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To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (480)3/13/2007 3:48:39 PM
From: HG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 536
 
TEHRAN (AFP) - War epic "300", a smash hit in the United States for its gory portrayal of the Greco-Persian wars, has drawn the wrath of Iranians for showing their ancestors as bloodthirsty "savages".

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The press, officials and bloggers have united in denouncing the film as another example of "psychological warfare" against Tehran by its American arch enemy at a time of mounting tension over its nuclear programme.

"Hollywood declares war on Iranians," said the headline in the reformist daily Ayandeh-No of the film which tells the story of the 300 Spartan soldiers fighting off ancient Persians in the Battle of Thermopylae.

"It seeks to tell people that Iran, which is in the Axis of Evil now, has for long been the source of evil and modern Iranians' ancestors are the ugly murderous dumb savages you see in '300'," fumed the paper on its front page.

A cultural advisor to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad described the film as "American psychological warfare against Iran."

"American cultural officials thought they could get mental satisfaction by plundering Iran's historic past and insulting this civilization," Javad Shamaghdari told semi-official Fars news agency.

Three MPs in the Iranian parliament have also written to the foreign ministry to protest to the production and screening of this "anti-Iranian Hollywood film".

The film has already proved a major box office hit in the United States and, unsurprisingly, Greece.

It is highly improbable the film would ever be screened in the Islamic republic but contraband DVDs of the latest American movies are often available on the streets no sooner that they are internationally released.

Cyber savvy Iranians have already started online petitions and set off "Google bombs" against "300".

The furore over "300" is by no means the first time Iran has been left fuming over Western portrayals of its ancient history.

Iranians were also enraged by the 2004 epic 'Alexander' about the conquest of the Persian Empire and a notorious 2005 British newspaper review of an exhibition of antiquities which branded ancient Persia the "Evil Empire".



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (480)3/28/2007 4:40:53 PM
From: HG  Respond to of 536
 
I once got a referral to work with young, 32 year old gulf war veteran. It broke my heart to learn what the war had done to him.

The trauma was so intense that I called up the veteran center to get some help/supervision in dealing with the person, and find out that all war veterans had the same issues with PTSD, hypervigilance, aggression, behavior control, alcoholism and drug addiction, self imposed isolation, loss of social interaction, trust and relationship issues and inability to return to normal lives. He went thru a divorce, and then remarried....and his new wife came along...and she was in a deep clinical depression, and suicidal, because of his illness. Their child did't understand why her dad was so.......like a savage, she said.

And he was a simple, good man before he went to war.

These costs of war remain hidden. A whole lot of broken down men, their trauma invalidated and unacknowledged, used and discarded like toilet paper, hidden from society - to feed the war fever that grips most Americans. Disposable lives in a society that loves disposables.

After 3 months of treatment, I was so....distraught....and emotionally charged....that I realised I had lost my objectivity and was focussing on the injustice of it all - just like his wife and his daughter was. So I referred him out to someone else. His wife cried when I broke the news....

It was a very moving experience for me...and made me realize I was too chicken to face the ugliness of American war...

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Worries grow over mental health of U.S. soldiers By Jeremy Pelofsky
Wed Mar 28, 7:26 AM ET


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Retired U.S. Navy medic Charlie Anderson twice thought about committing suicide: once when he feared he would be sent back to Iraq in 2004 and again last year when a friend and fellow veteran killed himself.

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"I can't say that I can't go because we don't do that, I also can't go because I'm putting people in danger if I do," he said of his first brush with suicidal thoughts, which came while he was awaiting his second deployment.

In the end, Anderson was not deployed but it sparked a two-year effort to get help for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), one of thousands of soldiers returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan facing a battle to re-enter everyday life.

While much of the attention has been on physical wounds like traumatic brain injuries, as well as squalid living conditions for recovering soldiers, doctors, families and lawmakers are expressing growing concerns that veterans are not be getting the right mental health help.

Those worries come as President George W. Bush has ordered almost 30,000 more troops to Iraq. Already 1.5 million soldiers have been deployed in the U.S.-led war on terrorism, with one-third serving at least two combat tours, which increases the chances of PTSD.

Despite finally receiving treatment, Anderson finds himself in the middle of a divorce and still constantly on edge -- jumpy at loud noises and always eyeing the exits of rooms.

"I have triggers every day, but I'm learning how to deal with them," he said.

The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates 12 percent to 20 percent of those who served in Iraq suffer from PTSD. A 2004 Army study found 16.6 percent of those returning from combat tested positive for the disorder.

Individuals suffer from PTSD if they relive the trauma, experience emotional numbness, isolation, depression, substance abuse, and memory problems. These often lead to job instability and marital troubles.

MENTAL DISORDER

"I see a range of people coming in from a level of having PTSD but not being severely handicapped and dysfunctional, then I see other people who are really, really handicapped and dysfunctional," said Dr. Wayne Gregory, a psychologist at the Central Texas Veterans Healthcare System.

Two studies in the last month have shown more than 30 percent of soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan met the criteria for a mental disorder, with the American Psychological Association (APA) finding at best that 40 percent sought help.

"Now people are getting out of the service and they're beginning to seek help," said Dr. Paul Hicks, professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at Texas A&M's Health Science Center College of Medicine.

"We don't know when or if that will level off. It's got to level off at some point, but we haven't reached that point," he said.

A study published by the Archives of Internal Medicine found 13 percent of almost 104,000 veterans evaluated suffered from PTSD. Mental illness "threatens to bring the war back home as a costly personal and public health burden," it said.

Congress has ordered the Pentagon to establish a mental health task force, though its findings won't be presented until May.

"We have put them in very stressful situations and often times people need help and that help should be made available," said Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (news, bio, voting record), an Arizona Democrat.

The Pentagon is already on the defensive about medical treatment for soldiers after an investigation found shoddy living conditions for troops recovering from physical injuries at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates told Congress last month that the number of troops who tested positive for a mental health condition after being deployed was lower, 22 percent.

A Defense Department (DOD) spokeswoman defended its practices, noting mental health teams were in the field and they had begun a new program this year to also screen troops three to six months after they return home.

"DOD has been aggressively reaching out to support our military personnel before, during and after their deployments and their family members, this is unprecedented," said Pentagon spokeswoman Cynthia Smith.