logo

Congress Puts Partisanship Above Honoring Nation's Veterans

image
Created: 11 November, 2013
Updated: 14 October, 2022
2 min read

Every year on Veterans Day, I get a number of press releases from lawmakers in Congress about how our veterans should be honored and their sacrifices remembered on this day. However, before lawmakers make these statements, perhaps they should think about how exactly they have honored our veterans -- or shall I just cut to the chase and say haven't honored our veterans?

It is sad that "support our troops" is only used by many politicians as a political talking point when millions of veterans have been abandoned by the government they fought for. Thirteen percent of the

Super No Funding Time_ad2homeless population in this country are veterans. Roughly a quarter of veterans who seek care from VA facilities suffer from PTSD and/or TBI, but the VA does not have the means to be able to effectively treat these afflictions and can only give our veterans subpar treatment at best in many cases.

The very fact that some lawmakers were willing to jeopardize veteran benefits and use our veterans for face time and political talking points during the government shutdown for the sake of politics shows how little our troops and our veterans actually mean to lawmakers who are only concerned about re-election and being primary'd out. Partisan politics is put in front of the people our government promised not to forsake.

Our veterans were willing to put country above all else, but many lawmakers in Congress can't honor the men and women who have served -- and are currently serving -- this country by doing the same. Special interests, political consultants, and small ideological voting blocs are put ahead of working together to find the most practical and pragmatic solutions to our nation's biggest problems. Lawmakers are too busy looking ahead to their next primary election to see the issues right in front of them.

When is the last time lawmakers worked together to pass substantive legislation to help veterans struggling to make a living? What about addressing the ongoing problem of military sexual trauma, which 85,000 veterans sought treatment for in 2012? What about fixing sequestration, which would not only help economic growth, but would increase the resources available to the VA and military health agencies to treat serious afflictions like PTSD, increase the funding available to keep veterans off the streets, and would help military families nationwide?

The only legislation we get from Congress is the bare minimum of what House Republicans and Senate Democrats are willing to agree on. In many cases, so called "bipartisan" legislation doesn't actually do anything to address the problem, much less fix it. Hyper-partisan gridlock does not honor those who were and are willing to sacrifice everything for the United States.

It's time for change.

Photo Credit: Hang Dinh / Shutterstock.com

Latest articles

2024 ballot
Pew: Half of US Voters Would Replace Trump AND Biden on the Ballot If Given Chance
US voters are largely unhappy with the options the two major parties have given them in the 2024 presidential election. While Hillary Clinton says these voters need to get over themselves, Pew Research has found that she is talking to most of the country....
25 April, 2024
-
2 min read
voting
Breaking Down the Numbers: Independent Voter Suppression in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania held its primary elections Tuesday, which effectively acted as the general election in most cases. However, statewide, over a million voters had to sit on the sidelines because of the state's closed primary rules....
24 April, 2024
-
3 min read
Kennedy
DNC Loses Its First Attempt to Kick RFK Jr Off the Ballot
Independent presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr will officially appear on the Hawaii ballot after a ruling Friday blocked an effort by the Democratic Party to disqualify him from ballot access. It marks the first loss by the DNC in its legal strategy to limit voters' choices on the 2024 presidential ballot....
22 April, 2024
-
3 min read