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Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau for April 24, 2010
Transcript:
Woman: Hey... you going somewhere? Melissa: Yeah, thanks to you. Woman: Me? Melissa: Seabrook's now sending me to the Restoration Center, which has GOT to be the chaplain's doing... and she had my back because my battle buddy ratted me out. But if she hadn't, I wouldn't be getting help now. I owe you, dude. Woman: Bravo foxtrot foxtrot? Melissa: Bravo foxtrot foxtrot.
Wildcard24365 almost 15 years ago
Bravo zulu! Itās a bit too tidy if this is the denoument, but I appreciate that Mel is self-aware enough to understand she still needs help.
rayannina almost 15 years ago
GEE1G: But you mean ā@#$%^&*&^%$#ā in a good way, right?
Chrisnp almost 15 years ago
Way too tidy indeed. Iām sure this isnāt the last weāll see of Mel, but I guess itās time to peek in on some of the other characters. Hope itās Alex and Toggle.
FriscoLou almost 15 years ago
Looks like the blockage is opening up.
Iāve got something up my sleeve, but I canāt pull the trigger till the right time. Iām sort of itchinā for Mr. Butts.
randgrithr almost 15 years ago
This is way too bucolic an ending and not how it usually plays out in real life. The stigma attached to getting mental health help in the military, especially if you have a clearance (which you lose for the duration) would have had a real-life Mel frothing at the mouth at Roz. Iāve been in Rozās shoes and I know.
Mel conveniently gets a female chaplain (Iām STILL going WTF?! over that one) who just happens to know about a stress relief program, and a āgood guyā (if clueless) CO who is willing and able to transfer his ābest mechanicā out in the middle of a deployment. Not everyone is so lucky.
In closing, anyone who thinks Mel is a āpsychoā because she suffered an unprosecuted command rape needs a serious kick in the behind.
Allison Nunn Premium Member almost 15 years ago
Had a brother in the COās shoes. He got several of his ābattle scarredā GIās into the stress relief program (without them having to go back to the states), he said it didnāt take much to get them back and better than ever, was well worth it to send them & no, their buddies did not get on them for it since it was handled essentially āin the fieldā. The military is a lot better about things like that than it used to be (fortunately!)
antburman almost 15 years ago
Gee and I thought the Captain was gay. Well done G.T. Lovely, soft touch.
pschearer Premium Member almost 15 years ago
Alpha, bravo, charlie, delta, echo, foxtrot, golf, hotel, india, juliet, kilo, lima, mike, november, oscar, papa, quebec, romeo, sierra, tango, uniform, victor, whiskey, x-ray, yankee, zulu.
I learned that almost fifty years ago and it stuck.
As for the storyline, since it is Saturday, it may be the end of the sequence of recent days, but in the world of Doonesbury, this story is clearly not finished. (I have to wonder about people who donāt like happy ā or at least hopeful ā endings.)
lewisbower almost 15 years ago
Mental Health? When I was at HQMC I went to the Chaplain instead of the shrink. Didnāt want to trade my clearance for a rifle in SE Asia.
babka Premium Member almost 15 years ago
thereās knowing you need help, being able to ask for help, and being able to receive help. sometimes many years between those humbling and crucial realizations. basically they took it to the Highest Command, and the orders came down accordingly through fallible human beings.
when human beings are taught to kill other human beings in the name of God and Country and Service and such, returning from āactive dutyā can take a lifetimeā¦..how to reconcile such actions and such aftermaths?????
and rape is spirit-murder, and employed as such in warfare itself.
locutus555 almost 15 years ago
Fantastic, Iāve been in the commander job and it can scare you if you think your actions are misinterpreted.
Have a Great Morning Everyone.. Locutus
Chrisnp almost 15 years ago
Randgrithr, I agree that the ending is ābucolic,ā as you put it, and also that Mel would more likely be steaming mad at Roz about now. I donāt know about this ārestoration centerā Beyond a link someone helpfully posted the other day, but we had a combat stress team (I think thatās what we called them) where I was in Iraq. Although itās not a career ender, word gets out to the whole unit that the soldier was sent there, and there seemed to be a lingering stigma when the soldier returned. Besides, I didnāt think Mel was that ready to admit she needed help.
The rest of your post I disagree with. Iām pretty sure her clearance would have been suspended, rather than lost. Suspensions happen for all sorts of reasons, and itās no big deal. She wonāt be handling classified at the restoration center anyway. Having a female chaplain is certainly convenient, but not implausible. The chaplain wouldnāt just happen to know about a stress relief program, it would be her job to know.
Seabrook wasnāt just being a good guy. He was worried about loosing one of his best mechanics completely due to stress or loosing her for a few weeks. One other more political part of Seabrookās decision: If Mel had a break down, and it became known to the battalion or brigade commander that Seabrook had been advised by the chaplain to send her to mental health before it happened and that he ignored the advice, Seabrook would be in serious trouble himself. Iāve seen company commanders get relieved from command for similar decisions.
Dana Kuhar Premium Member almost 15 years ago
Rather sweet.
longtimecomicsfan almost 15 years ago
Why so many double posts?
randgrithr almost 15 years ago
Chrisnp, much depends on the level of clearance but back in the day, a suspension was difficult to lift once it was imposed. In the case I was involved in, a coworker was drinking heavily, losing stripes almost monthly for his behavior and ended up a slicksleeve in correctional custody after a DWI. Because heād lost his license I was asked to pick him up on the day of his release from CC. He asked to stop by the AAFES and came out with a case of beerā¦ that was when I felt it necessary to say something to my NCOIC. He was reassigned stateside and never got either his stripes or his clearance back as far as I know. To truly illustrate that no good deed goes unpunished, as soon as this happened, guess who ended up with his job. snerk Mind you, I managed to hold it down quite competently for 3 years.
To be fair, I never would have considered a chaplain for counseling. At the time, it was completely out of the question. I was the unitās only practicing Wiccan and most of the people around me were Evangelistic Christians. Itā¦ wouldnāt have worked out at all well.
Pschearer, itās not that I donāt like happy endings. Itās that I had hope that this thread in Doonesbury would raise the general publicās awareness of what countless women in our military are going through on a daily basis. Their stories donāt end anywhere near as prettily, and thereās still an immense amount of work to be done to correct the sexism and vicious injustice that they face. I would consider the prosecution, court martial and dishonorable discharge of Melās original perp to be the REAL happy ending.
aquak1 almost 15 years ago
Chrisnp, He doesnāt want to āloseā her, not ālooseā her. Save those extra Os for when something isnāt tight.
dms67 almost 15 years ago
I think Iām sort of an average Doonesbury reader ā¦ I read the strip to be entertained and sometimes to be informed. I have to admit I didnāt have any idea that there was a stress management program at the Bagram Airfield until this plot line came along. I think Trudeau sometimes just wants to raise awareness of something, not necessarily make a big statement.
RomanyX almost 15 years ago
antburman: You could still be right. Nothing weāve seen indicates that he isnāt.
T Gabriel Premium Member almost 15 years ago
dah di di dit di di dah dit di di dah dit
and
di di dah di di dit da dah da di da dit
Eighteen weeks in Radio Telegraph Operatorās School, MCRD, San Diego, CA. Feb - Jul 1967. Ten weeks after - three years in Vietnam, Republic of with units of the 1st Marine Division. From the day I left the school never heard another dah dit. Lots of voice traffic though. Talked a lot to naval guns, airdales, and combat control.
freeholder1 almost 15 years ago
interesting. A Soap opera approach at the start with the heroine all wrapped up in her deep problem that gets treated by people who genuinely care about her as a person instead of as a symbol. How un-Hollywood and un-Fox. Bucolic? More like the real ending if everyone does indeed care about her.
FriscoLou almost 15 years ago
Holy Smokes! just read this in the NY Times. Hope Melās unit isnāt like this. Maybe this isnāt that happy ending.
http://nyti.ms/cuz3IQ
Naw, nothing bad ever happens to anyone in Doonesbury. Zonkās never had to get a real job, Jeff still has a job, BD just lost his leg below the knee, Dukeās still free, and Togās ābout to kick the trailer. Donāt sweat it Mel.
Justice22 almost 15 years ago
FriscoLou,,, Sadā¦ā¦ Good story about the sad facts. While all cannot be cured, there should be better results than this.
Dragoncat almost 15 years ago
The first step to solving a problem is knowing you have a problem.
Iām glad Mel and Roz are still BFFs. It may be the end of their sequence (for now, at leastā¦), but it sure looks like a happy ending to me.