Site icon Flopping Aces

On the VA, ‘Blame Bush’ Doesn’t Fly

Deroy Murdock:

Imagine that you visit a friend’s house a month after he’s moved in. The place is a mess: The roof leaks. The basement brims with trash. The walls have holes in them, and the porch creaks menacingly in spots.

“It’s a fixer-upper,” your pal explains. “The previous owner didn’t maintain it. But I will!”

So, you go about your business and return five years later.

This time, the house is even more dilapidated. The roof is partially imploded. The basement teems with vermin. Several walls have fallen sideways onto the weed-encrusted lawn. And parts of the porch simply have collapsed.

Far worse, several overnight visitors who braved these conditions actually died as the attic crashed down into the guest bedroom.

You stare at your friend, agog.

“It’s a fixer-upper,” he explains. “The previous owner didn’t maintain it. But I will!”

After five years and four months, this is how the “Bush did it” defense sounds in relation to the scandal consuming the Veterans Affairs department.

Obama “sees the ramifications of some seeds that were sown a long time ago, when you have two wars over a long period of time and many, many more, millions more veterans,” House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California told journalists last Thursday. “We go in a war in Afghanistan, leave Afghanistan for Iraq with unfinished business in Afghanistan. Ten years later, we have all of these additional veterans. In the past five years, 2 million more veterans needing benefits from the VA. That’s a huge, huge increase.”

Translation: Blame Bush.

No doubt, Obama inherited a bad situation. Veterans from the Iraq and Afghan wars came home (and still return from the latter) and require medical attention. Others — who were deployed stateside, in Europe, Asia, and aboard U.S. naval vessels — also need and deserve medical treatment, as both active-duty personnel and as veterans.

Obama was well aware of the VA system’s shortcomings. While still a U.S. senator, Obama declared on August 21, 2007: “No veteran should have to fill out a 23-page claim to get care or wait months, even years, to get an appointment at the VA.”

Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Exit mobile version