Agent Orange Is Still Killing Veterans Slowly
This
is a true story told to me recently by a friend who wishes to remain
anonymous. It explains his experience with the legacy of Monsanto and
Dow and the ongoing effects of its product, Agent Orange, the lethal
spray used in Vietnam during the war.
My
friend’s brother died a slow death from the effects of Agent Orange.
And the other day while at the mall he met someone now
going through what his brother went through prior to his death.
He
said a man stepped out of a store wearing an orange T Shirt. On its
back was, "I was killed in Vietnam I just haven't died yet.”
Roy
walked up to him and asked if his shirt pertained to Agent Orange. He
said that it did, and he began to tell Roy his story. He was just out of
high school when he joined the service and was sent to Vietnam. He said
he was in the Highlands with the Big Red One. Fighting was intense,
snipers were everywhere and Operation Ranch Hand sprayed Agent Orange
day after day. He finished his tour, came home and thought he was safe.
But
all the symptoms of Agent Orange poisoning except diabetes soon
appeared: breathing problems, cancer, genetic problems that he passed on
to his children and heart attacks. He has fought the cancers for years.
Now the cancer has returned in six locations.
He
said when he first reported his health problems, the Veterans
Administration denied, denied and continued to deny that they were due
to Agent Orange. Finally, they admitted, after analysis proved the
danger of dioxin, that he had indeed been poisoned. By this time, he had
accumulated debt, had a checkered work record because of all the health
episodes and had suffered for years without adequate medical care.
As
Roy listened, he found it to be the same refrain other veterans had
told him, including his brother. The VA knew about Agent Orange, but
they felt if they kept stonewalling, the Vietnam Vets would die or just
give up on getting the care they needed and deserved.
Roy said this
man at the time didn't question the morality of the war in Vietnam. He
went and fought, got a biological injury he did not get a purple heart
for and returned to a nation that turned its back on him. No veterans in
the history of this country have been so maligned.
As
the man Roy met in the mall said, "The only parade my fellow Vietnam
veterans got to honor them started with a hearse and ended up at a
graveyard.”
Roy
didn't get much sleep that night as he thought about the truth of that
man's statement and remembered as well the agony of his own brother’s
death from Agent Orange.
Donal Mahoney
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