The Punisher wrote:
Might be deserving of it's own topic... but not even 24 hours later and we have more servicemember on servicemember violence.

Unless things have changed a great deal from when I was growing up in the military, there's servicemember on servicemember violence almost every day. Homicide doesn't happen every day, but it's not exactly an extremely rare occurance, unfortunately.
Every single base I ever lived on had incidences of stabbings, beatings, rapes, attempted homicide, ect. A lot of it was between servicemembers in the barracks or in the apartment slums around the base or domestic violence situations though. And I would say that there was a murder involving the military community (not necessarily ON the base) every year or two. This was on and around Air Force bases, BTW, so not exactly the most he-man me Rambo type of environment (unless you count the crazy-ass fighter pilots. That's a different sort of he-man testosterone expression though. ;>). I anecdotally heard that it was "common" on the other branch bases, but frankly that could have just been intra-service bitching, I bet in all but the largest bases it's probably about the same.
Not everyone who joins the military is a good person, or a person with impulse control, or a mentally healthy person. That was true even before the branches started lowering their standards.
Back to the original subject, I think that perhaps people are discounting the effect of dealing with other people's trauma can have on the observer/worker. I have watched social workers become mentally ill from the absolute hell of dealing with severely traumatized people. Does it happen to everyone? No. But I do know that psychiatric trauma specialists burn out really really quickly, at least in the civilian world. I cannot imagine that it's different just because you're in the military. I could see a case being made that it may be worse, since unlike a civilian job you may not be able to just up and give your 2 week notice when you're hitting your breaking point, and you also may very well be penalized for seeking psychiatric help yourself. Nothing excuses what this guy has done. He had other options. He could have gone awol. He could have committed suicide. He chose to take the easy way out, and didn't give a crap about what happened to the people whose lives he took or destroyed, which pretty much negates anything good he might have done in his life in my opinion. So I don't have sympathy for him. However, it is kind of irritating to read people saying that just because someone hasn't seen combat means that they're just some kind of pansy limp wristed idiot who can't possibly have experience any kind of mental trauma. Now that is bullshit, if that's what folks really mean. People can be, and most certainly ARE traumatized by bearing witness to other people's extreme suffering up close and personal. That's why there's such a high burnout rate amongst professions involving a lot of personal contact with deeply traumatized people. I was never raped by my daddy, nor was I ever the victim of extreme neglect--but let me tell you, after working with and helping children who were, I most certainly have internal scars that I'm going to carry to my fucking grave. I was just smart enough that when it just got to be too much I did the right thing and got the hell out. One person's experience is one person's experience. If you work with certain populations you obviously don't have the trauma that any one individual has, but you do carry small bits of many different people's trauma and over time it can really fuck you up.
That being said, again, I'm not excusing what this guy did. And for all any of us know, he only treated mild cases, or didn't give a fuck about any of his patients anyway, ect. But murderous, evil assholes aside, can we please not denigrate the people who work with traumatized folks? It IS hard. It IS traumatizing to the support people. (ask any caregiver, professional or not). You DO actually have to be quite tough to survive in that profession long term. And it does require bravery, honor, and commitment. There's more than one way to be tough and to see a lot of difficult things. The actual battlefield is one path. There are others. And most people who do this work day in and day out don't go out on a rampage even when they can't take it anymore. :/