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I was checking my email and came across this story on yahoo. We've been putting these kids through this for the past eight years. How do we expect that they won't snap or feel hopeless?
"Data released by the Army this week show what seems to be a steadily increasing number of suicides among soldiers, from 128 in 2008 to 160 last year, an average of about 13 suicides each month.
Last month, despite a strenuous effort by the Army and the other military services, 14 active-duty soldiers took their own lives. The Army cites "relationship difficulties'' as a key factor in causing soldiers to consider suicide."
The article tells the story of Army Spec. Joe Sanders. Thousands of miles from home, watching his fellow soldiers getting killed and maimed, he learns that his wife wants a divorce. Sanders confided in his roommate that he was contemplating suicide. His roommate, Spec. Albert Godding, saved him by removing the firing pin from Sanders' weapon.
"When Sanders pulled the trigger of his loaded carbine, there was only a light click. Horrified both at what he had done and what he had failed to do, Sanders tore open his weapon, searching frantically to find why it hadn't fired. He quickly identified the reason: no firing pin.
At that moment his roommate, Spec. Albert Godding, walked in. "Where's my firing pin -- I don't have a firing pin!'' Sanders yelled, terrified that he'd misplaced that critical piece and would get in trouble for losing it.
"And how,'' Godding asked gently, "did you discover it was missing?''"
What can you say about a story like this besides "WTF are we still doing over there?!?"
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