|
'WHEN JANE & JOHNNY COME MARCHING HOMELESS' DOCUMENTARY NEWS: PAST INTERVIEWS & EVENTS "ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT DOCUMENTARIES BEING MADE AT THIS TIME"- Ron Kovic (a Vietnam Veteran, peace activist, lecturer, and the author of 'Born on the 4th of July'. He was portrayed by Tom Cruise in the film).
|
JOE MANTEGNA & CHARLES DURNING JANUARY, 2009 I interviewed Joe Mantegna on the 5th of January. He spoke on camera about his participation in the Memorial Day Concert in Washington, DC with Gary Sinise and Charles Durning as well as his involvement with New Directions, a non-profit organization, in Los Angeles that helps homeless veterans rehabilitate back into society. Joe is an amazing human being and I am proud to not only work with him, but to call him a friend. SEPTEMBER, 2008 Yesterday, September 6th, I had the incredible opportunity to interview actors: Charles Durning and Dan Lauria for 'When Jane & Johnny Come Marching Homeless'. It was an absolute delight to speak with both Charlie and Dan and to gain insight into their service for our country. Dan Lauria is a Vietnam war veteran and served as an officer in the US Marine Corps in the early 1970s. He is an advocate for veterans and is an Honorary Board of Directors member at The National Veterans Foundation, founded by Shad Meshad. The NVF, is a non-profit, veterans helping veterans, foundation- serving the crisis management, information and referral needs of all US Veterans and their families. The work of the NVF will also be featured in this documentary. Charles Durning joined the US Army when he was 17 years old. On June 6, 1944, Durning was with Allied troops under General Eisenhower for the invasion of German-occupied France in the Normandy landings (D-Day). Durning was also present for the Battle of the Bulge, the German counter-offensive in December 1944. He was seriously wounded by a mine and suffered severe bayonet wounds in hand-to-hand combat with Nazis. His unit was eventually defeated in Belgium by an SS Panzer unit, but Durning escaped and was spared the fate met by many of his friends -- the infamous Malmedy massacre, in which German officer Joachim Peiper had over 100 American prisoners shot dead without warning as they stood in a field. Charles has said that he still suffers from nightmares about his war experiences. For his military service, he was awarded three Purple Hearts and a Silver Star. He was honored at this year's National Memorial Day Concert (2008) and was also honored with the Life Achievement Award at the 14th Annual Screen Actors Guild Award Ceremony on January 27, 2008. On July 31, 2008 Durning was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame next to the one of his idol, James Cagney. I am grateful to my friends, actor Joe Mantegna, and Joe's assistant, Dan Ramm, who connected me to both Charlie and Dan Lauria. Joe Mantegna has also agreed to be interviewed. He is the spokesperson for New Directions, another non-profit, veteran organization, located in Los Angeles, which will be featured in the documentary as well.
|
|
JOSEPH L. GALLOWAY MAY, 2008
I had the unique opportunity to interview the exceptional, military reporter, Mr. Joseph L. Galloway, in San Francisco at the Marine Memorial Club this past Wednesday, May 21st. It was one of the most inspiring interviews I have recorded for this documentary.
On his webpage: www.mcclatchydc.com/galloway there is a paragraph 'about Joe'- "General H. Norman Schwarzkopf has called Joseph L. Galloway, a military columnist for McClatchy Newspapers, "The finest combat correspondent of our generation- a soldier's reporter and a soldier's friend."
I call Joseph L. Galloway, a giant among men, the Keeper of Light, the Voice of Caring for our Veterans. He was portrayed by Barry Pepper, in the film, 'We Were Soldiers', based on the 1992 book, 'We Were Soldiers Once... And Young' co- written by Joe Galloway and Lt. General Harold G. Moore. During the Vietnam War, he served 3 tours in Vietnam for UPI, beginning in 1965. Decorated for rescuing wounded soldiers under heavy enemy fire during the battle at Landing Zone X-Ray in the Ia Drang Valley, he was the only civilian awarded the Bronze Star by the US Army during that war. August 2008 marks the release of the sequel to their book, 'We Are Soldiers Still: A Journey Back to the Battlefields of Vietnam'- co-written by Joe and Lt. General Harold G. Moore. Joe sent me an email the following day with a copy of this week's column, "Commentary: How we can really honor our veterans". With his permission, it is posted to this webpage.
In this column, he mentions Major General (retired) Matt Caulfield of Oceanside, CA, who I also had the pleasure to interview in San Francisco. Again, another passionate man, dedicating his time and energy to help his fellow veteran with the issue of joblessness. In addition, Col. (retired) Bucky Peterson was interviewed on the issue of college education for veterans, and the program he has helped design for the State of California called, 'Troops to College'. And Major General (retired) Mike Myatt spoke to me on camera regarding his concerns about our veterans opportunities when they return home.
I am extremely grateful to all these wonderful human beings for giving me their time and participating in this documentary. They truly CARE and are trying hard to make a difference in a system that is seriously damaged.
__________________________________________ Commentary: How we can really honor our veterans
By Joseph L. Galloway McClatchy Newspapers
Memorial Day is upon us again, and the more traditional towns will be flying flags and hosting parades and holding ceremonies to honor the million American soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen who've fallen in the wars of history and in the wars of today.
It is good to honor the fallen and to comfort the families and friends who mourn one among them whose death broke their hearts.
This year, however, I'll depart from tradition and ask that we reflect less on our fallen comrades who are at peace, and more on those veterans especially those from our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who are alive and need our help.
How strange that today in our country, in a time of war, battles are raging over the need for medical care, educational benefits, employment opportunities and assistance for those who've served honorably and come home to begin new lives in a nation they risked their lives to defend.
The shameful thing is that most of those battles are being waged against the very government, the very bureaucracies, the very politicians who sent those young men and women to war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Maybe the right word here isn't shameful, but criminal.
On Capitol Hill, our lawmakers debate the pros and cons of a new GI Bill that would provide our latest combat veterans with education benefits at least equal to those that their grandfathers received when they came home from winning World War II.
Our president has threatened to veto that bill if Congress passes it. The Republican candidate to succeed him, Sen. John McCain, a veteran and former prisoner of war himself, refuses to support that GI Bill and offers a watered down, cheaper substitute.
The Pentagon and the Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, a former university president, oppose better educational benefits for veterans, for fear that offering them might entice more young troops to leave the service for the campus.
This is odd, coming as it does from a president who talks a lot about supporting our troops, from a senator who draws a 100 percent military disability pension and from a former college president who surely knows the value of higher education.
Others among us wage endless battles and rage against the very agency charged with providing medical care, disability pensions, mental health care and counseling and, yes, the parsimonious educational benefits for all who've served and sacrificed for our country- the Veterans Administration (VA).
In recent months, VA officials have been caught providing false statistics that far understate the true number of veterans, old and young, who commit suicide. They've ordered doctors to diagnose fewer cases of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and to substitute a diagnosis of a lesser, temporary stress disorder.
The young people marching home from war and trying to rejoin civilian society, get a job and start a life aren't having much luck, either. The government's own statistics show that fully a quarter of returning veterans are employed in jobs that pay wages that put them below the poverty line, or less than $21,000 a year if they're single.
Marine Maj. Gen. (ret.) Matt Caulfield of Oceanside, Calif., knows that the young men and women leaving military service today are the finest he's ever known in a long career in uniform- yet they're having a hard time finding good jobs.
"The CEO's and chairmen in industry all say how their companies want to hire veterans," Caulfield told me. "But this is simply not translating downward to the people who do the interviews and make the hiring decisions. A veteran is someone alien to your average corporate hiring manager, who is a 28-year-old woman with a college degree."
Caulfield, a veteran of two combat tours in Vietnam, said that government and industry are both failing miserably in providing job opportunities for this new generation of veterans. He called it a scandal when some of the best and brightest and most motivated of their generation are consigned to jobs flipping burgers or, worse, to the street corners in big cities where they hold up cardboard signs that advertise: "Homeless Veteran- Will Work for Food."
So let's review the bidding here this Memorial Day. Let's all pay lip service to Support Our Troops. But if we want to be honest, we should edit those yellow-ribbon bumper stickers to say Support Our Troops- As Long As It Doesn't Cost Anything.
Let's acknowledge that this new generation of soldiers and Marines is amazingly motivated and talented. They're expected to be good killers, good diplomats and ambassadors of American goodwill who operate under impossibly complex rules of engagement in impossibly dangerous and deadly environments.
But if they come home wounded, their brains rattled by the huge IED's of the new way of war, and if they suffer the horrors of PTSD nightmares and flashbacks, let's dump them on the streets with the least amount of help and benefits possible, as cheaply as possible.
For sure we don't want to improve their chances, better their future prospects, by offering them the same college benefits we gave their grandfathers six decades ago. God help us if they all get college degrees and figure out what we've done to them.
|
MEMORIAL DAY: 5/28/2008 On Sunday, May 25, 2008, I videotaped the Memorial Day Service at Arlington West which was located on the beach next to the Santa Monica Pier. Veterans for Peace along with many volunteers set up over 4000 white crosses in the sand representing all the men and women soldiers who have died in Iraq. Every Sunday, rain or shine, the crosses go up at sunrise and are taken down at sunset. Check out their website: www.arlingtonwestsantamonica.org The first speaker at the Memorial Day event was Ron Kovic, the Vietnam Veteran who was paralyzed from that war and wrote about his ordeal in 'Born on the 4th of July', and became the movie in which he was portrayed by Tom Cruise. It was an honor to meet him. Here are some of his words: - "I have come to believe there is nothing in the lives of human beings more terrifying than war and nothing more important than for those of us who have experienced it to share its awful truth."
- "War is not the answer. Violence is not the solution. A more peaceful world is possible."
- "I am the living death, the Memorial Day on wheels. I am your Yankee Doodle Dandy, your John Wayne come home, your Fourth of July firecracker exploding in the grave."
- "We who have witnessed the obscenity of war and experienced its horror and terrible consequences have an obligation to rise above our pain and suffering and turn the tragedy of our lives into a triumph."
_________________________________
|
|
|
|
|