Why I Write

In June of 2009 when the Tucson Citizen editor Mark Evans extended the offer to join the ranks of a handful of bloggers and lend some attention to Veterans Affairs, I accepted, but not without some trepidation about holding my own with genuine journalists. The likes of, Rene Shaefer-Horton and Hugh Holub, have decades of journalistic integrity and a loyal reader base.

With the guidance and tutelage of Mark Evans, a University of Arizona journalism instructor, and the the occasional rebuking and syntax correction of fellow blogger Carolyn Classen, I have managed to hang in with content that I hope is timely and compelling.

The feedback from the TC.com software indicates that Veteran Veritas, when disciplined, hovers in the 45-50 percentile range of reader interest.  Sports rules! That tells me that it has been worth the modest dedication and rigor it takes to keep this Blog chugging.

There are days I feel like the “little engine that could,” yet in reading over the past two years of comments and private emails I am assured that Veteran Veritas has been helpful and occasionally enlightening for our community of veterans. It is for them I write and remain invigorated.

Cliche as the journalistic dictum may be, “to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable,” it remains as a guide.

When I received a call from the Department of the Air Force Public Information Office about a posting that spoke of planes at Davis Monthan being contaminated with Dioxin,(Agent Orange), I knew we were serving the interest of our population of veteran readers. They have not called again.

I write to connect. It seems to be have been my lot in life since childhood. Even as a young paper boy for both the Arizona Daily Star and the Tucson Citizen, (my brother and I delivered for both in the same day), I was connecting my subscribers with each other. As the first paper boy for El Con Mall in 1959, everyone on my route knew of all the special sales at Dave Bloom and Sons, Mills Touche and Steinfelds and Gruenwald Jewlers.  Connecting is a joy and blogging permits the flowering of a natural tendency.

The one aspect that provides the most fuel for blogging is the outreach to our veterans who bore the weight of battle. They deserve the best and most useful information available to enhance their quality of life.

Veterans of war frequently do not hold the same divisive and charged viewpoints as the dominant culture. It is vital that we remain connected and with solidarity–if only for the sake of vigilance. To protect our democracy we must grasp the historical meaning, burdens and ramifications of war, with all its consequent impact on society and the individual psyche.

Many of the postings of the past two years are no more than informational direction, with attribution, while others have been intended to heal and advocate for the disabled veteran. I try to leave editorial for the pros. There are plenty of them, including the self proclaimed ones!  At times it is hard to resist or may even seem irresponsible to not add opinion, especially when a commenter is off base. But then that is the beauty of entering dialogues that only blogging affords.

As a 100% disabled veteran of the Marine Corps and a combat squad leader in Vietnam, I know well the dark night of the soul and the travails my comrades have experienced. For 12 years I worked as a Veteran Service Officer shepparding hundreds of men and women through the disability claim process. I have walked Point on that patrol and know well the nuances of the Congressional Federal Register Title 38 that dictates the process.  Never did I imagine that we would be engaged in a now 11 year long war sending  home so many wounded men and women. August was the deadliest month in the Afghan war.

It is for them I write and connect, with the full awareness that the validation of their experiences and the fellowship, as temporal as it may be, is the space that heals. I pray that Veteran Veritas has served that end.

As a student of history, it strikes me that the ecology of our society is more transformed by the connectors than the trench workers. Without the connectors, the bankers, politicians, automakers and pharmaceutical companies, have no juice.

The waterways, railroads, highways and phone companies have connected us for a century. It is now the Internet that trumps and transcends all of  them as the world above the world that connects us  in cyberspace and  is the new unregulated democracy.

Journalism will survive and blogging is its ship. Veteran Veritas is a small cabin on that big boat. I invite you to continue to sail with us.

 

 

“Only the dead know the end of War.” Plato

 

” I am but a small pencil in the hand of God.” Mother Theresa

8 thoughts on “Why I Write”

  1. Well written Mike, and quite true– blogging is our way to connect our community in this modern, internet age.  I don’t think I ever “rebuked” you, only noted some typos over the past 2 years, which we are all capable of (even me, the unofficial “editor” here at Tucsoncitizen.com.)  Keep on blogging, as your column does serve a much needed purpose for the  Veterans of America.

  2. Write on, my brother. One can feel your love in your words. Your mission is one of goodwill and there is no better “connector” of human beings than goodwill. I lost two dear friends in Vietnam, both Tucsonans, and when war is engaged in with no honorable purpose I can’t help but enter the conversation – in their names.

  3. I’m sure your posts have helped many veterans aware of services they may not know are available to them. 
    I was just talking with a veteran who recently turned 65 and had not signed up for a Part D drug plan. He served in the 60’s but was stationed in Germany.  I told him to call the VA to see if he qualifies for services.  He called and was told he makes too much money, and because he was not in Vietnam, he is in a low priority group.
    I think you told me once before that the door opens and closes for admission to VA services for those in the low priority groups.  Any advice for this guy?

    1. Denise- he would not be in a low priority group because of not being in Vietnam, but as a result of  a means test indicating his income and assets. He should remain in that group for now, as he will most likely get less expensive meds, if needed, for a low co-pay. He may not always be making the same amount of money either, and it is good to simply be in the system for future needs.
      Some of the reasons for the priority groups are to control abuse. You have exceedingly wealthy citizens who will use government services while simultaneously complaining about the Government.  It is also the only way to control the costs of care for the VA and to provide service for the disabled vets who have no income. Do you know what Priority Group he was given?

  4. Thanks Brother!

    As usual you have touched my heart with your words. It is good to be reminded that there so many of us out there who care eneough to do something about it. You are the bread that feeds the masses. God Bless you! 

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