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Landon Steele Military - Brett revealed his first cam appearance on Sunday's live show. 0:00 Show Intro - Where are you rehearsing? 8:50 Chicopee Councilor 18:30 Lucjan Galecki comes to the show 31:30 Pauly Crispy 1:15:25 Roxbury Gofundme Mom 1:41:00 Freestyle 1:43:55 Ask Turtleboy - TurtleClub, Christmas, Pauly Crispy…

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Landon Steele Military

Landon Steele Military

Tuesday's Live Show interviewing Christian Silvestri. He is a business owner, fighting against foreclosures and restrictions. The sound from the host end is low for the first few minutes and then gets better. Like his restaurant page - Rabias Dolce Fumo, Boston https://m.facebook.com/rabiasdolcefum... Rel…

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0:00 Introduction 3:15 Shirley Cancer GoFundMe https://tbdailynews.com/shirley-mom-c... 30:05 Tony Fed https://tbdailynews.com/president-of-... 47: 03 Springfield Christmas Fundraiser https://tbdailynews.com/mom-who-used-... 1:06:54 Bringham Director of Nursing https://tbdailynews.com/internal-emai... 1: 21:...

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Delavan Pitches Lakewood To 2 1 Win Over Camden

What is an audition score? Listen Score (LS) is a metric that shows how popular this podcast is compared to other public rss-based podcasts in the world on a scale of 0 to 100. The more, the the more popular it will be. Calculated from 1st and 3rd party data. Updated monthly.

What is Global Rank? This podcast is one of the most popular shows out of 3,023,599 podcasts worldwide, ranked by Listener Score (Estimated Population Score). Army medics Landon Steele, right, and James Blumenschein, second from right, lead dozens of veterans on a 23-mile walk from the Richfield VFW to the state Capitol to the Uptown VFW in Minneapolis, Friday, Oct. 25, 2013.

Landon Steele served two tours in Iraq, but has seen his teammates go down since returning to the United States.

Landon Steele Military

"We are the population coming back from the longest war in history and we represent only 0.45 percent of the US population," said Steele, a former medic. "And at 23 himself -killing a day, that's not a problem, it's a disease."

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To draw attention to the plight of troubled soldiers, Steele and fellow doctor Jim Blumenschein planned to travel from the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Richfield to the state capitol in St. Louis. Paul and then to the VFW in Minneapolis. But after word of their tour spread, they were joined by dozens of others who needed to raise awareness about the rising number of suicides by members of the armed forces.

With some marchers wearing camouflage fatigues and carrying backpacks, a group of military veterans, active duty service members and their supporters walked 23 miles to recognize more than 20 dying veterans with suicides every day across the United States.

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Veterans, led by march organizer Landon Steele, marched on 65th Street in Richfield. W. on Friday, October 25, 2013, to the State Capitol in St. Paul and then to the Uptown VFW in Minneapolis.

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U.S. According to Department of Veterans Affairs data, 18 to 22 veterans nationwide die by suicide every day. U.S. The study was based on numbers from less than half of the states. Researchers say government treatment programs have led to improvements, but the agency needs to do more to prevent armed suicides.

Steele said it's hard to find someone in the military who doesn't kill himself. Five members of the former unit killed themselves - and one killed himself just days after holding the march.

March co-organizer Jim Blumenschein said he doesn't know exactly why so many veterans take their own lives. He suspects the number of uses is a factor. Some members of the military have been doing multiple tours of war zone duty in recent years.

Landon Steele Military

"I'm sure it won't help at all," Blumenschein said. "It's very taxing. There are times when people make a trip and then they are done. If you do your 12 months, you're done and go home and stay home."

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Some people showed up at the Richfield VFW parking lot to show support, not march. Among them was Jim Gifford, who served in the US Marines in the late 1980s. He had never been in a war, but he was well aware of the problem of military suicide.

About a dozen co-workers took their own lives, Gifford said. The VA needs resources to reach more troubled vets, he said.

Veterans carried an American flag and many were decked out in full gear, including back packs, during the 23-mile walk on Friday, Oct. 25, 2013, at the Richfield VFW.

"You know, tough guys, guys, don't talk about weakness," Gifford said. "Or everything's fine. Ask any of these people - or anyone - 'How are you?' [They say] 'Oh, I'm fine,' or 'Things are fine,' whatever."

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Meg McConnell is hoping to raise money for research into post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. She said her brother, Sgt. Ian Williams McConnell shot himself to death two years ago while suffering PTSD nightmares. After his death, her family created a foundation that donates money to research at the University of Minnesota.

"They found that one part of the brain causes it,” McConnell said. “It's really like a disease — and it's caused by trauma."