PBS has had a show on IRAQ veterans who have PTSD. It’s sad to see how many young people, in the beginning of life are suffering from trauma after serving there. It’s like compressing our very worst and complete life into one single year of life and then living with the horrific images in your mind day in and day out afterwards. These young people who gave their lives, and literally gave their lives to the military effort and will continue giving their lives because for the rest of their lives they will have the images we wish they would never have had to see.

Too bad we can’t send the old drunk geezers out there who don’t care about their lives anyways and who are crazy as hell, and hell bent on showing how macho they are. Instead the unfortunate truth is that we send out our youngest most vital members of society to a horrific, depressing and sad world.

Coping with PTSD is difficult. It can take much time to dull memories that one doesn’t really want to deal with.

If you are military suffering PTSD check out the link here to find more assistance.

A car chase  ended in a Deputy having a heart attack because of stress. While he was suffering the heart attack one of the passengers of the vehicle, that was handcuffed tried to help him, but unfortunately he died. Meanwhile. Deputies charged the driver with involuntary manslaughter after consulting with prosecutors because the chase led to the stress that caused the Deputy’s heart attack.

While this seems par for the course, maybe in South Carolina, it begs the question; if a Deputy suffers a heart attack while discharging his duties of booking a thief, is the thief liable for the medical situation of that Deputy?

As I was driving through my nearby McDonald’s the other day to pick up a quick healthy yogurt, I noticed a WI-FI sticker on the payment window. What?! Mickey Dee’s has WIFI? Apparently so. If you’re in between sales calls and need to login you can find a number of WI-FI places located at the McDonalds website. Now the poor mans version of Starbucks,  Mickey Dee’s is offering free WI-FI while you munch on a Big Mac. This vast network of WI-FI locations makes it possible to surf the web and get email from nearly every block in the country. Well Done McDonald’s.

812766137_m.jpgSo today it was announced how a summer surge against illegal immigrant gang members was a whopping success. Looking at the Operation Shield website, I note some statistics that will interest anyone who is following this story:

The fiscal budget for 2007 is over 4million dollars. ICE has approximately 15,000 employees working in 400 offices nationwide and over 50 locations internationally.

In FY06, CE removed 185,431 illegal aliens from the country, a ten percent increase over the number of removals in FY05. This essentially means that for every employee of the ICE program, 12 illegals are brought in in a year. Is that enough?

I think if I worked an entire year on finding and dealing with illegal immigrants with my sister, who is a lawyer, we could deport at least 50 people. I find this a staggering number of illegals for such a huge workforce.

While “the government” seems proud to boast the numbers of illegals netted, like the current wave of 1300 of them, I find the number small and unsatisfactory. Of the 1313 that were taken in, 1300 of them were in Los Angeles, or so it seems from all the doublespeak press releases I’ve been reading at the ICE website.

While I’m not advocating removal of your local gardner on immigration infractions, certainly you can find more gang members and deadbeats in the illegal population than this scrawny number.

According to ICE, since the latest effort kicked off, authorities have arrested 7,655 gang members from 700 different gangs. That’s great, now what about the other 100,000 out there that are destoying American cities with gang violence.

Even the Justice Department’s estimate in 2005 of more than 700,000 gang members nationwide could be too low by at least 200,000, said Patrick Word, vice chairman of the Mid-Atlantic Regional Gang Investigators Network, a group that helps collect data for the Justice Department. At this point with the collection of 185,000 per year, it could take 10 years to eradicate our streets of violent gang members, and moreover, while they are doing it another 700,000 will enter this country illegally. From what I hear there are over 12 million illegals here at this time. That means that we have 1 in 10 of them in gangs.

If the government is set on handling this problem, their employees will have to step it up because 10 illegals per worker is not enough enforcement.

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