| Thursday, October 21, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, Barack Obama  attempts to stomp out the flames of freedom, Lt Dan Choi states Obama has "lost  my trust,"  Nouri concludes his tour, the political stalemate continues, a woman  whose husband died in Iraq last month shares why she feels the army is culpable  in her husband's death, and more.   Starting in the US where DNAinfo quotes  Dan Choi stating, "I have  a message for Valerie Jarrett and all those politicians in the White House:  You've lost my trust.  You have lost my trust and I am not gonna vote for Barack  Obama after what he did yesterday." What did he do yesterday?  Showed yet  another side of hypocrisy.  Lily is dancing on the table we've all been Pushed  too far I guess on days like this you know who your friends are  -- "Taxi Ride," written by Tori Amos , first appears on Scarlet's  Walk  Lt Dan Choi was discharged from the military for the  'crime' of being gay. With federal Judge Virginia Phillips issuing a halt to  discharges under Don't Ask, Don't Tell and the Pentagon telling recruiters that  while Phillips' injunction on discharges is in place, they must not discriminate  in recruiting against gays or lesbians (see Rebecca's "don't ask barack because he will  tell " from last night), Dan Choi took action Tuesday.  For a brief  moment, equality appeared to exist.  Betty's "Sick of the ass in the White  House ," Mike's "An ugly day ," and Cedric's  "Shame on you, Mark  Sherman " and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! STOP  WHORING! " covered the latest last night.  For those who missed  the news, Gillian Losh (Badger Herald) reports  the latest  in the ongoing Don't Ask, Don't Tell story: A federal appeals court ruled to temporarily suspend a  judge's ban overturning the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that prohibits openly  gay and lesbian individuals from serving in the military. The U.S. Justice Department filed an emergency motion  with the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to stay the decision, arguing the  injunction on the policy has caused "confusion and uncertainty" in the Pentagon  and the military, according to the appeals filing. The three-judge panel approved the short-term motion  to stay while they study the issue and consider suspending the injunction for a  longer period. 
 In an analysis, Devin  Dwyer (ABC News -- link has text and video) offers  an  analysis: The administration's handling  of the case has angered critics on both sides of the issue. Gay rights  advocates, infuriated by what they see as hypocrisy, and some legal scholars,  insist the "duty to defend" has already been fulfilled and that there is ample  precedent for the administration to let Judge Phillips' decision stand.  Meanwhile, supporters of the law say the administration's invocation of their  "duty" is a smokescreen for a halfhearted defense. "It happens every once in awhile at the federal level  when the solicitor general, on behalf of the U.S., will confess error or decline  to defend a law," said former George W. Bush administration solicitor general  Ted Olson, who is leading the legal challenge of California's ban on same-sex  marriage. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the state attorney general have both  declined to defend the law in court. "I don't know what is going through the [Obama]  administration's thought process on 'don't ask, don't tell,'" Olson said. "It  would be appropriate for them to say 'the law has been deemed unconstitutional,  we are not going to seek further review of that.'"   Speaking on CNN today (link has video),  Dan declared, "I just heard Valerie Jarrett talk to you guys and I am so  absolutely upset at the things she could be saying at this moment.  Yesterday,  when President Obama -- after Don't Ask, Don't Tell has been dead for a week, no  enormous consequences, nobody quitting the military because of honest soldiers.   And all the sudden you see give mouth to mouth resuscitation to discrimination  and injustice.  Valerie Jarrett said that gay people, some of us should try to  understand the politics in the situation that we are a nation of laws.'  Well we  understand that.  We don't need a lecture from Valerie Jarrett on that.   Civics.  Day one.  American government. Checks and balances.  When Congress  enacts a law that's unconstitutional, whose job is it to strike it down?  The  court. I understand that the judicial branch is the only branch of the  government that is filling its mandate to the Constitution.  And that the  president is not able to do that? I am resentful.  Absolutely."     Insulring is the use of noted homophobe Rachel Martin by NPR to cover this  topic. On Morning Edition today, Martin   insisted that Judge Phillips caused "a little bit of uncertainty and chaos" with  her decision.  Rachel Martin then went on to declare the Don't Ask, Don't Tell  policy had to remain in effect because the White House didn't know what to do.   As only a HOMOPHOBIC LIAR can do, Rachel spun that: "They're going to have to  overahaul sexual harassment rules."  No, they're not. Sexual harassment is  sexual harassment and the rules -- excuse  me, THE LAW -- covers it in terms of  same-sex sexual harassment and in terms of opposite-sex sexual  harassment.     Rachel's a liar, she'll always be liar.  While the liar is still among us,  let's apply to logic to her lies.  According to Rachel, there are all these  things the government has to do, just has to do.  Including "sensitivity  training for troops."  Was there sensisitivy training required when Eisenhow  racially integrated the military? No. You give an order, that's the end of the  story.     But Rachel wanted to lie because -- well that's all she's ever done.      Okay there is one week left in this month.  We then have November and  December.     When exactly is Barack planning on ending Don't Ask, Don't Tell.  The  Pentagon's laughable study is supposed to be done at the start of December.  That's supposed to mean the end of Don't Ask, Don't Tell (the end to those who  keep half-an-eye on the story).  So what's the difference.  Why is Judge  Phillip's decision being appealed.  Forget the injunction for a moment.  (The  decision was that Don't Ask, Don't Tell was unconstitutional.  The injunction  was added by Judge Phillips after and it prevented any discharges under Don't  Ask, Don't Tell while the executive branch did any appeals.)  Why are they  wasting, WASTING, tax payer money on this bulls**t?     Five weeks?  Five weeks until -- according to the popular narrative --  Don't Ask, Don't Tell is repealed and Barack is wasting the Justice Dept's hours  and our tax dollars on this nonsense?  How is that cost effective and how does  it demonstrate that he knows the first thing about running a government?  It  doesn't.   That's the decision.  Now let's move to the injunction.   The injunction did no harm.  All the injunction did was prevent people from  being discharged for being gay.  The Penatgon added the policy that recruiters  couldn't discriminate.  Neither of those were causing any harm -- especially  when, Barack wants us to believe -- he's planning on ending Don't Ask, Don't  Tell in December.   People need to be asking what's going on because it appears Barack's  primary rally cry of "We're going to end Don't Ask, Don't Tell!" Is a great deal  like his cry of, "We want to end the war!"  Apparently, footnotes are required  for all of Barack's speeches.   Chris Johnson (Washington Blade) reports that US  House Rep Barney Frank states Barack shouldn't have allowed Phillip's decision  -- not just the injunction, the entire decision -- to be appealed: "First,  President Obama made a mistake in appealing the decision of Judge Phillips,  ruling it unconstitutional. While presidents do have the obligation to defend  even laws they dislike, 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' has already been repudiated as  bad policy by the President himself, by a decisive majority of the House and by  a Senate majority just short of the votes necessary to break filibuster." Writing for the Palm Beach Post editorial board, Rhonda Swan  also feels  the decision should not have been appealed and argues, "It  defies logic that an administration opposed to this bigotry would fight to  maintain it. President Obama has said the policy 'weakens our national  security.' The Justice Department said it has a duty to defend the laws enacted  by Congress. The department did so, and lost. The right thing would have been to  accept defeat. In this case, defeat would have been a win for the country."  GetEQUAL issued the following :      Today, Robin McGehee, co-founder and director of GetEQUAL -- a  national, direct action lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender civil rights  organization -- issued the following statement in response to the ruling by  Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issuing a temporary stay against an earlier  injunction in Log Cabin Republicans vs. United States of America. The  stay was sought by the Department of Justice against a ruling last week that  ordered the U.S. military to immediately stop enforcement of the discriminatory  "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law:  "This temporary stay, sought by President Obama's Department of  Justice, brings the military's discriminatory 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' law back  from the dead. It is a travesty that after numerous attempts, President Obama  and Attorney General Eric Holder will go down in history as the Administration  that breathed life back into 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.' The lives and careers of  openly gay and lesbian servicemembers are now back in the crosshairs of our  government and a renewed commitment to discrimination falls squarely in the  hands of this White House."   Actually, I tend to agree with what Secretary [Robert] Gates said  on the issue. And that is that you need to engage the force to find out their  opinion about this because, after all, this is an all-volunteer force. If in  fact they are alienated by a decision like this to repeal, then they could walk.  And who are you going to backfill?   We'll stop him there.  He is right on one thing: Gates' position.  Maginnis  summarized Gates' position correctly.       Today Nouri al-Maliki continued (and concluded) his never-ending campaign  tour. John Leland (New York Times) observes , "On  Wednesday, Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki took his shuttle campaign to  Egypt, a predominantly Sunni state that has had warmer relations with Mr.  Maliki's main political rival, Ayad Allawi. Mr. Allawi's multisectarian bloc,  which includes most of Iraq's Sunnis, won the most seats in the national  elections in March, ahead of Mr. Maliki's bloc, which is overwhelmingly Shiite."  Al Arabiya reports , "Al-Maliki, who  is Shiite, is trying to remain in power in Iraq in face of strong opposition  from a rival Sunni-backed bloc, which Egypt and other Sunni Arab states have  supported."  Liu Wanli (Xinhua) opines, "By boosting business  links with Arab nations, the incumbent prime minister run ahead of other  candidates in the race to form Iraq's new government, analysts said." Wanli  offers examples:    During his visit to Egypt, Al-Maliki said he had invited Egyptian  companies to do housing, hospital, oil and electricity projects in  Iraq. He also proposed a joint Iraqi-Egyptian free trade zone and new  pipeline that would allow Iraqi gas exports through Egypt, pledging to cut the  red tape for Egyptian firms doing business in his country. In Jordan, King Abdullah and Maliki stressed the need for practical  steps to boost ties between Jordan and Iraq in all fields and highlighted the  importance of establishing frameworks to enhance cooperation, particularly in  the economic and commercial fields, a Royal Court statement  said.     March 7th, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board noted in  August , "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as a  success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that optimism  in a cold shower of reality." 163 seats are needed to form the executive  government (prime minister and council of ministers). When no single slate wins  163 seats (or possibly higher -- 163 is the number today but the Parliament  added seats this election and, in four more years, they may add more which could  increase the number of seats needed to form the executive government),  power-sharing coalitions must be formed with other slates, parties and/or  individual candidates. (Eight Parliament seats were awarded, for example, to  minority candidates who represent various religious minorities in Iraq.) Ayad  Allawi is the head of Iraqiya which won 91 seats in the Parliament making it the  biggest seat holder. Second place went to State Of Law which Nouri al-Maliki,  the current prime minister, heads. They won 89 seats. Nouri made a big show of  lodging complaints and issuing allegations to distract and delay the  certification of the initial results while he formed a power-sharing coalition  with third place winner Iraqi National Alliance -- this coalition still does not  give them 163 seats. They are claiming they have the right to form the  government. In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister . It's seven  months and fourteen days and counting.  Meanwhile, as Nouri concluded his tour today, he also 'graced' Turkey with  his presence in a visit so brief even Nouri felt compelled to comment, "This is a short but very important visit ."  Ernesto Londono (Washington Post) quotes   Iraqiya spokesperson Maysoon Damluji stating, "We have concerns about any  agreements and promises he has given.  Any agreements made after March are not  legitimate because there is no parliamentary monitoring."  Nor is there any  prime minister.  Nouri's term expired some time ago.  That is why there were  calls for the creation of a caretaker government.  Ayad Allawi was among those  making that call.  For the US White House, that was not going to happen due to  the fact that they doubted they would get the agreement to extend the military  presence in Iraq past 2011 were someone other than Nouri put in charge (most  calls for a caretaker government -- including from Allawi -- asked that the  United Nations create the caretaker government). In August, the US  government's refusal to support the creation of a caretake government in Iraq  was embarrassing.  As the political stalemate has now reached the middle of  October, it's only more embarrassing.  Though Nouri stated this week that 'soon'  he would create a new government that ignores the fact that (a) he's made that  announcement repeatedly throughout the stalemate and (b) he may not end up prime  minister.  Yes, yes, the day after the election, Quil Lawrence was calling Nouri  the winner and next prime minister.  But NPR broadcasting that lie didn't make  it any less of a lie. Throughout the stalemate, War Hawk Samantha Power has  vouched for Nouri, insisting he was the US' best option.  She didn't miss it but  she did ignore history.  Repeatedly Nouri has been the willful puppet doing just  what he wanted to do.  That's why he signed on the White House benchmarks after  the 2006 mid-terms but never bothered to live up to them.  Those benchmarks?   They were to measure progress.  And the US Congress, if progress was not found,  was supposed to cut off all funds.  The White House didn't hold him to it and  the Congress -- as a body -- didn't hold him to it.  (US House Rep Lloyd Doggett  was among those, in 2008, publicly calling out Nouri's refusal to meet the  benchmarks he had agreed to.)  These benchmarks were not supposed to extend for  four years or more.  They were supposed to be met in a year to eighteen months  time.  All this time later, Nouri still can't check off a single benchmark.   Like all the other War Hawks before her, Samantha Power got played.    And Nouri, of course, never did a damn thing to help Iraqi refugees.  He  never kept his promise to pay neighboring governments. He didn't do anything  about the violence within Iraq.  He never did a damn thing to help but he did do  a few things to hurt -- such as offering certain countries deals if they'd evict  refugees.  Dropping back to Tuesday's  snapshot :Staying with the United Nation, in Geneva today,  UNHCR spokesperson Melissa Fleming  addressed  the issue of Iraqi returnees, "A poll of Iraqis who have  returned to Baghdad from neighbouring countries found that physical insecurity,  economic hardship and a lack of basic public services has led the majority to  regret their decision to return to Iraq. The survey also found that 34 percent  said they were uncertain whether they would stay permanently in Iraq and would  consider seeking asylum in neighbouring countries once again if conditions do  not improve." Fleming noted that the bulk of the returnees were unable to live  in their own homes (presumably they were occupied by squatter and those who ran  them off to begin with) and the bulk of those who returned did so due to  economic conditions (the savings they'd been living on were gone). The  University of Chicago's Will Taylor reports for  Global Post  on Iraqi refugees Mohammad and Marwa and their  daughter Noor who have arrived in the US after fleeing Iraq for Syria. Mohammad  is a journalist who covered politics and government in Iraq until "local  hostilities and militia" forced them to leave the country. Mohammad explains, "I  wrote about a high officer in Iraq. He is official officer and besides that he  has a militia." As a result, the Mahdi militia visited Mohammad's home and  "kidnapped Mohammed and his mother." Though they eventually released him, the  whereabouts and status of his mother remain unknown. Despite that and despite the UN repeatedly stressing that it is not  safe for returns, Dutch News reports  the Dutch  government announced they will continue to forcibly deport Iraqi refugees. It's  hard to figure out which is worse: the Dutch government's actions (and other  European nations) or the fact that worldwide condemnation has not been heaped on  them for these forcible returns. On the issue of refugees, Chibli Mallat (Daily Star) reports : I received last week a news documentary made by an  Australian television network from Dr. Isam Khafaji. Khafaji is an old Iraqi  friend who fought against Saddam Hussein's regime because of its appalling  human-rights record, and keeps the fight on for the continuing miseries  affecting Iraq. The documentary focuses on the Iraqi women who have found refuge  in Syria and who became part of a prostitution ring set up with the usual  villains: families who don't care and who eke out pennies for survival by  selling their women folk's bodies, mafia-like rings of proxenetism, and  governmental graft at various levels. The story is repeated, with variations, in  Lebanon, Iran, Jordan, inside Iraq, and to some extent, Iran. It is an ugly  story. In a sea of violence, only  sporadic attention has been devoted to that ongoing tragedy, which was  particularly highlighted by courageous investigators in UNHCR. Only through  working on a report for ESCWA on violence against women and available  international legal instruments to combat it, did I know about this significant  ring of misery affecting young Iraqi women in the countries of  refuge. Little is done in practice to  remedy an intolerable situation. The exception is a new venture which has  mobilized around Rebecca Heller and her colleagues at Yale law school as  described in this page. IRAP's main focus has been US responsibility toward  Iraqi refugees, in particular the weaker link constituted by girls and women  living in sexual slavery in host countries. Taking up individual cases, IRAP is  trying to secure the attention, sympathy and network of US immigration and  related authorities to provide relief.Today, the United Nations Population Fund  issues a new report  which they summarized in this  release:When women have access to the same rights and  opportunities as men, they are more resilient to conflict and disaster and can  lead reconstruction and renewal efforts in their societies, according to the  State of World Population 2010, published today by UNFPA, the United Nations  Population Fund. 
 The report's release  coincides with the 10th anniversary of the United Nations Security Council's  landmark resolution 1325, which aimed to put a stop to sexual violence against  women and girls in armed conflict and to encourage greater participation by  women in peacebuilding initiatives.
 "When women and girls suffer deep discrimination, they  are more vulnerable to the worst effects of disaster or war, including rape, and  less likely to contribute to peacebuilding, which threatens long-term recovery,"  said UNFPA's Executive Director Thoraya Ahmed Obaid at the launch of the  report. Through the stories of  individuals affected by conflict or catastrophe in Bosnia and Herzegovina,  Haiti, Iraq, Jordan, Liberia, the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Timor-Leste  and Uganda, the report shows how communities and civil society are healing old  wounds and moving forward. However, more still needs to be done to ensure that  women have access to services and have a voice in peace deals or reconstruction  plans. The report is entitled "State Of The World Population 2010  Resources: From Conflict and crisis to Renewal: Generations of Change" and has a  broad vista and multiple sections.  We'll note the following on Iraq:      Over the last decade or two, the Office of United Nations High  Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has out of necessity blurred a once-clear line  between the internally displaced and refugees who flee from country to country.  Both populations have similar needs and similar fears when conflict forces them  into flight. Iraq is a case in point. According to the UNHCR and government  estimates, in mid-2010, there were 4.8 million Iraqis "of concern," a  description that means they felt that they could no longer live safely at home.  Of these, more than 2.6 million were displaced within Iraq and 1.9 million had  crossed borders into another country. Conversations with Iraqi families who have  sought refuge in Jordan reveal that many of them have experienced both: first  moving from place to place in Iraq in search of safety and then finally, and in  desperation, fleeing the country entirely, sometimes with death threats hanging  over them. After national elections in Iraq in 2010, a new fear has complicated  the lives of Iraqi refugees who say they are concerned that with the Iraqi  political climate declared to be "normal" and sectarian violence reduced (though  not ended) they will be sent back by host countries in Europe and some parts of  the Middle East.   Iraq, with about 29 million people, is a youthful country. The  median age of its people is just over 20, with more than a third of the  population falling into the 0-14 age group, and about a fifth in the 15-24 age  group. So among the frightened people are solemn, wide-eyed children who barely  grasp what has become of their lives. Their parents, fathers and mothers suffer  anguish. Mazin Mohammed Riadh, who says it took him six months to overcome  the fear of being followed, is a 37-year-old engineer from Baghdad. He recalls  how his wife and children lived in terror when the family arrived in Jordan from  Iraq in the summer of 2007. Several relatives of his wife, Hirraa Abass Fadhil,  who is 26, had been killed by members of a Shiite militia because of their Sunni  names; one uncle targeted for death was an imam. "My son was frightened when he  saw a policeman because of his experience back home, because of the sectarian  nature of the police," Riadh said. He takes the little boy into the street to  shake hands and talk with Jordanian police officers to learn that they will not  harm him. Riadh said that he and his wife had problems of their own to overcome  before they were able to focus on their children. "We needed to settle down  mentally. We needed to feel secure first. When we came to terms with things  around here, then I started to teach my children to live normally."   The couple's two young sons, Abdullah, born in 2003, and  Abdurrahman, born two years later, are now adjusting reasonably well, their  parents said. The problem is Adam, the 15-year-old brother of Hirraa, one of her  three siblings living with them in Jordan. Their mother died in 2000 giving  birth to the youngest of the three, a sister named Nawal. Their father died a  year later of heart disease. Another sister, Havaa, is 19, unsettled and unsure  about her future because university education in Jordan, much of it private, is  beyond the family's financial means. Riadh said that he had promised his wife  that he would always look after her sisters and brother and keep them all  together as a family. That pledge has led to an unexpected setback in their  lives as refugees, said Riadh, a softspoken man obviously shaken and distressed  by dissension in the family over their next move.  Riadh, who has engineering skills, had been offered resettlement in  the United States. Adam refused to go, and his family won't leave without him.  The situation they face -- their future in the hands of a disturbed 15 year old  -- illustrates well, but sadly, the complications of refugee life that go on  even after a return to some sense of security. Adam has never recovered from the  killing of his brother, Omar, gunned down at the age of 18 in Baghdad when he  entered a Shia neighborhood where someone recognized him as a resident of a  Sunni section of the city known to harbor Al Qaeda terrorists. In Iraq by 2007,  Hirraa said, "Corpses filled the street, both Shia and Sunni." In Amman, the  Jordanian capital, the UNHCR office had prepared for a flood of Iraqi refugees  in 2003, after the American-led invasion of Iraq. But they did not come then. It  was not until 2006 and after, when sectarian killings began to explode, that  many Iraqis were finally forced to flee. That was the setting from which Riadh  escaped. "For Adam, things are terrible," Riadh said, through an  interpreter. "Omar was his idol, his friend, his brother. After he died, Adam  used to dream about him every night. He would go out in the streets hoping to  find him alive to bring him back. Omar's death has affected the whole family,  but it has affected Adam most. He was in a horrible mental state when we arrived  in Jordan. He didn't want to see anybody. He did not want to go to school. We  took him for counselling. He went once or twice and then he said, 'Am I crazy  that you are taking me there?' He did not want anybody to see him there. We are  forcing him to go to school. The first year he came here he got into a fight; it  was a fight between two schoolboys because he was an Iraqi."     Reuters notes that a Samarra roadside  bombing claimed the life of 1 Sahwa and a Baghdad roadside bombing left three  people wounded.   September 24th, US Spc John Carrillo Jr. and Pfc Gebrah P. Noonan were shot  dead while serving in Iraq. A third US soldier was injured in the shooting and  he or she has not been identified at present. US Spc Neftaly Platero's name has  been floated in the press as the shooter. Yesterday, USF issued the  following : BAGHDAD – A U.S.  service member, Spc. Neftaly Platero, is in pre-trial confinement, in connection  with the shooting and killing of two service members and injury of another here  Thursday. The incident remains under  investigation. "Our condolences go  out to the families of those service members whose lives were lost. We are  saddened by this tragic incident," said Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Buchanan.  Lindsay Wise (Houston Chronicle) notes
  Platero  was on his second tour of Iraq. Joe Goldeen (Stockton Record)  reports : Carrillo's mother,  Desiree Carrillo, and his wife, Reylene Carrillo, both of Stockton, were made  aware Tuesday that charges were pending, and they issued a short joint statement  Wednesday: "We just want justice for  our son and husband," they said. Goldeen has been covering this story from early on.  Which may be why he knows the date of the shooting but a national outlet  apparently telegraphs how little they care about Iraq by not even getting the  date incident correct. Carrillo's family has already expressed  their dismay that the US military, when informing them of the death of John  Carrillo Junior, was not frank about the circumstances of his  death. 32-year-old Sgt John F. Burner III died serving Iraq September  16th.  He was on his third tour of duty.  He apparently died of a heart attack.   Immediately prior to his death, he had difficulty breathing and walking and  sought help.  He was not given the help he needed and his family has expressed  their feelings that the military did not protect their loved one.  Along with  his parents, his loved one include his wife Verena and their two daughters.  At CNN, Verena Burner explains  that she spoke with her hsuband  via Skype on September 15th and that "he looked pale and appeared cold," that he  was sick, that his request to see a doctor was at first refused and then when he  was allowed to see one the doctor told him that he (the doctor) couldn't perform  any tests at that time.  Verena Burner writes:  John's symptoms were coughing, difficulty breathing, tingling in  hands and feet to the point where he couldn't even walk. John also told me that  while on quarters he did not eat much, he was not checked on the way he should  have been. Some days he only received one meal. John was uploading pictures to  e-mail to me, said he would be right back. After waiting for a while, and he did  not return, I started to get worried and made some phone calls. One hour later  he was found outside of his living quarters. He was still alive when taken to  the hospital, but had a respitory attack soon after and passed away.  I feel that his leadership and the medical system failed my  husband. He started complaining about his symptoms about a week before he passed  away. I can't help but think that they should have and could have done more for  him. My heart aches for my two daughters Celina (10) and Caitlyn  (7). My husband John was a great soldier, even better husband and father  and deserved so much more! I think this story needs to be heard, so changes can be made and no  other family will have to go through something like that. A soldier should never  be denied treatment! Like I said in some other articles, I am sure he wasn't the  first and he won't be the last if no one speaks out about how out soldiers are  treated.        |