Two veterans sought psychiatric care at a VA clinic in Chico, California. They were bounced between virtual providers and struggled to get support in the threadbare system. A staffer worried, “We are going to kill someone.” Then tragedy struck.
From the outside, it looked like a haven for heroes: a state-of-the-art building with a gleaming atrium, a large American flag flying out front. But the clinic hadn’t had a full-time, on-site psychiatrist in five years. A single nurse was responsible for connecting hundreds of veterans, some with serious mental illness or active suicidal thoughts, with an ever-changing lineup of telehealth providers in different time zones.
The military has long drawn recruits from remote towns across America, promising them a lifetime of health care in return for their service. But the VA has seldom staffed those same communities with the mental health professionals needed to help them once they return home. Two decades of war in Iraq and Afghanistan have turned this chronic shortcoming into an emergency. The demand for mental health care has grown at a rate that’s triple the rate of growth for all VA medical services. Anguished employees, doing what they can with threadbare staffing and glitchy technology, are burning themselves out trying to avert disasters that feel inevitable. In Chico, nurses and social workers cried after their shifts, and the new site manager, a veteran and longtime health care administrator, had made a grim prediction: “We are going to kill someone,” she told colleagues.
If hindsight is 20/20, agency officials should have exquisite vision by now. Their files are littered with cautionary tales of missed screenings and insufficient follow-up; in at least 16 instances since 2019, veterans who received inadequate care wound up killing themselves or other people; an additional five died for reasons related to the poor quality of care. Each time, investigators with the VA’s Office of Inspector General swooped in to determine whether the system failed; each time, they concluded it had.
There's no more money for mental health services at the VA, but we'll find another $200 billion for Ukraine and Gaza, absolutely. The neglect we have for our own people in order to fight wars we shouldn't be involved in is unconscionable.
Look at Canada, by contrast, which spends 26 billion a year on war and has universal health care. Must be nice to live in a country that isn't full of self-important warmongers.
The war in Ukraine isn't depriving you of universal Healthcare. Even if we didn't give them jack shit, we still wouldn't have it because our politicians don't give a fuck. Equating the two is so incredibly disingenuous.
What's disingenuous is how you can pretend that tacking on another 100 billion unbudgeted to an already trillion-plus war budget is somehow insignificant. That's even more true given the history you have to ignore of how the war industry in the US has wrangled us into war after war after war since the 80's, serving no purpose except to drive us into debt.
The fact that you think that's cash funding proves you don't even know what aid is being sent. The majority of Ukraine aid is COLD WAR EQUIPMENT. The US was literally about to pay to dismantle old shells because their shelf life was coming up. Instead they saved money by sending them to Ukraine. Those super amazing game changing HIMARS and ATACAMS were built in the 90s and, news flash, already paid for. Just because they tell us how much the equipment is worth doesn't mean that much money literally came out of this year's budget.
Do you realize Israel has universal healthcare for its own citizens at the expense of the American taxpayer? If you're American, that's who you work for.