How
much would you charge for your legs? How about your arms or your
eyesight or hearing. Then after we had made a deal for these body parts
and functions, how long would you wait for payment? One year? Two years?
How about five years or even longer?
It
has recently been reported that some 600,000 veterans today are
backlogged and waiting for their VA benefits. These are our warriors who
made a contract with you and me, joined the military, went to war to
help save our freedom, were wounded or harmed in some way in that
service, and are now waiting for us to fulfill our end of the contract.
Our end is to help them with their expenses and their medical costs. Our
end is to assist them in their return to mainstream life. Our end is to
help them with education so that they might figure out a way to earn a
decent living in light of possible disabilities. Our end is to be
grateful for their service and their sacrifice. These are our warriors.
These are our champions. We should be ashamed.
Their
body parts are scattered all over the Middle East. Their sense of sight
and their sense of hearing are lying on the sands of the Iraqi and
Afghani deserts. In many cases their sense of worth is also laying
there. And so the question. How much would you charge for your legs? How
long would you wait for your contract to be honored?
I
never cease to be amazed that we, in our zeal to stay free, send our
military into harms way with the promise that we will be there for them
when they need us and then we turn our backs on them. Our politicians
and bureaucrats say to these champions, be patient, we will get around
to you in time. Most of these slick little dudes who fill the offices
and bureaus of our government never actually see war. They never
actually feel the pain of limb loss. All they apparently see is
paperwork. They read statistics.
Here’s
a thought. Get them out of their little cubicles. Get them out of their
offices. Send them to the hospitals and rehab centers and let them see
what war is really all about. Let them walk with the veteran who
experiences artificial limbs for the first time. Let them read to the
veteran who gave his sight for their freedom. Let them comfort their
spouses and children as they face an uncertain future.
Then
send them back to their little offices and see if they are not in some
way a little more compelled to speed up the process of caring for these
warriors. When they understand that these are real people with real
issues and not just numbers on a sheet of paper, they might try a little
harder. The military did their job, now it is time for civilian
bureaucrats to do theirs.
Here
is a little exercise. Look down at your legs. Take a long look at you
arms. Gaze out at your spouse and your children. Listen to some great
music. Now imagine what you would charge to give any or all of that up
and how long would you wait for your agreed upon benefits. How patient
would you be? How long would you wait before you got really angry? It’s a
fair question.
Ron Scarbro
1 comment:
Great article Ron, we as a nation should be ashamed. I am at a loss as to how to get this across to our weak willed politicians who are only in DC for political gain. They are a joke as leaders.
Q
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