Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Agent Orange and Vietnam

 

Agent Orange first killed the rainforest, stripping the jungle bare. In time, the substance then spread its toxic reach to the food chain, leading to a generation of birth deformities. Though it was diminished and disused in 1971, the amount of this fatally poisonous substance dispersed by hand spraying, vehicles, and aircraft was estimated to be around twenty million gallons within South Vietnam alone. .
             Agent Orange was one of the fifteen defoliants developed by Monsanto Corporation, Dow Chemicals, along with eight other companies that were used during the Vietnam War. Agent Orange is known to be the most harmful to human. Agent Orange was a fifty-fifty mix of two chemicals known as 2-4-D(Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) and 2,4,5-T (Tricholorophenoxyacetic acid). The combined product of thee two highly toxic herbicides/pesticides would then be mixed with kerosene and diesel fuels. The earliest health concern on Agent Orange was that it contained TCCD, one of the malignant poisons known to men. In laboratory test on animals, the TCCD found in Agent Orange was found to cause a variety of diseases, many of them fatal. The TCCD found in Agent Orange is a hazardous and unwanted byproduct of the chemical manufacturing process. It is known to cause cancer, diabetes and numerous health diseases. All the information above I got from (http://www.lewispublishing.com/orange.htm ).
             "The emotional toll is horrifying, if you ever saw an image of a white hair mother crying at the burial of her black hair son. If you ever saw an image of a child, stalk naked running out of a burning village. These images arouse a strong feeling, an emotion inside of you. But war is war, the battle is in the past. The battle we face today is different. If you ever sat next to a defected baby held a hand of a war veteran still in pain, and could only wait for death because of a poisonous substance.


Essays Related to Agent Orange and Vietnam