NEW FILM ABOUT AGENT ORANGE
Hello,
I am the daughter of Vietnam Veteran who has been working on the long-term consequence of the impacts of Agent Orange on human health and the environment for more than 20 years. At the moment I am working to raise awareness about a new film called The People VS Agent Orange that will be screening virtually at the s in Delaware and across the US starting March 5th. Below are links to the theater in DE through which it is possible to stream the film in the comfort of your own home through your computer or through a Roku player. Information about other theaters where the film will be streaming throughout the US and about the film can be found at https://www.warlegacies.org/people-vs-agent-orange or https://www.thepeoplevsagentorange.com/screenings-1.
The main focus is the story of two women, one Vietnamese – French who is currently suing the chemical companies and the other an American from Oregon who fought to end the use of 2,4,5-T/2,4-D when it was still being used domestically until 1979 after being banned in Vietnam during the war. However the film also covers the impact of Agent Orange on Veterans and their children and includes an interview with Senator Daschle who admits that the Agent Orange denial and coverup by the US government was “handled at far higher levels than I would like to acknowledge." Not a surprise to any of us
My organization, with the support of individuals and other organizations, are offering a limited number of discounts of $4.00 to veterans to help enable those who may be on limited budgets to stream the film. The normal streaming fee is $12 at most theaters. Individuals or organizations can also help support these discounts for veterans by making a donation when they purchase their streaming pass at one of the links below. We are also encouraging communities around the US to hold webinars, Q&As or discussions about the issues the film raises and we are compiling these discussions on the films website for others to view.
Thank you for your time. And as an Army brat whose father served two tours in Vietnam when I was a child, I really mean it when I say ‘Thank You for Your Service” as I have some understanding of the sacrifice made by you and your family for your service to our country.
Susan
Susan Hammond
Executive Director, War Legacies Project Inc
144 Lower Bartonsville Road
Chester, VT 05143
Tel: 917-991-4850
Email: shammond@warlegacies.org
Hello,
I am the daughter of Vietnam Veteran who has been working on the long-term consequence of the impacts of Agent Orange on human health and the environment for more than 20 years. At the moment I am working to raise awareness about a new film called The People VS Agent Orange that will be screening virtually at the s in Delaware and across the US starting March 5th. Below are links to the theater in DE through which it is possible to stream the film in the comfort of your own home through your computer or through a Roku player. Information about other theaters where the film will be streaming throughout the US and about the film can be found at https://www.warlegacies.org/people-vs-agent-orange or https://www.thepeoplevsagentorange.com/screenings-1.
The main focus is the story of two women, one Vietnamese – French who is currently suing the chemical companies and the other an American from Oregon who fought to end the use of 2,4,5-T/2,4-D when it was still being used domestically until 1979 after being banned in Vietnam during the war. However the film also covers the impact of Agent Orange on Veterans and their children and includes an interview with Senator Daschle who admits that the Agent Orange denial and coverup by the US government was “handled at far higher levels than I would like to acknowledge." Not a surprise to any of us
My organization, with the support of individuals and other organizations, are offering a limited number of discounts of $4.00 to veterans to help enable those who may be on limited budgets to stream the film. The normal streaming fee is $12 at most theaters. Individuals or organizations can also help support these discounts for veterans by making a donation when they purchase their streaming pass at one of the links below. We are also encouraging communities around the US to hold webinars, Q&As or discussions about the issues the film raises and we are compiling these discussions on the films website for others to view.
Thank you for your time. And as an Army brat whose father served two tours in Vietnam when I was a child, I really mean it when I say ‘Thank You for Your Service” as I have some understanding of the sacrifice made by you and your family for your service to our country.
Susan
Susan Hammond
Executive Director, War Legacies Project Inc
144 Lower Bartonsville Road
Chester, VT 05143
Tel: 917-991-4850
Email: shammond@warlegacies.org
PHU LOI
Hello, Welcome to LZ Phu Loi. This is my first glimpse of Vietnam's Peaceful Skies. And yes, there truly were beautiful skies. From where we built our hooch, you could see almost into forever. I have seldom seen such beautiful sunsets in my life as I can remember vividly in this faraway country, so torn by the devastation of war and conflict . Even long before the first GI stepped off a boat or plane in country, this land was at war. Back in 1945, when the Japanese signed the peace treaty out in Tokyo Harbor, on the USS Missouri, Ho Chi Minh vowed to adopt a document not unlike our own Constitution.. He wanted Peace with a unified Vietnam, where democracy would rule the country, not communism. |
Had the United States backed Ho Chi Minh with his plans for a unified Vietnam in 1945, and not the disloyal French, those who died, would still be alive today, living a life of peace at home, and not laying down their lives in that faraway land of Vietnam.
We are missing nearly 59,000 lives and over 2100 Missing in action, of our population! I invite you to consider... and take those 59,000 men and women, and then multiply the children these missing Americans would have had, had they lived and married, we then are missing perhaps 180,000 souls and their progeny. I doubt few have considered these ramifications of the Vietnam war and it's cost to humanity forever into the future. Just how many scientists, astronauts, Doctors, Senators, and even Presidents are lost to the future? Perhaps one of those potential scientists was the one to discover a cure for cancer or AIDS? But we'll never know now, will we?
It is up to us, the living to continue carrying forward, for those who cannot. That is what we owe them, who died in that land of Vietnam. We must live our lives to the fullest, so they can live in us.
Let us also teach our children that there just has got to be a better way to solve our National differences, than spilling the blood of our youth in foreign lands. Maybe if they made Senators and Congressmen put on uniforms and go fight wars, then perhaps wars would finally come to an end?
Vietnam is an incredibly beautiful country! Sometimes, when the guns were silent, life returned almost instantly back to the way it was for 2000 years before. A land of gentle, peace-loving people.
In a way, although the war had a sad ending for our Country and those who went to war, peace has finally come to Vietnam, and both the Vietnamese and the American people are finally becoming friends again. Strange how things turn around, like the old saying goes, "What goes around comes around" and so has the world. It has spun around it's axis, within it's solar orbit now a lot of years since I left country, for my home in America, and Peace has finally come to this gentle people in that faraway little country, in Southeast Asia called Vietnam.
We are missing nearly 59,000 lives and over 2100 Missing in action, of our population! I invite you to consider... and take those 59,000 men and women, and then multiply the children these missing Americans would have had, had they lived and married, we then are missing perhaps 180,000 souls and their progeny. I doubt few have considered these ramifications of the Vietnam war and it's cost to humanity forever into the future. Just how many scientists, astronauts, Doctors, Senators, and even Presidents are lost to the future? Perhaps one of those potential scientists was the one to discover a cure for cancer or AIDS? But we'll never know now, will we?
It is up to us, the living to continue carrying forward, for those who cannot. That is what we owe them, who died in that land of Vietnam. We must live our lives to the fullest, so they can live in us.
Let us also teach our children that there just has got to be a better way to solve our National differences, than spilling the blood of our youth in foreign lands. Maybe if they made Senators and Congressmen put on uniforms and go fight wars, then perhaps wars would finally come to an end?
Vietnam is an incredibly beautiful country! Sometimes, when the guns were silent, life returned almost instantly back to the way it was for 2000 years before. A land of gentle, peace-loving people.
In a way, although the war had a sad ending for our Country and those who went to war, peace has finally come to Vietnam, and both the Vietnamese and the American people are finally becoming friends again. Strange how things turn around, like the old saying goes, "What goes around comes around" and so has the world. It has spun around it's axis, within it's solar orbit now a lot of years since I left country, for my home in America, and Peace has finally come to this gentle people in that faraway little country, in Southeast Asia called Vietnam.
VIETNAM (Click square at the bottom right after starting video to view full screen.)
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VIETNAM NEWS & STORIES
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VIETNAM PHOTOS
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FLIGHT HELMET
APH 5 Flight Helmet - 205th Geronimo's - named: Ralph Chappell (Geronimo 33) 1968 -69 & 70
(Ralph is searching for Marc who sent me these photos. I don't recall his last name.) |
Lessons Learned - Looking Back
Vietnam was a sea of blood. In 15 years of bitter combat, 58,000 plus Americans were killed and 303,000 were wounded or injured. About 75,000 of these mostly teen-age boys were severely disabled. A million North Vietnamese and Viet Cong perished in absolute dedication to a Marxist economic theory that never worked. Communism would doom much of the earth to nearly three generations of slavery under ruthless dictators. More than 250,000 of our brave South Vietnamese died in battle, hoping to save their culture, their religions, their regional freedom - and because Americans said, "We will stand with you against the global evil of communism. Untold hundreds of thousands of civilians in the South and Laos and in Thailand's border regions, were murdered by VC retribution, starved to death, executed in post war concentration camps or made refugees by the poorly targeted and massive us of U.S. firepower throughout the region. In the end, the communists trumpeted and crushed the million-man South Vietnamese Armed Forces, driving the Americans and their failed policy into the sea of political and military defeat. Continued |
Interesting Videos
The Vietnam Conflict NEW 2/16
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