rife with angry polemic that nearly mimics the very cacophony from the streets of Iraq and Afghanistan. To us these endless paid for diatribes are freedom of speech. To the returning veteran they are  called, “triggers.”

Who cares? Who in the neighborhood actually cares? Care with feet, not care with rhetoric?

The TucsonCitizen.com has provided a forum here for dialogue, outreach, and advice from fellow veterans. Most all the time it has remained in the category of helpful and guided toward betterment of the veterans condition.

But honestly, when you look at the statistics about our readers, as we get on a monthly basis,  the community cares the most about, sports, Mexicans and guns, in that order.

The lip service given to, “Support the Troops,” is a sentiment that seems quite ephemeral.  Meaningful for raising money for non-profits, but has little to do with the activity of daily living of most Americans. I have never in my life witnessed such a disconnect from soldiers and war.

Sure they are in the news and make for wonderful advertisements that touch our heartstrings, but who in the village is preparing for Johnnie and Joan when they coming marching home?

Two years ago there were a series of forums at Himmel Library, staffed by combat veterans, that focused on preparing the families of veterans who were transitioning. All of the presenters  were published authors and all had struggled with the demons of war. What happened to these community forums? Has war so jaded us all that we are just flat worn out?  Did T.S Elliot nail it by asking how much reality can humankind handle?

So where is my doubt?  I doubt the efficacy and value of maintaining a blog, as an unpaid volunteer, that remains in the  pantry of most Americans.

My gloom is not all pervasive. Veteran Veritas has for many a season been ranked in the top 25 of readers. We have have garnered many new followers and veterans from all over the United States , Great Britain, Scotland and Ireland.

My doubt  stems from wondering if the publisher and owner of the Tucson Citizen, Gannett, cares. They provide absolutely no feedback to the contributors here. Curiously they are the owners of Military Times and USA Today, both of whom rely heavily on military readership.  I was so naive as to think they might have sent us a Christmas card or something. A subscription to USA Today would be nice. Especially since they never leave enough in retail outlets.

At any rate, this online confessional of sorts for men and women of war, marches on with a desire to one day turn swords into plowshares and promulgate some sense of peace around the world, and offer some contentment inside  the collective ranks of veterans who want to share their stories and struggles. The feedback I get from them is the only fuel that invigorates.  Emails from Seattle to Tampa are what keep me tuned in. New pals who are veterans of the Army Special Forces in Great Britain are pretty buffed.

In the context of our Marine Corps motto and oath, “First to fight for right and freedom and to keep our honor clean…” I do not wane. A good Marine is always a peacekeeper first  and will do what it takes to vanquish the evil forces on our planet. I wished it were different.

But I say again, my doubt is about the neutered, jaded, weary public that is rapidly acquiescing to corporate America and a war machine that has compromised its conscience and allowed itself to be more interested in Penn State pedophiles then men and women at war.

Our Editor Mark Evans has been great and always helpful. I expected more help  from Gannett.

I will just lower my expectations and read the Sports page first, so as to be a regular American.

San Diego Union Names Person of The Year- The Marine

Marine recruits from 3rd Recruit Training Battalion, Company L , about to begin their graduation ceremony from boot camp, remain under their drill instructor's watchful eye at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego.
Ok, I know it is not local. But the people they defend are local.  Plus it is a cool picture.  They never gave us Dress Blues when we graduated.  We only got the top just for pictures in the album.
Marine recruits from 3rd Recruit Training Battalion, Company L , about to begin their graduation ceremony from boot camp, remain under their drill instructor’s watchful eye at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego. — Nelvin C. Cepeda
Written by

Today, the U-T launches a new tradition. Each Jan. 1, we will honor the Person of the Year, an individual or category of individuals with San Diego ties.

We can think of no better way to begin this tradition than by selecting as our first winner the Marine. Since Sept. 11, 2001, America has relied on the Marine to keep us safe from terror at home and to take the fight to our enemies abroad, a task our Marines have handled with immense courage, professionalism and honor.

Some of the 56,000 Marines based in San Diego County — the West Coast hub for Marine ground and air forces — have served a half-dozen or more tours of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan. Their sacrifices, and those of all the other military personnel based in our county, have been enormous.

Some have died, some have suffered horrific injuries, some are wounded in less-obvious ways. The Marine’s family also has borne a huge burden.

Yet the Marine perseveres, caring for loved ones, protecting our nation and demonstrating the wisdom of Marine Commandant Charles McCawley’s 1883 decision to make “semper fidelis” — Latin for “always faithful” — the Marine Corps motto. When not defending this nation abroad, the Marine is our neighbor, our friend, our children’s coach, our school’s supporter, a welcome, constructive and beloved member of our community.

The U-T is far from alone in its admiration. “Some people work an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a difference to the world. But the Marines don’t have that problem,” President Ronald Reagan wrote in a letter to a young Marine about to deploy on a dangerous mission.

We couldn’t agree more.

In recognition of all the Marine has done for San Diego, for the United States and for the cause of freedom, the U-T salutes the Marine, our 2011 Person of the Year. Semper fi!

New Mobile Vet Centers

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

January 4, 2012

 

 

VA Deploying 20 New Mobile Vet Centers

Additions to Fleet Will Expand Veterans’ Access to VA Services Across U.S.

COLUMBUS, Ohio- The Department of Veterans Affairs today deployed 20 additional Mobile Vet Centers from the production facility of Farber Specialty Vehicles to increase access to readjustment counseling services for Veterans and their families in rural and underserved communities across the country.

“Mobile Vet Centers allow VA to bring the many services our Vet Centers offer Veterans to all communities, wherever they are needed,” said VA Under Secretary for Health Robert A. Petzel. “VA is committed to expanding access to VA health care and benefits for Veterans and their families, and these 20 new vehicles demonstrate that continued commitment.”

In an event attended by Petzel, U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, representatives of the Ohio congressional delegation, and Veterans service organizations, VA launched the 20 new vehicles to their destinations ranging across the continental United States, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.

These customized vehicles–which are equipped with confidential counseling space and a state of the art communication package—travel to communities to extend VA’s reach to Veterans, Servicemembers and their families, especially those living in rural or remote communities.  The vehicles also serve as part of the VA emergency response program.

The 20 new, American-made vehicles will expand the existing fleet of 50 Mobile Vet Centers already in service providing outreach and counseling services.  The 50 Mobile Vet Centers were also manufactured by Farber Specialty Vehicles.  In fiscal year 2011, Mobile Vet Centers participated in more than 3,600 federal, state and locally sponsored Veteran-related events.  The VA contract for the 20 Mobile Vet Centers totals $3.1 million.

 

-More-


Mobile Vet Center Launch 2/2/2/2

 

During the announcement event, Petzel also announced that Farber Specialty Vehicles recently won a competitive bid to produce 230 emergency shuttle vehicles for VA over the next five years.  The shuttles will provide routine transportation for Veteran patients in and around various metro areas during normal operations, but convert to mobile clinics that will facilitate the evacuation of patients and their care teams during disasters and emergencies.  The VA contract for the 230 emergency shuttles totals $53.5 million.

VA has 300 Vet Centers serving communities across the country, offering individual and group counseling for Veterans and their families, family counseling for military related issues, bereavement counseling for families who experience an active duty death, military sexual trauma counseling and referral, outreach and education, substance abuse assessment and referral, employment assessment and referral, VA benefits explanation and referral, and screening and referral for medical issues including traumatic brain injury and depression.

More than 190,000 Veterans and families made over 1.3 million visits to VA Vet Centers in fiscal year 2011.

To find out more about Vet Center services or find a Vet Center in your area, go to www.vetcenter.va.gov.

The 20 new mobile Vet Centers will be based at:

 

  • Birmingham, Ala.
  • San Diego, Calif.
  • Atlanta, Ga.
  • Western Oahu, Hawaii
  • Cedar Rapids, Iowa
  • Evanston, Ill.
  • Indianapolis, Ind.
  • Baltimore, Md.
  • Pontiac, Mich.
  • Kansas City, Mo.
  • Jackson, Miss.
  • Greensboro, N.C.
  • Lakewood, N.J.
  • Reno, Nev.
  • Stark County, Ohio
  • Lawton, Okla.
  • Ponce, Puerto Rico
  • Nashville, Tenn.
  • Washington County, Utah
  • Green Bay, Wis.

 

 

#   #   #

Merry Christmas Tucson

So do you know how a combat veteran says Merry Christmas?  Like this….”Merry Christmas … for CHRIST sake!”

All one need do is ask why the child Jesus was born.  Once that miracle is grasped, the first tangible miracle in human history, most all else falls into place.

The world of pugnacity, polemic and pugilism spouted by small souls solely to get ahead of the other, is mostly a sideshow.

Salvation of the human race and the planet lies in the spiritual realm where the avatars of history have guided us.

The Christ Child born of a miracle to create miracles has never misguided us.

My vote is for Jesus. Merry Christmas fellow veterans!

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Training Free To Veterans

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction

WINTER 2012 * MBSR PROGRAM

 

Developed in 1979 by Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn at the University of Massachusetts medical school, this is a manualized, evidence-based, 8-week program. MBSR is highly participatory and deeply engaging experiential learning. Explore the interplay of mind and body to mobilize inner resources for learning, growing, and healing.

MBSR Info & Registration

Wednesday * Jan. 4 or Jan. 11 * 6:00 – 8:30 pm

Library, Ada McCormick Building

1401 E. First St. (at Highland Ave.)

MBSR 8-Week Program

Wednesdays * Jan. 18 – March 7 * 6-8:30 pm

Library, Ada McCormick Building

1401 E. First St. (at Highland Ave.) Registration required

FREE

TO

VETERANS

 

 

Facilitators

Drs. Teri Davis and Dana Ferris have participated in professional training

with Drs. Jon Kabat-Zinn and Saki Santorelli, and have completed additional

training programs at the Center for Mindfulness at UMass Medical School.

Dana is a clinical psychologist. Teri is a naturopathic physician and

founder of Purple Mountain Institute and the Mindful Veterans Project.

 Visit the website

 

Transcendental Meditation -Just What The Doctor Ordered For Veterans of War

Filmmaker and Producer David Lynch has a been a devotee of Transcendental Meditation for decades. He now wants returning veterans to have the experience of the noted stress -reduction benefits of TM.

The David Lynch foundation is donating $1 million in grants to teach the meditation technique, known as TM, to the active-duty, veterans and their families. There is a ton of documentation showing the profound remedial benefits to those suffering from post-traumatic stress syndrome.

These grants originate from a division of his foundation called Operation Warrior Wellness.

The current recipients of the Operation Warrior Wellness grants are the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, and the UCLA Operation Mend program.

I have practiced TM regularly since I was initiated in the program in 1972, and can testify to the immediacy of its calming effects and the contribution it affords to access a seeming infinite source of psychic energy.

I too suffered from PTSD following my service in the Marine Corps in Vietnam.  There is no question that my healing pilgrimage, that is perennial, is aided by the daily practice of meditation and prayer.

Nurses at the VA hospital love to take your blood pressure the moment after you arrive for an appointment. It is always higher than normal since the hustle and bustle of getting there and the waiting room adds to the stimuli that will raise it a few points. I always ask them to take it twice. In the interim, I use the technique of TM and show them how I can lower my BP by at least 15 points.

In 2005 I was a candidate for a research project at Brain States in Scottsdale Arizona. I was lodged at the Mayo Clinic hotel for a week and participated in a very sophisticated Bio-Feedback experiment for the treatment of PTSD.  I called it a “Jedi” program. We were all wired up and could view or own brain waves on a big screen. I did not tell them I was a meditator. On day three they asked me how I was able to go to Alpha wave pattern so fast, at which time I gave credit to the TM program. It really does work.

Natural healing processes can cure many physical and mental afflictions. Injured tissue regenerates, white blood cells reject infection, and emotional issues will be subject to spontaneous remission or one finds ways to dance with the distress. Growth itself in all its forms is a natural process and flows without cognitive comprehension or attention. There seems to be a basic primal urge in all living creatures to move in the direction of the fullness of expression, talent and potentialities. It is only the stress of life and surely the stress of combat that dulls the senses and makes us numb to the point of raw fear of changing and resisting natural growth, or natural recovery.

While practicing TM the adherent is able to contact pure awareness and an energy reservoir deep within the psyche. The consequent benefits are a notable decreased anxiety and less dependence on external stimuli, such as drugs and alcohol for arousal needs and self mobilization. The related results are an increase in stability, performance, (many athletes meditate),optimism, energy and overall good health habits.

Mr. Lynch’s timing is perfect, as we prepare for thousands of troops to return home by the end of the month.

I praise, David Lynch for helping the veterans transition to polite society. Given that the retail cost of the training is now approximately $2500.00, his act of charity is well placed.  I paid $95 in 1972!

I would hope that David Lynch is not the sole provider of grants for TM training. It would be nice if someone in the Uof A Foundation, Angel Charities, or the Tucson Community Foundation were to do the same for the veterans in Southern Arizona.

A little peace and contentment can only good for the economy.

(http://www.davidlynchfoundation.org).

Nearly 1000 Police Move To Evict Occupy LA

I am watching this moment in history as it unfolds and remain impressed with the behavior of both the occupiers and the LAPD.  I cannot help but be reminded of my days as a cub reporter for KRLA radio station during the Watts Riots in the summer of 1965.  I worked for Norm Woodruff that summer reading the teletype and packing his battery pack for the microphone.

It was a bit hairy,as Martial Law had been imposed and the National Guard were everywhere and carrying rifles and shotguns. Our car was shot at mistakenly, and the bullet grazed my sidekick, Reid Smith’s head, as we drove through the barricades flashing press passes that apparently were no longer acceptable in the riot zone. I was 17 years old.  This experience was my first understanding of being attracted to adventure! The Vietnam War followed.

The clear difference is that I have yet to hear any news coverage of the  raison de etre for the Occupy  movement. Who is the spokesperson? What is the direction and content of the movement? I fully understand the genesis of the protestations. Wall Street sucks and acts with impunity. Got it. But now what?

The gatherings of the 60’s had an end game. The end of the Vietnam War. Where is the end game? Or is this a fill in the blanks test?

Is it possible that the intrigue and mystery is tactical? Will the movement survive the winter?

There are intelligent young citizens in that crowd. They do not all need a shower and a job as Newt the morphed Spiro Agnew suggests.  I am sure many of them  have American Express Cards and huge school loans that are not being forgiven, as the Banksters were.  Now there is a reason for exercising some free speech energy.

Back to watching KTLA Channel 5 from Los Angeles. I just hope there are no Iraq or Afghan vets in the crowd that get triggered with stress. God speed. And God Bless our right to protest.

Returning To Vietnam Fraught With Temptations

 Gee, and my former Sgt. and I were planning to go to Vietnam next year.  I guess we will need a chaperone!

Vietnamese-American women place strict rules on men returning to homeland

Posted: 11/06/2011 07:00:00 AM PST
Updated: 11/06/2011 09:37:36 AM PST
U.S. sailors chat with Vietnamese women at a bar in Da Nang. (HOANG DINH… (Hoang Dinh Nam)
  • HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam — The trouble for Henry Liem begins every time he prepares to return to his homeland.
Getting the required visa from the Vietnamese government is a breeze. It’s the “second visa” — from his wife worried that he will stray over there — that requires diplomatic skills.
“My wife is always cranky every time I go,” said Liem, a philosophy instructor at San Jose City College who visits Vietnam twice a year to teach at a university. “So I rarely disclose my upcoming trip until the last minute. It’s pain minimization. The longer she knows, the longer I have to bear the pain.”
Thirty-six years after the Vietnam War ended, Communist government officials openly welcome Vietnamese-Americans back, even those who fought against them. But another Civil War has erupted, this one pitting Vietnamese-American women against their husbands and boyfriends who want to return to the Southeast Asian country. The men’s significant others contend that Vietnamese women lie in wait to ambush them, often eager for the financial stability such a match would bring.
“All the girls in Vietnam are aggressive. They attack!” said Ha Tien, 38, who owns an accounting business in San Jose. She said she lost her man to such a love guerrilla a few years ago.
Women are worried
The tension over this issue has reached epic proportions in the Bay Area Vietnamese community and elsewhere. Vietnamese comedy skits

poke fun at the household strife and pop performers sing about it. It’s the No. 1 topic for women, Tien said. Any time a man travels back alone, she added, it’s assumed he’s not just going to visit Uncle Vu or Cousin Thuy but to play in a country with an abundance of attractive young women.

“There is not a Vietnamese family (in Silicon Valley) that doesn’t know a man who has done this,” Tien said.
Hien Nhan, who owns the Polo Bar in the central part of bustling Ho Chi Minh City, said that Vietnamese-American women do have reasons to worry.
“The problem is, Vietnamese women are getting prettier and prettier,” said Nhan, perched on a stool at his cozy establishment that serves up draft beer, hamburgers and female employees in short shorts who flirtatiously brush against male customers they like. “They wear more cosmetics. They eat better. They exercise.”
And they are not afraid to let foreigners know they are open to a frolic, a fling or something more serious.
“The tradition has been the male chases after the female,” Liem said. “Now, it’s the other way around in Vietnam.”
Said one Vietnamese-American tech executive from Silicon Valley who didn’t want to reveal his name for fear of causing his own second visa problems: “You get hit on all the time. Even at the hotel. You check in and they hit on you. I can’t do more than 10 days in Vietnam at a time. Otherwise, I get into trouble.”
Those who get a second visa often have strict limits placed on them, said San Jose’s Peter Nguyen, who until recently had a girlfriend in Ho Chi Minh City. Not long ago, a buddy of his overstayed a two-week second visa issued by his girlfriend. “When he came back, she tossed all his stuff out onto the street,” he said.
“He was having so much fun,” Nguyen added. “The temptations are so great. Guys 50 and over can get girls who are in their 20s and look like models. It’s too good to pass up.”
A friskiness permeates the culture in Vietnam that many men visiting from other countries find irresistible.
“There’s a certain charm here that you don’t see in Singapore or China,” let alone the United States, said Chung Hoang Chuong, a faculty member in the Asian American Studies department at City College of San Francisco, who spends about half his time in Vietnam. “If you make a pass at a girl, she won’t push you away. She’ll answer with a smile.”
The apparent role reversal is driven in part by the popularity of Western culture and poor economic conditions in Vietnam. Indeed, Nguyen, a 40-year-old who works in customer service but is now unemployed, said his girlfriend in Vietnam recently dumped him because he failed to find a good job in Vietnam.
It’s a money thing
Vietnam is a demographically youthful society — about 70 percent of the country’s 90 million citizens are younger than 35 — and young people flow into the big cities from the countryside every day looking for opportunities. Viet Kieu, the term for ethnic Vietnamese living overseas, and foreigners are seen as ideal catches for some women because they can support them and their families.
“Good-paying, decent jobs are extremely difficult to find,” even for Vietnamese with college degrees, Nhan said.
Nguyen Le, a 29-year-old who operates a Ho Chi Minh City sidewalk cafe, says she and other women are attracted to Viet Kieu and foreigners for a number of reasons, the first being financial security.
“They have more money, more earnings,” said Nguyen. “And they are more considerate, more tender and caring with their women. In the eyes of a foreigner, love is more important than it is with Vietnamese gentlemen.”
Suspicions unfounded
Still, some men say the suspicion that most Vietnamese-American males come here just to play is overblown — plenty of Viet Kieu come back only for business or family visits.
“We love fun, but we are not stupid,” said Khanh Tran, a retired teacher who lives in San Jose. “I am still healthy, but I am not going to (misbehave in Vietnam) at the expense of my family, my wife. We have been together for more than 40 years.”
Nonetheless, his wife, taking no chances, refuses to issue the former officer in the South Vietnamese military a second visa. “I would love to go back,” he said wistfully.
Increasingly, some Vietnamese say, the appeal of foreigners is waning because of a new class of wealthy Vietnamese, including many multimillionaires. And some Viet Kieu males have a bad reputation because they act like playboys who throw money around and convince women they are sincere in their affections — only to disappear when they return to the United States.
But at times it’s the Viet Kieu who end up on the losing end. Some who marry and bring their new bride home to the United States have discovered the women envisioned a much richer lifestyle than they can provide, leading to strife and divorce.
Viet Kieu men receive little sympathy from Viet Kieu women for their dalliances, whether they lead to love or heartbreak. “We blame the men for their weakness, for not being responsible,” said My Hanh, a 31-year-old San Jose resident.
Returning to Vietnam holds little appeal for women like her: “There’s a saying, ‘If a girl goes back to Vietnam, it’s like bringing wood to the forest.’ “

Turn Off The TV There Is Good News Elsewhere/ Veterans Jobs Bill Passes

 Comprehensive Legislation to End Veteran Unemployment

According to the Labor Department, there are 3.4 million job openings right now in the United States. Yet, many employers are finding that workers do not have the skills or training they need to qualify for them.

There are nearly 900,000 unemployed veterans in the United States–a staggering figure. The latest Department of Labor unemployment report shows that in October 2011, the average unemployment rate among all veterans was 7.7% and 12.1% for veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Equally troubling, veterans between the ages of 35 and 64, the group with the highest financial obligations and the fewest available VA education and training options, continue to make up nearly two-thirds of all unemployed veterans. Overall, nearly one in twelve of our nation’s heroes can’t find a job to support their family, don’t have an income that provides stability, and don’t have work that provides them with the confidence and pride that is so critical to their transition home.

The “VOW to Hire Heroes Act” is bipartisan, bicameral, comprehensive legislation that would lower the rate of unemployment among our nation’s veterans. This bill combines provisions of Chairman Miller’s Veterans Opportunity to Work (VOW) Act – which passed the House on October 12, 2011 –  (H.R. 2433; Report #112-242), and Chairman Murray’s Hiring Heroes Act (S. 951; Report #112-36), and veterans’ tax credits into a comprehensive jobs package that will aggressively attack the unacceptably high rate of veterans’ unemployment by:

  • Expanding Education & Training: To begin moving veterans out of the unemployment lines, the VOW to Hire Heroes Act of 2011 provides nearly 100,000 unemployed veterans of past eras and wars with up to 1-year of additional Montgomery GI Bill benefits to qualify for jobs in high-demand sectors, from trucking to technology. It also provides disabled veterans who have exhausted their unemployment benefits up to 1-year of additional VA Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment benefits.
  • Improving the Transition Assistance Program (TAP): Too many service members don’t participate in TAP and enter civilian life without a basic understanding of how to compete in a tight job market. Therefore, the VOW to Hire Heroes Act will make TAP mandatory for most service members transitioning to civilian status, upgrade career counseling options, and job hunting skills, as well as ensuring the program is tailored to individuals and the 21st Century job market.
  • Facilitating Seamless Transition: Getting a civil service job can often take months which often forces a veteran to seek unemployment benefits. To shorten the time to start a federal job after discharge, this bill would allow service members to begin the federal employment process by acquiring veterans preference status prior to separation.  This would facilitate a more seamless transition to civil service jobs at VA, or the many other federal agencies that would benefit from hiring our veterans.
  • Translating Military Skills and Training: This bill will also require the Department of Labor to take a hard look at how to translate military skills and training to civilian sector jobs, and will work to make it easier to get the licenses and certification our veterans need.
  • Veterans Tax Credits: The VOW to Hire Heroes Act provides tax credits for hiring veterans and disabled veterans who are out of work.

Furthermore, the VOW to Hire Heroes Act is completely paid for and does not increase the deficit.