| 6000 US Veterans Killed Themselves In 2005 Your
New Reality More American US veterans are dying by their own hand back home in one year, than have died in battle in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. It's impossible to comprehend the horror that these men and women experienced, and witnessed, that made them unable to keep living once they were home from the war. But the story of the 'Malboro Man', James Blake Miller (see below) provides some insight into life during and after the war in Iraq for American soldiers. A report from CBS News exposes some of the appalling statistics of the homeland carnage : * In 2005, more than 120 American war veterans took their own lives each and every week. That is more than double the national US suicide rate. As a rough rule, for every successful suicide there are usually three or four who try and fail to kill themselves. * More than 100,000 vets are seeking help for mental health issues. * More than 52,000 were trying to get help for PTSD alone. And that's only the veterans who have come forward. * Of 90,000 vets returning from Iraq, 28% had mental health problems. * Vets are 11% of the general population, but make up 25% of the United States' homeless people.
Note : this story has been corrected after more research and a third
viewing of the CBS News story made clear that it was 6000 veterans of
America's wars since World War 2 who took their own lives in 2005, not
6000 veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. On a first viewing of
the CBS News story, the introduction gives the mistaken impression that
the 6000 veteran suicides figure was related to only veterans of the Iraq
and Afghanistan wars. Regardless, it is still a shocking number of post-war
suicides, and considering the high rate of PTSD in Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans, it is only likely to climb higher unless more help is made available
to these veterans. Miller told...how empty and confused he had felt when combat ended. How he had placed the barrel of an M-16 assault rifle in his mouth on the outskirts of Fallouja one day, taken a deep breath and reached for the trigger.
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