Ft. Hood Shooter was Cruelly Mistreated and Harassed for his Ethnicity

Secondary PTSD a likely Factor

(Blog Post) Everyone else just sat down there and drunk their beer and looked at him and giggled at him,” the woman said, starting to cry. “They just would laugh at him when he walked down with his Muslim clothes. . . . He was mistreated. He didn’t have nobody. He was all alone. He went to his apartment there and was all alone. Full Story »

Posted by Jon Raymond

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Jon Raymond
4.7
by Jon Raymond - Nov. 10, 2009

Comprehensive reporting from multiple credible sources on various angles of the reasons behind the Ft Hood shooting.

PTSD is rampant and highly underrated. The military has a standing policy to diminish its pervasive devastating impact on our troops both during and after their terms of service.

“In mid-August, just a few weeks after moving to Killeen, Hasan had a run-in with a soldier living in apartment No. 12. One night after he had been drinking, John Van de Walker scraped a key along the full length of the passenger’s side of Hasan’s car. Then he removed and destroyed a bumper sticker that read, ‘Allah is Love,’ according to several residents, including live-in managers John and Alice Thompson.”

The U.S. military has a long standing policy of racism toward the peoples of countries we are “at war with.”. It is standard procedure to dehumanize these foreign populations so that soldiers can more easily deal with the rampant death of innocent people that they see in war. I use the term racism loosely here as it actually applies to the Muslim religion. But few make the distinction between the Muslim religion and Arab ethnicity.

I think Hasan has a lot more in common with Timothy McVeigh than he does with Muslim terrorists in Afghanistan. They are (or were) both U.S. military members who were disgruntled enough with the military to retaliate and kill innocent victims.

Hasan likely suffered from secondary PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) in listening to the many troops’ horrid stories of war as they came to him after returning from war. Fort Hood Private Michael Kern who knew of Hasan tells of his own problems dealing with his killing a child, and how stories like this had to effect Hasan. Hasan had tried in vain to leave the military but there was no way once you are deployed as the private says.

Disclosure: Jon is involved in this story as an editor (review not included in overall rating). Help

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