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By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer (ArmyTimes)
Posted : Tuesday Dec 23, 2008 13:23:15 EST


At a recent gathering in a small auditorium at Fort Lee, Va., wounded soldiers listened as everyone in their chain of command up to a full colonel reassured them that life in the post’s Warrior Transition Unit remained good.

Capt. David Payne, their company commander, reminded them that Fort Lee had ranked in the top five of 35 WTUs for 15 straight months, according to monthly online polls. The barracks are “rated the top in the Army.” Three members of the cadre are former wounded soldiers themselves.

Lt. Col. Robert Lather told them the hospital is being revamped, with more space dedicated to active-duty soldiers so they don’t have to wait in long lines with troops going through Advanced Individual Training.

“Your mission is to heal,” said Col. Donna Diamond, head of Fort Lee’s Kenner Army Health Clinic. “We’re here to make sure your needs are addressed.”

In the back of the room, Sgt. Loyd Sawyer shook his head.

“We’re having another dog-and-pony show,” he said.

Before the meeting, troops were told their attendance was mandatory, and they needed a doctor’s note to get out of going. After the meeting, soldiers seen talking to reporters — or even surreptitiously passing notes with phone numbers — said they were called in by their chain of command and asked about what they had said.

“The town hall meetings are never like that,” said 1st Lt. Rebecca Ludwick, one of about 70 injured soldiers assigned to the WTU. “I’ve never seen all those officers there.”

The disparities didn’t end there. As officers from the unit explained that they were fully staffed, that the cadre is well-trained and cares, and that the troops consider their chain of command friends, the soldiers offered a different story: They can’t get appointments; they are forced to perform 24-hour duty while on sleeping medications; they say they are treated as whiners trying to get over on the system; they say training injuries are treated as less important than combat injuries, even though by law, both require the same medical care.

Two said they sought off-post counseling to help them deal with the stress of being in the WTU. One with severe post-traumatic stress disorder went back to the hospital as an inpatient after a cadre member yelled at him for playing with his unit patch.

One said she was named the executive officer of the unit, even though she injured herself during initial training and had no command experience. Another faced an Article 15 for oversleeping — even as he was going through a sleep study that eventually diagnosed him with narcolepsy.

They say that when they ask for help — through an ombudsman, the Wounded Warrior hotline or through the Inspector General office — they are admonished for violating the chain of command.

The Army created Warrior Transition Units after the scandal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.C., in early 2007 after investigations showed that soldiers working their ways through the military medical retirement system had to fight through a thick bureaucracy of lost paperwork, incorrect documents, untrained lawyers and counselors, and unfair ratings that left them with a lifetime of injuries and little or no compensation.

It was revealed that sick and injured soldiers served as platoon sergeants and squad leaders even as they took medications or dealt with mental health issues. Some spent months — even years — in medical hold units. Ultimately, many signed whatever they were handed so they could go home.

The 35 Warrior Transition Units, formed about a year and a half ago, include professional cadre pulled in to provide stability; nurse case managers assigned to monitor soldiers’ progress and appointments; a doctor just for the soldiers in the unit; and family resources. They have ombudsmen and case managers. Everyone, officials say, has been trained in the special needs for soldiers with PTSD or traumatic brain injury.

But in recent months, the Army realized it does not have the manpower to staff the units, the rules changed about who would be allowed in, and the focus shifted to those with combat injuries rather than those who injure themselves preparing to deploy. Those who don’t go to a Warrior Transition Unit remain in their home units, where unfit soldiers fill deployable slots — leaving line units understaffed as they prepare for deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan.

The offshoot, Fort Lee soldiers say, is that those without combat injuries are treated as if they are a waste of resources.

Payne disagreed. “They’re treated the same,” he said. “From what I understand, everyone’s treated exactly the same.”

Brig. Gen. Gary Cheek, director of the Army’s Warrior Care and Transition Office, told a meeting of the Association of the U.S. Army in October that “our focus is on soldiers with complex medical needs.”

‘I’m sick of being hassled’

Retired Army Lt. Col. Mike Parker, who has worked as an advocate for wounded soldiers by helping them through the medical retirement process, said he sees the same recurring issues in the Army’s WTUs. “Fort Lee’s probably one of the worst of the bunch, but it’s happening all over the place,” he said.

He and other veterans’ advocates say they see errors in medical retirement paperwork, incorrect information about what benefits soldiers are eligible for, and soldiers being forced out for pre-existing mental health conditions and disciplinary problems that directly relate to their military service.

Some of Parker’s concerns surfaced at the Fort Lee town hall meeting.

Ludwick asked why all of her medical conditions were not properly documented on her medical form. Lather explained that he had called for guidance and been told that only medically unacceptable conditions should be on the form, and that the Physical Evaluation Board at Walter Reed was kicking back packets that listed all conditions.

That’s wrong, Parker said, after talking with board officials. All conditions should be listed.

Sgt. Stanley Craig stood up at the meeting to ask why he was given 24-hour staff duty when he was on sleeping medication.

“Many people ... function on the same medications you take,” Lather replied. Payne told him to talk with a platoon sergeant.

Diamond said her staff is doing a good job. “I’ve not heard any complaints on the cadre at all,” she said. “I think people understand they genuinely care.”

Payne is a former patient who broke his leg after stepping in a gopher hole at Fort Riley, Kan. A Medical Evaluation Board found him fit for duty. He had two surgeries to repair the leg.

“When I got here, I was still dealing with my own issues,” he said. “I didn’t really have specific Warrior Transition training.”

He did have his cadre train online, and had substance abuse and mental health counselors give classes.

Because the WTU is not a typical unit — no arms room, no motor pool — he feels his role is more akin to that of a parent.

And the soldiers say they often do, in fact, feel like children.

One soldier who asked not to be named said he had a meltdown one day because of his PTSD and asked his nurse case manager to make him a mental health appointment.

But she didn’t. Rather, she had him committed to the Veterans Affairs mental health clinic at Portsmouth, Va., where he was immediately released, he said, because the doctors said there was no need for him to be committed.

He began seeing a counselor, but was told he couldn’t go to his second appointment because he had made the appointment himself, rather than having his case manager do it.

When he arrived at Fort Lee from another unit, he said it took 6½ weeks to restart his physical therapy, and then a month to get an appointment for an MRI.

Then, he said, his nurse case manager told him she was too busy and that he needed to make his own appointments for anything not related to his medical retirement case.

“They’re blaming me for prolonging my medical care,” he said. “I’m ready to go home. I’m sick of being hassled. I can’t stop shaking.”

Craig arrived at the WTU after serving two tours at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., as a mortuary affairs specialist. He blew out his knee on an obstacle course 2½ years ago. Then, in October 2007, while training to deploy, he fell off a truck and suffered multiple herniated discs. Doctors realized immediately he was not deployable.

At Fort Lee, he said he hasn’t seen his nurse case manager for more than a month, but was told he can’t make his own appointments.

When he stepped in a hole Labor Day weekend and broke a bone in his ankle, he received a referral for a doctor’s appointment from the unit’s primary care physician. He gave it to his nurse case manager, who told him to make the appointment himself, he said. He finally got the appointment in mid-November.

The paperwork related to his Medical Evaluation Board was a disaster, he said, and when he tried to explain it to the cadre, they didn’t understand what he was talking about.

His original separation date was August. He’s been extended until Dec. 30 because of his medical retirement case. He just received his final paperwork for his medical evaluation board. He was rated at 10 percent for his knee and 10 percent for his back, which his paperwork states he hurt picking up a footlocker several years ago — a noncombat-related injury. His training injury that caused the herniated discs had been left off.

“I specifically remember falling out of a truck,” Craig said sarcastically. “I’m so fed up with this place.”

He said he just signed the paperwork to get it over with.

‘They want you to give up’

Sawyer’s wife, Andrea, begged for her husband to be admitted to the hospital when he didn’t get the help he needed for his severe PTSD. He had been at Joint Base Balad in Iraq on the day a Turkish airliner crashed and killed 45 people about 1,000 yards from the mortuary where he worked. The staff spent hours cataloging belongings and lining up bodies in the parking lot.

“Some of them were still hot and burned through the bags,” he said. “I saw a lot of that. That was a rough three days.”

When he returned home, he couldn’t sleep, dealt with anger issues, jumped at noises and spent hours on the living room floor crying with his dogs. He spent three weeks as an inpatient in a psychiatric ward, and then was transferred to the Fort Lee WTU. On his third day there, Sawyer was playing with his new unit patch when his platoon sergeant began yelling.

“I ended up with a sergeant first class in my face yelling at me for disrespecting the people who died for that patch,” Sawyer said. “He didn’t know me from Adam. He’s lucky that morning I was very heavily medicated.”

Andrea Sawyer said the platoon sergeant made her husband “write a five-page paper on the importance of the patch.”

“Loyd went back to the psychiatric ward because he couldn’t deal with the people at the WTU,” she said. “That was his third day at the WTU.”

He was supposed to see his nurse case manager weekly, but didn’t. “They billed me for appointments when I wasn’t even there, just to pad the books,” he said. “They had me down one day for an 8 a.m. appointment at Portsmouth, a 9:30 a.m. appointment at Fort Lee and a 10 a.m. back at Portsmouth.”

He said it took three months after he received a referral to get an orthopedics appointment. “The only thing you get is what you fight tooth and nail for. They want you to give up so they can just process you out or wait for you to screw up so they can get you gone immediately.”

When an inspector general visit was scheduled, soldiers spent five hours cleaning their rooms, Sawyer said. “God knows they’re not allowed to say anything,” he said of soldiers in the WTU.

He said the soldiers were told to speak only if asked questions. If they spoke up on their own, the “retribution is s--- duty,” he said.

Spc. Elizabeth Sartain had PTSD after serving as a mortuary affairs specialist in Kuwait. “Anyone who dies in Iraq, those bodies come through Kuwait,” she said.

When she got home, she tried to commit suicide. She poured pots of boiling oil over her arms and legs to try to match what she felt inside with what she felt outside.

“I was devastated,” she said. “I wasn’t getting the help I needed.”

After spending time as an inpatient at a psychiatric ward, she transferred to the WTU. She immediately began working eight hours a day as Payne’s orderly room clerk.

“It was overwhelming,” she said. “It was too hard to recover and be his secretary.”

She said she wasn’t allowed to make her own appointments, but did anyway because she needed help. “The case manager says she’ll call you back, but never does,” she said. “Weeks would go by. I’d check in, and it hadn’t been done. They’ve told us they’re overwhelmed.”

She said she also was berated for jumping the chain of command — for talking to the WTU ombudsman.

Ultimately, she received a disability rating of 50 percent for PTSD and was discharged.

Pvt. Aaron Howard began his tour at the WTU as a sergeant. In Iraq, he had his big toe shot off by another soldier who reacted poorly when an Iraqi family didn’t stop at a checkpoint. He also suffers from PTSD.

Before his injury, he had hoped to start law school and become an officer. But at the WTU, he said he was demoted for missing too many formations.

He said he received one Article 15 while he was waiting for results of a study that showed he has sleep apnea, narcolepsy and hypersombulance (excessive daytime sleepiness).

“I had eight alarm clocks, but I could not wake up,” he said.

He received another Article 15 when he missed an appointment because he got the time wrong. He said his chain of command told him he “made up” his ailments.

“I’m getting counseling statements every 15 minutes,” he said. “I made E-5 in six years, no troubles. I come to Fort Lee and I’m the biggest turd in the Army.”

Recently, he said he was told he could get out administratively on a psychiatric discharge. That would end his time in the WTU — but he would leave with no medical benefits or retirement pay. He said his chain of command also tried to get him out for “continued misconduct.”

Ludwick said her biggest surprise came when she arrived at the WTU as a patient and was assigned duty as the unit’s executive officer. She was injured in February 2007 during a land navigation course when she fell down a hill in full battle rattle. She said she was told to “suck it up — you’re an officer.”

She did — and received her commission — but “there were days when I could barely walk,” she said.

Still, she continued her training, going to Fort Sill, Okla., for her officer leadership course. In her first week, she reinjured herself in combatives training.

“The other person yanked my leg up over her shoulder,” Ludwick explained. “She dropped me because she could hear it rip.”

Ludwick ended up in a leg immobilizer, and the second part of her training was waived. She went to Fort Lee for her officer basic course, but no one cut her formal orders for that. When she arrived in December 2007, she received orders attaching her as the WTU’s executive officer.

“They said, ‘We’re going to make you the XO,’” she said. “I can’t even walk. The cadre were like, ‘You need to be a patient.’”

So instead of performing XO duties, she worked at the post museum, leaving the XO slot empty. She remained in the museum position until October.

The first time she saw an orthopedic specialist since her injuries was at Fort Lee. “The surgeon at Portsmouth wouldn’t help me because it had been too long since the injury,” she said.

She discovered she had three herniated discs, a torn muscle in her back, stress fractures and nerve damage on one side of her body, and a broken ankle.

When it came time to do her paperwork for her medical retirement, only the herniated disc was put on it, even though she was using a wheelchair.

Her disability rating came back at 20 percent.

“It was a total joke,” she said. “They said, ‘Here’s $8,000 in severance pay — good luck.’”

She filed an IG complaint, which declared that everything had been done properly, she said.

Then she sent a letter to her congressman, after which she said she was told she could no longer talk with her Physical Evaluation Board liaison officer.

“They told me I was causing trouble,” she said.

Ludwick said she sank into depression and stayed away from the unit. She sought outside mental health help to deal with the panic attacks she said were caused by the people at the WTU.

She also talked to the Military Officer Association of America, who recommended that Parker look at her case. With his help, she appealed her case and ended up with a disability rating of 50 percent.

“My case is horrible, but when people come into the WTU, they’re all horrible,” she said. “I’m sure people are busy, but that’s the whole reason this unit was put in place. I’ve never been so much as asked if I need anything.”

Ludwick said she often sees people sign their paperwork without appealing it — or without understanding that they need to because their cases were handled improperly.

“People just get so frustrated,” Ludwick said. “They just sign and get out. I don’t have the luxury to just go out and get a job — I can barely walk.”

‘We’re at 100 percent’

Diamond said she has an open-door policy, but has had only three soldiers come through that door in the past few months.

She receives weekly updates from commanders and the ombudsman, and her office is in the clinic where soldiers go for appointments.

Diamond insisted staffing is not an issue. “We’re at 100 percent,” she said, adding that the unit has four case managers, though one is out on maternity leave.

“In the beginning, I think everyone was having problems,” she said. “I think we were overwhelmed. That should not be an issue so much today.”

She said the command keeps a timeline noting when appointments have been activated, and she hasn’t seen any problems with the timeline.

Diamond seemed unclear on some of the WTU’s policies.

“We have not used patients to oversee other patients,” she said, adding that privacy laws would prevent that. “They’ve got their own medical care to see to — that’s kind of a conflict.”

But Payne said some patients are given “leadership roles.”

“I expect them to lead,” he said.

Army WTU regulations state that patients will not be placed in roles overseeing other soldiers, but Payne said he ensures the wounded soldiers who fill squad leader positions do not write counseling statements or conduct UCMJ actions, and they are not rated for those duties. But he said only three noncommissioned officers were willing to perform those duties without being rated — two as team leaders and one as a squad leader.

“We’re not going to push them to do that,” Payne said.

When Craig was asked to fill such a role, he declined. “As an NCO, you’re supposed to know where your soldiers are at,” he said. “When the cadre’s gone, the team leader becomes a squad leader. There is nothing I can do for a wounded soldier for support. What are we actually going to do as patients for other patients?”

During the day, the soldiers are expected to attend 6:30 a.m. formations, work four hours minimum, and then attend a 1 p.m. formation. They may miss work for appointments, and Payne said supervisors know what medications they’re on.

But Craig said the rules can and do change, and they’re not always clear. As of mid-October, he said he was told his four-hour day has been switched to an eight-hour day, to be used for warrior tasks and drills.

“If I wanted to go do battle drills and reinjure myself, I’d go back to my old unit,” he said.

But the rules sometimes do differ from soldier to soldier. For example, while most have to appear for formation every day, some don’t. Staff Sgt. Jimmie Fedrick, one of the soldiers Payne offered for an interview to Military Times, was injured in Baghdad July 29, 2007, by a roadside bomb. It ripped apart 75 percent of his muscle in his back and leg, and he was diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury.

“I’m always in pain,” he said. “I’m always depressed. Always. I don’t come in that often. When I call here, there’s always someone to help.”

No one forces him to attend the 6:30 a.m. formations, and he said cadre and commander are willing to spend time with him when he needs it. “If I don’t come in, they call to ask if I’m OK.”

When Payne and Diamond were asked if Fort Lee should have a WTU, both paused for a long time.

“It’s served its purpose, given the mission that it had,” Diamond finally said. “I think the overall sense is that we’re doing a good job. I think there’s always going to be some conflicts, and if it doesn’t come up the chain, it’s hard to address.”

Cheek said the WTU situation has improved across the Army, and compared the WTU barracks to the “best hotels.”

However, he also said it’s “very likely” that some of the smaller WTUs will be consolidated. He said the biggest complaint for soldiers is the amount of time and bureaucracy they still must endure to get through the process, but that those delays “are really in the best interest of the soldier.”

“It’s not perfect,” he said, but added: “I have great confidence that we take good care of our soldiers.”


http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/12/military_lee_warriortransition_122308w/

 

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There has been a sharp increase in the number of caesarian births in Australia over the past five years. The major factors attributed to this surgical intervention to what should basically come natural is convenience. Being able to name a time and place months in advance allows even the birth of a child to fit into peoples hectic lifestyles. It has become such a problem that the phrase has been coined, too posh to push.

What with OBGYN's having some of the highest insurance rates in the medical field, what they really need is expectant mothers demanding c-sections and induced labours so that they don't have to contend with the possibility the birth may interfere with some social event or heavens above they may have to do some work in delivering their new born. After all the only decent place to raise a sweat is the gym.
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To everyone that peruses this journal enjoy your break from work, school and the mundane. Eat, drink and be merry - but above all be safe and stay safe. To all on my Friends List have a joyous day whether or not you are a Christian. Take the day and celebrate with family and friends...Life and what it means to be alive. Share food, drink, yourself.

Peace
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I have entered another realm. A world dominated by uploads, downloads and seeds. Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] piranhaex I am now a happy camper seeder. Yes folks I have entered the twilight zone of Torrents. No more down-time for my pc, it can now spread it's seed(s) all over the nets.

So a big Thank You to Brad for getting me started. Merry Christmas boyo. The best present!!!
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10:00 AM December 19

Researchers in the United States say they have developed an experimental vaccine to neutralise the parasite that carries malaria inside mosquitoes.

The vaccine targets the microscopic parasite Plasmodium falciparum inside the gut of the mosquito, blocking the organism's development and thereby preventing further transmission of the disease.

Scientists at the National Institutes of Health took a protein that is only present in the parasite during its time in the mosquito gut and strengthened it by combining it with other proteins.

When it was administered to mice, the strengthened protein created long lived antibodies.

The research has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA.

Previous studies have shown that antibodies against the protein Pfs25 in the blood meal of mosquitoes can hinder parasite development.

Malaria affects up to 500 million people and kills more than 1 million children each year, mostly in Africa, but a vaccine against the disease still eludes scientists despite decades of research.

The most severe form of the disease is caused by the Plasmodium falciparum parasite, which, once in a human's bloodstream, travels to the liver where it multiplies.

New forms of the parasite are then released into the blood, where they invade red blood cells, ultimately destroying them.

- AFP

Source: ABC
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12:23 PM December 21

Staff at the ABC TV studios in Brisbane will be moved off site within days after a report found serious concerns about the incidence of breast cancer.

An independent panel of experts has found 10 women have developed the disease while working on the site since 1995.

The panel says that rate is six times greater than what would normally be statistically expected.

The panel was unable to find a cause, despite extensive testing.

But the panel says it cannot be attributed to chance.

ABC managing director Mark Scott is briefing staff on what action management will take and says moving will begin with days, with the site expected to be completely cleared by January.

Source: ABC
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Battlestar Galactica series 3.

Love this show and if rumours are correct it is going to be cancelled next year I'm going to be upset. Sci-Fi doesn't get any better.

Weeds

This show is wrong on so many levels but it's such fun to watch. Mary-Louise Parker is a scream in this show, nothing like her West Wing character.

Laguna Beach

What the hell is this crap and why is it on TV? I've puked my guts out throughout the first three episodes. Enough already somebody give them all zits and unwanted pregnancies.
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8:23 AM December 14

According to results of two large clinical trials in Kenya and Uganda, male circumcision halved a man's risk of being infected by the virus that causes AIDS, in heterosexual intercourse.

Public health leaders hailed the results as pointing to a potentially powerful way to reduce HIV infections in Africa, the continent hardest hit by AIDS.

"It does have the potential to prevent many tens of thousands, many hundreds of thousands and perhaps millions of infections over coming years," Dr Kevin De Cock, director of the World Health Organisation's (WHO) Department of HIV/AIDS, told reporters.

The US National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced an early end to the two clinical trials after an interim review of the results showed that medically performed circumcisions had a great impact in cutting the HIV infection risk.

A study in Kisumu, Kenya, involving 2,784 men showed a 53 per cent reduction of HIV infections in circumcised men compared to uncircumcised men.

A parallel study involving 4,996 men in Rakai, Uganda, put the reduction at 48 per cent in circumcised men compared to uncircumcised men.

Experts say the prevalence of male circumcision varies greatly from region to region in African countries south of the Sahara, with nearly all men in some areas remaining uncircumcised.

Dr Anthony Fauci, director of the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the institute agreed to end both trials early and offer circumcision to all men involved in the studies.

The results of the studies seemed to strongly confirm earlier findings about the value of male circumcision in curbing AIDS.

"These results indicate that adult male circumcision could be an important addition to an HIV prevention strategy for men," Dr Fauci said.

"Male circumcision can lower both an individual's risk of infection and hopefully the rate of HIV spread through the community."

Dr Fauci added that adult male circumcision is not completely protective "and must be seen as a powerful addition to, not a replacement for, other HIV prevention methods."

-Reuters
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The US Army has brought an end to one of its best-loved units as the last MASH field hospital folded up its khaki tents for good. MASH stands for Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (as if you didn't know), but after decades of repeats it has come to symbolise the funny side of the US military. The final installment of M*A*S*H in 1983 is the most watched TV episode in US history.

The last real-life MASH passed away with far less fanfare last month, when the 84 bed field hospital was formally handed over to the Pakistani Government, after four months of providing relief for the victims of last October's earthquake.

When MASH units first began at the end of WWII, they were revolutionary. They were whole hospitals, complete with well-equipped operating theatres, set up under canvas just behind the front lines. Their proximity to the fighting, together with the use of helicopter evacuations in Korea, Vietnam, and the first Gulf War, saved thousands of soldiers' lives. In Korea, a seriously wounded soldier who made it to a MASH alive had a 97% chance of survival. Americas last MASH in South Korea was cosed down nine years ago. The army now prefers smaller, more agile medial units, known as combat support hospitals, which can travel to casualties on the front line.

The last of the old breed, the 212th MASH, based in Germany, was the first US military hospital established in Iraq after the 2003 invasion, but was then transferred to Pakistan after last year's earthquake. US medical units treated more than 30,000 civilian victims of the disaster.

The M*A*S*H legend was created by a former army surgeon, Richard Hornberger, who wrote a fictionalised account of his experiences in Korea under the pen-name Richard Hooker in 1968. All the characters who later became screen icons - "Hawkeye" Pierce, "Trapper" John McIntyre, "Hot Lips" Houlihan and "Radar" O'Reilly - first appeared in the novel, as did the rigged football games and the constant martinis. The anti-war sentiment at the time the book came out fueled interest in a screenplay and then a film. The director Robert Altman turned the story into a rambling, anecdotal meditation on the absurdities of war.

The TV series that followed two years later was one of the few cases of a spin-off eclipsing the original.

Postscript: Who would have thought you could base your entire career on a TV show?
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Senior Australian Defence Force (ADF) officials have cast doubt on whether Australia will continue with the nation's biggest defence purchase, the US Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program.

The sticking point is the United States has not yet agreed to share sensitive technology for the aircraft.

Testifying at a US Senate Committee in Washington today, the Australian officials made their concerns plain and threatened not to proceed to the next phase of the project unless they are assured they will have access to all technology needed to operate and service the jets.

The Federal Opposition is warning of a gap in Australia's air defence if the strike purchase does not proceed.

At a cost of $12 billion, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighters (JSF) will be Australia's most expensive defence purchase, set to be delivered in 2012.

Rear Admiral Gates is the head of Australia's defence staff in Washington and he has testified today before the US Senate Armed Services Committee.

It is examining the JSF project, which involves America and eight other nations.

"Schedule is critical because we need to replace our ageing F-111 and F/A-18 aircraft," he said.

Sticking points

Rear Admiral Gates has made it clear there are some sticking points.

"Guaranteed access to necessary JSF data and technology to allow Australia to operate and support the JSF will be required before we join the next phase of the project," he said.

Australia is due to sign up for the next phase of the project by December this year.

Rear Admiral Gates has told ABC radio's The World Today program that US laws have to be changed to allow America to share sensitive technology that Australia needs to operate and service the jets.

"Legislative change is a difficult road - I thought our political system in Australia was challenging enough, here's it's quite fascinating," he said.

"[But] I don't think it is impossible."

The federal Opposition has been warning of a looming gap in Australia's air defence between the planned retirement of the F-111s and the delivery of the Joint Strike Fighters.

Rear Admiral Gates says Australia is pushing the US to deliver the new jets on budget and on time.

"I think it's critical to us in that respect. You heard us stress that both the F-111 and the F/A-18 that their departures and what we're trying to work here is that there won't be any potential gap - that the Joint Strike Fighter shows up as planned in 2012," he said.

"Right now, from where I'm sitting, I'm reasonably confident - it's a long way off, but already we need to be in place steps that further signings of MOUs [memorandum of understanding] that's been done, even later this year."

Capability questioned

There has also been concern in Australia that the JSF may not have the highest ability to evade detection and enemy attack that was initially promised.

Air Commodore John Harvey is the director-general of the RAAF New Air Capability project based in Canberra and says he is very confident the fighter's stealth capability is high.

"The situation is that there's been no downgrading of the capability, the requirements are the same, and the aircraft is performing to those requirements," he said.

"What has happened, was there was a re-categorisation of the the terminology in the US and that has lead to the change of one letter in one Powerpoint slide on the Internet - there's no change to the performance or the capability.

"We've been involved in the project now for over three years, we've had ... scientists involved in analysing it, we've had Australian pilots flying simulated missions, and so we're very confident in the capability of the aircraft."

He dismisses Federal Opposition concern that the JSF would not be able to effectively compete against some of the Russian-built jets that air forces in Asia, particularly in China, are using.

"We've done a lot of analysis of this including simulated activities over here, and the aircraft was designed to meet those future threats and threats that aren't even flying yet," he said.

"The US don't spend over $40 billion developing aircraft that's not going to face future threats."

Source: ABC

2006

Jan. 7th, 2006 03:49 pm
doc_who: (12 Apostles)
There won't be any introspection from me, no looking back to 2005 and rehashing any particular moment or event or nuance. I'm all for looking forward, onward and upward. The year is already one week old, fifty one to go. Some say time flies when you're having fun, other say time flies as you get older. I like to think of it as time is flying faaaaaaaaaaster as I'm having fun getting older. I stopped saying I was 29 ages ago, it got a bit stale after the third year, I won't bother when 39 comes around, it will be straight onto 40, well as straight as a bent guy can.

I'm currently on leave, this year it hasn't been interrupted. I'm making a point of doing very little. Lots of sun, family and friends. Catching up on a ton of reading. My magazine pile is a metre high. I'm at home this afternoon baby-sitting my nephew. An amazing product of love and technology. Here he sits on the couch next to me watching my every move. He can tell I'm not his dad but he can't quite work out why we are so much alike yet not the same person. When he sits on my knee facing me he will reach out and touch my face looking for that non-existant goatee that his father sports, he'll then run a finger along my left eyebrow in search of the piercing scar that I also don't share. Life, I hold it in my hands and bounce it on my knee, precious, unique nothing else compares.

Time for a swimming lesson...won't be long before it's driving lessons.
doc_who: (Default)
Check this out:

Feature length film to be released in December 2005.
doc_who: (LJ Mates)
The following article appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald this morning.

Gay ban bad for GP shortage
By Mark Metherell
June 11, 2005

A doctor-starved area on the southern edge of Sydney will miss out on getting a British general practitioner because of the Federal Government's immigration policy on same-sex couples.

An English doctor who was to have joined a practice in Helensburgh has backed out of the job after immigration authorities told him of additional visa requirements for his male partner.

Earlier this year, two overseas-trained doctors did not take up positions at Campbelltown and Liverpool hospitals because the Immigration Department refused to issue family visas to their same-sex partners.

Now two Helensburgh GPs have written to the Immigration Minister, Amanda Vanstone, saying they are "exasperated and bitterly disappointed" at the discrimination against homosexual relationships, which was "also disadvantaging our population's health".

Dr Trevor Kemper and Dr Annette Beaufils told Senator Vanstone that, for four years, they had been trying to recruit another doctor to a practice with "unmanageable" patient loads.

The English doctor, 35, and his partner of eight years had been told by immigration officials that the partner would not qualify for a family visa, available to heterosexual partners of overseas doctors recruited to areas of need.

The partner could stay for 12 months on a visitor's visa but would be forbidden to work.

The two men were now considering New Zealand, where they could emigrate as a couple.

The president of the Australian Medical Association, Mukesh Haikerwal, said it was "appalling that fit and healthy people who could provide services to our community are being denied access because of a shortsighted view about homosexuality".

A spokeswoman for the Immigration Department in Canberra confirmed yesterday that same-sex partners had to apply for visas that would not allow them to work.

No comment was available last night from Senator Vanstone.
doc_who: (Default)
Time is flying this year. I must be getting old. I remember Christmas as yesterday but it's June already! I've been remiss in not posting something on LJ that others can read. 90% of my LJ posts are for my benefit and mine alone. I have settled back into as normal a routine as one can have doing my job.

The hubby has been retrenched and is now looking for work. He's not happy, about two steps away from depression. He puts on a brave face but I can see through that. I took him up to the Gold Coast last weekend to see our mum and [livejournal.com profile] animator who's working there each weekend for a couple of months. Three days of warm weather and some surf cheered him up, not to mention the eye candy.

Whilst were up there we took mum out for dinner. She enjoyed it. Whilst she had an early night we went clubbing. I'm definately getting old. I much prefer to be at home in bed at 3am getting some loving than getting felt up by some stranger at a club. Besides I think I felt my liver hiccup or was that burp?

This weekend we are going to be doing things around the house. We have five or six pot plants that are going into the ground in the back yard for more greenery and to screen the fence. I met our new neighbours who moved in just before Christmas. They have two boys and a girl all just under 20. They regularly have wild parties...someone load the Winchester.

Well I'm going down stairs to watch the Scissor Sisters DVD with the gang cause I am a scissor sister and so are you.
doc_who: (You taste good!)
I'm Back.

Tired, somewhat emotional, a bit hyper yet exhausted.

So what's been going on?
doc_who: (LJ Mates)
I arrived back in Sydney yesterday (Friday) morning. It was my last visit to Iraq. I accompanied my boss and his boss and THE Boss. We had stop-overs in London and other places I can't mention. Travelling transport aircraft always puts my back out which leaves me in a pissy mood.

I did arrive back in time for [livejournal.com profile] animator's Christmas Party at work. This party is legendary. I napped all afternoon to be ready, I ate plenty of pasta to ready the stomach for the alcohol assault to follow, I made sure I was wearing clean underwear and had a calling card in my pocket in case I forgot who I was or where I lived. It's THAT kinda party. This years theme was in aid of HIV awareness and you had to wear pink. Not wearing pink left you open to a $100 donation to HIV research. I wore pure silk hot-pink boxers and a blue sports coat with a pink and blue striped lining.

A sound stage was converted into a marquee where food and drink was served and on the periphery was a number of sports cages, a golfing drive, baseball batting cage, tennis volley and football throwing (yankee style) cage. There was even a dance floor and a mini dance competition. There was also an auction to raise more funds. Some items were donated by personalities, actors, studios all in the name of a good cause. [livejournal.com profile] mr_spunk who organised the catering this year instead of doing it raised $3000 by auctioning off his services for a dinner party for 6 to the highest bidder. [livejournal.com profile] animator raised $5000 by auctioning a flight to Uluru (yank=Ayers Rock), to be on location for a two day shoot next February. All up over $30000 was raised.

The food on offer was Turkish and Greek all served in two bite pieces. It was very tasty, colourful and there was plenty of it. Some served hot and others cold. Everything was arranged on platters-for-one, with an entree, mains and dessert platter for everyone. Oh and did I mention an open bar (nothing to do with lawyers), that served lots of pink drinks.

I managed to keep my pants on basically because mum was home baby sitting and I didn't want to arrive home sans pants like last year. I did have to prove several times I was wearing pink especially after I took my jacket off during the night.
doc_who: (Default)
Today was the hottest October day since records were kept - over 100 years. Hottest Spring day in 37 years.

Officially the temperature reached 38.5C (101F), but out here at work in the west it was 40C (104.5F). Added to all this we are in a droubt with Sydney's water levels below 50% capacity...way below, and summer not even here yet. I smell a bushfire season. You heard it here first "the state is a tinderbox!"

Doctor WHO

Oct. 12th, 2004 06:53 pm
doc_who: (Default)
The Metabeelis crystals got to the Doctor. Pertwee is dead...long live Tom Baker.
doc_who: (LJ Mates)
Our neighbours from HELL next door have sold by auction this afternoon. The cow had to have her arm twisted by her real estate agent to accept the final bid of $3,375,000. She wanted $4 million. She didn't have a hope in hell. Jr placed a caveat on the property last month because they still owe us $5,500, their share of the fence which they refused to pay for after it was built sticking us with the total bill. The new owners have been told to deduct the money from the sale and send it to us.

Fingers crossed that they settle quickly and move out - the whole neighbourhood will breathe a sigh of relief. Right about now [livejournal.com profile] animator is doing a chair dance at hearing the news. The cow called the cops once telling them we were operating a gay brothel with naked underage boys all over the place. (They were over 18, and wearing speedos and there was only four of them, hardly all over the place).

We will be drinking champagne tonight with dinner.
doc_who: (Default)
Monday 6th September Channel 9 22:30 Six Feet Under Season Premier
Monday 6th September Channel 10 23:30 Missing Jack Lemmon

Tuesday 7th September Channel 10 23:45 Duel Classic Speilberg

Wednesday 8th September Channel 7 23:30 The X Files season #1 episode 3

Thursday 9th September Channel 10 22:30 Twin Towers Oscar winner: best documentary short
Thursday 9th September Channel 7 23:30 The X Files 1.4

Friday 10th September Channel 7 22:50 The Rocky Horror Picture Show classic camp
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