Responding to the post about having your dogtags on your keychain and the possibility of identity theft because they display your SSN, it got me to thinking about that very same information on my old military paperwork. I still have all my paperwork from my time in the service. Last year, out of curiosity I was poking thru it all. My orders for reporting to my duty station not only had my SSN, but everybody else's that was processing thru the 21st Replacement Co. There must have been 30 other people on the same set of orders. I'm sure that my information is sitting in the dusty trunks of Lord knows how many other people's basements just waiting to be discovered and exploited...but what can one do? Mike
Your SSN...
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This is the main reason many of us opposed the military going to SSN in place of our old service numbers.But, as usual, the pencil pushers won and we lost. NickComment
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Someone in the Philippines has my SSN and knows I am R Cath and B neg. I left my dogtags in my utilities... (fatigues...)Comment
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Actually it should have been against the law for the Serives to use your SS Number, unless you gave it to them! The law states that one Gov. Agency cannot get or use your SS Number w/o your permission. Oddly this does not include private buisness, thus a credit car company can and does demand your number or will not give you a card, that is legal.You can never go home again.Comment
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The V.A. used to use the last 4 digits of your SS #. Now you have to give them your entire 9 digit number. I was in the blood draw clinic when I heard the guy in the next chair give his number. As unlikely as it may be, his number was identical to mine except for 1 number. My last 4 were 75** and his was 74**. I can still remember my service number. It was 722540.
The really odd thing about my VA ID card is that it has my middle name on it. Odd because I do not have a middle name. I served in the military for 6 years on continous active duty. I didn't realize I had no middle name until 25 years later when I traveled to Canada and they required a notarized copy of my birth certificate. Hello!!! There is no middle name on my birth cirtificate!
Just another typical bureaucratic screw up. So now these same bureaurats are going to tell us when, how, and where we can see a doctor and some high school drop out bureaucrat is going to decide whether you receive the stent that will keep you alive.
Hello Gloria. I hope Tricare or Medicare will step up for you.... but I pray you have a supplemental insurance policy that actually pays benefits.
My Medicare supplemental policy did well when I went to the VA ER for chest pains. The bill was $5,500... the medicare supplement paid $17 to the VA. In the end I wound up getting quite a break and after the dust settled only was our $2,200 out of pocketComment
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Just a question for those of you guys who use the VA. Is the VA able to provide care for all vets or do you have to be service- connected disabled or combat wounded? I'm 62 and this health insurance bit is getting nuts. I have a friend who is a retired MD pediatrician but he was combat wounded as a USMC doc in VN. He is getting all of his diabetic meds etc. How is the care?Comment
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From the VA site, a two question pre-test on eligibility:
If you are eligible you will be assigned to a priority group.
With VA health care, you’re covered for regular checkups with your primary care provider and appointments with specialists (like cardiologists, gynecologists, and mental health providers). You can access services like home health and geriatric (elder) care. And you can get medical equipment, prosthetics, and prescriptions. Apply for and manage the health care benefits you’ve earned.
If you think you will need VA health care apply before the current rules change.
I have received excellent care from the Indianapolis VA Hospital. Other VA clinics and hospitals may vary in the quality of care.Last edited by gwp; 08-22-2011, 06:43.Comment
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Musty old documents are the least of your worries. I advise identity theft insurance.Responding to the post about having your dogtags on your keychain and the possibility of identity theft because they display your SSN, it got me to thinking about that very same information on my old military paperwork. I still have all my paperwork from my time in the service. Last year, out of curiosity I was poking thru it all. My orders for reporting to my duty station not only had my SSN, but everybody else's that was processing thru the 21st Replacement Co. There must have been 30 other people on the same set of orders. I'm sure that my information is sitting in the dusty trunks of Lord knows how many other people's basements just waiting to be discovered and exploited...but what can one do? Mike
Phillip McGregor (OFC)
"I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthurComment

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