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Toxic Jihad: Our Hidden Bombs
Sept 28, 2002
In these days of doublespeak war hysteria, it seems
oddly appropriate that a parallel universe has suddenly
been discovered, a world of energy and annihilation
hiding behind hydrogen's confrontation with its evil
twin, antihydrogen...
The impending war belies a mirror world of a different
sort - one of destruction and annihilation concealed
behind lies and omissions masquerading as truth.
It's the tortured logic "President" Bush recently used
to justify the unlimited war powers he craves: "If you
want to keep the peace, you've got to have the
authorization to use force."
But as our leaders rally for another Persian Gulf
blowout, they seem to have forgotten the unspoken world
of toxicity our troops were exposed to in the 1991 Gulf
War - and the increased dangers awaiting today's
service members.
While 147 US troops were killed in action in the Gulf
War, almost 7,800 have since died and close to 200,000
(or a whopping 28%) have filed claims for medical and
compensation benefits. The UK figures are
proportionately similar, and shockingly, of the 537 UK
vets that have died since the Gulf War ended, a full
70% killed themselves.
The suspected culprit? A deadly syndrome called Gulf
War Illness which, despite $150 million and years of
studies, remains elusive. Potential causes could be the
unproved vaccines and drugs that were forced on troops,
oil-well fire pollution, radiation from allied-forces
Depleted Uranium Munitions, or an especially horrific
case of friendly fire, the exposure of more than
100,000 service members to chemical warfare agents when
US forces conducted demolition operations at Khamisiyah.
Despite the debilitating physical and emotional
consequences of Gulf War Illness, however, vets were
denied treatment for many years and still face an
uphill battle in getting proper support or
compensation. The US Department for Veterans' Affairs
has been accused of withholding death and disability
statistics so as not to undermine the administration's
case for another Gulf war, and only a few weeks ago,
almost 12 years after the fact, was a study finally
published stating that Gulf War Illness is not "just in
the minds" of sufferers.
But factors such as veteran disability and suffering
are not part of the administration's world-domination
equation: an unlimited number of fresh young troops is
necessary for an unlimited war and if the toxic dangers
they will face are even greater than those before them
(given the emphasis on ground warfare) then so be it.
Simple message: service members are heroes when
fighting, but when not in battle they are an expendable
liability.
It's interesting to note a similar laissez faire
attitude regarding toxicity happening right here at
home, and vicariously coming from a familiar source:
truth and justice's evil twin, US "Vice President" Dick
Cheney.
As CEO of oil-field services company Halliburton,
Cheney engineered the purchase of a number of companies
which later got hit with asbestos-related claims, a
liability that is now estimated will run Halliburton
$2.2 billion over the next 15 years. Cheney has pushed
for legislation limiting workers' rights to file claims
for asbestos-related illnesses, but he is not alone in
the fight - 250 of the world's largest corporations
recently petitioned the US Supreme Court to make it
harder for victims to sue.
With the number of claims in the hundreds of thousands
and rising every day, however, it is clear the asbestos
time-bomb can't be denied. Fred Baron, a Dallas-based
trial lawyer representing asbestos victims, has said
"there will be a jihad" against those individuals and
corporations trying to limit a victim's right to sue,
and adds "we will fight them with everything we've got."
At issue are toxic dangers (at home and abroad) linked
by governmental and corporate denial regarding their
deadly effects on the population. But the hazards and
suffering toxicity brings can no longer be relegated to
some unacknowledged separate world; we must expose our
hidden bombs for what they are, then demand justice for
those afflicted and fight to prevent new casualties.
Heather Wokusch is a free-lance writer. She can be
contacted via her web site at www.heatherwokusch.com
Patriotism means being loyal to your country all the time and to its government when it deserves it.
-- Mark Twain
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