Part II: Soldiering on? The invisible injuries of war
Canadians cannot have it both ways; a hero-honouring culture that does not honour its heroes. Neither can the anti-war movement rail against the treatment of civilians, foreign combatants and detainees -- the war overseas -- while ignoring the challenges facing soldiers and veterans who have brought the war home. All are casualties. This is where a new peace keeping effort must begin.
http://www.rabble.ca/news/2009/11/part-ii-soldiering-invisible-injuries-war
(Read Part I of this article:
Part II: Soldiering on? The invisible injuries of war Canadians cannot have it both ways; a hero-honouring culture that does not honour its heroes. Neither can the anti-war movement rail against the treatment of civilians, foreign combatants and detainees -- the war overseas -- while ignoring the challenges facing soldiers and veterans who have brought the war home. All are casualties. This is where a new peace keeping effort must begin. http://www.rabble.ca/news/2009/11/part-ii-soldiering-invisible-injuries-war (Read Part I of this article:http://www.rabble.ca/news/2009/10/soldiering-human-cost-war)