Agent Orange: Genocide on Both the Native Americans And the Hmongs

During the 1960s-1980s the US, Soviet Union, Canadian, and other country government used Agent Orange to commit genocide on both the Native Americans and the Hmongs. The Native Americans call it “Yellow Dust or Yellow Powder” and the Hmongs call it “Yellow Rain.” Both the Hmong and Native Americans today still suffer from the aftermath of this Agent Orange. SUFFERING FROM CANCERS AND ILLNESSES. Look at these links for more information and/or do a Google search to find out more information. Bsnorrell.Blogspot.Com. Www.Governmentindian.Com. Www.Hmongihrw.Org. Www.Tragicmountains.Org.

Agent Orange Exposed in Toxic Genocide Targeting Indian Communities

Agent Orange was used in the US, BC, and Ontario, prior to and after the Vietnam War | Update in the news: Agent Orange sprayed along Ontario roadways until the 1980s: | Www.Cbc.Ca | By Brenda Norrell | Censored News | Www.Bsnorrell.Blogspot.Com | Bsnorrell.Blogspot.Com


Agent Orange tested and stored in US, and BC, prior to and after Vietnam War
Agent Orange tested and stored in US, and BC, prior to and after Vietnam War

PINAL MOUNTAINS, Ariz. — Arizona was one of 21 states where Agent Orange was stored, or tested, prior to and during the Vietnam War, according to the US Department of Veterans Affairs. The site in Arizona was in the Tonto National Forest in the Pinal Mountains near Globe, in the Apaches homeland. The Department of Defense published studies showing that exposure to Agent Orange has led to adult onset diabetes. Medical studies have linked exposure to brain tumors, and diseases in grandchildren of those in contact with Agent Orange. The severe deformities and birth defects resulting from Agent Orange exposure of pregnant women in Vietnam can be seen online in the photos of their children. The US Department of Veterans Affairs reveals that Agent Orange was tested and used in Florida and Texas as early as 1944. But even after it was banned in the US, it was sprayed in Canada. In Canada, Agent Orange was sprayed in British Columbia during the 1980s.

At Kapuskasing, Ontario, Agent Orange was sprayed about 20 kilometers from a First Nations community. Agent Orange spraying in Gagetown and surrounding communities in Canada had far reaching effects, since soldiers from around the world trained there. The spraying at Kapuskasing reveals the pattern of the US and Canada of targeting areas with Indian communities. Kapuskasing was not only the site of Agent Orange spraying, but was also the site of a WWI prisoner of war camp and later a power plant. In a pattern of toxic genocide, areas near and on Indian communities have been used as prisoner of war camps, power plant sites and toxic waste dumps. In Arizona, the WWII prisoner of war camps included sites on Gila River Indian Community and Colorado River Indian Nations. Coal-fired power plants are now on and around many Indian Nations, including the Navajo Nation. The Western Shoshone in Nevada and Goshute in Utah continue to be targeted with toxic and nuclear waste dumps.

Navajos in New Mexico, Havasupai in Arizona and Lakotas in Nebraska and the Dakotas are targeted with new uranium mining that could contaminate their drinking water. During the Cold War, Navajos, Acomas and Laguna Pueblos worked in uranium mines without protective clothing and many died of cancer and respiratory diseases. Today, radioactive tailings are strewn on the Navajo Nation. Dene in Canada, like the Dine’ in Arizona, were never told of the dangers of uranium mining during the Cold War, and worked in the uranium mines without protective clothing. In the Pueblos, the radioactive dust blew on their foods as they ate. In the case of the Goshute in Utah, their neighbor continues to be a biological and chemical warfare testing site, the US military’s Dugway Proving Ground. John H.W. Hummel is pressing for an investigation of the use of Agent Orange in and around Indian communities in Canada and the United States.

“I think that herbicides (contaminated with dioxin) were sprayed on many of the forests and traditional territories of Indigenous people in North America. I think that this has harmed the health of many people,” Hummel told Censored News. “The infamous ‘Agent Orange’ was sprayed by the forest industry upon large tracts of Canadian forests in Ontario, New Brunswick, British Columbia and likely elsewhere in Canada and probably on American forests too. “This should be investigated. It may well impact thousands of Indigenous people on this continent,” Hummel said. The US Department of Veterans Affairs now provides a list of sites where Agent Orange was tested and stored, beginning in 1944, in the US. As more people who were exposed to Agent Orange develop cancer and other serious health problems, the liabilities multiply for the US. Veterans and other victims are now fighting for justice, both at Veterans hospitals for treatment and in court for restitution.

The US Veterans Affairs website states that Agent Orange was used to remove foliage providing cover for the enemy during the Vietnam War. “Agent Orange was the most widely used of the herbicide combinations sprayed. Agent Orange and other herbicides used in Vietnam were tested or stored elsewhere, including some military bases in the United States,” the Veterans Affairs website states. “The U.S. military herbicide program in South Vietnam took place between 1961 and 1971. Herbicides were sprayed in all 4 military zones of Vietnam. More than 19 million gallons of various herbicide combinations were used. Agent Orange was the combination of herbicides the U.S. military used most often.” Www.Publichealth.Va.Gov. “Agent Orange and other herbicides used in Vietnam were tested or stored elsewhere, including many military bases in the United States. Below is information from the Department of Defense (DoD) on projects to test, dispose of, or store herbicides in the U.S.

For projects outside the U.S., go to Herbicide Tests and Storage Outside the U.S.” Meanwhile, Agent Orange was used in BC, Canada, after the Vietnam War, during the 1980s. Jorma Jyrkkanen said, “When I was habitat protection technician for the BC Fish and Wildlife Branch between 1981 and 1987, I got a request by the BC Ministry of Forests to use Estron 3-3E in a sensitive area near the mouth of the Lakelse River. Upon examination of the ingredients, I determined that it was in fact one of the Agent Orange (AO) concoctions and rejected the application along with a note to MOF that I was not very pleased that they had entertained such an option. Read more … Jorma-Jyrkkanen.Livejournal.Com. Ontario teens were soaked by Agent Orange spraying done at Kapuskasing: Www.Thestar.Com.

The Toronto Star reported that, “records from the 1950s, 60s and 70s show forestry workers, often students and junior rangers, spent weeks at a time as human markers holding red, helium-filled balloons on fishing lines while low-flying planes sprayed toxic herbicides including an infamous chemical mixture known as Agent Orange on the brush and the boys below.” Agent Orange was used in Australia, New Zealand and Brazil (see Wikipedia link in references below.) “The Brazilian government used Agent Orange to defoliate a large section of the Amazon rainforest so that Alcoa could build the Tucuruí dam to power mining operations. Large areas of rainforest were destroyed, along with the homes and livelihoods of thousands of rural peasants and indigenous tribes,” according to Wikipedia. In Feb., 2011, the Toronto Star exposed the fact that powerline corridors were sprayed with Agent Orange.

Hummel said, “If dioxin contaminated Agent Orange was sprayed along these transmission corridors, the implications are horrendous. Especially for the First Nations and Métis people who may hunt, fish and pick berries anywhere near these corridors. These transmission line corridors pass through many of the First Nation and Metis peoples Traditional territories. “Dioxin has been linked to approximately 50 diseases and medical conditions: Www.Vva.Org including Type II Diabetes. If Ontario Hydro, Forest companies, the Ministry of Transport and the Ministry of Natural Resources were spraying Agent Orange all over Ontario, you can bet it happened all over Canada and in the United States as well. We need a truly National, coast to coast, enquiry about all of this.” US Sites Where Agent Orange Was Stored and Tested, US Department of Veterans Affairs. Www.Publichealth.Va.Gov.

Arizona Arkansas California Florida Georgia Hawaii Indiana Kansas Kentucky Maryland Mississippi Montana New York North Dakota Pennsylvania Rhode Island Tennessee Texas Utah Washington Wisconsin. Read more at Wikipedia: Miscarriages and birth defects linked to Agent Orange spraying in US and Vietnam; Dow Chemical and Monsanto produced Agent Orange; Agent Orange used in Australia and New Zealand: En.Wikipedia.Org. Also see: VA links Agent Orange to brain cancer in court decision: Www.Prweb.Com. Department of Defense: Agent Orange exposure leads to adult onset diabetes: Www.Defense.Gov. Recent News Coverage.

Canada

Agent Orange “soaked” Ontario teens: Www.Thestar.Com. Agent Orange outrage – Timmins Daily Press: Www.Timminspress.Com. Ontario probes Agent Orange poisoning: Www.Thestar.Com. Agent Orange probe widens: Www.Thestar.Com. Agent Orange spraying in Gagetown and surrounding communities: Www.Agentorangecanada.Com.

Links

Transportation Ministry also used Agent Orange, say NDP. Minister investigates. – Winnipeg Free Press: Www.Winnipegfreepress.Com. ‘Sources of Dioxins and Furans in British Columbia’: Groups.Google.Com. Agent Orange Use in British Columbia: Jorma-Jyrkkanen.Livejournal.Com. Ontario probes Agent Orange poisoning: Www.Thestar.Com. WHEN DID TRANSPORTATION MINISTER KNOW ABOUT AGENT ORANGE USAGE: Why Does It Take the Opposition to Tell the Truth: Www.Gillesbisson.Com. Just added: Sources of dioxins and furans in British Columbia: Friends-Of-Agg.Googlegroups.Com.

Government Indian

Agent Orange & Indian Communities | Www.Governmentindian.Com. AGENT ORANGE IN SAN CARLOS THE WORST DIOXIN CONTAMINATION IN NORTH AMERICA. THE APACHE COMMUNITY IS SUFFERING FROM CANCERS AND ILLNESSES TO THIS DAY RESULTING FROM AGENT ORANGE RESEARCH UPON THE APACHE PEOPLE OF SAN CARLOS ARIZONA WARNING! THIS CONTINUES TO THIS DAY COVERED-UP BY GOVERNMENT. ACT NOW BY SUPPORTING EFFORTS TO UNCOVER FOR THE WELL BEING OF THE PEOPLE.

Shoecraft V. Dow

In the 1960s, Billie Shoecraft was a homemaker and mother in her forties living with her husband and family in the canyon lands of the Tonto National Forest near Globe, Arizona. A spunky 5-foot-4, weighing 100 pounds or so, Shoecraft wore her hair in a bouffant flip and was a bit eccentric in her ways. In fact, some people around Globe called her just plain crazy. But Billie Shoecraft loved the canyon lands and the Arizona environment — she adopted them as home after going there from Indiana in 1948. Shoecraft, meanwhile, had broken out with a blistery rash after the 1969 spraying incidents, and she had been to local hospitals twice—once for difficulty breathing and swallowing, and another time for chest pains and pains in her extremities. Tests found nothing out of the ordinary. Read more.

Victims on The Homefront – Agent Orange



Yellow Powder Prophecy

Yellow Dust



“Fukushima I Nuclear Power P…”

Www.Youtube.Com

Hmong International Human Rights Watch

History of the Solemn Promise | Www.Hmongihrw.Org. Hmongs are peaceful people, who deeply believe in freedom and democracy. In the early 1960’s the United States Government was seeking allies to support its policies in Southeast Asia, while the Hmongs were seeking equal rights and freedom. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officers, Bill Lair and General Harry C Aderholt, met with General Vang Pao and the Hmong people at Padong, Laos. The Hmong and the US Government reached an agreement to defend the spread of Communism throughout Southeast Asia. The Hmongs agreed not just to side with the United States for freedom and democracy, but “they were willing to die for it.” (see attachment, Aderholt). General Vang Pao and the Hmong people rolled up their sleeves and picked up weapons and ammunitions to fight against the Communists from day one. When the Peace Treaty was signed, the United States had to depart Southeast Asia and left many Hmong without notification.

Because of the Hmongs’ role as CIA’s secret armies during the Vietnam War, they have been targeted for political persecution and torture. After March 27, 1975, the Pathet Lao radio broadcasted and singled out the Hmongs as enemies and spoke of “wiping out these Special Forces who had stood in their way for fifteen years.” (See attachment, Data as of July 1994, the Library of Congress) Due to fear of political persecution and torture, tens of thousands of Hmongs fled to the jungles for hideout, believing that the United States would return to rescue them. Twenty-eight years have passed and the Hmong still believe that the United States will continue to stand by their side. They are continuing to fight with the Communist Pathet Lao, which leading to great casualty. Many innocent women and children were killed by chemical warfare and military might.

The State Department officially came out with allegations of chemical warfare being used against the Hmong minority in Laos as retribution for their role as the CIA’s “Secret Army.” The State Department have known the chemicals as “trichothecene mycotoxins” or “agent orange” and by the Hmong victims as “yellow rain.” To this day, the “yellow rain” issue has never been resolved. (See attachment) The Hmong victims reported that thousands of Hmong people, including women and children, died of chemical intoxication, torture, and persecution. The hideout in the jungle was not safe for them, so that many fled for freedom. They risked their lives and infiltrated through the death zone. A fraction of them were able to swim across the Mekong River to Thailand. However, most of them died of land mine attacks, starvation, ambushes, diseases, and drowning.

Chemical – Biological Warfare Victims

Viewer Discretion Advised | Www.Tragicmountains.Org. After Laos fell to the communists in 1975, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (LPDR) resorted to the use of chemical-biological-toxin warfare, known in the media as “Yellow Rain,” to wipe out the Hmong who were the backbone of the U.S. military effort in Laos. These acts were nothing short of genocide, targeting men, women, and children: dispersing the chemical indiscriminately among the many Hmong villages killing thousands of people. Today, the genocide remains unrecognized by the international community. These photographs are evidence to those claims.

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  1. I find it interesting that Agent Orange was used on the Native Americans too. I always thought it was only used on the Hmongs. This makes me ask, why are they trying to eliminate us? What are they so afraid of? Is it that we (the Hmong and Native Americans) hold the key to life?

  2. I really hope people can see the connection and be able to connect the dots? The evidence is right in front of our face. The Hmong’s got genocide with Agent Orange/Yellow Rain and the Native Americans got genocide with Agent Orange/Yellow Dust or Powder. Both at the same time (between 1960’s-1980’s). So it ask. Why these people? What about these people that they had to target the Hmong’s and Native Americans? Why at/and or during the same time? I hope really hope people wake up to this. These are the same PEOPLE!!!

  3. I’m bumping this so it can be towards the top. I don’t think people really realizes that Agent Orange (Yellow Rain, Yellow Dust, Yellow Powder) was used on both the Hmongs and Native Americans of North, South & Central America to commit mass genocide.

  4. Yeah i agree and i hope people really do realize that connection too. That is a huge clue and it should tell people something about Hmong’s and Native Americans of North, South & Central America.

  5. I had no clue. My mom took Hmong studies classes in college n told me about what the government did to the Hmong n Vietnamese during the Vietnam war n something to do with that yellow dust and how the government used the Hmong n Vietnamese to fight the war against their own people n when it was over made up crap about yellow monsters or something like that to scare them into not wanting to come over to the USA n which that was promised as an enticed to get them to fight. I mite have a few details wrong but I was told that story 14 years ago n memory is foggy.

  6. Randi – Yep pretty much. That yellow rain was used on the Hmong people. It was the Hmong people that was recruited during the Vietnam war and it was known as the secret war. The Hmongs were recruited to fight both the Vietnamese and the Laos people because the US government was not granted to step foot on the land. They seen that the Hmong people were skilled warriors and knew how to navigate the land and mountains and therefore they recruited them. The US promised the Hmongs that if they fought along side of them that they would be granted to come to the US to live freely. So yes, the US government lied to the Hmongs.