Difference between revisions of "Agent Orange"
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==Medical experts== | ==Medical experts== | ||
+ | ===Richard Doll=== | ||
While he was being paid $1,500 <i>a day</i> for twenty years in consultancy fees by [[Monsanto]], a total of eleven million dollars, British [[epidemiologist]] Sir [[Richard Doll]] wrote to a royal Australian commission investigating the potential cancer-causing properties of Agent Orange. Sir Richard said there was no evidence that the chemical caused cancer.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/science/2006/dec/08/smoking.frontpagenews</ref> | While he was being paid $1,500 <i>a day</i> for twenty years in consultancy fees by [[Monsanto]], a total of eleven million dollars, British [[epidemiologist]] Sir [[Richard Doll]] wrote to a royal Australian commission investigating the potential cancer-causing properties of Agent Orange. Sir Richard said there was no evidence that the chemical caused cancer.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/science/2006/dec/08/smoking.frontpagenews</ref> | ||
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+ | ===Vernon Houk=== | ||
+ | Dr. [[Vernon Houk]] was Director of the Center for Environmental Health at the Centers for Disease Control, and also Assistant Surgeon General under both presidents [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] and [[George H.W. Bush]].<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/1994/09/13/obituaries/vernon-houk-crucial-figure-in-dioxin-issue-is-dead-at-64.html</ref> [[Henry Vinson]] , who ran the biggest gay escort service in Washington DC, wrote: | ||
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+ | {{SMWQ | ||
+ | |subjects=Vernon Houk,sexual blackmail | ||
+ | |text=Dr. [[Vernon Houk]] quickly comes to mind when I think of a patron of my escort service who may have fallen prey to [[blackmail]]. Houk served as Director of the Center for Environmental Health at the [[Centers for Disease Control]], and also as the [[Assistant Surgeon General]] under both presidents [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] and [[George H.W. Bush]]. Although Houk lived in [[Atlanta]]...he was fond of holing up D.C. hotels with multiple bottles of booze and several escorts over the course of a weekend, and [likely CIA operative] Tony was also fully cognizant of the eminent doctor's bacchanal laced sprees.<br> | ||
+ | In the [[1980s]], Congress tasked Houk with overseeing a study on the toxic effects of Agent Orange on [[Vietnam War|Vietnam veterans]], who had been subjected to the [[carcinogenic]] chemical en masse. Houk, however, declared that the soldiers' records made it impossible to discern the extent of Vietnam veterans who were subjected to Agent Orange, and he put the kibosh on the study. But a former chief of Naval Operations, who was the Navy's top commander in Vietnam, told a House subcommittee that Houk "made it his mission to manipulate and prevent the true facts from being determined" in his quest to cover up the true carnage spawned by Agent Orange. If Houk had proceeded with the Agent Orange study, [[the Pentagon]] undoubtedly would've been liable for astronomical, [[class action lawsuits]]. | ||
+ | |source_name= Henry Vinson, ''Confessions of a DC Madam'', page 201-202 | ||
+ | |date=2015 | ||
+ | |authors=Henry Vinson | ||
+ | }} | ||
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Revision as of 00:40, 30 March 2023
Agent Orange (defoliant, herbicide, chemical weapon, carcinogen) | |
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Interest of | Richard Doll |
Introduction
Agent Orange is one of the defoliants in a group of defoliants that was used heavily in Vietnam from 1961 to 1971 and has caused ongoing damage to the people and environment of Vietnam and will continue to do so for generations to come. It is a combination of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T, variations of it where all given colour codes and they became known as Rainbow Herbicides each with different chemical constituencies. Agent Orange being the most heavily used of the group and was used from 1965 to 1970. Close to 20,000,000 gallons of Rainbow Herbicides were used, with Agent Orange claiming approximately 12,000,000 gallons.
- Full article: Operation Ranch Hand
- Full article: Operation Ranch Hand
Medical experts
Richard Doll
While he was being paid $1,500 a day for twenty years in consultancy fees by Monsanto, a total of eleven million dollars, British epidemiologist Sir Richard Doll wrote to a royal Australian commission investigating the potential cancer-causing properties of Agent Orange. Sir Richard said there was no evidence that the chemical caused cancer.[1]
Vernon Houk
Dr. Vernon Houk was Director of the Center for Environmental Health at the Centers for Disease Control, and also Assistant Surgeon General under both presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush.[2] Henry Vinson , who ran the biggest gay escort service in Washington DC, wrote:
“Dr. Vernon Houk quickly comes to mind when I think of a patron of my escort service who may have fallen prey to blackmail. Houk served as Director of the Center for Environmental Health at the Centers for Disease Control, and also as the Assistant Surgeon General under both presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Although Houk lived in Atlanta...he was fond of holing up D.C. hotels with multiple bottles of booze and several escorts over the course of a weekend, and [likely CIA operative] Tony was also fully cognizant of the eminent doctor's bacchanal laced sprees.
In the 1980s, Congress tasked Houk with overseeing a study on the toxic effects of Agent Orange on Vietnam veterans, who had been subjected to the carcinogenic chemical en masse. Houk, however, declared that the soldiers' records made it impossible to discern the extent of Vietnam veterans who were subjected to Agent Orange, and he put the kibosh on the study. But a former chief of Naval Operations, who was the Navy's top commander in Vietnam, told a House subcommittee that Houk "made it his mission to manipulate and prevent the true facts from being determined" in his quest to cover up the true carnage spawned by Agent Orange. If Houk had proceeded with the Agent Orange study, the Pentagon undoubtedly would've been liable for astronomical, class action lawsuits.”
Henry Vinson (2015) [3]
References
- ↑ https://www.theguardian.com/science/2006/dec/08/smoking.frontpagenews
- ↑ https://www.nytimes.com/1994/09/13/obituaries/vernon-houk-crucial-figure-in-dioxin-issue-is-dead-at-64.html
- ↑ Henry Vinson, Confessions of a DC Madam, page 201-202