Dear Presidents Obama and Putin:
The US once had the ability to treat the cause of idiopathic pain eg causalgia (see The Lancet p.106 Jan. 14, 1978) but fails to do so know. There are plenty of US Government records of all sorts and scientific and "junk" publications eg Oggi to support these contentions. The techniques of the first named author of The Lancet p.106 Jan. 14, 1978 were used to treat Leonid Brezhnev's trigeminal neuralgia. The first named author's work was well known and highly regarded by both
Vladimir K. Zworykin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_K._Zworykin
(Russian:
Влади́мир Козьми́ч Зворы́кин - Vladimir Koz'mich Zvorykin) (July 29
[O.S. July 17] 1888 – July 29, 1982) was a ...
Biography - Second marriage and calling - Death - HonorsManfred von Ardenne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manfred_von_Ardenne
Manfred von Ardenne I urge either or both of you to immediately see that the work of the first named author is advanced, explicated , continued and widely applied.
You may send your emissaries to talk further at 1063 Hempstead Turnpike Franklin Square, NY.
note Obama offers US Veterans nothing to cure their causalgia despite same being readily curable as shown by the records of all sorts of the United States. More than talk?
Obama Assures Disabled Veterans They Will Get Aid
Brian Blanco/European Pressphoto Agency
By JACKIE CALMES
Published: August 10, 2013
ORLANDO, Fla. — President Obama
on Saturday assured thousands of disabled veterans meeting here that
while the war in Afghanistan was ending, like the one in Iraq before it,
the work of helping the wounded warriors of those conflicts “has only
just begun.”
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Mr. Obama, addressing the annual convention of the Disabled American Veterans,
said that his administration was finally shrinking a backlog of years
of benefits claims — by 20 percent in the past five months. But new
waves of claims were coming in, he added, including from aging Vietnam
veterans able to seek help for ailments that may stem from exposure to
Agent Orange, and from recent combat casualties suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injuries.
“This time of war may be coming to an end, but the job of caring for our
veterans goes on,” Mr. Obama said. “And our work caring for our newest
veterans has only just begun.”
The president noted that even though the last veteran of World War I
died two years ago, survivor benefits still go to the children of those
who fought in that war, as well as in the Spanish-American War, and
even to the daughter of a Civil War veteran — just as benefits will go
to the heirs of what he called “the 9/11 generation.”
Mr. Obama spoke before an estimated 3,400 attendees, joined by his wife,
Michelle Obama, who was received warmly, reflecting her work, along
with Jill Biden, the wife of Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.,
advocating for military families. From Florida, the Obamas flew to
Martha’s Vineyard, in Massachusetts, for an eight-day family vacation.
The president said his administration was committed to increasing
spending for veterans’ physical and mental health, education and job
assistance; for programs addressing homelessness among veterans; and for
hiring more workers at the Department of Veterans Affairs, and paying overtime, to eliminate the claims backlog.
In keeping such promises, Mr. Obama is helped by the fact that spending
for veterans is supported by both parties in an otherwise polarized
Washington, and was exempted from what Mr. Obama called the “reckless
across-the-board budget cuts” known as sequestration, which has strained
other military and domestic programs.
Those cuts took effect in March, when Republicans in Congress rejected
the president’s proposals for alternative deficit reductions, including
tax increases for the wealthiest taxpayers and for some corporations.
Mr. Obama took credit for the exemption, saying, “I made it clear that
your veterans’ benefits are secure from this year’s sequester.”
But, in an appeal to veterans to apply pressure on lawmakers ahead of
the budget battles to come this fall, he added, “The best way to protect
the V.A. care you have earned is to get rid of the sequester
altogether.
“Congress needs to come together and agree on a responsible plan that
reduces our deficits and keeps our promises to our veterans, and keeps
our promises to future generations,” he said, drawing some of the
loudest applause he received.
Mr. Obama, who last appeared at the disabled veterans’ convention in
2010, provided his audience with an update on an Army Ranger, Sgt. First
Class Cory Remsburg, whom he had spoken of three years ago, after the
soldier suffered a traumatic brain injury in Afghanistan. After years of
surgery and therapies, he remains blind in one eye and unable to fully
move his left side, but he is making progress with speech and movement,
Mr. Obama said.
On an overhead video projection, the president could be seen getting
emotional for a moment as he recalled meeting Sergeant Remsburg
privately in Phoenix on Tuesday — a meeting the White House did not
divulge to reporters who were there to cover Mr. Obama’s speech on
housing policy.
The wounded warrior slowly stood from a chair with his parents’ help,
looked at the president and saluted sharply. “Rangers lead the way,” he
said.
“Cory is 30 years old. His recovery, like so many of yours, will last a
lifetime,” Mr. Obama said. “And when it comes to our work of making sure
that our nation is fulfilling its promises to the men and women who
served and sacrificed, America cannot give up either.”
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