Malkin: Requiem for a VA Victim

This story tugged at my heart, as it should for every red-blooded patriot. Society’s attitude towards our military is much different than it was fifty years ago , or even twenty-three years ago when I retired. I am constantly thanked for my service, and while I do appreciate it very much, there is a growing feeling within me that thinks it may be a facade. Has it merely become a fade to thank a Vet? Do these kind, well-meaning folks really appreciate what we have done? Or are they simply following the crowd? I don’t want to demean in anyway their show of gratitude as it can go a long way to help our Vets. However, do these well-meaning and kind folks really know what is going on with our Vets? I think not. Our government needs to establish some priorities and put its money were the people’s mouth is. Surely, let me rephrase that, “hopefully” our Vets deserve a higher priority than the illegals streaming across our borders, the fraudulent millions on welfare , and the refugees welcomed to our shores by the Chicago Street Hustler and his band of cronies. Politicians rant and rave, promise to help, get re-elected, then disappear. Michelle puts forth some very interesting thoughts and ideas — will anyone listen? Donald, you promised, so please do something in January 2017 to help our Veterans! 

Why was this incident not on every evening news cast? You’ll have to answer that one, I have to go take my blood pressure meds!

michelle_malkin_55What does a suffering military veteran have to do to force an unresponsive government to change its ways?

How about self-immolating in front of his VA clinic? Hello, paper-pushers and desk jockeys? Are you there? Would the heat, the smoke and the smell of burning flesh rouse you in the least?

Nope. Apparently, even this horror is not enough to move the inert bureaucrats at the Department of Veterans Affairs — let alone the indifferent tango dancer-in-chief.

While President Obama sashayed in Buenos Aires two weeks ago, proud Navy veteran Charles Richard Ingram III, 51, made his last life’s journey. He walked nine miles from his home in Egg Harbor Township, N.J., to the curb in front of the Northfield, N.J., VA clinic on New Road.

With a large blue wooden cross looming on the side of a chapel in the background, Ingram stood on the lawn, poured gas all over his body and lit a match. A firefighter told The Daily Beast that the retired chief petty officer, known as “Rich” to family and friends, was “100 percent burned.” A bystander had rushed to his side with blankets to snuff out the flames and first responders arrived within minutes.

But it was too late.

CPO Ingram leaves behind a grieving wife, two young children ages 3 and 5, and a charred patch of brown and blackened grass 75 feet from the entrance of the VA’s Atlantic County Community Based Outpatient Clinic (CBOC).

The bloated VA system now employs nearly 400,000 people to carry out its purported “mission of caring.” The CBOCs were established to “to more efficiently and effectively serve eligible veterans and provide care in the most appropriate setting,” according to the feds. But nobody from Ingram’s CBOC — one of 800 such offices run by the VA, which boasts a record $150 billion budget — was there to help on that Saturday when Ingram perished. Why not? Because the facility is closed on weekends. Its daytime, weekday hours (8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) serve the convenience of the government employees, not of the men and women who put their lives on the line for their country.

Area veterans’ advocates and local officials in both political parties have pushed for years to address chronic under staffing and Soviet-era wait times. The Atlantic City Press reports that there is just one lone psychologist to provide therapy to 200 veterans on any given day.

“To make matters worse,” local Democratic state senator Jeff Van Drew (who worked in the VA system as a dentist) pointed out last week, “there are no Veterans Affairs hospitals in the region, so even if a veteran is able to schedule a timely appointment at the nearest VA hospital, he or she would have to travel hours to Philadelphia, Penn., northern New Jersey or Delaware to receive care.”

Would it have been too much to ask the VA’s employees to open for just one day of weekend appointments and one weekday of late-night appointments? Apparently, that was too much of a sacrifice for the 8-to-4:30-ers. Vets’ groups petitioned for extended hours for years. Nothing happened.

How about a pilot program to free the VA’s hostages and allow vets to receive health care from personal doctors and local hospitals, as Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-N.J., has long proposed? There must be no escape hatches, anti-privatization special interests have decreed. All must suffer for the Greater Good.

Flacks for the Wilmington, Delaware, VA Medical Services facility, which oversees Ingram’s South Jersey clinic, downplayed appointment delays and vets’ complaints after Ingram’s sacrificial act. Instead, the bureaucrats blithely touted their “telehealth” services via computer, “group therapy” and “additional social workers.” Nothing to see here, move along.

When Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc burned himself to death on a Saigon street corner to protest abuses by the Diem government in 1963, the world took notice. The monk left behind his crystallized bones, intact heart and an inflamed movement to end repression against his people. American journalists played a key role in amplifying Duc’s message and ensuring that his death wasn’t in vain.

Where are the national media voices and advocates for U.S. Navy CPO Charles Ingram and the countless other martyrs victimized by the VA?

If a loyal veteran burns himself to the ground in a forest of government bureaucrats, will anybody hear him?

NOTE: God bless you Michelle for keeping these sort of tragedies front and center.

Originally posted 2016-04-07 11:26:28.

2 thoughts on “Malkin: Requiem for a VA Victim”

  1. I think it would be instructive to have one (more than one, actually) of the “heavies” in the VA, don “regular” clothes and assume some various maladies that plague our veterans. Then, this faux supplicant should attempt to get help from the VA system. See how long it takes and how screwed up things were. What kind of “attitude” does he/she get?

    More walking around and seeing who is working and how many seem to not be doing that much work. Maybe tightening up here to give relief over there is probable. Maybe, some are just not working all that hard nor their methods are not all that effective/efficient.

    My two cents worth.

    1. Agree totally. It’s called “managing by wandering around.” Like we used to do as captains, majors, LtCols! I firmly believe anyone working at/for the VA should be a Vet!

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