Een
klein Vietnamees vissersdorp wordt geplaagd door de enorme vervuiling
van Formosa Steel Mill, een vervuiling die meer dan 100 km. van de
kustlijn zo heeft vervuild dat vissen, het werk van veel dorpsbewoners, niet meer verantwoord is, het gaat hier om één
van de grootste milieuvervuilingen in Vietnam (en ik neem aan dat ze
de Vietnamoorlog daar buiten hebben gelaten, immers de gigantische
vervuiling met Agent Orange door de VS eist tot op de dag van vandaag
slachtoffers en zorgt voor misgeboorten, het gaat daarbij dan ook om één van de grootste oorlogsmisdaden van de VS uit die oorlog)
Bij
datzelfde dorp wil Samsung, je weet wel die van de smartphones, tv’s enz., een kolencentrale bouwen, de Vung An 2
centrale. Als deze centrale inderdaad wordt gebouwd, zal dit een ramp
zijn voor de bewoners van het dorp, daar men met nog veel meer
luchtvervuiling te maken krijgt, plus de neerslag van koolstof
(fijnstof) en andere zwaar kankerverwekkende stoffen….
Oil
Change is een petitie gestart die Samsung op andere gedachten moet
brengen, ontzettende dom en lullig dat Oil Change niet een
wereldwijde petitie is gestart, immers overal worden de smartphones
van Samsung gebruikt, bovendien heeft zo’n petitie veel meer effect,
waarbij je zelfs zou kunnen oproepen geen artikelen meer van Samsung
te kopen……
Lees het
volgende relaas van Oil Change en zegt het voort, met de oproep geen
producten meer aan te schaffen van Samsung, want reken maar niet dat
de bouw van deze kolencentrale op zich staat, je kan er donder op
zeggen dat Samsung in arme landen nog veel meer van dit soort zwaar
vervuilende centrales heeft gebouwd en bouwt, centrales die nog veel vervuilender
zijn dan op olie gestookte (oliecentrales) en al helemaal vergeleken met gasgestookte centrales, waar de eerste, dus oliegestookte centrales de
gezondheid van omwonenden al ernstig schaden en de nabijgelegen natuur fikse schade toebrengen…….
Ken je
iemand in de VS? Wijs deze dan ajb op deze petitie!
Why is Samsung financing coal plants?
Susanne
Wong, Oil Change International <info@priceofoil.org>
In 2016
the Formosa Steel Mill spilled toxic chemicals in a small fishing
village in Central Vietnam devastating a hundred miles of coastline
and making the area nearly unfishable. It is one of the worst
environmental disasters in Vietnam’s history.
Samsung is now planning to
build a coal plant in the same village, where polluted air and water
have already destroyed the livelihood of thousands of people.
Samsung
isn’t just a technology company. They have branches that deal in a
wide variety of sectors, including Samsung Construction and Trading –
the arm currently considering building the Vung Ang 2 coal plant in
Central Vietnam.
This week a global
coalition led by youth from South Korea, Japan, and 30 other
countries is calling on Samsung to reject involvement in Vung Ang 2.
This dirty coal project would lock in decades of new carbon emissions
that we cannot afford.
Samsung’s
decision to build this project is critical. Four companies have
exited the project, including British bank Standard Chartered. A
hastily cobbled together group of Korean companies is poised to step
in. But Samsung is the weak link right now as 11 Samsung executives
were just put on trial for stock price manipulation.
If we
can pressure Samsung to reject Vung Ang 2, this will likely force
other Korean companies to do the same. With your help, we can end
this project once and for all.
Samsung
can’t even defend their involvement from a financial position –
it is already cheaper in Vietnam to invest in new solar arrays than
new coal, and new onshore wind generated power is expected to become
cheaper than coal power in the next year.
Hare
kwaadaardigheid Nikki Haley, VS ambassadeur bij de VN, die keer op
keer het gore lef heeft om wie dan ook de les te lezen, moet
eindelijk eens kijken waarvoor haar eigen land, de grootste
terreurentiteit op aarde, de VS, verantwoordelijk is….. Neem de
zogenaamd door de wettige regering van Syrië gepleegde
gifgasaanvallen die Haley keer op keer noemt als feit, terwijl de
enige bewezen gifgasaanvallen* allen zijn toe te
schrijven aan de door de VS beschermde ‘gematigde rebellen’ (lees: terreurgroepen die zich schuldig maken aan moord, verkrachting, marteling en het gebruik van chemische wapens..)…… Daarmee maakt de VS zich ook nog eens schuldig aan vreselijke oorlogsmisdaden…….
De
schrijver van het hieronder opgenomen artikel, Brian Kalman heeft een
aantal oorlogsmisdaden van de VS op een rij gezet, o.a. waar de VS gebruik heeft gemaakt van
gifgas, en waaruit ten overvloede nog eens de enorme
hypocrisie van helleveeg Haley blijkt…..
Voorts wijst de schrijver nog eens op het chemische wapenprogramma van de VS, een programma waar nog steeds aan wordt gewerkt en waar nog steeds onderzoek wordt gedaan naar nieuwe chemische wapens, ondanks dat de VS of beter gezegd de Vereniging van Terreurstaten het verdrag tegen de verspreiding van chemische wapens, ofwel Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) heeft getekend……
Het gestolen land VS ‘heeft zich voorts onderworpen’ aan de Organisatie voor het Verbod op Chemische Wapens (OVCW), die landen bij de les moet houden, een organisatie waar de VS lid van is……. De organisatie die e.e.a. controleert is het VN orgaan OPCW en is gezeteld in Den Haag, blijkbaar heeft die organisatie geen toegang tot de massamoord laboratoria van de VS….(zie de PS notitie onderaan in dit bericht) Kortom de OPCW is een uiterst lamme organisatie (zoals de hele VN), maar dat past dan weer prefect bij het hypocriete Nederland, de hielenlikker van de VS…….
Nieuw voor mij is het feit dat de VS in meerdere buitenlanden laboratoria heeft voor ‘onderzoek’ naar chemische wapens
US
History of Chemical Weapons Use and Complicity in War Crimes
Before
pointing the finger at Russia and Syria, the U.S. should answer for
its own record
Written
by Brian
Kalman exclusively
for SouthFront;
Brian Kalman is a management professional in the marine
transportation industry. He was an officer in the US Navy for eleven
years.
The
world is once again witnessing the height of U.S. hypocrisy as
members of the U.S. State Department ratchet up anti-Russian and
anti-Syrian rhetoric surrounding the use of chemical weapons in Syria
and the UK. Ambassador Nikki Haley has warned Syria, Iran and Russia
that they will be held accountable for their pre-determined use of
chemical weapons in Idlib on innocent civilians. No evidence was
provided to support her threats. The United States carried out cruise
missile strikes on two previous occasions, and each time provided no
evidence to prove their assertion that the Syrian government used
chemical weapons in attacking civilians, nor was any rational reason
given for such an obviously irrational decision on the part of the
Syrian state. No evidence has ever been provided to justify the clear
international crime of aggression committed by the United States on
these two earlier occasions. Now, the UK and the U.S. are both
attempting to accuse the Russian government of using chemical weapons
in an alleged attempted assassination of a Russian national on UK
soil. Once again, no real evidence has been presented, only
assertions and hearsay.
On Thursday September 13th, Assistant Secretary of State Manisha Singh declared before the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee that the United States would level the most severe of sanctions against Russia, including breaking all diplomatic ties, if Russia refused to admit its guilt in perpetrating the Skripal assassination fiasco and refused to submit to International inspections by the OPCW of its alleged chemical weapons and biological weapons programs. She stated that Russia would have to meet this requirement by an arbitrary November 4th deadline, set by the United States in accordance with a U.S. law, not an international law. H.R. 1724 – Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 specifies in part:
Title III: Control and Elimination of Chemical and Biological Weapons – Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 – Declares it is U.S. policy to: (1) seek multilaterally coordinated efforts with other countries to control the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons; and (2) strengthen efforts to control chemical agents, precursors, and equipment.
Requires the President to use the U.S. export control laws to control the export of defense articles, defense services, goods, and technologies that he determines would assist a country in acquiring the capability to produce or use such weapons.
Amends the Export Administration Act of 1979 to require the Secretary of Commerce to establish a list of goods and technology that would assist a foreign government or group in acquiring chemical or biological weapons. Requires a validated export license for the export of such items to certain countries of concern.
Requires
the President to impose certain sanctions against foreign persons if
he determines that they knowingly contributed to the efforts of a
country to acquire, use, or stockpile chemical or biological weapons.
Declares such sanctions to include: (1) denial of U.S. procurement
contracts for goods or services from such foreign persons; and (2)
prohibition against importation of products from such persons.
Authorizes the President to waive imposition of such sanctions if he
determines that is in the national security interests of the United
States.
Amends
the Arms Export Control Act to set forth similar provisions.
Requires
the President to make a determination with respect to whether a
country has used chemical or biological weapons in violation of
international law or has used lethal chemical or biological weapons
against its own nationals. Authorizes specified congressional
committees to request the President to make such determination with
respect to the use of such weapons.
Requires
the President to impose the following sanctions against foreign
countries that have been found to have used such weapons: (1)
termination of assistance under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961
(except humanitarian assistance and agricultural commodities); (2)
termination of arms sales and arms sales financing; (3) denial of
U.S. credit; and (4) prohibition of the export of certain goods and
technology. Directs the President to impose at least three of the
following additional sanctions unless such countries cease the use of
such weapons and provide assurances that they will not use, and will
allow inspections with respect to, such weapons: (1) opposition to
the extension of multilateral development bank assistance; (2)
prohibition of U.S. bank loans (except loans for food or agricultural
commodities); (3) further export prohibitions; (4) import
restrictions; (5) suspension of diplomatic relations; and (6)
termination of air carrier landing rights. Provides for the removal
and waiver of such sanctions.
Requires
the President to submit to the Congress annual reports on the efforts
of countries to acquire chemical or biological weapons.
Repeals
certain duplicative provisions of the Foreign Relations Authorization
Act, Fiscal Years 1992 and 1993.
It
is important to note that nowhere in this law is there a legal
commitment made by the United States itself, to eliminate its own
chemical and biological weapons capabilities. This is not an
oversight, yet speaks to the imperial hypocrisy of the United States
and an acknowledgement that it alone has been the largest perpetrator
of chemical weapons use and proliferation for more than 50 years. It
currently maintains the largest stockpile of both chemical and
biological warfare agents of any nation on the planet, and continues
to expand its biological weapons research and development on a scale
far larger than any other country.
While
the U.S. Department of Defense maintains that its massive biological
research programs are meant to counter and defend against new
biological weapons being developed, they are in fact developing
bio-weapons in the process.
International
Obligations and the OPCW
Russia is one of 192 signatories (state and non-state parties) of the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention, along with the United States. On September 27th, 2017 it was announced by Russia and the OPCW, that Russia had verified the total destruction of its large chemical weapons stockpile dating from the years of the Soviet Union, estimated at 39,967 metric tons of chemical agents. Russia was obligated to do this by 2020, yet was able to accomplish the task three years ahead of schedule. Under the original agreement, both the U.S. and Russia were obligated to accomplish this by 2007, but both nations required an extension of the deadline.
Although
admitting to a total stockpile of 28,000 metric tons of chemical
agents, the U.S. admits to destroying 90% of its chemical arsenal.
The U.S. requested and was granted an extension out to 2023 to
achieve verified elimination of 100% of its chemical weapons. The
only other signatory of the law other than the United States not to
have already met the requirements is Iraq. It must be stated that
much of the chemical weapons in the Iraqi arsenal are based on the
chemical warfare agents supplied to the Saddam Hussein regime during
the height of the Iran-Iraq war by the United States and other
western nations. Saddam used some of these U.S. supplied weapons to
murder thousands of Iraqi Kurds in the town of Halabja in 1988.
Estimates range between 3,000 – 7,000 deaths and over 10,000
injured.
Saddam
Hussein was a valued asset of the United States and its Western
allies for decades. Hussein pictured above with former French
President Jacque Chirac and U.S Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
Not
only did the United States, and France for that matter, provide
chemical weapons to the Saddam regime, but the U.S. intelligence
agencies provided the Iraqi military with vital battlefield
intelligence, including satellite imagery in aiding them in the war.
The U.S. was well aware that the Saddam regime had used chemical
weapons in at least four offensives during the war. Of course they
knew, they had facilitated the transfer of these weapons to help the
Iraqis prosecute a war of aggression against Iran. Declassified CIA
documents clearly show that the United States was well aware that the
Iraqis had used chemical weapons at least four times between 1983 and
1988. Iran had accused Iraq of using chemical weapons, and tried to
build a case to bring before the United Nations. The United States
withheld its knowledge of course, and continued to aid its ally in
perpetrating these crimes against humanity.
Perhaps
the most powerful photo taken of the Halabja chemical attack
perpetrated against Iraqi Kurds. This woman died running with her
child in an attempt to save her, yet could not escape the deadly
effects of the chemical agents used. Their embrace will forever
symbolize both human love and sacrifice, and unfathomable human
cruelty.
U.S.
Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley has lied through her teeth
repeatedly in her statements before the U.N. Security Council and the
General Assembly. She has stated repeatedly that Assad has used
chemical weapons against his own people in Ghouta in 2013, Khan
Shaykhun in 2017 and Douma in 2018, yet has not supplied one shred of
evidence beyond dubious social media posts of unknown provenance. She
has also stated that the United States is certain that it could only
be the Syrian government, as no other party in the conflict zone
could possibly possess chemical weapons. Here’s the problem with
her statement. Firstly, the United States and the OPCW verified that
Syria destroyed or surrendered all of its chemical weapons agents. On
its official website, the OPCW states:
“Veolia,
the US firm contracted by the OPCW to dispose of part of the Syrian
chemical weapons stockpile, has completed disposal of 75 cylinders of
hydrogen fluoride at its facility in Texas.
This
completes destruction of all chemical weapons declared by the Syrian
Arab Republic. The need to devise a technical solution for
treating a number of cylinders in a deteriorated and hazardous
condition had delayed the disposal process.
Commenting
on this development, the Director-General of the OPCW, Ambassador
Ahmet Üzümcü, said: “This process closes an important chapter in
the elimination of Syria’s chemical weapon programme as we continue
efforts to clarify Syria’s declaration and address ongoing use of
toxic chemicals as weapons in that country.”
Secondly,
the OPCW and the UN have both verified that opposition forces within
Syria have used chemical agents as weapons on numerous occasions
during the conflict. Not only has Carla Del Ponte, UN human rights
investigator, former UN Chief Prosecutor and ICC attorney stated that
opposition forces had used chemical weapons, but also the former OPCW
head field investigator in Syria Jerry Smith stated to the BBC that
he found it very unlikely that the government perpetrated these
chemical attacks.. As recently as October of last year the U.S. State
Department itself seemed to acknowledge the same truth in its warning
to U.S. citizens traveling to Syria. The travel warning stated:
“Tactics
of ISIS, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, and other violent extremist groups
include the use of suicide bombers, kidnapping, small and heavy arms,
improvised explosive devices, and
chemical weapons.
They
have targeted major city centers, road checkpoints, border crossings,
government buildings, shopping areas, and open spaces,
in Damascus, Aleppo, Hamah, Dara, Homs, Idlib, and Dayr al-Zawr
provinces.”
U.S. History of Using Chemical Weapons and Supporting Those that Do
The
last country in the world that should lecture anyone on the
possession and use of WMDs is the United States. Not only is the
United States the only country in history to ever target civilians
with multiple atomic bombs, it has used chemical weapons against the
populations of Southeast Asia and Iraq in the past. Now, they were
smart enough not to use mustard gas and anthrax, but the accumulative
effects of Agent Orange and depleted uranium in these populations has
been devastating, and will not only cause great harm and pain for
these populations, but will leave the land poisoned for generations.
The
United States sprayed copious quantities of TCDD (dioxin
tetrachlordibenzo-para-dioxin), a class 1 carcinogen all over regions
of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos in an attempt to defoliate the jungle
environment, and thus rob their enemy of an environment they excelled
at fighting in and hiding in as part of Operation Ranch Hand. Known
as Agent Orange, the chemical was banned in the U.S. in 1970.
Although extremely hard to quantify, the devastating effects of
dioxin exposure in the Vietnamese population are easily identifiable,
as the same effects were observed in U.S. veterans that returned home
after exposure to the toxin. Abnormally high levels of various
cancers and debilitating birth defects are present in Southeast Asian
populations in areas of greatest use of Agent Orange. Dioxins remain
in the soil and water table, as they do not degrade naturally. Dioxin
also bio-accumulates in the fatty tissues of animals and thus remains
in the food supply.
One
of the many young Vietnamese born long after the war with
debilitating, neurodevelopmental diseases and birth defects due to
Agent Orange exposure of their parents.
The
United States learned little from the crime it perpetrated in
Southeast Asia, nor did it seem to care as it repeated a similar
offense in two successive invasions of Iraq. Having failed to achieve
its aim of defeating Iran through its brutal Iraqi proxy, even after
helping the Saddam Hussein regime in chemical warfare attacks against
Iranian soldiers and Iraqi Kurdish civilians, the United States
largely ignored the numerous atrocities carried out by one of its
favorite dictators. The U.S. would turn on its erstwhile henchman in
1990, after Saddam decided to attack one of its favorite corrupt
emirates in the region. The resulting 1991 invasion of Iraq saw the
heavy use of depleted uranium armored piercing rounds. Depleted
uranium is extremely dense, and thus good for piercing hardened steel
or composite armor. The follow-on invasion of 2003 brought more death
and destruction, and more depleted uranium.
Locations
of depleted uranium munitions used by U.S. Airforce A-10 ground
attack aircraft in Iraq during the 2003 invasion. Depleted Uranium is
also used in anti-armor munitions utilized by all U.S. tanks and
armored fighting vehicles as well, so the true breadth of
distribution and employment of depleted uranium in the above map are
understated.
The
U.S. has not funded the reclamation and disposal of depleted uranium
contaminated scrap in Iraq. The new Iraqi government has started
cleaning up the approximately 350 sites identified as having depleted
uranium contamination in the country, mostly around Basra and
Baghdad, yet also scattered over the entire country. It is estimated
that between 1,000 and 2,000 metric tons of depleted uranium used in
various munitions fired during the invasion of 2003 alone. It is hard
to narrow down the exact amount as the U.S. military has failed to
provide any definitive numbers. Iraqi doctors have recorded and
reported higher cases of cancers in adult patients and increased
birth defects in children being born in Iraq since the invasion took
place. The U.S. government seems determined to undermine any attempts
to draw direct correlations between this recorded phenomenon and its
use of depleted uranium in two successive wars in Iraq. It has also
fought all attempts by U.S. war veterans suffering from various
cancers and neurological diseases from their similar exposure in both
wars.
Continued Support of War Criminals
Nikki
Haley fails to acknowledge the historic role of the United States
government’s support of some of the world’s most horrible regimes
in the past. From the Khmer Rouge and Saddam Hussein then, to Saudi
Arabia and Tahrir al-Sham now, the United States has supported many
of the world’s most deplorable violators of human rights. Yet Nikki
Haley has the arrogance and delusional belief that she has the moral
high ground in chastising Syria and Russia before the U.N.?
Just
this week U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo clarified that the
Saudi and UAE have acted in good faith in taking steps to reduce
civilian casualties in their military operations in Yemen and that
the U.S. military would keep providing both material and direct
support to both nations in prosecuting their illegal war. U.S.
manufactured and supplied bombs are being used to kill civilians in
Yemen regularly, amounting to an estimated 15,000 killed or injured
civilians over a period of three years. This does not take into
account the deaths and suffering associated with the humanitarian
crisis that has resulted from the Saudi-led coalition destroying
virtually all infrastructure in the Houthi controlled part of the
country. I am sure that it is also just another “unintended
consequence” that al-Qaeda has expanded and strengthened its
position in Yemen as a direct result of the conflict. When will any
member state in the U.N. finally tell Nikki Haley that the Security
Council must acknowledge that al-Qaeda has always been a proxy of
Saudi Arabia and the United States?
Children
injured when a Saudi airstrike targeted a school bus in Saada, Yemen.
A total of 51 civilians, 40 of them children below the age of 15 were
killed in the strike. The United States supplies the aircraft, bombs,
aerial refueling and intelligence gathering resources to support the
bombing campaign.
Nikki
Haley continues to claim that Russia is directly facilitating an
impending humanitarian disaster and war crime in the impending Syrian
military operations to retake Idlib province, destroy a host of ISIS
and al-Qaeda linked terrorist groups and liberate hundreds of
thousands of civilians. She said the same thing during the battle to
liberate Aleppo. Her lies were revealed when the SAA and Russia
finally liberated the city and Syrian civilians who were kept as
prisoners there by the Islamic terrorists were finally free of the
horror of their captivity. Is it no wonder that tens of thousands of
Syrian refugees displaced by the conflict are now returning to their
home country?
Apparently
Nikki Haley sees no issue at all in Imperial America supporting Saudi
Arabia and the UAE killing Yemeni civilians by the thousands in
Yemen. The U.S. not only supplies the bombs, but directly provides
in-flight refueling of the aircraft and the intelligence used to
conduct the “precision” strikes that target schools, hospitals,
funerals, and even school bus loads of children. Does this surprise
anyone? U.S. coalition airstrikes against ISIL in Raqqa and Mosul
killed an estimated 6,000 civilians. In Raqqa, U.S. aircraft
conducted 90% of the airstrikes, and the U.S. fired at least 30,000
artillery rounds into the city. The U.S. has yet to pay any political
or legal price for its indiscriminant destruction of these cities.
One
of thousands of airstrikes carried out on the Syrian city of Raqqa.
The U.S. led coalition was widely criticized for its blatant
disregard for civilian casualties in its targeting of the city as
part of its offensive to destroy ISIL. They have yet to be held
accountable for the estimated 800-1,000 civilians deaths caused.
The Russian Response
Russia
needs to finally accept the reality that there is nothing to be
gained by negotiating, or attempting to collaborate with the United
States in solving problems. It’s like a shepherd using a wolf to
defend his flock, or a detective enlisting the aid of a criminal to
solve a crime that the criminal is a co-conspirator in perpetrating.
It is illogical in the extreme. The Russian U.N. mission needs to
call out Nikki Haley and the U.S. on its own deplorable record and
hypocrisy and while seeking the aid of other member states,
must also realizing that most of them are bought-off by Washington.
Hasn’t Haley repeatedly threatened to stop giving money to nations
that do not support her resolutions?
The
Russians need to realize that they can never have a mutually
respectful and beneficial relationship with the political and
financial elites that control the United States. Russia will always
find a friend in the American people, but Washington? This same elite
despises the American people more than it does Putin or Assad. If it
wasn’t for working class American citizens fed up with the U.S.
establishment elite, we would likely already be in a direct war with
Russia, China and Iran. I hope that the Russian political and
military leadership understands this. Stop trying to placate
Washington and start preparing to defend your nation. The Deep State
will not stop at Ukraine or Syria. They desire the complete
subjugation of Russia and a return to the Yeltsin days, or worse.
======================================
* Een aantal gifgasaanvallen vond niet eens plaats, zo bleek uit
onderzoek van o.a. de VN……
PS: Israël en Egypte behoren tot de weinige landen die het CWC niet hebben getekend en nog steeds chemische wapens produceren, opslaan en verkopen…….. Niet ondenkbaar dus dat de terreurgroepen in Syrië (‘gematigde rebellen) hun gifgas hebben betrokken uit Israël en/of Egypte, beiden grote vijanden van het Syrische Assad bewind…… Israël heeft al een paar keer aangegeven samen te werken met die terreurgroepen en zelfs samenwerking met IS niet uit de weg te gaan……. Dat deze terreurgroepen gifgas bezitten, waaronder sarin en chlorine deert het westen blijkbaar niet…..Overigens gebruiken veel westerse landen die het verdrag ondertekenden wel een chemisch wapen dat ze ook opgeslagen hebben, t.w. traangas……… Onlangs bleek overigens dat Nederland in het bezit is van nog veel gevaarlijker chemische wapens, die door TNO worden onderzocht……. (volgens het verdrag mag je ook geen chemische wapens in het bezit hebben…)
Vorige week werd bekend gemaakt dat de zwaar onverantwoordelijke misdadige gifmenger Monsanto een man, Dewayne Johnson*, die beroepsmatig RoundUp heeft moeten gebruiken en daardoor het non-Hodgkin Lymfoon (dodelijke bloedkanker) opliep, een vergoeding moet betalen van $ 289 miljoen. Zoals je begrijpt: Roundup producent Monsanto is zo onbeschoft tegen deze veroordeling in verweer te gaan, terwijl het bedrijf al decennia geleden op de hoogte was van het gevaar dat gebruik van Roundup met zich meebrengt…….
Monsanto is nu overigens van Bayer, één van de grote oorlogsmisdadigers uit WOII, waar men gevangenen uit de concentratiekampen misbruikte voor medische proeven…… Ongelofelijk dat men de naam Bayer na de oorlog heeft behouden…… Kortom gezien het verleden is Bayer een bedrijf dat waarschijnlijk nog minder dan Monsanto ethisch verantwoord onderneemt…..
Gisteren kwam Anti-Media met het bericht (overgenomen van Common Dreams) dat Vietnam genoegdoening wil van o.a. Monsanto voor de productie en de verkoop daarna aan het VS leger van het chemische wapen Agent Orange (ook Dow Chemical maakte dit chemische wapen). Viet Nam News meldde afgelopen zondag dat de vereniging van Agent Orange slachtoffers (VAVA) een zaak aanspant tegen Monsanto en dat voor 3 miljoen Vietnamese slachtoffers van deze chemische oorlogsvoering met Agent Orange.
Shell had tijdens de Vietnamoorlog een grote voorraad van dit smerige chemische wapen voor het VS leger opgeslagen in Pernis…….
Nog steeds eist Agent Orange slachtoffers onder de jonge bevolking van Vietnam, kinderen die met vreselijke afwijkingen worden geboren…….. De VS heeft naar schatting 45 miljoen liter van deze kankertroep over Vietnam gesproeid tijdens de, in feite illegale oorlog van de VS tegen Noord-Vietnam…… Hier een link naar een artikel van Independent Science News, waar de gevaren van Agent Orange worden beschreven.
Naast de slachtoffers die de VS met Agent Orange maakte, kwamen er meer dan 2 miljoen Vietnamezen om door deze agressieoorlog van de VS, ofwel ze werden vermoord door de VS en partners als Australië die meevochten in Vietnam…….
Vietnam
Demands Monsanto Finally Be Held Liable Over Agent Orange
(‘met dank’ aan de grootste terreurentiteit op aarde, de VS, in deze het Pentagon, voorts met dank aan Monsanto, Dow Chemical en Shell….)
(CD) — In
the wake of a U.S. court ordering Monsanto
to pay $289 million in damages to man who says its weedkiller Roundup
caused his cancer, Vietnam has called
on the
agrichemical giant to pay reparations to Vietnamese victims of Agent
Orange.
“This
case is a precedent that rejects previous arguments that the
herbicides supplied to the U.S. military by Monsanto and other U.S.
chemical companies during the Vietnam War are not harmful to people’s
health,” spokesperson for the Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign
Affairs Nguyen Phuong Tra said to
reporters last week.
“We
believe Monsanto should be responsible for compensating Vietnamese
victims of Agent Orange for the damages caused by the company’s
herbicides,” she said.
Monsanto, now a
unit of Bayer, was one of the manufacturers of Agent Orange. The U.S.
dumped roughly 45 million liters of the notorious compound, which
contained dioxin,
on Vietnam during the war, unleashing “a
slow-onset disaster whose devastating economic, health, and
ecological impacts … are still being felt today.” With its
long-lasting impacts on the Vietnamese, as well as U.S.
service-members, it’s been called “one
of the most tragic legacies of the war.”
Viet
Nam Newsreported Sunday
that the Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA), which
is working for justice on behalf of roughly 3 million Vietnamese
affected by the chemical warfare, is also hopeful given the new
verdict.
“No
matter how difficult and prolonged this case might be, we won’t
ever give up on it, for the sake of the millions of Vietnamese
victims,” said Quách Thành Vinh, VAVA’s chief of office and
director of liaison lawyers office.
Former
U.S. school groundskeeper Dewayne Johnson, who’s suffering from
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, secured his
legal victory against Monsanto on Aug. 10. CNN reported that
the ruling “could set a massive precedent for thousands of other
cases claiming Monsanto’s famous herbicide causes non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma.”
PS: vanmorgen op Radio1 rond 8.45 u. in het ‘positieve nieuwsoverzicht’ (‘opmerkelijk nieuws uit andere media’ noemt men dat in het Radio1 Journaal met presentator en superleeghoofd van Den Berg) aandacht voor een Australiër die het vliegtuig terugzag waarin hij tijdens de Vietnamoorlog had gevlogen…… Positief nieuws dus geen aandacht voor de enorme moordpartij in Vietnam middels straaljagers en bommenwerpers, of het sproeien met Agent Orange….. De man was blij het toestel weer te zien, zo liet de wezenloze medepresentator (v) weten en zo voegde ze toe, hij mag ook een keer mee met een tochtje in dat moordwapen…… (al nam ze het woord moordwapen uiteraard niet in de mond….) ‘Leuk positief nieuws hè??!!!’
De superlatieven na de dood van oorlogsmisdadiger en massamoordenaar McCain zijn niet van de lucht, zelfs VPRO’s OVT liet het ‘geweldige onderdeel de Vakantieman‘ gistermorgen vallen om een portret van deze schoft ‘te schilderen…….’
Hier de aankondiging van dit onderdeel op de site van Radio1:
‘De
invloedrijke en zeer gerespecteerde Amerikaanse senator John McCain
is zaterdag op 81-jarige leeftijd overleden aan de gevolgen van
hersenkanker. In de studio de amerikaniste Markha Valenta om over hem
te praten‘
Hier wat woorden die tijdens dit onderdeel werden gebruikt over McCain: presentator Mathijs Deen begon al goed toen hij in de aankondiging al stelde dat McCain krijgsgevangene is geweest, dat herhaalde hij tijdens dit praatje een paar keer gevolgd door: “daar praten we zo meteen over” (en dat zal ik hierna dan ook maar doen…..)
Valente stelde dat McCain een markante figuur was, “Zeg maar bigger than life….” Uiteraard werd zijn verzet tegen Trump genoemd en als je als senator tegen Trump bent, zit het wat betreft Valenta en de VPRO wel goed met je……
Volgens Valenta was McCain een politicus van karakter, die zijn karakter inzette, zijn integriteit (ha! ha! ha!), zijn moed, zijn gevoel voor eer (ha! ha! ha!), zijn vasthoudingsvermogen, zijn strijdbaarheid, die hem door zijn gevangenschap hielpen…….
Dan zijn gevangenisstraf: hij zat in een vliegtuig aldus Valenta, toen hij werd neergehaald door de Noord-Vietnamezen…… In een vliegtuig? McCain bestuurde één van de vele ‘vliegtuigen’ waarmee de VS Noord-Vietnamese steden en dorpen plat bombardeerde, waarmee napalmbommen op de bevolking van Noord-Vietnam werden afgeworpen, of waarmee dorpen en steden werden bestookt, die werden verdacht van sympathie en hulp voor de Noord-Vietnamezen……
Verder gebruikte de VS het ontbladeringsmiddel Agent Orange, een middel dat tot op de dag van vandaag slachtoffers eist onder de bevolking van Vietnam…….
Beste bezoeker, met geen woord werden deze oorlogsmisdaden genoemd, nee McCain, zoon van een VS admiraal mocht eerder naar huis, maar dat weigerde hij, wetend aldus Valente dat hij langer vastgehouden en gemarteld zou worden in wat toen nog Noord-Vietnam werd genoemd…… De VS had niets te zoeken in Vietnam en wat betreft dat martelen, de VS deed en doet niet anders dan mensen martelen, alleen het gijzelen van mensen op Guantanamo Bay is al een marteling van jewelste, waarnaast die mensen ook nog eens fysiek werden (en naar het schijnt nog steeds worden) gemarteld…..
Presentator Deen vatte het voorgaande samen met de woorden: hij was een oorlogsheld…… ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Als je zo lult, zonder naar de feiten te kijken, kan je ook stellen dat soldaten van het Duitse nazi-bewind oorlogshelden waren als ze opkwamen voor hun collega’s, wat ze verder ook geflikt hadden…….
Valenta voegde nog toe dat McCain een hart voor benadeelden had en dat gebaseerd op z’n onwil om ObamaCare af te schieten……. Toch meldde Valente nog wel dat McCain een groot voorstander van de oorlog tegen Irak was, een oorlog waarin tot nu meer dan 1,5 miljoen benadeelden werden vermoord door ronduit VS terreur, die verdere uitleg over de illegale oorlog van de VS tegen Irak, kwam natuurlijk niet uit de mond van Valenta….. Laten we over de benadeelden in de VS maar helemaal niet spreken, hoewel? >> Meer dan 60 miljoen mensen in de VS die afhankelijk zijn van voedselbonnen, daar ze aan de grond zijn geraakt in de onmenselijke neoliberale VS prestatiemaatschappij, zaken waar McCain totaal geen moeite mee had…….
Vanmorgen was het overigens ook op de buitenlandse radiozenders bal en stak men McCain de ene na de andere veer in de vieze oorlogsreet…..
McCain is dood, een goede reden om een goed glas whiskey te drinken en een bong te roken van (uiteraard gevuld met softdrugs), iets waarvan McCain i.t.t. de harddrug alcohol, een zwaar tegenstander was…) Lees wat McCain betreft ook: ‘McCain terminaal ziek: vier als het zover is zijn dood luidruchtig, niets om je voor te schamen‘ (en zie wat Caitlin Johnstone volkomen terecht over McCain te zeggen heeft)
Het
Pentagon en de CIA, onderdeel van ‘het geheime propaganda ministerie’ van de VS hebben de
directe supervisie gehad over honderden bekende films. Vorig jaar maakten de
schrijvers Tom Secker en Matthew Alford op basis van 4.000 voormalig
geheime documenten bekend hoe het Pentagon en de CIA via programma’s
deelnamen aan het maken van honderden films en tv series en daarbij invloed uitoefenden op het aan het publiek gepresenteerde materiaal….
Je snapt dat de VS overheid ook op deze manier het volk in de VS en de consument buiten de VS hersenspoelt met haar smerige geschiedvervalsing en het goedlullen van de ronduit grootscheepse terreur die het buiten haar grens uitoefent……. (uiteraard worden voor de leugens van de VS overheid niet de typeringen gebruikt die ik hiervoor neerschreef)
Secker
en Alford kwamen aan deze documenten door een beroep te doen op de
‘Freedom of Information Act’ (FOIA), of zoals wij dat noemen een beroep te
doen op de Wet Openbaarheid Bestuur (WOB). Uit de documenten bleek
dat het Pentagon en de CIA achter de schermen hadden meegewerkt aan meer dan 800 belangrijke films en 1.000 tv series en onder druk de strekking van deze films en series hebben bepaald…….
Overigens
zal de oplettende kijker van Hollywood films en series al lang geleden hebben geconcludeerd dat de VS overheid betrokken is bij het propaganda
maken via films of tv series…… Neem alleen al een groot deel van al de A- en B-films en series die werden gemaakt over de Vietnam oorlog, waar zelfs decennia na die oorlog de Noord-Vietnamezen als de wrede en foute tegenstanders van ‘de heldhaftige VS militairen’ worden afgeschilderd……..
‘Heldhaftige VS militairen’ die alleen al in Vietnam verantwoordelijk zijn voor meer dan twee miljoen moorden…… Nog steeds zijn de gevolgen van deze oorlog zichtbaar in Vietnam, bijvoorbeeld de slachtoffers van napalm bombardementen of de slachtoffers die het chemische wapen ‘Agent Orange’ maakte en nog maakt….. (ook Laos en Cambodja werden ‘stiekem’ zwaar gebombardeerd, waarbij ook nog eens honderdduizenden burgers omkwamen…….)
Er worden nu al een aantal jaren films over de illegale oorlog van de VS tegen Irak gemaakt, waarin de VS uiteraard de goede partij is, ondanks dat deze grootste terreurentiteit op aarde met die oorlog verantwoordelijk is voor de moord op meer dan anderhalf miljoen Irakezen……
Niet
alleen de VS maakt zich schuldig aan dit soort propaganda, de Britten
kunnen er ook wat van. De BBC gaat zelfs zover dat men de militaire
missies van de Britten als een vorm van vermaak op tv brengt…. (ook Nederland doet dit…) Twee vliegen in één klap: namelijk het volk tonen dat de Britten
goed bezig zijn in het buitenland, ook al helpen de Britten de
reli-fascistische dictatuur Saoedi-Arabië en zijn daarmee mede
verantwoordelijk voor de genocide die dit land in Jemen
uitvoert……. Voorts zijn dit soort propaganda documentaires goed
voor het ronselen van kinderen voor het leger…….
410
Movies Made Under the Direct Supervision of the Pentagon
(ZHE) — A
year ago we featured a
detailed report by
authors Tom Secker and Matthew Alford exposing just how vast the
Pentagon and CIA programs for partnering with Hollywood actually are,
based on some 4,000 new pages of formerly classified archived
documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.
The report
noted at the time that “These
documents for the first time demonstrate that the US government has
worked behind the scenes on over 800 major movies and more than 1,000
TV titles.”
Reviewing
the ever expanding list, the average movie watcher might be in for a
shock at what films are actually included — there
are the more predictable ones like Black
Hawk Down, Zero Dark Thirty,
and Lone
Survivor;
but also entirely
unexpected ones that apparently needed the military-industrial
complex’s propaganda touch like Earnest
Saves Christmas, Karate
Kid 2, The Silence of the Lambs, Twister,
the Iron
Man movies, and
more recently Pitch
Perfect 3.
When
a Hollywood writer or producer approaches the Pentagon and asks for
access to military assets to help make their film, they have to
submit their script to the entertainment liaison offices for
vetting. Ultimately,
the man with the final say is Phil Strub, the Department of Defense’s
(DOD) chief Hollywood liaison,
who has been at the helm of this formerly semi-secret department
going all the way back to 1989.
If
there are characters, action or dialogue that the DOD doesn’t
approve of then the film-maker has to make changes to accommodate the
military’s demands. If they refuse then the Pentagon packs up its
toys and goes home. To obtain full cooperation the producers have to
sign contracts, called Production Assistance Agreements, which lock
them into using a military-approved version of the script.
Months
ago, Strub was again profiled in a report called Elisting
an Audience: How Hollywood Peddles Propaganda,
which quoted him trying to push back against the growing media
exposure over the past year: “We’re
not trying to brainwash people! We’re out to present the clearest,
truest view,” Strub
told The
Outline.
The
report rightly noted that while Americans generally pride themselves
on living in a free speech anti-censorship society, while
simultaneously mocking the propaganda examples in places like Russia
or China, the US public is subject to more homegrown state-run
propaganda than it thinks:
Military
pageantry in Russia, massive rallies in North Korea, blunt messaging
from China. We
cluck at shameless self-aggrandizing when we see it overseas. But it
doesn’t take much effort to see that American propaganda is
everywhere, too. It’s
not government-made, and it’s not quite as brazen as its
counterpart from abroad. But it’s here, and to ignore that a piece
of content is, at its core, propaganda — especially these days,
while Trump openly pines for grand army parades — is a mistake.
“There’s all kinds of ways to make an ideological point,”
Harris added. “Sometimes
I do think we’re not attuned enough. We do not look hard enough for
propaganda.”
And
what’s more, unlike in authoritarian systems, in the West it is the
consumers that are actually willing, if perhaps unwitting,
participants in state propaganda. The
Outline report continues:
Certainly,
the content has alternative, sincere agendas, too, but it’s the
giant, amorphous market of consumers that has called it forth. That’s
the difference between our propaganda and everyone else’s. In
autocratic regimes, a government-backed entity pushes it onto
indifferent or unwilling consumers. In America, we, the consumers,
happily demand it.
Want
to see what Hollywood films — some
recent and some going back decades — that
you’ve seen but were unaware had the US Department of Defense’s
official imprimatur?
* *
*
Below
is amerely
partial list of
films in alphabetical order that had Pentagon involvement either
during the script or production phase,
according to declassified US government documents. Amazingly the list
of 410 movies is but half of the total number (for example, Zero
Dark Thirty and
some other prominent ones are not on there) and was
compiled by the FOIA investigative website Spy
Culture.
Met het uitrollen van 5G netwerk komt er steeds
meer twijfel aan de veiligheid van de straling voor de hersenen en
raken meer en meer wetenschappers ervan overtuigd dat de straling die
wordt aangewend voor de mobiele telefoon, kankerverwekkend
is, ofwel o.a. hersentumor bevorderend……. Met het 5G netwerk wordt die straling nog gevaarlijker……..
In het hieronder opgenomen artikel
geschreven door Mark Hertsgaard en Mark Dowie en eerder geplaatst op
The Nation (hier de link naar het origineel), wordt aangetoond dat
de fabrikanten van mobiele telefoons en de netwerkbeheerders willens en wetens
wetenschappers betaalden voor hen gunstige uitkomsten uit onderzoek
naar straling van mobile telefoons……. Echter zoals het onderzoek naar het gebruik van tabak en fossiele brandstoffen verging, vonden
een aantal van deze wetenschappers wel degelijk bewijzen voor negatieve beïnvloeding van de hersenen door de straling, overigens kan door diezelfde straling ook het
DNA beschadigd worden……
De Wereldgezondheidsorganisatie (WHO) waarschuwt en stelt dat straling van mobiele telefoons ‘mogelijk’ kankerverwekkend kan zijn……. Zo zie je nog maar eens de werking van lobbyisme in de WHO, de lobby van netwerkbeheerders en fabrikanten van mobiele telefoons…….
In feite zijn een paar miljard mensen alleen door de mobiele telefoon te gebruiken, onderdeel geweest van een gezondheidsonderzoek, daar nooit van te voren een onderzoek werd ingesteld naar negatieve gezondheidseffecten door het gebruik van deze telefoons……..
Lees het volgende ontluisterende
artikel ajb en neem het zekere voor het onzekere: gebruik je telefoon
met ‘oortjes’ en microfoon, dus niet tegen je hoofd en zegt het
voort! (en doe je telefoon niet in je broekzak…)
Let wel deze ‘geschreven video’ is een andere dan de gesproken tekst in de ‘video’ op het origineel
Things
didn’t end well between George Carlo and Tom Wheeler; the last time
the two met face-to-face, Wheeler had security guards escort Carlo
off the premises. As president of the Cellular Telecommunications and
Internet Association (CTIA), Wheeler was the wireless industry’s
point man in Washington. Carlo was the scientist handpicked by
Wheeler to defuse a public-relations crisis that threatened to
strangle his infant industry in its crib. This was back in 1993, when
there were only six cell-phone subscriptions for every 100 adults in
the United States. But industry executives were looking forward to a
booming future.
Remarkably,
cell phones had been allowed onto the US consumer market a decade
earlier without any government safety testing. Now, some customers
and industry workers were being diagnosed with cancer. In January
1993, David
Reynard sued the NEC America Company,
claiming that his wife’s NEC phone caused her lethal brain tumor.
After Reynard appeared on national TV, the story went viral. A
congressional subcommittee announced an investigation; investors
began dumping their cell-phone stocks; and Wheeler and the CTIA swung
into action.
A
week later, Wheeler announced that his industry would pay for a
comprehensive research program. Cell phones were already safe,
Wheeler told reporters; the new research would simply “re-validate
the findings of the existing studies.”
George
Carlo seemed like a good bet to fulfill Wheeler’s mission. He was
an epidemiologist who also had a law degree, and he’d conducted
studies for other controversial industries. After a study funded by
Dow Corning, Carlo had declared that breast implants posed only
minimal health risks. With chemical-industry funding, he had
concluded that low levels of dioxin, the chemical behind the Agent
Orange scandal, were not dangerous. In 1995, Carlo began directing
the industry-financed Wireless Technology Research project (WTR),
whose eventual budget of $28.5 million made it the best-funded
investigation of cell-phone safety to date.
Outside
critics soon came to suspect that Carlo would be the front man for an
industry whitewash. They cited his dispute
with Henry Lai,
a professor of biochemistry at the University of Washington, over a
study that Lai had conducted examining whether cell-phone radiation
could damage DNA. In 1999, Carlo and the WTR’s general counsel sent
a letter to the university’s president urging that Lai be fired for
his alleged violation of research protocols. Lai accused the WTR of
tampering with his experiment’s results. Both Carlo and Lai deny
the other’s accusations.
Critics
also attacked what they regarded as the slow pace of WTR research.
The WTR was merely “a confidence game” designed to placate the
public but stall real research, according to
Louis Slesin, editor of the trade publication Microwave
News.
“By dangling a huge amount of money in front of the cash-starved
[scientific] community,” Slesin argued, “Carlo guaranteed silent
obedience. Anyone who dared complain risked being cut off from his
millions.” Carlo denies the allegation.
Whatever
Carlo’s motives might have been, the documented fact is that he and
Wheeler would eventually clash bitterly over the WTR’s findings,
which Carlo presented to wireless-industry leaders on February 9,
1999. By that date, the WTR had commissioned more than 50 original
studies and reviewed many more. Those studies raised “serious
questions” about cell-phone safety, Carlo told a closed-door
meeting of the CTIA’s board of directors, whose members included
the CEOs or top officials of the industry’s 32 leading companies,
including Apple, AT&T, and Motorola.
Carlo
sent letters to each of the industry’s chieftains on October 7,
1999, reiterating that the WTR’s research had found the following:
“The risk of rare neuro-epithelial tumors on the outside of the
brain was more than doubled…in cell phone users”; there was an
apparent “correlation between brain tumors occurring on the right
side of the head and the use of the phone on the right side of the
head”; and “the ability of radiation from a phone’s antenna to
cause functional genetic damage [was] definitely positive….”
Carlo
urged the CEOs to do the right thing: give consumers “the
information they need to make an informed judgment about how much of
this unknown risk they wish to assume,” especially since some in
the industry had “repeatedly and falsely claimed that wireless
phones are safe for all consumers including children.”
The
World Health Organization classifies cell-phone radiation as a
“possible” carcinogen.
The
very next day, a livid Tom Wheeler began publicly trashing Carlo to
the media. In a letter he shared with the CEOs, Wheeler told Carlo
that the CTIA was “certain that you have never provided CTIA with
the studies you mention”—an apparent effort to shield the
industry from liability in the lawsuits that had led to Carlo’s
hiring in the first place. Wheeler charged further that the studies
had not been published in peer-reviewed journals, casting doubt on
their validity.
Wheeler’s
tactics succeeded in dousing the controversy. Although Carlo had in
fact repeatedly briefed Wheeler and other senior industry officials
on the studies, which had indeed undergone peer review and would soon
be published, reporters on the technology beat accepted Wheeler’s
discrediting of Carlo and the WTR’s findings. (Wheeler would go on
to chair the Federal Communications Commission, which regulates the
wireless industry. He agreed to an interview for this article but
then put all of his remarks off the record, with one exception: his
statement that he has always taken scientific
guidance from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), ‘which, he said, “has concluded, ‘the weight of scientific
evidence had not linked cell phones with any health problems.’”)
Why,
after such acrimony, Carlo was allowed to make one last appearance
before the CTIA board is a mystery. Whatever the reason, Carlo flew
to New Orleans in February 2000 for the wireless industry’s annual
conference, where he submitted the WTR’s
final report to
the CTIA board. According to Carlo, Wheeler made sure that none of
the hundreds of journalists covering the event could get anywhere
near him.
When
Carlo arrived, he was met by two seriously muscled men in plain
clothes; the larger of the two let drop that he had recently left the
Secret Service. The security men steered Carlo into a holding room,
where they insisted he remain until his presentation. When summoned,
Carlo found roughly 70 of the industry’s top executives waiting for
him in silence. Carlo had spoken a mere 10 minutes when Wheeler
abruptly stood, extended a hand, and said, “Thank you, George.”
The two muscle men then ushered the scientist to a curbside taxi and
waited until it pulled away.
In
the years to come, the WTR’s cautionary findings would be
replicated by numerous other scientists in the United States and
around the world, leading the World Health Organization in 2011 to
classify cell-phone radiation as a “possible” human carcinogen
and the governments of Great Britain, France, and Israel to issue
strong warnings on cell-phone use by children. But as the taxi
carried Carlo to Louis Armstrong International Airport, the scientist
wondered whether his relationship with the industry might have turned
out differently if cell phones had been safety-tested before being
allowed onto the consumer market, before profit took precedence over
science. But it was too late: Wheeler and his fellow executives had
made it clear, Carlo told The
Nation,
that “they would do what they had to do to protect their industry,
but they were not of a mind to protect consumers or public health.”
This
article does not argue that cell phones and other wireless
technologies are necessarily dangerous; that is a matter for
scientists to decide. Rather, the focus here is on the global
industry behind cell phones—and the industry’s long campaign to
make people believe that cell phones are safe.
As
happened earlier with Big Tobacco and Big Oil, the wireless
industry’s own scientists privately warned about the risks.
That
campaign has plainly been a success: 95 out of every 100 adult
Americans now own a cell phone; globally, three out of four adults
have cell-phone access, with sales increasing every year. The
wireless industry is now one of the fastest-growing on Earth and one
of the biggest, boasting annual sales of $440 billion in 2016.
Carlo’s
story underscores the need for caution, however, particularly since
it evokes eerie parallels with two of the most notorious cases of
corporate deception on record: the campaigns by the tobacco and
fossil-fuel industries to obscure the dangers of smoking and climate
change, respectively. Just as tobacco executives were privately told
by their own scientists (in the 1960s) that smoking was deadly, and
fossil-fuel executives were privately told by their own scientists
(in the 1980s) that burning oil, gas, and coal would cause a
“catastrophic” temperature rise, so Carlo’s testimony reveals
that wireless executives were privately told by their own scientists
(in the 1990s) that cell phones could cause cancer and genetic
damage.
Carlo’s
October 7, 1999, letters to wireless-industry CEOs are the
smoking-gun equivalent of the
November 12, 1982, memo that
M.B. Glaser, Exxon’s manager of environmental-affairs programs,
sent to company executives explaining that burning oil, gas, and coal
could raise global temperatures by a destabilizing 3 degrees Celsius
by 2100. For the tobacco industry, Carlo’s letters are akin to the
1969 proposal that
a Brown & Williamson executive wrote for countering anti-tobacco
advocates. “Doubt is our product,” the memo declared. “It is
also the means of establishing a controversy…at the public level.”
Like
their tobacco and fossil-fuel brethren, wireless executives have
chosen not to publicize what their own scientists have said about the
risks of their products. On the contrary, the industry—in America,
Europe, and Asia—has spent untold millions of dollars in the past
25 years proclaiming that science is on its side, that the critics
are quacks, and that consumers have nothing to fear. This, even as
the industry has worked behind the scenes—again like its Big
Tobacco counterpart—to deliberately addict its customers. Just as
cigarette companies added nicotine to hook smokers, so have wireless
companies designed cell phones to deliver a jolt of dopamine with
each swipe of the screen.
This Nation investigation
reveals that the wireless industry not only made the same moral
choices that the tobacco and fossil-fuel industries did; it also
borrowed from the same public-relations playbook those industries
pioneered. The playbook’s key insight is that an industry doesn’t
have to win the scientific argument about safety; it only has to keep
the argument going. That amounts to a win for the industry, because
the apparent lack of certainty helps to reassure customers, even as
it fends off government regulations and lawsuits that might pinch
profits.
Central
to keeping the scientific argument going is making it appear that not
all scientists agree. Again like the tobacco and fossil-fuel
industries, the wireless industry has “war gamed” science, as a
Motorola internal memo in 1994 phrased
it. War-gaming science involves playing offense as well as defense:
funding studies friendly to the industry while attacking studies that
raise questions; placing industry-friendly experts on advisory bodies
like the World Health Organization; and seeking to discredit
scientists whose views depart from the industry’s.
Funding
friendly research has perhaps been the most important component of
this strategy, because it conveys the impression that the scientific
community truly is divided. Thus, when studies have linked wireless
radiation to cancer or genetic damage—as Carlo’s WTR did in 1999;
as the WHO’s
Interphone study did in 2010;
and as the
US National Toxicology Program did in 2016—industry
spokespeople can point out, accurately, that other studies disagree.
“[T]he overall balance of the evidence” gives no cause for alarm,
asserted Jack Rowley, research and sustainability director for the
Groupe Special Mobile Association (GSMA), Europe’s wireless trade
association, speaking
to reporters about the WHO’s findings.
A
closer look reveals the industry’s sleight of hand. When Henry Lai,
the professor whom Carlo tried to get fired, analyzed 326
safety-related studies completed between 1990 and 2005, he learned
that 56 percent found a biological effect from cell-phone radiation
and 44 percent did not; the scientific community apparently was
split. But when Lai recategorized the studies according to their
funding sources, a different picture emerged: 67 percent of the
independently funded studies found a biological effect, while a mere
28 percent of the industry-funded studies did. Lai’s findings were
replicated by a
2007 analysis in Environmental
Health Perspectives that
concluded industry-funded studies were two and a half times less
likely than independent studies to find a health effect.
One
key player has not been swayed by all this wireless-friendly
research: the insurance industry. The
Nation has
not been able to find a single insurance company willing to sell a
product-liability policy that covered cell-phone radiation. “Why
would we want to do that?” one executive chuckled before pointing
to more than two dozen lawsuits outstanding against wireless
companies, demanding a total of $1.9 billion in damages. Some judges
have affirmed such lawsuits, including a judge
in Italy who refused to allow industry-funded research as evidence.
Even
so, the industry’s neutralizing of the safety issue has opened the
door to the biggest, most hazardous prize of all: the proposed
revolutionary transformation of society dubbed the “Internet of
Things.” Lauded as a gigantic engine of economic growth, the
Internet of Things will not only connect people through their
smartphones and computers but will connect those devices to a
customer’s vehicles and home appliances, even their baby’s
diapers—all at speeds faster than can currently be achieved.
Billions
of cell-phone users have been subjected to a public-health experiment
without informed consent.
There
is a catch, though: The Internet of Things will require augmenting
today’s 4G technology with 5G, thus “massively increasing” the
general population’s exposure to radiation, according to a
petition signed by 236 scientists worldwide who
have published more than 2,000 peer-reviewed studies and represent “a
significant portion of the credentialed scientists in the radiation
research field,” according to Joel Moskowitz, the director of the
Center for Family and Community Health at the University of
California, Berkeley, who helped circulate the petition.
Nevertheless, like cell phones, 5G technology is on the verge of
being introduced without pre-market safety testing.
Lack
of definitive proof that a technology is harmful does not mean the
technology is safe, yet the wireless industry has succeeded in
selling this logical fallacy to the world. In truth, the safety of
wireless technology has been an unsettled question since the
industry’s earliest days. The upshot is that, over the past 30
years, billions of people around the world have been subjected to a
massive public-health experiment: Use a cell phone today, find out
later if it causes cancer or genetic damage. Meanwhile, the wireless
industry has obstructed a full and fair understanding of the current
science, aided by government agencies that have prioritized
commercial interests over human health and news organizations that
have failed to inform the public about what the scientific community
really thinks. In other words, this public-health experiment has been
conducted without the informed consent of its subjects, even as the
industry keeps its thumb on the scale.
“The
absence of absolute proof does not mean the absence of risk,” Annie
Sasco, the former director of epidemiology for cancer prevention at
France’s National Institute of Health and Medical Research, told
the attendees of the 2012 Childhood Cancer conference. “The younger
one starts using cell phones, the higher the risk,” Sasco
continued, urging a public-education effort to inform parents,
politicians, and the press about children’s exceptional
susceptibility.
For
adults and children alike, the process by which wireless radiation
may cause cancer remains uncertain, but it is thought to be indirect.
Wireless radiation has been shown
to damage the blood-brain barrier,
a vital defense mechanism that shields the brain from carcinogenic
chemicals elsewhere in the body (resulting, for example, from
secondhand cigarette smoke). Wireless radiation has also been shown
to interfere
with DNA replication,
a proven progenitor of cancer. In each of these cases, the risks are
higher for children: Their skulls, being smaller, absorb more
radiation than adults’ skulls do, while children’s longer life
span increases their cumulative exposure.
The
wireless industry has sought to downplay concerns about cell phones’
safety, and the Federal Communications Commission has followed its
example. In 1996, the FCC established cell-phone safety levels based
on “specific absorption rate,” or SAR. Phones were required to
have a SAR of 1.6 watts or less per kilogram of body weight. In
2013, the
American Academy of Pediatrics advised the FCC that
its guidelines “do not account for the unique vulnerability and use
patterns specific to pregnant women and children.” Nevertheless,
the FCC has declined to update its standards.
The
FCC has granted the industry’s wishes so often that it qualifies as
a “captured agency,” argued journalist Norm Alster in a
report that
Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics published in
2015. The FCC allows cell-phone manufacturers to self-report SAR
levels, and does not independently test industry claims or require
manufacturers to display the SAR level on a phone’s packaging.
“Industry controls the FCC through a soup-to-nuts stranglehold that
extends from its well-placed campaign spending in Congress through
its control of the FCC’s congressional oversight committees to its
persistent agency lobbying,” Alster wrote. He also quoted the CTIA
website praising the FCC for “its light regulatory touch.”
The
revolving-door syndrome that characterizes so many industries and
federal agencies reinforces the close relationship between the
wireless industry and the FCC. Just as Tom Wheeler went from running
the CTIA (1992– 2004) to chairing the FCC (2013–2017), Meredith
Atwell Baker went from FCC commissioner (2009–2011) to the
presidency of the CTIA (2014 through today). To ensure its access on
Capitol Hill, the wireless industry made $26 million in campaign
contributions in 2016, according
to the Center for Responsive Politics,
and spent $87 million on lobbying in 2017.
Neutralizing
the safety issue has been an ongoing imperative because the research
keeps coming, much of it from outside the United States. But the
industry’s European and Asian branches have, like their US
counterpart, zealously war-gamed the science, spun the news coverage,
and thereby warped the public perception of their products’ safety.
The
WHO began to study the health effects of electric- and magnetic-field
radiation (EMF) in 1996 under the direction of Michael Repacholi, an
Australian biophysicist. Although
Repacholi
claimed on disclosure forms that he was “independent” of
corporate influence, in fact Motorola had funded his research: While
Repacholi was director of the WHO’s EMF program, Motorola paid
$50,000 a year to his former employer, the Royal Adelaide Hospital,
which then transferred the money to the WHO program. When journalists
exposed the payments, Repacholi denied that
there was anything untoward about them because Motorola had not paid
him personally. Eventually, Motorola’s payments were bundled with
other industry contributions and funneled through the Mobile and
Wireless Forum, a trade association that gave the WHO’s program
$150,000 annually. In 1999, Repacholi helped engineer a WHO statement
that “EMF exposures below the limits recommended in international
guidelines do not appear to have any known consequence on health.”
Two
wireless trade associations contributed $4.7 million to the
Interphone study launched
by the WHO’s International Agency for Cancer Research in 2000. That
$4.7 million represented 20 percent of the $24 million budget for the
Interphone study, which convened 21 scientists from 13 countries to
explore possible links between cell phones and two common types of
brain tumor: glioma and meningioma. The money was channeled through a
“firewall” mechanism intended to prevent corporate influence on
the IACR’s findings, but whether such firewalls work is debatable.
“Industry sponsors know [which scientists] receive funding;
sponsored scientists know who provides funding,” Dariusz
Leszczynski, an adjunct professor of biochemistry at the University
of Helsinki, has explained.
The
FCC grants the wireless industry’s wishes so often that it
qualifies as a “captured agency.”
To
be sure, the industry could not have been pleased with some of
the Interphone
study’s conclusions.
The study found that the heaviest cell-phone users were 80
percent more likely to develop glioma.
(The initial finding of 40 percent was increased to 80 to correct for
selection bias.) The Interphone study also concluded that individuals
who had owned a cell phone for 10 years or longer saw their risk of
glioma increase by nearly 120 percent.
However,
the study did not find any increased risk for individuals who used
their cell phones less frequently; nor was there evidence of any
connection with meningioma.
When
the Interphone conclusions were released in 2010, industry
spokespeople blunted their impact by deploying what experts on lying
call “creative truth-telling.” “Interphone’s conclusion of no
overall increased risk of brain cancer is consistent with conclusions
reached in an already large body of scientific research on this
subject,” John Walls, the vice president for public affairs at the
CTIA, told
reporters.
The wiggle word here is “overall”: Since some of the Interphone
studies did not find increased brain-cancer rates, stipulating
“overall” allowed Walls to ignore those that did. The misleading
spin confused enough news organizations that their coverage of the
Interphone study was essentially reassuring to the industry’s
customers. The
Wall Street Journal announced
“Cell Phone Study Sends Fuzzy Signal on Cancer Risk,” while the
BBC’s headline declared: “No Proof of Mobile Cancer Risk.”
The
industry’s $4.7 million contribution to the WHO appears to have had
its most telling effect in May 2011, when the WHO convened scientists
in Lyon, France, to discuss how to classify the cancer risk posed by
cell phones. The industry not only secured “observer” status at
Lyon for three of its trade associations; it placed two
industry-funded experts on the working group that would debate the
classification, as well as additional experts among the “invited
specialists” who advised the group.
Niels
Kuster, a Swiss engineer, initially filed a conflict-of-interest
statement affirming only that his research group had taken money from
“various governments, scientific institutions and corporations.”
But after Kuster co-authored a summary of the WHO’s findings in The
Lancet Oncology,
the medical journal issued
a correction expanding
on Kuster’s conflict-of-interest statement, noting payments from
the Mobile Manufacturers Forum, Motorola, Ericsson, Nokia, Samsung,
Sony, GSMA, and Deutsche Telekom. Nevertheless, Kuster participated
in the entire 10 days of deliberations.
The
industry also mounted a campaign to discredit Lennart Hardell, a
Swedish professor of oncology serving on the working group. Hardell’s
studies,
which found an increase in gliomas and acoustic neuromas in long-term
cell-phone users, were some of the strongest evidence that the group
was considering.
Hardell
had already attracted the industry’s displeasure back in 2002, when
he began arguing that children shouldn’t use cell phones. Two
scientists with industry ties quickly published
a report with
the Swedish Radiation Authority dismissing Hardell’s research. His
detractors were John D. Boice and Joseph K. McLaughlin of the
International Epidemiology Institute, a company that provided
“Litigation Support” and “Corporate Counseling” to various
industries, according
to its website.
Indeed, at the very time Boice and McLaughlin were denigrating
Hardell’s work, the institute was providing expert-witness services
to Motorola in a brain-tumor lawsuit against the company.
The
wireless industry didn’t get the outcome that it wanted at Lyon,
but it did limit the damage. A number of the working group’s
scientists had favored increasing the classification of cell phones
to Category 2A, a “probable” carcinogen; but in
the end, the group could only agree on
an increase to 2B, a “possible” carcinogen.
That
result enabled the industry to continue proclaiming that there was no
scientifically established proof that cell phones are dangerous. Jack
Rowley of the GSMA trade association said that “interpretation
should be based on the overall balance of the evidence.” Once
again, the slippery word “overall” downplayed the significance of
scientific research that the industry didn’t like.
Industry-funded
scientists had been pressuring their colleagues for a decade by then,
according to Leszczynski, another member of the Lyon working group.
Leszczynski was an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School when
he first experienced such pressure, in 1999. He had wanted to
investigate the effects of radiation levels higher than the SAR
levels permitted by government, hypothesizing that this might better
conform to real-world practices. But when he proposed the idea at
scientific meetings, Leszczynski
said,
it was shouted down by Mays Swicord, Joe Elder, and C.K.
Chou—scientists who worked for Motorola. As Leszczynski recalled,
“It was a normal occurrence at scientific meetings—and I attended
really a lot of them—that whenever [a] scientist reported
biological effects at SAR over [government-approved levels], the
above-mentioned industry scientists, singularly or as a group, jumped
up to the microphone to condemn and to discredit the results.”
Years
later, a
study that
Leszczynski described as a “game changer” discovered that even
phones meeting government standards, which in Europe were a SAR of
2.0 watts per kilogram, could deliver exponentially higher peak
radiation levels to certain skin and blood cells. (SAR levels reached
a staggering 40 watts per kilogram—20 times higher than officially
permitted.) In other words, the official safety levels masked
dramatically higher exposures in hot spots, but industry-funded
scientists obstructed research on the health impacts.
“Everyone
knows that if your research results show that radiation has effects,
the funding flow dries up.” —Dariusz Leszczynski, adjunct
professor of biochemistry at the University of Helsinki
“Everyone
knows that if your research results show that radiation has effects,
the funding flow dries up,” Leszczynski said in an interview in
2011. Sure enough, the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of
Finland, where Leszczynski had a long career, discontinued research
on the biological effects of cell phones and discharged him a year
later.
According
to scientists involved in the process, the WHO may decide later this
year to reconsider its categorization of the cancer risk posed by
cell phones; the WHO itself told The
Nation that
before making any such decision, it will review the final report of
the National Toxicology Program, a US government initiative.
The results
reported by the NTP in
2016 seem to strengthen the case for increasing the assessment of
cell-phone radiation to a “probable” or even a “known”
carcinogen. Whereas the WHO’s Interphone study compared the
cell-phone usage of people who had contracted cancer with that of
people who hadn’t, the NTP study exposed rats and mice to
cell-phone radiation and observed whether the animals got sick.
“There
is a carcinogenic effect,” announced Ron Melnick, the designer of
the study. Male rats exposed to cell-phone radiation developed cancer
at a substantially higher rate, though the same effect was not seen
in female rats. Rats exposed to radiation also had lower birth rates,
higher infant mortality, and more heart problems than those in the
control group. The cancer effect occurred in only a small percentage
of the rats, but that small percentage could translate into a massive
amount of human cancers. “Given the extremely large number of
people who use wireless communications devices, even a very small
increase in the incidence of disease…could have broad implications
for public health,” the NTP’s draft report explained.
The
NTP study was to be peer-reviewed at a meeting on March 26–28, amid
signs that the program’s leadership is pivoting to downplay its
findings. The NTP had issued a public-health warning when the study’s
early results were released in 2016. But when the NTP released
essentially the same data in February 2018, John Bucher, the senior
scientist who directed the study, announced in a telephone press
conference that “I don’t think this is a high-risk situation at
all,” partly because the study had exposed the rats and mice to
higher levels of radiation than a typical cell-phone user
experienced.
Microwave
News’s
Slesin speculated
on potential explanations for
the NTP’s apparent backtracking: new leadership within the program,
where a former drug-company executive, Brian Berridge, now runs the
day-to-day operations; pressure from business-friendly Republicans on
Capitol Hill and from the US military, whose weapons systems rely on
wireless radiation; and the anti-science ideology of the Trump White
House. The question now: Will the scientists doing the peer review
endorse the NTP’s newly ambivalent perspective, or challenge it?
The
scientific evidence that cell phones and wireless technologies in
general can cause cancer and genetic damage is not definitive, but it
is abundant and has been increasing over time. Contrary to the
impression that most news coverage has given the public, 90 percent
of the 200 existing studies included in the National Institutes of
Health’s PubMed database on the oxidative effects of wireless
radiation—its tendency to cause cells to shed electrons, which can
lead to cancer and other diseases—have found a significant impact,
according to a survey of the scientific literature conducted by Henry
Lai. Seventy-two percent of neurological studies and 64 percent of
DNA studies have also found effects.
The
wireless industry’s determination to bring about the Internet of
Things, despite the massive increase in radiation exposure this would
unleash, raises the stakes exponentially. Because 5G radiation can
only travel short distances, antennas roughly the size of a pizza box
will have to be installed approximately every 250 feet to ensure
connectivity. “Industry is going to need hundreds of thousands,
maybe millions, of new antenna sites in the United States alone,”
said Moskowitz, the UC Berkeley researcher. “So people will be
bathed in a smog of radiation 24/7.”
There
is an alternative approach, rooted in what some scientists and
ethicists call the “precautionary principle,” which holds that
society doesn’t need absolute proof of hazard to place limits on a
given technology. If the evidence is sufficiently solid and the risks
sufficiently great, the precautionary principle calls for delaying
the deployment of that technology until further research clarifies
its impacts. The scientists’
petition discussed
earlier urges government regulators to apply the precautionary
principle to 5G technology. Current safety guidelines “protect
industry—not health,” contends the petition, which “recommend[s]
a moratorium on the roll-out of [5G]…until potential hazards for
human health and the environment have been fully investigated by
scientists independent from industry.”
No scientist can say with
certainty how many wireless-technology users are likely to contract
cancer, but that is precisely the point: We simply don’t know.
Nevertheless, we are proceeding as if we do know the risk, and that
the risk is vanishingly small. Meanwhile, more and more people around
the world, including countless children and adolescents, are getting
addicted to cell phones every day, and the shift to radiation-heavy
5G technology is regarded as a fait accompli. Which is just how Big
Wireless likes it.
Mark
HertsgaardTWITTERMark
Hertsgaard, The
Nation’s
environment correspondent and investigative editor, is the author of
seven books, including HOT:
Living Through the Next Fifty Years on Earth .
To
submit a correction for our consideration, click here.
===============================
Ach, de normale gang van zaken: geld verdienen gaat in de inhumane neoliberale maatschappij ver voor op de volksgezondheid………… (al moet gezegd worden dat deze gang van zaken zo oud is als de weg naar Rome….)
‘Complottheorie Denken’ noemt men dat, wanneer men beweert dat een bekende persoon die zich gesuïcideerd zou hebben, hoogstwaarschijnlijk of (na onderzoek) zelfs onomstotelijk bewezen is omgebracht door de overheid.
‘Vreemd genoeg’ blijken de complotdenkers echter vaak gelijk te hebben of te krijgen, zo werd Martin Luther King in feite door de FBI vermoord…..* Als je alleen dat feit al in aanmerking neemt, hoe moeilijk kan het dan zijn iemand om te brengen, die regelmatig of incidenteel harddrugs anders dan, of juist in combinatie met de harddrug alcohol gebruikt?? Inderdaad een klus waar je op het eerste gezicht zo mee wegkomt: neem heroïne: er wordt eigenlijk alleen versneden heroïne op de markt gebracht. Verkoop of geef iemand zuivere heroïne en een dodelijke overdosis vindt haar weg………..
Op zeker ook dat de VS overheid, waarschijnlijk de FBI en/of de CIA een aantal ‘vervelende grootheden’ uit de 60er jaren en van latere datum hebben vermoord, artiesten/muzikanten die zich negatief uit hebben gelaten over de VS, zoals verzet tegen de smerige Vietnamoorlog, waarin de VS een paar miljoen mensen vermoordde middels tapijtbombardementen en bombardementen met napalm. Heden ten dage komen er nog Vietnamezen en mensen in aangrenzende landen als Laos om het leven door onontplofte munitie van de VS….. Zoals er nog steeds mensen overlijden door blootstalling aan Agent Orange, een ontbladermiddel dat de VS in Vietnam gebruikte op gebieden met oerwoud, een stof die net als de gebruikte napalm deels opgeslagen lag Rotterdam…..
Terug naar het onderwerp: het volgende bericht van Brasscheck TV gaat over dit soort zaken, bijzonder onwaarschijnlijke suïcides, waarvan een fiks aantal onder zeer verdachte omstandigheden…… Zoals iemand die zich tweemaal door het hoofd heeft geschoten…… Ook Kurt Cobain komt aan de orde, van wie ook een interview is te zien in het volgende artikel:
Executed
by “suicide”
THE
DEATH OF KURT COBAIN
AS THE ROSETTA STONE OF “SUICIDED”
ACTIVISTS
THE
PATTERN IS ALWAYS THE SAME
From
the movie “Soaked in Bleach.”
One
of our most important videos ever for understanding the mechanics of
how inconvenient people are “suicided.”
“Soaked
in Bleach” is the single best account of how murders are staged and
then “transformed” by idiot and/or corrupt cops and the news
media into “suicides.”
Other
examples:
Danny
Casolaro…investigative
journalist who documented Bush family crimes.
Reportedly
cut his own wrist 10 to 12 times in a hotel room.
Gary
Webb...investigative
journalist who revealed details of CIA involvement in drug dealing
Reportedly
shot himself in the head TWICE
Vince
Foster…a
long time Clinton friend and insider who was having second thoughts
about his criminal collaborations with the Clintons
Reportedly
shot himself with his right hand even though he was left handed.
Aaron
Swartz...possibly
the most effective Internet rights activist of all time
Reportedly
hung himself after his attorney assured him that a trumped up federal
government case against him was weak.
David
Kelly...UK
weapons inspector who publicly called into question the UK
government’s fraudulent “proof” of Iraq’s weapons program
Reportedly
cut his ulnar artery with a bread knife, a tool unlikely to do the
job and on an artery an injury to which is unlikely to end anyone’s
life.
JH
Hatfield…had
the goods on George W. Bush’s cocaine use
Reported
suicide by drug overdose in a hotel room
Mark
Lombardi…successful
artist who documented connections between the Bush family and the Bin
Ladens
Reportedly
hung himself just as he was achieving significant commercial success
and media attention.
Deborah
Palfrey…the
“DC Madam” who had over 10,000 client records including top
Washington people.
Reportedly
went to her mother’s home to hang herself in her storage shed.
Frank
Olson…CIA
scientist and biological warfare expert who declared his intention to
quit
Reportedly
jumped out of a hotel window as the result of a bad LSD trip nine
days before.
They
all committed suicide because they were “depressed.”
Not
so fast.
As
this documentary on the death of Kurt Corbain shows:
The “he was depressed” story is always injected into the media
narrative early and often and rarely has any basis in fact.
Sometimes, in the case of Kurt Cobain, it is carefully manufactured
before the suicide is discovered.
Some
targets may have been under significant stress, but had resilient
personalities and in some cases had no reason to be depressed at all
Police
in these cases are remarkably incompetent, declarations are made far
in advance of any reasonable investigation, and essential evidence –
including the body itself – is often destroyed.
False
suicide notes are created.
The
“suicide” of Kurt Cobain shows how sloppy and/or corrupt police
work and media manipulation turn obvious homicide cases into “end
of story” suicide accounts.
Kurt
Cobain – level headed, down-to-earth.
Does
he seem like someone likely to commit suicide?
PS: je zou je zelfs voor kunnen stellen dat een flink aantal
journalisten niet langer durven te schrijven wat ze voor ogen komt, daar
ook hen regelmatig een vreemde dood treft en dan bedoel ik in westerse
landen…..
Toch leuk dat telkens als je het woord ‘oranje’ hoort, of het nu om voetbal, het koningshuis, ING, of de brievenbussen gaat, je automatisch moet denken aan Agent Orange……
Met dit chemische middel beging de VS grote oorlogsmisdaden in Vietnam, tot op de dag kent het land een groot aantal slachtoffers van deze letterlijke kankerzooi……. Kijk en dat laatste past weer mooi bij de voornoemde instituties!
Zie ook de berichten onder de labels onder dit bericht, waarin het woord ‘oranje’ voorkomt.
De valse schijnheil Obama is er uit: Vietnam mag wapens kopen van de VS. Deze plork, die godbetert de Nobelprijs voor de vrede kreeg, terwijl er geen president voor hem was, die zolang achter elkaar oorlog voerde, durfde eerder te zeggen, dat hij niet van zins was, Vietnam verontschuldigingen aan te bieden, voor de enorme terreur waar de VS dit land in heeft ondergedompeld.
Terreur die zelfs heden ten dage nog te zien is in de Vietnamese maatschappij, bijvoorbeeld bij de overlevenden van VS bombardementen, die daardoor ledematen kwijtraakten, of overlevenden van napalm bombardementen met hun vreselijke littekens en misvormingen, of de slachtoffers die in aanraking kwamen (of ronduit werden onder gesproeid) met Agent Orange, waardoor zelfs nu nog kinderen met (zichtbare) afwijkingen worden geboren………
Wat Obama wel kon doen voor de Vietnamezen, was hen VS wapens verkopen, hij gaat de boycot voor VS wapenleveranties opheffen…….. Obama is een toplobbyist van het militair-industrieel complex, dat heeft hij uit en te na bewezen tijdens zijn presidentschap en nu dus ten overvloede nog eens……
Volgens Obama is dit nodig, daar Vietnam zich moet kunnen verdedigen…… Tegen wie dan? De VS dat maar liefst 2,5 miljoen slachtoffers maakte, in een land waar het niets te zoeken had??? Heden ten dage betalen de Vietnamezen nog geld terug aan China en Rusland, vanwege de wederopbouw na de enorme terreur van de VS, tijdens de Vietnamoorlog. De VS heeft zelfs de wederopbouw van het land dwarsgezeten met hun boycot, die allesbehalve alleen wapens betrof……….
De VS is bezig om rond China en Rusland zoveel mogelijk bases aan te leggen en u hoeft er niet van op te zien, dat binnen een paar jaar, ook Vietnam weer een VS basis op haar grondgebied zal hebben. Sterker nog: daarover is de VS al in onderhandeling met Vietnam, waar de VS een strategisch punt als basis wil hebben, ‘tegen de Chinese expansiedrift…..’ Als ‘t niet zo godvergeten onbeschoft en triest was, zou je je daadwerkelijk doodlachen, jezus!!
Bovendien is deze smerige streek van Obama, de zoveelste provocatie aan het adres Rusland, dat redelijk goede banden onderhoudt met Vietnam en het land o.a. wapens leverde…..
Obama? Die zou door het Internationaal Strafhof moeten worden aangeklaagd, vanwege het grote aantal oorlogsmisdaden en moorden (standrechtelijke executies van verdachten middels drones) die hij heeft laten begaan!!
Wat is het toch altijd lekker wakker worden in Den Haag, als je met je raam open hebt geslapen, en je ruikt als eerste, als je wakker wordt, de ‘heerlijke’ geur van de petrochemie in je slaapkamer, zalig!!! Je zou bijna de zin aanhalen uit de film ‘Apocalypse Now’, van Coppola: ‘I love the smell of napalm in the morning’, vreemd genoeg niet eens zo gek, als je bedenkt, dat ‘Agent Orange’, een chemisch middel, dat de VS over de oerwouden van Vietnam spoot, om deze te ontbladeren, deels in Nederland werd gemaakt* en opgeslagen in….. Rotterdam!!! Men was indertijd als de dood voor een aanslag op raffinaderijen door de Rote Armee Fraktion, bij een grote aanslag, waarbij meerdere raffinaderijen de lucht in zouden gaan, zou een gebied met een straal van meer dan 25 kilometer zo ongeveer weggevaagd zijn…… Door het gebruik van dit middel, ondervinden nog steeds veel Vietnamezen grote gezondheidsklachten.
Terug naar Den Haag: met name op nevelige dagen, als er praktisch geen wind staat, kan je zelfs in Den Haag de geur uit het Botlek gebied ruiken. Dat komt, omdat men daar ‘s nachts de meest gore stoffen mag lozen, dan slapen de meeste burgers toch, hupsakéé! Tegenwoordig weet geen hond in Den Haag, dat je bij milieudienst Rijnmond kan klagen over die stank, niet dat ‘t iets uitmaakt, je krijgt netjes bericht terug, waarin te lezen valt, dat de klacht genoteerd is……
Dit is een gang van zaken, die al meer dan een halve eeuw duurt en alsof het niet 2013 is, mag deze zwaar vervuilende smeerpijperij gewoon doorgaan, hopeloos en dan nog commentaar hebben, als Nederland weer eens als één van de vuilste jongens van de klas, uit de EU bus komt………
*Als ik mij niet vergis, door Koninklijke Shell (Nederland), ‘leuk’ bijkomend effect: als dat zo is, heeft de groot aandeelhouder van Shell, de toenmalige koningin, daar flink geld aan verdiend……