Tag Archive for military

How to Promote Spousal Abuse

Here’s a recipe for promoting spousal abuse and other violent personal crimes: Recruit people for sports like football and boxing or induct them into the military.  Then spend the entire time you have them training them to fight, attack, do physical harm, and perform other acts of extreme violence.   Focus on harming their opponent, who is an enemy to be defeated at all cost.  Mold them into fighting machines whose objective is to win.

When you’re successful, don’t be shocked when the violence they’re trained for and live with daily spills into their private lives.  If you don’t want that to happen, maybe you should modify the training.

 

 

 

OK to Abuse Military Women

It’s okay to abuse women in the military.  That’s the attitude I get out of recent statistics from the Department of Veterans Affairs records looking at women returning from duty in Afghanistan and Iraq: one fifth of them experienced sexual trauma, as measured by screening tests.  And the V.A. admits that there are very likely more, since so many women, uncomfortable with the V.A., don’t seek treatment there and, therefore, are not counted in the statistics.

Of course, many assaults aren’t reported.  Would you, knowing that the people you report to you (above you in rank) will be skeptical or that you might face retaliation?  How will your career be affected? is a reasonable—and common—question victims ask  themselves.

For a clearer explanation of what these women face, read the Center for Public Integrity article at http://www.publicintegrity.org/2013/09/05/13317/one-fifth-female-veterans-iraq-afghanistan-show-signs-sexual-trauma.

Then urge your lawmakers to do something about it by cosponsoring H.R. 1593, the STOP Act. (A quick, easy way to do so is through the American Association of University Women’s site–just click on http://salsa4.salsalabs.com/o/50796/p/dia/action/public/index.sjs?action_KEY=8324.)

Military Sexual Assault

I was startled by the number of sexual assaults in the military and how they’re handled.  Read this article by Lisa Maatz, AAUW Director of Public Policy and Government Relations, then do something about it (click on links).

Bear with me for a moment as I share some numbers:

  • More than 200,000 women are in the active-duty military, making up 14.5 percent of the active-duty force.
  • Nearly 3,200 cases of sexual assault in the military were reported in 2010, yet the Department of Defense estimates the actual number of assaults to be at least 19,000 since most cases are never reported.
  • Of the sexual assault cases reported to military officials, only 8 percent of the attackers in those cases were prosecuted in the military court system – compared with 40 percent of similar offenders prosecuted in the civilian court system.

Eight percent. And even if the military justice system convicts a perpetrator of sexual assault, the perpetrator’s commander, someone with no legal training whatsoever, can throw out that conviction at their own discretion – even the president of the United States cannot overturn their decision.

Yesterday I stood with two of our nation’s veterans as they recounted their experiences with sexual assault in the military. When Kelly Smith first reported her assault at age 19, investigators interrogated her for eight hours and accused her of lying. Although her attacker eventually signed a confession, Smith says he never appeared before a court martial and instead retired with full honors and benefits.

I also stood next to Jeremiah Arbogast, a retired Marine Corps member, who told his story from a wheelchair. He was left a paraplegic after his failed suicide attempt – a desperate action he took after he was sexually assaulted by a fellow Marine. As Arbogast said, we still have the world’s finest fighting force – but it is being threatened by too many sexual predators who are protected and allowed to stay in the military.

I joined these truly courageous veterans and our congressional champions on Capitol Hill yesterday to call for passage of the Sexual Assault Training Oversight and Prevention Act, or STOP Act, which would create an independent, professional office within the military to investigate, and prosecute sexual assault, instead of leaving the decisions in the hands of commanders who can act at their own discretion. The STOP Act would still keep the authority over sexual assault cases in the military—just not in the hands of individual commanders who are not trained to handle these cases. AAUW believes the result will be the kind of confidential and thorough investigative process necessary in the face of such crimes.

Join me in urging your representative to cosponsor the STOP Act and fundamentally change how sexual assault is handled in the military. 

We have to do something about those numbers I mentioned. We have to do something to prevent experiences like those of Kelly Smith and Jeremiah Arbogast from happening again. Urge your representative to cosponsor the STOP Act (H.R. 1593) today. 

 

 

 

Pit Bulls

My grand-dogs are pit bulls.  That’s probably what has led me to question inborn evil in the breed.  They get all the bad press.  Admittedly, many truly are vicious and unpredictable, thanks to humans who’ve trained previous generations to fight.  Yet, humans used to consider the pit a dog people admired, and they were often thought of as the perfect companion for children.

I found an interesting article  “10 Things You Never Knew About Pit Bulls.”  It tells some history of the breed (including serving in the military), interesting facts (like how likely it is you’ll be killed by one), and what happens to those who end up in shelters.  Go to www.care2.com/greenliving/10-things-you-never-knew-about-pit-bulls.html and read for yourself.

 

Photo

[One of my grand-dogs cuddling my grand-dog-to-be.]