In fact, the raid on Fallujah in late February 2007 “…revealed a homegrown factory for car bombs and cylinders of toxic chlorine gas and other chemicals…” (Tuorinsky, 2008, p. 66). Year 2007 was particular nasty for Iraq when terrorists used Chlorine tankers to kill some and injure several. Compared to other agents used in war (i.e. nerve agents), Chlorine is not as toxic (But I’m not saying that it isn’t dangerous whatsoever). If it is used on unprotected individuals (i.e. civilians), a chlorine attack can be considered successful.…
Operation Ranch Hand was a U.S. herbicidal warfare campaign during the Vietnam War from 1962 to 1971. It was a chemical defoliation operation, largely inspired by the British use of 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D during the Malayan Emergency in the 1950s. It involved the spraying of the rainbow herbicides (Agents Green, Pink, Purple, Blue, White and Orange, color-coded ) to destroy the plant based ecosystem in Vietnam and deprive the enemy (Viet Cong soldiers) of agricultural food production and advantages in battle. Agent Orange was the most extensive and dangerous chemical sprayed during this campaign..…
In this scholarly thesis by Pamela King, she goes very in-depth about the effects of Agent Orange on people during and after the war. Although she covered pretty much everything on the war in her one hundred plus page thesis, the main part to focus on is the section that talks about the legal actions taken by the U.S. veterans after the war. She goes into detail about the legal cases that were in action after the war. A specific suit that she talks about was filed in the Federal District Court in New York from 2.4 million Vietnam War veterans against the U.S. government and the chemical companies that produced Agent Orange. Many Blue Water veterans have testified to witnessing large billowing clouds of Agent Orange engulfing their ships.…
Agent Orange was a herbicide an a weedkiller used to eliminate rainforest cover so the VC couldn't use it. Agent orange was used alot in the Vietnam war. According to History.com staff it tells me that about 11 to 13 million gallons of Agent Orage was sparyed in between January of 1965 in April 1970. Agent Orange is most known to come in orange striped containers.…
During the WWI and WWII, many of the Americans feared the Red Scare and what would the attackers possibly have in mind to do to the United States. The American government instilled much of their fear in its own citizens towards the communist government. The Red Scare started shortly after the end of the World War 1 and the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia by the Communists. This scare went world wide after the Communists had taken their first strike that took place in 1919. These communists called themselves the Reds because of their charges they wanted to hold.…
Chemical Warfare in WWI Why did I pick this subject? I choose this because i’m interested in Chemical Warfare during WW1. In this essay you will learn when and why It started, what kind of chemicals they used in bombs and gases, who fought in the warfare, how it affected lives of people during this time, and when it ended. Chemical Warfare started by the Germans one hundred years ago on January 2, 1915. The Germans had first attacked using Chlorine gas.…
The United States was using a defoliant known as Agent Orange that was used to eliminate tree cover and crops that were beneficial to the North Vietnamese. Agent Orange was an extremely powerful herbicide that later proved to cause serious health problems, such as tumors, rashes, birth defects, and cancer among both troops and Vietnamese citizens. From 1961 to 1972, four-and-a-half million gallons of the defoliant were poured over nineteen million acres of Vietnamese land. In addition to the irreparable harm done to the Vietnamese environment, around 400,000 citizens were killed or seriously injured by the defoliant, and to this day, people suffer side effects linked to it (Agent Orange). MORE ON…
“Cancer is among the leading causes of death worldwide. As of 2012, there were 14 million new cases and 8.2 million cancer-related deaths worldwide” (Cancer Statistics, National Cancer Institute). Cancer was a very widespread disease during World War I due to the use of mustard gas. Mustard gas was a common war weapon, for it was very cruel and had a high fatality rate; this gas is extremely poisonous and caused a cancer epidemic due to the way it attacked the respiratory system. Exposure to this gas was fatal since it attacked its victim’s organs and caused irregular cell growth with later lead to cancer.…
However the most common and firm belief is that vietnam took victory in the end. But what was there price? There were millions of vietnamese that died during the war, soldiers, mothers, children, with a death toll in the millions, but what about the people still affected by it today? In the years of 1961 up to 1971, the u.s government was sending out a chemical known as agent orange and spreading it all over the country in order to kill the jungle and take away the viet kongs advantage. Agent orange is a chemical that is filled with dioxin; one of the most deadly substances to man.…
For example, significant increases in cancer risk are associated with workers that have been exposed to high concentrations of ionizing radiation, certain chemicals, metals, and other substances (Hunt 4). There are many Louisiana workers who work in petrochemical refineries, and have been heavily affected by this field of work. In “A strong voice in Louisiana’s Cancer Alley,” by Julie Cart, a woman states that there is a clear difference between workers affected by the pollution and average students. She states that “the old-looking ones work in oil and gas or the chemical plants. You can clearly see the difference — the pallor of their skin, how shriveled” (Cart 4).…
Growing up in a Vietnamese family in America, the value of life is highlighted by working hard and knowing your roots. Stories about family hardship and history told from the older generation in my family are mostly ones of war. I have heard many different elements of war: war crimes, anticommunist sentiments, and the escape from Vietnam. Hearing these stories has always resonated with me, motivating me to work hard for the sacrifice of those before me. In that sense, I worked rigorously to provide myself an education from the College of Natural Sciences at the University of Texas and was excited about pursuing a professional health career.…
Analysis of Burgess’s childhood confirms the psychoanalytic theory that Alex and his fictional experiences within A Clockwork…
During WWI poisonous gas was used to break through the front lines, this caused people to die, and live the rest of their lives with health problems like blindness, lung problems, mental issues, or heart problems. During WWII Adolf Hitler set jews in gas chambers. Gas chambers were described as rooms that were airtight in which tons of jews were forced into to be murdered. These chambers then released tons of toxins thus suffocating the jews leaving them to die due to the poisonous gas in the air they couldn’t escape from. Hitler used this as a quick and effective ways to try and eliminate the jews.…
Will the Tanning Bed be officially banned? The statistics that were recently made about tanning beds have shocked even all of the dermatologists. However people still won't give them up.…
People kill each other every day. We might not see it or know about it until it reaches the news and the truth of it hits our ears and maybe we will never hear about it but it still happens. That is what Eddie Adams most famous photograph, “The Saigon Execution”, is if nothing else. It is a man killing another during the Vietnam war.…