It seems to me that you are part of the "some might be faking it, but that's OK if one person gets the help they need" group. I can't say that I agree with you.
No GO! I am part of the group that for many years did no want to claim that I was hurt, because I would have been blamed for faking it. Of course I believe there are scammers, and your intension to point them out are not a negative towards the individuals, but to the system. You have stated that, and made good example of how the system should fix itself with an example of the of the security guard that was caught.
My point is we are focusing not the fakers, the testing if done correctly should suss them out. Trust me, I am seeing it now. Will people be able to slip through the cracks? Hell yeah, a thug will always find a way to beat the system. But the way I have read it on here, maybe not by your post, but some others, is that the system is so broken that the fakers are cashing in on a pension in droves.
If it is just matter of going to the MIR and getting diagnosed with PTSD, get handed a chit and some scepacol, then head down to the atm machine to draw the pension for a night of boozing. Hell I would have done that years ago.
What we should focus on is not the people who fake it, but recognizing the ones that are suffering and guiding them to get the help they need ASAP. So that they can rehabilitate, and be integrated into whatever trade or position they had before. That is where I do agree with you and this what the goal of the treatment is.
If we do this, they fakers will be left on the wayside, not how it is right now which is the opposite. We are concentrating on the actions of the wrong people, and giving them all the attention.
As for the ones I stated that are jumping on the band wagon, especially those that say are suffering, why not offer suggestions on how to fix it as opposed to just criticising the system and the fakers.
dileas
tess