The Month of May is Dedicated to Appreciating Our Military

Make it Meaningful by Abolishing Their VA Medical Debt

By: Jerry Ashton
May 10, 2022
Category: News

Before we get to the medical debt part where there are millions of dollars in medical debt on the backs of our bravest (veterans owe money for medical services?), were you even aware that May is marked officially as the month in which we honor our military?

Do you know that the month also honors VE Day? Children of Fallen Patriots Day? Silver Star Service Banner Day? Military Spouse Appreciation Day? Armed Forces Day and Gold Star Families Day? As Month of the Military Caregiver? The fifth month of the year leads the pack in featuring our armed forces.

All that attention is a good thing. Patriotic, some might say.

But when the month ends, and flags are furled and the marchers tuck their uniforms away and the flurry of activities are only a memory, questions still remain. Could we have done more as a nation than a ceremonial homage? As individuals, shouldn’t there be a better, more long-lasting way to show our care? Let’s explore the problem, and then welcome the solution.

The Public Heart Giveth — the Congressional Budget Taketh Away

One such obligation we require of our government is that of providing healthcare for our warriors. This moral and ethical standard was established by Abraham Lincoln in 1865 in his second inaugural address barely a month before he was assassinated:

“…to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow, and his orphan…”

Fast forward 157 years and we learn that this care is discretionary. It goes for all who are on active duty but only a percentage of those who are ex-military. As example, when a veteran makes application for VA health care (yes, they must apply), they will be assigned to one of eight priority groups to determine the level of healthcare for which they qualify and any cost to be borne.

This is where it gets sticky. Placement in these groups is based on military service history (where and when), disability rating (full or partial), income level and whether the person qualifies for Medicaid (financial). Only conditions that are caused or made worse by a person’s military service will be provided for free. Do you see the problem?

After all adjustments are made against services delivered, unpayable healthcare bills both within the VA system as well as due outside medical providers (which consists of claims denied by the VA) have left our heroes and heroines knee-deep in medical debt. To the tune of an accumulated $6 billion and rising by the millions every year.

All on the backs of the veterans.

A Campaign to End Veteran Medical Debt

As a former Navy journalist and veteran, I and a powerful coalition of current and former service men and women and veteran’s advocates are forming a powerful coalition with the end purpose of motivating and enabling the VA Hospital System to release its millions (billions?) of unpaid and unpayable medical debts for complete and total forgiveness — including the removal of any negative credit marks that may be on someone’s record.

It’s not crazy, it’s sane. It’s not far-fetched, it’s grounded in common sense business and charitable practices. It’s not unheard of, medical debt is forgiven every day with no tax consequences to the recipient of this gift. You will be comforted to know that precedent has already been set and policies already changed when enough people made the voices clearly understood.

It’s just not yet being done by the VA. Not yet. It hasn’t been brought to its attention. But, it will be with your help.

Here is the website: https://endveteranmedicaldebt.com/. Tweet with us here: https://twitter.com/EndVetMedDebt. And, there’s always FB: https://www.facebook.com/EndVetMedDebt/

You are invited to join this year-long effort to overdue a grievous wrong. A wrong that is being foisted on the very people we selected to be the guardians of our country. A wrong that you can help make right.

By Contributor:

Jerry Ashton

Jerry Ashton walked into Occupy Wall Street in 2011 as a debt collector, and walked out of that experience two years later as a debt forgiver – literally rethinking his profession to co-found RIP Medical Debt in 2014 to reverse the ills caused by that industry. Six years later at the time of his retirement, his charity had successfully abolished over $2.7 billion in unpayable medical debt for over 1,800,000 Americans across the U.S. As of this writing, the total debt abolished is over $5 billion over almost 4 million people.

Jerry founded Let's Rethink This in late 2020 with the intention of seeing that lightning can strike twice. This time as a “B” Corp and not a charity, Jerry and his co-creators intend to bring about $1 billion in social and economic good this time through a unique Searchlight/Spotlight/Ignite model.

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