Posted on 05/12/2017 4:15:13 AM PDT by Kaslin
Mr. President, we sent you to D.C. to drain the swamp. Firing FBI Director James Corey was a good start. I don't know a single conservative who trusted him. Now it's time to drain the VA swamp.
Because hero vets dying in battle is a tragedy. But allowing our heroes to die on American soil at the hands of the Veterans Administration because of neglect, indifference, incompetence, or pure criminal negligence is a national disgrace.
This story isnt about a generic vet. This is the story of Sgt. Eric Thomsen, United States Air Force. Eric lost his battle. He committed suicide only weeks ago. He was loved by his family - including my wonderful friends, his sisters Erika Lipton and Capt. Roxie Merritt, US Navy (Ret.). Eric was a loving father of Heather, Robert, and Joseph, and grandfather at the time of his death.
Eric was a typical courageous American hero. He was 100% prepared to give his life for his country on a faraway battlefield. What he never expected was to lose his life here at home, because of the indifference of his own government.
Eric was a typical American kid. His story could be your son, your brother, your husband, your father. Eric grew up with a dream of joining the Air Force, just like his father. His moral code was always about sacrifice, duty and honor. Eric married his high school sweetheart when she became pregnant. He was 19 years old in 1974 when he left college and enlisted in the Air Force to provide for his new son. While in the Air Force, Eric put himself through college and became an air traffic controller. He retired as a Master Sergeant.
Because of his loss of hearing, he was forced to give up his career as an Air Traffic Controller once in the private sector. He was hired by Sprint to oversee the governments communications. Then the problems began.
Eric suffered from depression. He was put on so many medications by the VA hospital, including amphetamines and various tranquilizers, to the point of being addicted to the prescriptions, which worsened his depression. Eventually the VA performed Electro Shock Therapy on him as an outpatient. ECT should always be performed on an inpatient basis because of the potential dangerous side effects.
Because of a bad combination of so many drugs prescribed by the VA and the unsupervised effects of ECT, Erics depression became crushing. His personality changed to the point his friends and family no longer recognized him.
Unable to work, Eric was forced to retire. He applied to the VA for a disabled designation. Eric had to agree to have a VA Fiduciary assigned to take over his finances - even though he was quite capable of handling this himself. That was the VAs rule for psychiatric disability.
This was the beginning of the end for Eric. The nightmare for this American hero spiraled out of control as Eric claimed to witness his assigned VA Fiduciary destroy his finances. Eric complained repeatedly to his VA caseworkers. They did nothing. It was just his word against the VA Fiduciary.
NOTE: Erics family- including his sister Roxie (a retired U.S. Navy Captain) witnessed the entire situation and backs up his story.
Eric pleaded for help from a U.S. Senator, who proclaimed to be an advocate for veterans. Eric wrote and called the U.S. Senators office many times. The assistants who answered the phones at the Senators office admitted they were overwhelmed with calls from vets in crisis. He was told to wait. But for Eric waiting wasn't an option - he was unraveling by the day. No one from the Senators office ever called back.
The worst part for Eric was that nobody at the VA would believe him about the assigned VA Fiduciary stealing from him. By this time, with his lifelong savings taken, Eric lost his home - because payments were never made by the VA Fiduciary.
Finally, Eric got an Arizona state representative to listen to him and help him. The VA Fiduciary was not fired, but rather "reassigned."
At this point, Eric had enough of the Arizona VA, and moved away. Eric was extremely dependent on his many VA drug prescriptions and could not function without them. Unfortunately, there wasnt a VA hospital near him, so he often drove long distances to pick up his prescriptions. He always had to be there exactly on the last day, because of VA scheduling, and never had any medicine as a cushion to allow any flexibility.
As his depression continued to worsen, he got very frustrated and often couldnt even get out of bed, let alone travel so far to pick up meds. VA rules didnt allow him to use civilian doctors or hospitals. If he missed his appointment, he was out of luck (and out of meds). He spiraled from disaster to disaster.
In the last few months of his life, Eric was consumed with bitterness and depression over his treatment by the VA. He finally couldnt take it anymore. Sgt. Eric Thomsen committed suicide.
The pain, shame, depression and desperation was finally over.
Sadly, nothing has changed. Erics story happens every day at the VA. Since his tragic suicide, many of Erics military vet buddies have called his family to offer condolences. All of them recite similar experiences. All of them express extreme frustration at the VAs lack of caring, and huge bureaucratic red tape. They all feel like they are up against a brick wall when it comes to getting any attention to their plights. Many of them admit to having constant thoughts of suicide.
Twenty-two vets a day commit suicide in the United States. Each of them - like Eric- gave their lives for their country. Just not the way they expected.
This veteran crisis doesn't attract headlines. Because the reality is
The mainstream media doesnt care. They don't personally know any vets. To journalists, those 22 suicides a day are just another statistic. They didnt know Sgt. Eric Thomsen. Now you do. Rest in peace, Eric.
In honor of Sgt. Eric Thomsen, please drain the VA swamp, President Trump
When employees can’t be fired or even lose their bonuses, no matter what they do or don’t do, many of them become completely indifferent.
That is very true and must be changed.
Last week I read that a judge ruled that the firing of a VA administrator was not constitutional.
I agree. It can't be done by presidential fiat. The system was established by legislation and legitimately-enacted regulations, and it needs to be undone the same way.
The surprise would be someone's actually being fired - removed from employment against his will - rather than reassigned, relieved of duties, suspended with pay, retired on full pension, etc.
That’s the only way to do it.
I think I read that too, but that’s just his opinion.
Paging Senator McCain.
Never the less, the unions have thrown sand in the gears of the swamp draining machine
Infinite delay is their game plan
They may think their union and civil service status protects them. Having the particular VA Fiduciary from the article investigated by the FBI, and (if even a hint of embezzlement is apparent) put through federal prosecution, would be a wakeup call.
There ARE ways to get rid of incompetents and criminals, if there is an Administration with the WILL to do what’s needed. Sleazeballs will generally be guilty of multiple offenses. Find the biggest sleazeballs, and tell them that investigators will be going through their expense accounts, and every aspect of their professional lives, and if they have ANYTHING wrong there, then federal prosecutors are lined up to make their lives hell. Unless they do everybody a favor and resign first.
A simple solution to the VA ineptitude is SHUT THEM DOWN, sell off all hospitals and give Vets a card where they can get treatment from any doctor they want. The money saved from the staff firings plus the sale of the hospitals should go a long way in paying for our deserving veterans health care. I always said from the beginning of the Obamacare debate that “If you like government run healthcare, go visit a VA hospital. I speak from experience.
Drain the swamp of the media too
Stop talking to morons like Lester Holt. Trump should ask lester why they helped hilLIARy cheat in the elections.
If you want to sue the VA, you have to use one of their approved lawyers.
There is one VA approved lawyer in my state.
I can understand that some people aren’t as competent as other people.
But the VA is filled with bureaucrats who are thieves. They steal from the taxpayers and from the individual Veterans.
“- - - give Vets a card where they can get treatment from any doctor they want.”
That card exists. It’s called the Choice card. With it, I see my own doctor downtown, he writes prescriptions filled by the VA. I see my own eye doctor, my eye glass prescription is filled by the VA. The VA pays for all.
But you need to be a combat vet or disabled to qualify. There are probably other ways to get it.
“”That card exists. Its called the Choice card””
Glad I kept reading as I was going to post the same thing. My husband received that card in the mail a couple of months ago along with an explanation of what it meant. We had no idea anything had even been done to make that happen.
My husband has never utilized VA health care benefits but just recently signed up with the VA. We are more interested in “help” in the things he’s not able to do anymore due to severe COPD but certainly wouldn’t refuse help with his RX etc., but not if he had to make a trip to the VA to finalize anything.
Haven’t applied for anything yet - there are a lot of programs and we’re still reading.
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