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Agent Orange Birth Defects

children of vietnam veterans agent orange www.covvha.net

Okinawa bacteria’ toxic legacy crosses continents, spans generations | The Japan Times.
JON MITCHELL
JUN 4, 2013
[Warning: Some may find this story's content and images to be disturbing.]

Tu Du Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City houses one of Vietnam’s busiest maternity clinics, but hidden in a quiet corner, far from the wards of proud new mothers, is a room stacked floor to ceiling with every parent’s nightmare. In dozens of glass jars lie the bodies of deformed babies preserved in formaldehyde — some have no heads, others have two, several are so scrambled that their faces jut from their stomachs and their arms are where their legs should be.

The doctor who delivered many of these children was Nguyen Thi Ngoc Phuong. Forty-five years ago she was a young intern at Tu Du Hospital when the city was known as Saigon, capital of war-torn South Vietnam.

“In 1966 or 1967 I started noticing an unprecedented increase in the number of birth defects at the hospital. There were too many deformed babies to count. They were born in areas sprayed with defoliants by the U.S. military,” she told The Japan Times.

During the Vietnam War, the Pentagon drenched South Vietnam with 76 million liters of herbicides — including Agents Blue, White and Orange — in a bid to destroy its enemies’ crops and jungle hiding places. The U.S. government assured Vietnamese people and their own troops that these “rainbow herbicides” were perfectly harmless to human health. But it was lying.

Agent Blue, the Pentagon’s preferred chemical for killing rice crops, included a poisonous compound of arsenic. Among the ingredients of Agent White were the carcinogens hexachlorobenzene and a cocktail of nitrosamines. Agent Orange, the best known and most commonly used herbicide, contained dioxin. Categorized as one of the deadliest poisons on the planet, dioxin has a lethal dose measured in the millionths of grams; it is also teratogenic, meaning it can damage the growth of the fetus.

Dr. Phuong was one of the first doctors to link South Vietnam’s soaring number of birth defects to the U.S. military’s defoliation campaign. But even when the herbicide flights ended in 1971, the health problems continued to grow.

“For example, those who were directly sprayed by Agent Orange passed the dioxin to their children in their breast milk. Then the problems were passed from the second to the third generation through damage to the cells and the DNA,” Phuong explained.

These second- and third-generation victims of Agent Orange suffer from illnesses ranging from cancers and diabetes to autoimmune disorders. Maj. Gen. Tran Ngoc Tho, chairman of the Ho Chin Minh City branch of the Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin, explained that 3 million people are currently suffering from the effects of herbicides in Vietnam — and the numbers are rising every year.

However, according to Tho, when these birth problems first began to emerge in the late-1960s, the government of South Vietnam had a special name for the source of this scourge.

“They called it ‘Okinawa bacteria.’ During the war, Okinawa had many U.S. Air Force bases, and American planes came from there to bomb South Vietnam. There were stories that the planes that used to spray these chemicals came from Okinawa, too.”

From 1945 to 1972, Okinawa was under U.S. jurisdiction, and during the Vietnam War the island served as the Pentagon’s forward staging post for the conflict. Used to train troops, store supplies and ship them to the war zone, Okinawa also hosted the more clandestine side of the American war machine, including at one point as many as 1,200 nuclear warheads, as well as a massive arsenal of nerve and mustard gas.

Given the presence of these weapons of mass destruction, the storage of rainbow herbicides on Okinawa should come as no surprise. Dozens of U.S. veterans and Okinawa base workers claim these substances were warehoused on the island and sprayed around the bases’ fences to keep back the vegetation, a practice also common in South Vietnam at the time. Although the Pentagon denies such allegations, many of these former service members have illnesses consistent with dioxin exposure. Moreover, their children — and grandchildren — are sick, too.

One of these veterans is Rick Dewess. A former U.S. marine stationed on Okinawa between 1969 and 1970, he currently suffers from multiple illnesses — including diabetes, ischemic heart disease and respiratory problems — that he blames on dioxin poisoning. He believes his exposure has also damaged the health of his children.

“Our first child was a miscarriage. Then our next try, a son, had a kidney removed and needed another two surgeries by the time he was 5 years old. My second son had problems with his spine and my daughter has thyroid issues,” Dewess told The Japan Times.

Neither he nor his wife has any family history of the medical issues his children have been diagnosed with.

Dewess believes his exposure to dioxin occurred at Naha Military Port, where he was assigned to off-load equipment damaged during combat in Vietnam. He worries that this work put him in contact with dioxin-contaminated soil. Such fears were supported by a 2008 ruling from the Department of Veterans Affairs — the federal agency responsible for awarding compensation to sick service members — which recognized that another former G.I. on Okinawa had been exposed to rainbow herbicides while handling contaminated gear in the same circumstances.

A second marine veteran alleging dioxin exposure — and consequent damage to her children’s health — was Caethe Goetz. Featured in The Japan Times in August 2011, Goetz had developed multiple myeloma — a rare form of cancer usually found in men in their sixties and seventies — when she was 49 years old. She passed away in November 2012 at the age of 58.

During her service on Okinawa, Goetz was pregnant and often used to take walks near the perimeter fence of Camp Foster. She recalled walking through foliage that had recently been treated with herbicides and, on one occasion, even being sprayed in the face. “I didn’t think much of it at the time — I just wiped the liquid away,” she said in an interview shortly before her death.

As with the other veterans claiming dioxin exposure on Okinawa, the Pentagon denied that the substance Goetz was exposed to was one of the rainbow herbicides. But in a recent interview, marine Sgt. David Robinson, a member of one of Camp Foster’s maintenance crews, seemed to confirm Goetz’s suspicions. “I sprayed the base perimeter. When filling up my fogger [a handheld spray machine], a barrel with an orange stripe was in the stand. I asked the sergeant in charge what it was, and he said, ‘Agent Orange.’ ”

Antonia, the child Goetz was carrying on Okinawa, was born with a number of problems.

“I have deformed knee caps and then, at the age of 32, I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. The only family history of this illness is my grandfather, who was diagnosed in his sixties,” Antonia told The Japan Times.

Goetz’s second daughter, Catherine, also shows signs of her mother’s suspected dioxin exposure; she suffers from recurring infections, chronic fatigue syndrome, reproductive problems and a fused pelvis.

Antonia explained that these problems are now becoming apparent in the third generation of the Goetz family. Her oldest daughter has a defect with her eyes and was diagnosed with cataracts at the age of 10. Her young son suffers from developmental delays and a congenital problem with an artery in his neck.

Other U.S. veterans who believe they came into contact with rainbow herbicides on Okinawa also have children with similar diseases. Kris Roberts — a New Hampshire state representative who claims he unearthed a large cache of Agent Orange on Futenma air station in 1981 — has a daughter who suffers from health problems he suspects were caused by his exposure to dioxin on Okinawa.

Likewise, Joe Sipala — a former air force sergeant now leading veterans’ demands for an independent inquiry into Agent Orange on Okinawa — has also witnessed the sufferings of his children. While serving at Awase Transmitter Site in 1970, Sipala was tasked with spraying Agent Orange around the installation to kill weeds. As a result of this work, Sipala soon fell sick. His first child died in the womb, so misshapen that the presiding doctor told him he was lucky the baby hadn’t survived. His two surviving children were both born with birth defects — including a daughter whose deformed feet required multiple operations.

Even though the Pentagon kept information about the toxicity of these chemicals hidden, Sipala and many of his fellow veterans feel responsible for their children’s illnesses.

“It makes me feel guilty. At the time we didn’t know the dangers of spraying these herbicides, but it was my damaged DNA that caused my children’s issues,” Sipala said in a recent interview.

According to Heather Bowser, co-founder of Children of Vietnam Veterans’ Health Alliance, such feelings are common among former service members who were unwittingly exposed to poisonous herbicides during the 1960s and ’70s. “I struggled my whole young life watching my father carry the guilt believing he had caused my birth defects,” said Bowser, who was born two months premature and missing her right leg below the knee and several fingers — problems her father attributed to his exposure to Agent Orange during the Vietnam War.

Bowser said that the scale of the second-generation problems in the U.S. is appalling.

“A 1986 report stated that among 200,000 veterans surveyed, 56,000 of their children had birth defects. But we have no idea how many of them are truly affected, because we have never been offered an open dialogue by the U.S. government,” she said.

Despite overwhelming scientific evidence linking dioxin exposure to birth defects, Washington has been reluctant to support America’s second-generation victims. For example, while offering limited help to the children of female veterans who served in South Vietnam born with defects such as cleft palate, heart disease and clubfoot, it refuses to link their illnesses to Agent Orange; instead, it states that “these diseases are not tied to herbicides, including Agent Orange, or dioxin exposure, but rather to the birth mother’s service in Vietnam.” It is as though the country itself were somehow responsible for children’s birth defects, not the 76 million liters of toxic chemicals sprayed there.

As for the sickened children of male veterans, the U.S. government only recognizes one illness related to Agent Orange: spina bifida.

However, when it comes to Okinawa, the Pentagon’s blanket denials that Agent Orange was ever on the island prevents even this limited assistance reaching the sickened children of U.S. veterans such as Dewess and Sipala.

Goetz’s daughter Catherine believes the motivation for the Pentagon’s denials is simple: money.

“If the U.S. government admitted Agent Orange exposure on Okinawa, it would open a floodgate of claims for many generations to come. Seeing how my mother was treated by her country, I feel the government has dishonored all who served — it should be looking out for the people who defend our nation.”

Back in the country that blamed the birth defects maiming its newborns on “Okinawa bacteria,” Maj. Gen. Tho shares Catherine’s anger with Washington. Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the U.S. government has repeatedly denied assistance to Vietnamese people suffering from dioxin exposure. As recently as 2003, the U.S. Embassy in Vietnam accused the Hanoi government of waging a “two-decade-long propaganda campaign” over military herbicides; the following year, the ambassador alleged Vietnamese claims of health damage were based upon “fake science.” Even in 2012, when Washington announced it would clean up its former Agent Orange storage site in Da Nang, it refused to acknowledge any human health problems and instead labeled the project as simply “environmental remediation.”

Although Tho echoed Catherine’s belief that money lies at the root of Washington’s denials, he also suspects another motive.

“If they admitted to the health problems their defoliants caused, they’d be admitting to having waged a campaign of chemical warfare against the people of Vietnam. This would make them liable to be taken to the International Criminal Court at The Hague to be tried as war criminals,” he said.

With the stakes this high, perhaps it is understandable that the U.S. government has attempted to shroud its usage of these poisons within so many denials and lies. But with scientists estimating that serious health problems will persist into the fourth, fifth and possibly sixth generations, the coming decades will see millions more demanding answers about their illnesses — putting Washington under growing pressure to take responsibility for what Dr. Phuong first uncovered at Tu Du Hospital all those years ago.

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Agent Orange – Turkish Protesters Hijack Agent Orange for Increased Media Coverage
Official COVVHA Report 

Agent Orange Turkey COVVHA.NET
Heather A. Bowser, LPCC
COVVHA Co-Founder

What is more frightening than the thought of being intentionally poisoned by someone in authority over you? Perhaps, offspring being born with devastating birth defects, learning disorders, or rare illnesses?  Maybe dying of horrible cancers, heart conditions, or complications of Parkinson’s Disorder? These are not merely frightening thoughts to those exposed to Agent Orange; it is reality, life and death.

Over the weekend, there were wide reports coming from Turkey that police were using Agent Orange on protesters as a form of crowd control. Social media, especially Twitter became ablaze with re-tweets calling foul to this form of force by Turkish police on people who were trying to protest unrest within Turkey.  Social media accounts of the violence fueled more protesters to join the throng. Rampant reports of police using tear gas and high force water cannons to dissipate the crowd were coupled with images.

Agent Orange advocates and founders of (COVVHA) Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC. Kelly L. Derricks & Heather A. Bowserfelt after researching media reports about the incident in Turkey, it was important keep the dialog about Agent Orange set in fact and not fiction. COVVHA is fighting for justice for all generational victims of Agent Orange. It is a difficult fight shrouded in denial, secrecy and lack of media support. It is coupled by the urgent needs of sick and dying offspring of those exposed.

Agent Orange has a notorious history in Vietnam from 1961-1971. The United States military used several chemical herbicides during the Vietnam War to “help” in the War effort. The military sited the thick jungle foliage of Vietnam, and the enemy’s access to food crops, as reason to spray an unfettered amount of chemicals onto South Vietnam, killing all the vegetation in its spray zone.  The military deducted, if the enemy had no food and no place to hide, the U.S. and Allies would be victorious in Vietnam. In the end, they sprayed an estimated eighteen million gallons of Agent Orange, on a country the size of New Mexico.

Protesters in Turkey have stated the police were shooting orange liquid filled canisters at the crowd.  Agent Orange used during the Vietnam War was colorless. It was called agent orange because of the orange stripe around the middle of the fifty five gallon barrel it was stored in. It was not orange. However, a Turkish protester seeing this substance being shot would think something is very wrong here. It is natural for them to question what police were shooting at them. If a protester was un-knowledgeable of the history of Monsanto, Dow, and the 5 other chemical company’s recipe for herbicide, it’s not a far leap for a protester to think the Turkish police, firing an orange substance at them could think they were using Agent Orange. At that point protesters believe it had gone well beyond crowd control. Instead the police were trying to kill protesters with chemical warfare.

Agent Orange wasn’t used as a crowd deterrent it was used to defoliate plant material.  It was not sprayed directly on people as an act of chemical warfare. However, many were indirectly sprayed with Agent Orange during its use in Vietnam. Many U.S. and Vietnamese soldiers and Vietnamese civilians have recounted times when they were exposed by aerial spray.  Others were exposed when handling the chemical with no protective gear, working or living in areas that had been defoliated, or drinking contaminated water or food. The U.S. Military has fought back against outrage that Agent Orange was used as chemical warfare. They state it was used strictly as vegetation control, an agricultural chemical. The problems with the herbicides used in Vietnam were they were toxic. They were contaminated with an industrial byproduct called dioxin. Dioxin is one of the deadliest known contaminants to man.  Production of Agent Orange ended in the 1970’s.

The process of dying at the hands of Agent Orange is a long painful process, with the exception of Chloacne, which appears shortly after acute exposure; symptoms of exposure do not surface for years.  Police are looking for quick responses in riot control situations.

A quick internet image search about the effects of Agent Orange on the children of Vietnam can leave a person horrified. Babies today are still being born in Vietnam with severe deformities, especially in areas where the deadly dioxin is still in high concentration in Vietnam’s soil. There are still twenty eight such places in South Vietnam today.

The plight of America’s Vietnam Veterans, Australian Veterans, and Vietnamese Veteran’s illnesses and battle to gain justice has been going on for over forty years. Children and grandchildren of all, who fought in the Vietnam War from around the globe, are currently pleading for those in power to recognize the birth defects and diseases they suffer from and believe are caused by their parent or grandparent’s exposure to Agent Orange.  All of these groups cannot afford the reality of their life or death fight to be watered down or distracted from by Facebook and Twitter posts from Turkey.

So was this report from Turkey simply a misstep by a confused, uninformed protester, or was it something else? Could Turkish protesters have been trying to ride the impact of the fear associated with Agent Orange to gain more recognition for their county’s unrest? Or was it a simple mistake, which people perpetuated by not checking their facts? If the act by Turkish protesters was to gain international media exposure by claiming Agent Orange was used on them, it’s worked. The whole world did a double take when headlines read,” Turkish Riot Police, Starts Using Agent Orange,” all of the sudden the focus of the protest was lost.

There isn’t any evidence of Agent Orange being used in Turkey.  Members of the media and activists must check the facts so disinformation is not spread. To be successful we must push ourselves to be knowledgeable before just clicking the share button.

The challenge is to stay focused to the matters at hand. Turkey is going through unrest. Agent Orange is continuing to kill people every day. Don’t confuse the two, and do not turn away, your attention matters.

“A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.” ~ Mark Twain

© 2013 (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC.  All rights reserved.

BECOME A MEMBER OF CHILDREN OF VIETNAM VETERANS HEALTH ALLIANCE
YOU WILL RECEIVE A ONCE DAILY EMAIL OF ANY BREAKING AGENT ORANGE NEWS AND RELATED TOPICS IN ADDITION TO ANY COVVHA UPDATES
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Agent Orange COVVHA CO-Founders Announcement

Agent Orange Public Speakers COVVHA.NET

Kelly L. Derricks will be speaking at The Philadelphia PA March Against Monsanto Location

This Saturday May 25, 2013

Heather A. Bowser will be speaking at The Akron OH March Against Monsanto Location

This Saturday May 25, 2013

Event Links Have Been Attached Below For More Details

Akron Ohio Link

Philadelphia Pennsylvania Link

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GMO Agent Orange Monsanto

March Against Monsanto Resources and Information Links

MONSANTO AGENT ORANGE GMO COVVHA.NET

Please Use The Following Link To Print Agent Orange Awareness Flyers

http://covvha.net/agent-orange-covvha-flyer-for-march-against-monsanto-events-public-posting

Please Use The Following Link To View Truth Teller’s Millions Against Monsanto Video 

http://covvha.net/gmo-agent-orange-speech-given-by-truth-teller-at-millions-against-monsanto-nyc

Please Use The Following Link To View Monsanto’s Corporate Connection Map

http://covvha.net/monsantos-top-corporate-secrets-exposed/

Please Use The Following Link To Print A Single Page GMO Do Not Buy List

http://covvha.net/monsanto-gmo-brands-and-foods-printable-shopping-list

Please Use The Following Link For More GMO Resources 

http://covvha.net/category/gm-food/

Please Use The Following Link To Find Your Local March Location

Locations Are Added Every 5 Minutes

http://www.march-against-monsanto.com/p/blog-page.html

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AGENT ORANGE INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OFFICIAL COVVHA TESTIMONY
Tanya Mack COVVHA IOMThere is a renewed push for the Institute of Medicine to take seriously the claims made by the Children of Vietnam Veterans and their families about the birth defects and illnesses they are suffering from. The adverse affects of the dioxin laden herbicide sprayed over the jungles of Vietnam, AKA Agent Orange, have been well known since the government first admitted in 1991 to cause illnesses in Vietnam Veterans. For years, the veterans and their families have been saying birth defects and rare illnesses have affected their children’s health. These anomalies and illnesses are not only happening in the children of Vietnam Veterans (2nd generation), but now are showing up in alarming numbers in the grandchildren (3rd Generation) of Vietnam Veterans as well.

January 16, 2013, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance (COVVHA) participated, in the public hearings for the Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) Committee to Review on the Health Effects in Vietnam Veterans Exposure to Herbicides (Ninth Biennial Update) in Irvine, California. Tanya Mack, COVVHA Core Chairperson, and California resident, gave testimony on behalf of COVVHA to the committee. Tanya Mack is the Daughter of a recently, deceased Vietnam Veteran who succumbed service connected Agent Orange illnesses. She was born with severe hip dysplasia and has developed several rare aggressive cancers in her thirties which she is currently still fighting.

“The Institute of Medicine is an independent, nonprofit organization that works outside of government to provide unbiased and authoritative advice to decision makers and the public (From the IOM website).” They have been commissioned to review biannually, the most current data available about herbicides and the health effects on our Veterans. In the past, the IOM have been responsible for getting new illnesses added to the presumptive list for our ailing Vietnam Veterans. Like On October 13, 2009, when, the Veterans Affairs added three new medical conditions for Vietnam Veterans presumptively associated with exposure to herbicides; hairy cell and other B-cell leukemia’s, Parkinson’s disease, and ischemic heart disease, to the list of covered illnesses.

Included in COVVHA’s report to the committee, were the number and types of illnesses and congenital anomalies found in the second and third generation members of COVVHA. This includes the ailments that mirror the Vietnam Veterans and the congenital anomalies found on the list of birth defects covered in the children of women Vietnam Veterans. Tanya Mack, shared several studies from the early eighties including Ranch Hand studies and a current epigenetic study from Washington State that show a correlation to trans-generational exposures to dioxin, with the committee for them to consider. Several recommendations were made as to the next actions to help the children of Vietnam Veterans in the most practical ways.

Three of COVVHA recommendations included approving the currently covered eighteen plus, birth defects for children of female Vietnam Veterans for the children of male Vietnam Veterans. The second recommendation included the request for free DNA and Epigenetic testing for the biological children of Vietnam Veterans as needed, and an official Agent Orange Registry for Children of Vietnam Veterans. COVVHA made several other recommendations that were included in their submitted testimony.

Highlights of other participant’s testimony:
Ken Holybee, Director at Large, of Vietnam Veterans of America. Ken pointed out in the Veterans and Agent Orange 2008 Update, the IOM Committee concluded that it was plausible exposure to herbicides that could cause paternally mediated effects in offspring as a result of epigenetic changes, and that such changes would most likely be attributable to the TCDD contaminants in Agent Orange. He urged the committee to follow up on their 2008 recommendations. Due to the continued suffering the VVA sees in the families who attend their Agent Orange Town Hall Meetings.

Debra Kraus, widow of a Vietnam Veteran, Activist and Artist, shared a slideshow presentation of her art that is based on her experience through her husband’s dealings with the V.A. and health issues.

Elayne Mackey, National Health Committee co-chair for the Associates of Vietnam Veterans of America (AVVA). AVVA recommends the creation of Centers of Excellence to provide for research, treatment, and social services for the offspring of veterans of all eras who have been exposed to toxins while in service to our country.

Wesley T. Carter, Chair of the C-123 Veterans Association, asked for two possibilities, the Department of Defense designates the contaminated -123 aircraft, by specific tail number, as Agent Orange exposure sites. The other for the VA to accept claims from veterans able to provide evidence of service aboard the aircraft known to have been contaminated.

Andy Olshan, PhD, Chair of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina and Kim Boekelheide, MD, PhD, Professor of Medical Science, Brown University phoned into the meeting. The Doctors gave their opinion on the likelihood of Paternal Transmission of Dioxin through Sperm. The Doctors stated that paternal transmission is relatively small because the male system is made to minimize the transmission of issues and that there is not enough evidence to support the theory that Dioxin is transmitted through sperm.

COVVHA is committed to serving as a voice for the children of Vietnam Veterans including second and third generation victims of Agent Orange and Dioxin Exposures worldwide. We believe in empowering each other to hold the companies and governments responsible for causing so much devastation and suffering to our generations. We fight for justice globally. We hope the IOM will make the responsible recommendations to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Please, see the full testimony submitted to the Institute of Medicine attached which also includes Tanya Mack’s personal health struggle with Agent Orange related birth defects and cancers.

COVVHA members and supporters who have joined our email subscription will also receive the Video of Tanya’s testimony. If you would like to receive the video and other information from COVVHA you can subscribe in the box below

Committee to Review the Health Effects in Vietnam Veterans of Exposure to Herbicides (Ninth Biennial Update… by View Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance’s profile on Scribd” href=”http://www.scribd.com/COVVHA1″>Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance


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Heather A. Bowser, MsEd, LPCC
© 2013 (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC
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Agent Orange – Monsanto – GMO

March Against Monsanto 2013 season is here! Please read the following for important information.

Truth Teller 2013

Truth Teller 2013

On October 16, 2011, Kelly L. Derricks, also known as TRUTH TELLER traveled to New York City where she gave a public speech about Agent Orange after being invited by Millions Against Monsanto to participate in the rally event for World Food Day. Since then, the illness list she referenced reported by Children of Vietnam Veterans has grown to nearly 800 which are listed on the website of the Non-profit she Co-Founded, (COVVHA) Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC., with Heather A. Bowser.

Kelly has battled severe health issues since she was born that continue today. Some of her illnesses, presumed to be associated with the inter-generational effects of Agent Orange, include but are not limited to the following:

• Chronic kidney disease
• Crohn’s disease
• Addison’s disease
• Congenital adrenal hyperplaysia
• Intersticial cystitis.

*Her complete list of illnesses staggers to 35 different things.

Kelly will be speaking at the Philadelphia Location (Independence Mall) March Against Monsanto Event on Saturday May 25, 2013

Please Read Kelly’s Full Bio

http://covvha.net/children-of-vietnam-veterans-health-alliance-surviving-agent-orange-and-dioxin-exposures/

Please Watch the video below

http://www.youtube.com/user/teppnme

Kelly L. Derricks

© 2013 (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC.  All rights reserved.

BECOME A MEMBER OF CHILDREN OF VIETNAM VETERANS HEALTH ALLIANCE

YOU WILL RECEIVE A ONCE DAILY EMAIL OF ANY BREAKING AGENT ORANGE NEWS AND RELATED TOPICS IN ADDITION TO ANY COVVHA UPDATES
PLEASE ENTER YOUR EMAIL IN THE BOX BELOW,  A CONFIRMATION LINK WILL BE SENT TO YOUR EMAIL.  YOU MUST OPEN THE EMAIL AND CLICK THE CONFIRMATION LINK TO COMPLETE THE PROCESS.
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Genetically Engineered Food Right-to-Know Act

GMO HOUSE AND SENATE POPVOX WWW.COVVHA.NETTake Action and make your voice heard now!!!!!!

All Legislation Endorsed and/or Opposed Has Been Approved and Reviewed by Kelly L. Derricks

It has never been easier to write your State Representative and share your position on current legislation. C.O.V.V.H.A. has been making it even easier for members, fans and followers!! The days of getting your pens and papers out to send your letters are over!!!

An “action page” link has been set up for the Genetically Engineered Food Right-to-Know Act H.R.1699 & S.809 which takes you directly to the specific legislation as well as an area for your Name, Zip Code, and YOUR VOTE. That’s it!!! You hit enter and your information is sent directly to your State Representative in letter form which you will receive a copy of via email.

Your VOICE does count, PLEASE, use it!!!

Kelly L. Derricks (T.T.)

CLICK TO CAST YOUR HOUSE VOTE ON POPVOX NOW

CLICK TO CAST YOUR SENATE VOTE ON POPVOX NOW

I personally casted both of my votes and included the following statement to the United States House and Senate: I support H.R. 1699 (“To amend the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require that genetically engineered food”) because… GMO foods are engineered with health threatening compounds and chemicals and then sprayed with half of the chemical compound used in the production of AGENT ORANGE. The U.S. Gov’t killed my Father at the age of 37 after serving in the Vietnam War.  Agent Orange/DIOXIN was passed through his sperm mutating my DNA. I have to fight for my life every single day with more than 30 diagnosed illnesses at the age of 38 and so do tens of thousands of other Children of Vietnam Veterans who were exposed. Now the gov’t doesn’t care that we are being DOUBLE EXPOSED. That’s Capital Murder if you ask me. You’ll see me standing in a court room bringing charges of Murder against the United States Govt before you see me standing down on GMO.

Truth Teller
www.covvha.net

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agent orange wasting time

A note to C. Jack Ellis and David Oedel – What each of you “don’t get” is that while you banter back and forth, we sit hear dying.  While the fight to bring justice to Vietnam Veterans and their children exposed Agent Orange rages on internationally, you both neglected to give your readers any information on where they can find help.  Well gentleman, Here we are, (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC.  We respectfully ask that you stop arguing and start advocating.
Kelly L. Derricks – President/Co-Founder
(COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC.

ELLIS: David Oedel just doesn’t get it
Published: April 21, 2013 By C. JACK ELLIS — Special to The Telegraph

I have always considered David Oedel a friend; however, I am disappointed beyond belief with his attitude toward veterans in general and Vietnam veterans in particular, pertaining to the effects of Agent Orange.

Oedel is dead wrong on several of his pronouncements and assertions in his latest column in The Telegraph.

Let me be clear that my advocacy for veterans and their families did not begin when I first ran for elected office. The record will reflect that I have been on this journey since the 1970s when the Institute of Health discovered/revealed that the Agent Orange toxin was responsible for many ailments affecting Vietnam veterans and their offspring who were born with spina bifida shortly after their fathers returned from Vietnam.

Oedel states that my son was born in the early 1990s, which is not true. I returned from my first tour of duty in Vietnam in late 1968, and my son was born with spina bifida in late 1969. Most of the 2,200 children born with spina bifida to Vietnam veterans were conceived within a year after their fathers returned from Vietnam.

I guess Oedel’s way of thinking is that these 2,200 children of Vietnam veterans born with spina bifida shortly after their father’s return is just mere coincidence. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Oedel also stated in his April 14 column in The Telegraph) that children born to Vietnam veterans should not be compensated because they did not serve in the military. Oedel should know there are countless civilians affected by war. In the war zone, this is referred to as collateral damage.

Oedel went as far as quoting an ancient article in The New York Times as his source of information pertaining to Agent Orange and its effects on veterans and their offspring.

There was nothing casual about being sprayed with and/or operating in contaminated areas with this toxin for long periods of time. What was most shocking and appalling is Oedel’s assertion in his column that the thousands of Vietnam veterans suffering from prostate cancer because of Agent Orange and being compensated by the Veterans Administration are not deserving of such compensation. He further indicated that the only reason that our children are being compensated is because former President Bill Clinton needed to make amends with the military brass, so he decided to do so by throwing a bone to the veterans and their offspring.

For Oedel’s information, spina bifida and prostate cancer are not the only abnormalities caused by Agent Orange in which the VA is compensating veterans. The list is long. Among these include Hodgkin’s diseases, ischemic heart disease, multiple myeloma, Parkinson’s disease, respiratory cancers, diabetes and many others.

I am willing to bet that if Oedel and his offspring were suffering from such birth defects because of his exposure to a deadly toxin in combat that his attitude would be entirely different. I am inclined to believe that Oedel just doesn’t get it as it relates to veterans and their families being compensated with “largesse” for injuries caused in a war zone and beyond.

For whatever reasons, he insists on referring to these benefits as largesse or gifts from the government. Lastly, his implication that I and other politicians who fight for what’s rightfully due our veterans and their families are politically motivated. Those accusations are beyond the pale, and quite frankly, disgusting and insulting to every veteran who has worn the uniform, especially those who have worn it in combat, thus giving Oedel the right and freedom to state his uninformed opinions.

I feel Oedel owes an apology, not only to veterans, but politicians, as well. Oedel just doesn’t get it.

C. Jack Ellis is a retired Army non-commissioned officer and a former mayor of Macon.

Read more here: http://www.macon.com/2013/04/21/2447140/ellis-david-oedel-just-doesnt.html

Read Oedel Article here : http://www.macon.com/2013/04/14/2437885/oedel-extra-benefits-as-largesse.html

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Agent Orange Delaware Valley Vietnam Veterans www.covvha.net

COVVHA Co-Founder Kelly L. Derricks will be the guest speaker, this Wednesday April 3, 2013 at the Delaware Valley Vietnam Veterans meeting in Bristol, Pa. Bucks County. 7:00 p.m. all are welcome.

800 Coates Ave, Bristol, PA | Get Directions »

https://www.facebook.com/DV3PA

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Agent Orange John Bury Organic View Radio www.covvha.net

Agent Orange: What Legacy Do We Leave Behind For Children?

During the Vietnam War, the United States military sprayed millions of gallons of Agent Orange and other herbicides on trees and vegetation. Several decades later, concerns about the health effects from these chemicals continue. One of the groups impacted by Agent Orange Dioxin poisoning is the servicemen who were at sea. These brave men are often referred to as Blue Water Navy, which includes Coast Guard and Fleet Marine personnel.

Although it has been over forty years, there are still so many servicemen as well as their offspring who continue to suffer due to Agent Orange Dioxin poisoning. While the United States Veterans Administration offers “eligible Veterans”, a free Agent Orange Registry health exam to assess possible long-term health problems related to exposure, gathering the information is quite a task. However, there are people out there who are doing everything they can to help our veterans get the help that they need.

In this segment of The Organic View Radio Show, host, June Stoyer talks to Mr. John J. Bury, a retired US Navy and Vietnam War Veteran. He is going to talk about Agent Orange Dioxin poisoning and his work as an advocate, helping others that have also been affected.

Hear The Show Now

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Children of Vietnam Veterans: Their Voice Keeps Growing

Originally Published By Salem-News.com (Mar-27-2013 11:36)

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(WASHINGTON DC) – Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, INC. (COVVHA), is an organization that was founded to address the specialized needs of the children and grand children of Vietnam Veterans who have been negatively affected by their parent’s exposure to the herbicide, Agent Orange, during the Vietnam war. We educate veterans, their families, the general public, and lawmakers about Agent Orange and it’s effect on our lives.

COVVHA was founded by two children of Vietnam Veterans. Heather A. Bowser and Kelly L. Derricks. Both of their lifes have been significantly affected by Agent Orange. Kelly lost her father at age seven due to Agent Orange illnesses. Kelly currently suffers from twenty eight, unexplained illnesses which forced her to retire from her career in the mental health field. Heather was born with several birth defects, including missing her right leg below the knee, several of her fingers and big to on her left foot. Heather was born two months premature and only weighed 3.4 ounces. Her father is also deceased. Heather’s father had five bypasses on his heart at age 38, subsequently he died at ace 50 from a massive heart attack. His death was service related due to his Agent Orange exposure.

Kelly and Heather founded this organization because there are so many needs that are not being met in their peer group. The most pressing one, is the government has not acknowledged the devastating birth defects and illnesses in the children of male Vietnam Veterans, like they have in the children of female Vietnam Veterans. Currently, the government acknowledges eighteen plus birth defects in the children of female Vietnam Veterans. They only acknowledge one birth defect in the children of Male Vietnam Veterans. Spina Bifida. This, Kelly and Heather both feel is discrimination. Especially because they have so many reports of similar birth defects and illness.

COVVHA has also built a private support community for only children of Vietnam Veterans. It has over six hundred members. They educate and support each other in this group. Kelly and Heather want their members to understand that they are not alone. Many of them have lost, or are in the process of losing their Vietnam Veteran, plus they are dealing with birth defects or unexplained illnesses.

They are also seeing an influx of children of Vietnam Veterans who start researching Agent Orange because their child, the grand child of the Vietnam Veteran has been born with an issue, or suddenly has a rare illness.

COVVHA deals with a lot of issues, like grief, illness, anger and the like. The group also enjoys each others company and find many similar anecdotes of what it was like growing up with a Vietnam Veteran.

COVVHA is also involved in supporting international efforts in cleaning up, and disclosing locations of buried herbicide. Heather has traveled three times to Vietnam. She has visited two of the most poisonous hot spots still contaminated with Agent Orange, Da Nang, and Bein Hoa. Heather has also worked with organizations in Vietnam who support the on going health care of the Vietnamese children who are still being born today with birth defects due to their parents or grand parents exposure and the continued environmental pollutants. Recently Heather traveled to Okinawa, Japan to educate those seeking answers about reports that Agent Orange herbicide was stored, used and buried on the island of Okinawa. Building community with those who may have suffered due to Agent Orange in Japan is very important to the organization.

COVVHA seeks unity in all those who have been affected by Agent Orange dioxin so that our community may build strength in numbers and that our voices would be heard by those who make decisions.

(C) (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC.

Children of Vietnam Veterans: Their Voice Keeps Growing

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Billy Joel We Didnt Start The Fire - WWW.COVVHA.NET

We didn’t start the fire It was always burning Since the world’s been turning We didn’t start the fire No we didn’t light it But we tried to fight it We didn’t start the fire But when we are gone Will it still burn on, and on, and on, and on

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AGENT ORANGE COLD CASE FILES WWW.COVVHA.NET“When the people fear the government, there is tyranny. When the government fears the people, there is liberty.”
Thomas Jefferson

COVVHA readers may have recently noticed an increase of our publishing less recent government documents regarding Agent Orange.  For many readers, this is the first time they are able to see these once classified documents.  For others readers, these documents are nothing more than “OMB Memos” (Office of Management and Budget).

Which ever type of reader you may be, COVVHA will continue to make these documents available, many of them once ignored by our own government officials.  Every day, crucial information about the Vietnam War, Agent Orange, and Dioxin, is being removed from the public education system as well as the virtually non-existent education of medical students regarding these subjects.

We ask that our readers remember that COVVHA, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, was founded by, and is operated daily by the same children of Vietnam Veterans that have ALWAYS been ignored by the United States Government. Our renewed push for justice will most certainly include, to the best of our ability, the distribution of any documents that we feel our government would much prefer to stay under the rug they were once swept beneath.

In previous COVVHA articles, I personally have said “Agent Orange is a serial killer”.  In the world of criminal investigation, many professionals would say this is a cold case.  As with any cold case, the need for fresh eyes to review old evidence is crucial.

Kelly L. Derricks
© (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC

 

Chemical and Biological Weapons Senate Documents May 1969 Read Full Article →

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On October 16, 2011, Kelly L. Derricks (TRUTH TELLER) traveled to New York City where she gave a public speech about Agent Orange after being invited by Millions Against Monsanto to participate in the rally event for World Food Day.  Below is the video recording of that speech.

Kelly has battled severe health issues since she was born that continue today. Some of her illnesses, presumed to be associated with the inter-generational effects of Agent Orange, include but are not limited to the following:

• Chronic kidney disease
• Crohn’s disease
• Addison’s disease
• Congenital adrenal hyperplaysia
• Intersticial cystitis.

*Her complete list of illnesses staggers to 30 different things.

Kelly continues to fight for the Children of Vietnam Veterans as well as Vietnam Veterans and their families. In January of 2012 She Co-Founded The Non-Profit Organization (COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC

Visit The Main Website At WWW.COVVHA.NET

https://www.youtube.com/user/teppnme?feature=watch

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The wind was blowing coldly, I pulled the collar up over my ears so that they would stop stinging. There was a soft snow beginning to fall from the sky, adding to the feeling in the air. The children of all ages were bundled in there coats, hats, mittens and scarves all eager to greet Santa on this  blustery evening. My favorite were the babies with the animal hats on, they were just precious. The Alive Vineyard Church of Licking County was giving away free popcorn and Hot Chocolate to everyone, to help battle the nipping chill in the air and they had a wonderful live Nativity, you could pet the animals. Sahara, the 7 month old camel was my favorite, she was so sweet. We walked around that square I’ll bet 8 times, listening to the songs that were being sung, this 9 year old girl was amazing!

We had almost given into the cold and went home when it was time for Santa to make his arrival, the kids all got so excited and it was like an electric current in the air, you could feel it. He came in by way of the Newark Fire Department, on a ladder truck, it really is a site to see. He got up on the stage and directs everyone to yell Merry Christmas as loud as they can and the lights will come on. Everyone yells, nothing. You can feel the disappointment from the kids when they don’t come one. He says, try it again, this time give it all you’ve got! This time, the lights on the bottom quarter of the building come on and go off. Again, disappointment, but the excitement is building again. Then he tells everyone to close their eyes and feel the Christmas Spirit well up from their toes and then yell, this time, half of the building comes on and goes back out. The last time is the trick and the lights on the entire courthouse, the gazebo, all the decorations on the lawn and the trees all light up brightly and I realize that what I am feeling is JOY!

I have always loved the lighting of the courthouse. It has been a tradition in my family most of my life. Richard got to go with me this year. He hasn’t been able to do that since we first started to date 13 years ago. I felt joy in that my husband was with me, joy that I was able to be there, joy that I have family and friends that love me, joy that I am truly blessed! It is my hope that in this season of love that you are able to find one thing in your life that brings you joy! A child (or grandchild’s) laughter, being with your spouse, watching Christmas lights come on, helping someone that is less fortunate than you, giving someone a hug, reading your favorite book, whatever it is that brings you happiness and joy, I hope that you have it!

I sometimes forget just what joy feels like. We can sometimes let it get lost when we are feeling sick, pain, lonely, sad, angry, frustrated, like a lot of us are most every day of the year. It isn’t fair, it isn’t right but there has got to be ONE thing in your life that makes you feel joy, you just have to remember it. Even if it is a memory of a loved one that has gone on, or a memory of family get togethers from long ago. I feel it the most when my niece and nephew give me a hug and tell me they love me, when I am with my husband, when I am lost in a wonderful book, when I am with my family and feel the love that they have for me, when I am working with Heather and Kelly and I feel like I have accomplished something with two women who have become my sisters, when I look at my Christmas tree and I think of my mom. It is something that I let get lost a lot and I need to remember how that feels because it is too precious to be lost. Take some time in the holiday season to find someone that you love and just be with them. Go to the Soup Kitchen and help out, Give something of yourself.  It is worth it! It isn’t about how much you have or how much money you spend, it is about love, compassion and togetherness. I want the best for each and every one of you and it is my hope that you have a very Merry Christmas!

Karen Y. Wengert

 ©Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance

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On Monday November 12, 2012, Kelly L. Derricks and Karen Y. Wengert were please to return to the Organic View Radio Show, hosted by June Stoyer,  for a special Veterans Day feature about Agent Orange and the children of Vietnam Veterans.

Click the player below to hear the show!

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/theorganicview/2012/11/12/the-children-of-vietnam-veterans-health-alliance

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MY FATHER…

SEPTEMBER 4, 1945 -OCTOBER14,1982
HARRY C. MACKEL JR., STAKEOUT OFFICER
By JIM NICHOLSON
Source: Philadelphia Daily News Published: October 18, 1982
Daily News Staff Writer

Harry C. Mackel Jr., a decorated Philadelphia police officer who was wounded in the 1978 MOVE shootout, died Thursday October 14th of cancer in Rolling Hill Hospital, Elkins Park. He was 37.
Mackel had received numerous citations and commendations in his 12 years in the department, including the Valor Commendation, the highest award for bravery, for his arrest of two bank robbers in a shootout on Jan. 29, 1973.

Mackel was told by a woman passer-by at Germantown and Rising Sun avenues that day that a Provident National Bank branch was being robbed. As he entered the bank, Mackel was jumped from behind by the accomplice of the gunman, who was menacing the tellers.

While Mackel grappled with the accomplice, the first holdup man began shooting at the policeman. Mackel returned the fire, wounding the armed man, and then subdued the accomplice.

” He loved stakeout, he loved it so much that when I went to the DA’s office he had a chance to come along and refused,” said County Detective James E. Rubino, who had been Mackel’s partner for three years.

” He was the kind of partner every officer hopes he will have on the street,” Rubino added. ” He was an intelligent, smart street cop. My wife introduced me to him and his wife and from the first meeting I knew I liked the guy. He believed the stakeout unit was the ultimate job on the Police Department. But if he loved the department, he worshiped his family.”

According to Rubino, Mackel knew that there could be a bomb ticking inside him: Agent Orange.

” He handled the stuff when he was a loadmaster sergeant in Vietnam,” said Rubino, ” I think he did two tours in ‘Nam and was in the Air Force seven years. He told me he thought he might have been damaged by it.

” He died of cancer. But he lived life to the absolute fullest, nothing slowed him down, not even when he was shot during the MOVE shootout. He refused to be pulled back off the line when he was shot.”

Mackel was called out that day, Aug. 8, 1978, when a band of armed radicals decided to make a violent stand in its Powelton Village house.

” Charlie Stewart was wounded and Harry bent over to pull him to safety when a bullet grazed Harry across the back and buttocks. Harry didn’t know he was hit until he reached his hand into his coveralls and it came out wet,” said Rubino.

” He looked forward to coming to work every day,” Rubino said. ” I was very, very fortunate to have a friend like him.”

Mackel is survived by his beloved seven year old daughter, Kelly Lynne, his parents, his wife, and his sister, Mrs. Edward Murray. A mass of Christian burial was scheduled for 9:30 a.m. today at St. Bartholmew Roman Catholic Church, 5600 Jackson St. Burial will be in New Cathedral Cemetery

In The End, He Died For This Country and because of that,
I grieve for Him Every Day Of My Life.
© Kelly L. Derricks
© Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance

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MY FATHER…

SEPTEMBER 4, 1945 -OCTOBER14,1982
HARRY C. MACKEL JR., STAKEOUT OFFICER
By JIM NICHOLSON
Source: Philadelphia Daily News Published: October 18, 1982
Daily News Staff Writer

Harry C. Mackel Jr., a decorated Philadelphia police officer who was wounded in the 1978 MOVE shootout, died Thursday October 14th of cancer in Rolling Hill Hospital, Elkins Park. He was 37.
Mackel had received numerous citations and commendations in his 12 years in the department, including the Valor Commendation, the highest award for bravery, for his arrest of two bank robbers in a shootout on Jan. 29, 1973.

Mackel was told by a woman passer-by at Germantown and Rising Sun avenues that day that a Provident National Bank branch was being robbed. As he entered the bank, Mackel was jumped from behind by the accomplice of the gunman, who was menacing the tellers.

While Mackel grappled with the accomplice, the first holdup man began shooting at the policeman. Mackel returned the fire, wounding the armed man, and then subdued the accomplice.

” He loved stakeout, he loved it so much that when I went to the DA’s office he had a chance to come along and refused,” said County Detective James E. Rubino, who had been Mackel’s partner for three years.

” He was the kind of partner every officer hopes he will have on the street,” Rubino added. ” He was an intelligent, smart street cop. My wife introduced me to him and his wife and from the first meeting I knew I liked the guy. He believed the stakeout unit was the ultimate job on the Police Department. But if he loved the department, he worshiped his family.”

According to Rubino, Mackel knew that there could be a bomb ticking inside him: Agent Orange.

” He handled the stuff when he was a loadmaster sergeant in Vietnam,” said Rubino, ” I think he did two tours in ‘Nam and was in the Air Force seven years. He told me he thought he might have been damaged by it.

” He died of cancer. But he lived life to the absolute fullest, nothing slowed him down, not even when he was shot during the MOVE shootout. He refused to be pulled back off the line when he was shot.”

Mackel was called out that day, Aug. 8, 1978, when a band of armed radicals decided to make a violent stand in its Powelton Village house.

” Charlie Stewart was wounded and Harry bent over to pull him to safety when a bullet grazed Harry across the back and buttocks. Harry didn’t know he was hit until he reached his hand into his coveralls and it came out wet,” said Rubino.

” He looked forward to coming to work every day,” Rubino said. ” I was very, very fortunate to have a friend like him.”

Mackel is survived by his beloved seven year old daughter, Kelly Lynne, his parents, his wife, and his sister, Mrs. Edward Murray. A mass of Christian burial was scheduled for 9:30 a.m. today at St. Bartholmew Roman Catholic Church, 5600 Jackson St. Burial will be in New Cathedral Cemetery

In The End, He Died For This Country and because of that, 
I grieve for Him Every Day Of My Life.
© Kelly L. Derricks

© Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance


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For Immediate Release

Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance
COVVHA@GMAIL.COM
www.Covvha.net

Agent Orange In Ohio

Boardman, OH – October, 13 2012 – Two Generational Victims of Agent Orange who founded the Non-Profit Organization ‘Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance’ will host a meet & greet and educational seminar on October 13th starting at 6pm at Ohio Naturopathic Wellness Center, 755 Boardman-Canfield Rd., Suite D- (Southbridge West), Boardman, OH. Appetizers and beverages will be served, followed by the seminar at 7pm. Please make your reservations at COVVHA@Gmail.com for attendance since seating is limited. The event is free and open to the public and can also be joined through Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/COVVHA

Heather A. Bowser (39), Daughter of Bill Morris, of Canfield Ohio and Kelly L. Derricks (37), Daughter of Harry C. Mackel Jr., of Bucks County Pennsylvania are both daughters of deceased Vietnam War Veterans. Each of their father’s were exposed to the deadly herbicide Agent Orange/Dioxin while serving with the United States Military resulting in their untimely deaths.  Heather and Kelly were both born with multiple birth defects and illnesses which they still suffer from Today. In early 2012, after many years of independent advocacy, they came together to form ‘Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance’ a Non-Profit organization seeking justice and providing assistance for the tens of thousands of sons and daughters also suffering from the generational effects of Agent Orange that occurs during the conception of a child.

Karen Y. Wengert (38), Daughter of surviving Vietnam Veteran George Ridgeway, of Newark Ohio, will also be attending the event.  Karen’s mother, Barbara Ridgeway (Dunn), who is now deceased, was a key proponent in starting the area’s local VVA chapter.  At the age of 8, Karen accompanied by her parents on November 11, 1982, stood in attendance at the official opening of the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial Wall in Washington D.C.  As a surviving Vietnam Veteran, Karen’s father now suffers the severe health effects that Agent Orange / Dioxin is known for leaving in its destructive wake.  Recently,  Heather and Kelly were very pleased when Karen graciously accepted the position of Secretary as an Official COVVHA board member.  Karen has worked tirelessly over the last several months, despite her suffering with numerous illnesses, to ensure COVVHA’s ability to reach the 2ND generation victims of Agent Orange.

Nicknamed COVVHA, Kelly and Heather stress four simple words that have reached millions, not just in the American community, but also the international community of those exposed including Vietnam, Australia, Korea, Japan, Guam, and Canada; “You Are NOT Alone.” COVVHA has vowed that no Vietnam Veteran, Child, Grandchild, or those who were exposed to Agent Orange by other circumstances, will ever feel like they are waging the fight for their lives alone. The event which is being hosted by Kelly and Heather on October 13th starting at 6pm at Ohio Naturopathic Wellness Center, 755 Boardman-Canfield Rd., Suite D-(Southbridge West), Boardman, Ohio, Is intended to educate the general public and those exposed about the generational health and medical effects of Agent Orange. They also hope to meet other Sons and Daughters of Vietnam Veterans who may have interest in volunteering any extra time to COVVHA.

Before his Death at the age of 37, Kelly’s father stated, “I know I have a bomb ticking inside of me, I know that bomb is Agent Orange.” Before his death at the age of 50, Heather’s father stated, “If I only knew I was taking my children to war, I would have dodged the draft.”  Please join Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance on Saturday evening, October 13, 2012 to help COVVHA raise awareness.  R.S.V.P. by email at COVVHA@GMAIL.COM  At the conclusion of the evening’s events, A brief memorial tribute will be held in honor of Kelly’s father marking the 30 year anniversary of his death on October 14, 1982.  Kelly was only 7 years old when her father died.  Agent Orange was not just a Vietnam War Era tragedy. In fact, Agent Orange was used globally long before the war began. To people like Kelly and Heather and the millions they fight for, the Vietnam War never ended. The battle ground and weaponry have simply changed.


Visit Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance at their main website www.CovvHa.net 
Support COVVHA’S Facebook Page by clicking the “LIKE” button at https://www.facebook.com/COVVHA
Contact Heather and Kelly by email at COVVHA@GMAIL.COM
 
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My name is Karen Yvonne (Ridgeway) Wengert and I was born June 28th, 1974, to George and Barbara (Dunn) Ridgeway in Columbus, Ohio. My dad is a Vietnam Veteran and I am his very proud daughter. He was in Bien Hoa and Tan Son Nhut in 1965- 1966 and they were two of the heaviest effected areas for Agent Orange. He was a Flight Operations Coordinator with the 197th Aviation Company, his rank was SP5.

I had the typical childhood until I started to get migraines at the age of 4. I was officially diagnosed after many tests and treatments when I was 6. I still suffer with them to this day and on Social Security for them. They are so bad now that they effect my vision and I am on 3 types of medication to control them.

I grew up with an older sibling, who has had learning disabilities from a young age, and led an relatively uneventful life until I started to get Chroic Bronchitis when I was 12. I got it 4 times a year every year until I was 30.

I suffer from several mental disabilities, which I am on Social Security for now, and have from the age of 12. It began as depression. It turned into Clinical depression, which I was diagnosed with at 19, Bipolar disorder was next but I had to fight for an official diagnosis for that and got it at 26. I also have General Anxiety Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder, and Dysthemia.

I had a cancer scare in 2008. I was having a lot of health problems and come to find out that I had Type II Diabetes and Gall Stones. I was having trouble at work because I was sick all the time. I went for a CT scan as I was having pain in my abdomen and they found spots on my lungs. To make a long story short, after more tests, they told me that I was looking at Lymphoma. It turned out to be Sarcoidosis.

I have always had problems with my menstual cycle, I started at 13 and didn’t have another cycle until I was 15. I had excrutiating pain with my periods and I was sick every time. I was diagnosed at 18 with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome. I went on over the years dealing the best that I could and it finally came to a head last year when I had to have a complete Hysterectomy at the age of 37. My ovaries were the size of small potatoes and I had scar tissue trying to attach to my bowel.

I take 12 different pills everyday so that I am able to function properly. Not to mention the Vitamin D, as my levels are so very low. It has been a struggle over the years but I am here to tell the tale. My sibling and I both have mental issues and have been hospitalized for them, well, since we were teenagers.

My hope in being involve with COVVHA is that I can help Heather and Kelly to make a difference, to make a change. They are strong, independent fighters and I hope that I can take up the mantle and help where I can. I have been in the Vietnam Veteran Arena since I was 8 years old. My parents, along with a group of Vietnam Vets started the local VVA chapter here in town. I was at the Wall when it was opened on November 11th, 1982 and it is something that I will never forget. My mother was a lot like Kelly. She fought for those that didn’t have a voice or couldn’t. She would provide food and clothes for those that didn’t have any, we would have someone at our house for dinner or I was always babysitting so someone could go job hunting. I want to be able to say that I could help, even if it is from the background. I don’t have a very loud voice but I have other talents that will be beneficial to this group. I am proud of what my parents accomplished with the VVA and I am proud of this group as well!!

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We are the children of Vietnam Veterans, the ones left behind, the collateral damage of a war we never signed up for.  Yet today, and everyday, we share our grief world wide with other children, the children of September 11, 2001.

This article is not being written to discuss and or debate the who’s, why’s, and what’s of that day.  It is being written to simply state that WE, the children of Vietnam Veterans and our families, hear you and your families.

We understand your grief, your pain, and your horror.  We understand your questions.  We have asked the same questions.  Why.  The question is always WHY.

Our tragedies did not happen on one day as did yours.  Our tragedies have been occurring for more then 50 years.  Our fathers lay dead and dying because of Agent Orange / Dioxin poisoning.  Now we lay dead and dying.  Regardless, it is a tragedy that we suffer together.

When people ask me the same question that has been haunting Americans for 11 years, “What do you think happened that day”, I reply with the same answer each time; “My opinion does not matter.  What matters is that there are now thousands of children growing up without a father or a parent.  Children just like me.  Children that we at COVVHA have founded our principles on standing up for.  My father died when I was 7 years old and I would never wish that grief upon anyone that walks this earth.”

Whether it be the Vietnam War, Agent Orange Dioxin, or September 11, 2001, it is a shared grief.  No, it is not the grief of America, it is indeed the grief of the world.

“There is a sacredness in tears. They are not the mark of weakness, but of power. They speak more eloquently than ten thousand tongues. They are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition, and of unspeakable love.”
Washington Irving

© Kelly L. Derricks

Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance

 

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When it involves Vietnam veterans, some (not all) of our legislators turn a deaf ear. Those who do understand our health problems do try to help. They are the minority. I speak for Navy Blue Water Sailors, as well as some Air Force and Fleet Marines. These veterans of the forsaken Vietnam War did not have Boots-On-Ground.

For the most part, these veterans are not eligible for Veterans Affairs (VA) Health Care or Compensation for Agent Orange presumptive exposure. Who is doing the job of some legislators? John Bury, US Navy, retired, John Rossie, US Navy veteran, Susie Belanger, wife of a US Navy veteran, Heather Bowser, daughter of an US Army veteran, and Kelly Derricks, daughter of an US Air Force veteran.

We are advocates for the passage of the Agent Orange Bills. We are just a few of many who are involved, yet, we advocates take on the job that some legislators fail to do. Is it fair for us to seek meetings with members of Congress and Senate and plead the needs for Vietnam veterans? Is it fair to continue to ask the American people to write to their legislators to do their job and pass House Bill HR-3612 and Senate Bill S.1629?

We ask for these Bills to restore VA Health Care and Compensation Disability. We Vietnam veterans who are sick with diseases caused by Agent Orange Dioxin poisoning are doomed, unless those Bills are passed. Is this our death sentence for serving our Country? Is this the legacy we are to leave our children and grand children?

We advocates understand veterans issues are not the only items our legislators must deal with. Is it fair to say, we who served deserve to receive fair and equitable priority? I ask the American people once again to support us. Write the Congress and Senate. Urge them to pass the afore mentioned Bills.

  © John J. Bury, US Navy/retired/Vietnam War veteran, Media, Pa.

Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance

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“Fifty years later, the U.S. begins landmark project in Vietnam to clean up dioxin, a toxic chemical left from the defoliant Agent Orange.”

Watch today’s archive video episode of Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance on Huffington Post Live.  Guests included Co-Founder of COVVHA Kelly L. Derricks, Susan Hammond Founder of War Legacies Project, Tran Thi Hoan Vietnamese Advocate, and Jonathan Moore. Board Member, Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign.

Follow this link and press play on the video http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/5023fa5b02a76063fd000008

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Kelly L. Derricks, a former psychiatric therapist, founded  Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance this year with Heather A. Bowser to advocate for families of soldiers who were exposed to the toxic defoliant Agent Orange. She uses “every social media outlet possible” to get the group’s message to Congress. She’s weighed in on hundreds of bills through PoPVox, a website that lets individuals lobby lawmakers. And to Derricks’ surprise, her representatives have actually responded to explain where they stand.

Congressional offices used to gauge voters’ interest in an issue by the number of letters they received. Now, with citizens able to blast off an e-mail in seconds or reach politicians on Facebook and Twitter, it’s a growing challenge to “separate the signal from the noise,” says Brad Fitch, director of the Congressional Management Foundation, a nonprofit that aims to make Congress more responsive. A handful of tech startups like PopVox are trying to give citizens and lawmakers the tools to cut through the noise.

The site was born from the frustration of two Washington insiders who met at a dinner in 2009: Marci Harris, then a staffer for California Representative Pete Stark, and Rachna Choudhry, a lobbyist for the National Partnership for Women & Families. Both lamented the problems that keep the public from effectively communicating with Congress and felt they couldn’t fix them from their inside-the-Beltway roles. They left their jobs and launched PopVox in 2011 to be a nonpartisan platform to help citizens and advocacy groups get their messages to lawmakers.

“Individuals’ inboxes are full of these calls to action and ‘click here’ and ‘call here’ and do this, and they don’t feel like anyone is ever listening,” says Harris. “They’re either sending a gazillion messages or they backed out of the process completely.”

While sites such as Change.org and MoveOn.org recruit people behind causes or campaigns, PopVox keeps messages to Congress relevant by tying them to specific bills. First, a user chooses a bill and indicates whether she supports or opposes it. Then she can add a message, verify her identity, and send the comment to officials in her district. Representatives want to hear only from their constituents, not from people who live in other districts, Harris says, so many messages sent online are ignored.

The site’s data are publicly available, so anyone can see how sentiment toward a bill matches a representative’s actions on it. Interest groups can signal where they stand, too, and use PopVox to rally supporters. PopVox makes money by selling premium subscriptions to lobbying groups to help them tell how effective their campaigns are by measuring, for example, how many people who viewed a Web campaign sent comments on a bill. The company has about 20 paying clients so far, Harris says, and while it’s not yet profitable, it has signed up 135,000 users and has sent half a million messages to Congress.

PopVox delivers 99 percent of the messages electronically via the internal systems congressional offices use, and the company hand delivers the few messages that don’t go through because of errors. (In July, House Democrats announced plans to integrate PopVox into their internal system so messages will reach offices automatically.) There’s no way to confirm whether comments are actually read, Harris says.

The site can help lawmakers gauge reactions to their positions, says Fitch, of the Congressional Management Foundation. “If they comment on something or put something out in the marketplace, they’re going to look very carefully at what the reaction is to that and have a real, instant idea of how their position is playing in the marketplace of ideas,” he says.

Other entrepreneurs are targeting transparency at different stages in the political process. TweetCongressencourages voters to find if their representatives use Twitter and pushes those who aren’t using it to sign up.Votizen connects friends through social networks based on previous voting behavior to rally support behind a particular election campaign. The site has raised $2.25 million from investors, including PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel and former Facebook President Sean Parker.

Votizen co-founder Jason Putorti wants to refine campaigns by emphasizing social influence rather than money. He says that personal recommendations have the greatest impact on such decisions as whom you vote for. The company plans to make money by introducing specific campaigns to influential users. “You can make winning elections cheaper if you have people out there that can demonstrate they can turn out hundreds of votes,” Putorti says.

Despite the money in politics and public disgust with Congress, advocates such as Derricks believe technology can help hold lawmakers accountable. “You may not make a difference on a specific bill,” she says, “but when those representatives know your eyes are open, they’re going to start paying attention again.”  http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-08-02/beltway-insiders-startup-helps-you-lobby-congress

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A 17-year-old Murrieta girl is all too familiar with the adverse effects of Agent Orange, a chemical sprayed during the Vietnam War.

Jenna Mack, a 2012 graduate of Murrieta Valley High School, is the granddaughter of a Vietnam War veteran who was exposed to Agent Orange. Her mother is a second-generation sufferer of the ill effects.

Jenna has used Agent Orange as a platform in numerous pageants. She was named Miss Teen Murrieta 2011-2012 and is currently the Royal International Miss Teen California as well as National Miss Heart of the USA Supreme Beauty Queen.

“Jenna uses her titles and pageants as her voice for her platform which is ‘Agent Orange; Fighting for Second Generation Victims’ Rights,’” said her mother, Tanya Mack.

Jenna has taken her message beyond pageants, speaking at engagements at Camp Pendleton and at University of California, Berkeley.

Now Jenna has been invited to serve as a guest educator Aug. 24-30 aboard the NGO Peace Boat as it sails from Japan to Vietnam. Once in Vietnam she will meet with representatives of the U.S. Embassy and will do  humanitarian work at a hospital in Ho Chi Minh City.

Jenna’s drive to create awareness comes from watching her mother suffer what doctors have said is a potent genetic mutation caused by Agent Orange.

Jenna’s grandfather, James Sciaccotti, 65, served in the Air Force. He fought in the Vietnam War from 1968-1970.

Part of the United States’ strategy in Vietnam was to conduct an herbicide program to remove foliage providing cover for the enemy, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans AffairsAgent Orange was the most widely used of the herbicide combinations sprayed.

“That is where he was exposed to Agent Orange and sprayed heavily daily,” Tanya said.

Tanya, 38, said she was born with hip dysplasia. She’s had nearly 30 surgeries to correct it, in addition to suffering from lupus. But her health battles worsened when she was diagnosed with cancer five years ago, she told Patch.

“It has affected my life quite a bit,” Tanya said. “It has been a huge roller coaster. As the oldest child, Jenna has seen it all.”

Jenna, the oldest of three children, was in middle school when her mother was diagnosed with cancer. She changed her mother’s dressings three times a day and at 16, began administering her shots.

At 17, Jenna is a certified emergency medical responder, a certified nursing assistant and is enrolled in a registered nursing program.

“It seems she is well beyond her years, unfortunately, but this trip is very well-deserved and it is going to be an eye-opener for her.

“People to this day are being born with birth defects over there,” she said.

Jenna is attending the trip with Heather Bowser, a second-generation sufferer and an Agent Orange awareness activist.

Bowser is Co- founder and director with Kelly L. Derricks of the newly founded organization, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, which Tanya has taken an active role in.  Both Bowser and Derricks successfully took on Genentech pharmaceutical when Tanya was refused her medication after the trial drug won FDA appproval. Read the full story Here

“What our goal is and what we are trying to get accomplished is help for second generation victims.”

While numerous studies have been conducted on the lingering effects of Agent Orange—both in veterans and their children—currently the only Agent Orange birth defect recognized is spina bifida, according to Publichealth.va.gov.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.

Tanya said the fight is for all second generation victims to be recognized and receive medical benefits.

“It is going to be a long, long road and I may never see it so that is where Jenna comes in.”

http://murrieta.patch.com/articles/murrieta-teen-takes-on-agent-orange

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Harry C. Mackel Jr. September 4, 1945 – October 14, 1982
In Memory Day 2012

Today is a day I would have rather just kept to myself. As a matter of fact, for the last 2 weeks less than 5 people knew that exactly 30 years and 8 months to the date of my father’s death, his name would be included at a ceremony at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall known as “In Memory Day”.

I’m not there.  It was quite a difficult decision for me to make.  A decision that made me feel forced to attend a funeral of sorts.  I buried my father 30 years ago when I was 7 years old.  There’s not anything about the day that I don’t remember.  When I was told that his memory was to be included in today’s events I felt very sad.  I expressed to the people that did tell that I thought most would expect me to be happy about it.  But I wasn’t.  Not in any way.

Let’s face it.  People don’t visit the Vietnam Memorial Wall to be happy.  It is in essence a collective grave stone with more than 58,000 names on it.  30 years later our government has decided to acknowledge my father’s service in Vietnam and his death thereafter as something special?  30 years later?

To be clear, I did not submit the application, a relative did.  One that I have spoken to less than 10 times over the last 20 years.  When and if I ever go back to The Wall, it will be on my own terms and my own time.  It will certainly not be yet another day in history that the United States Government dictates to me how I am to feel about my father’s death and the Agent Orange that killed him.

So on a day that I wanted to keep to myself, I feel yet again forced to deal with the issue since going through my emails today; I was faced with an article written about the ceremony events.  An article that shared the story of another PA Vietnam Veteran who lost his life to Agent Orange & Dioxin exposure and was also being honored today.  The article failed to include the names of the other 9 PA Vietnam Veterans who are also being remembered today.  I felt that I should at least include my own father’s name, however in doing so I thought it necessary to share the story with all of you.

If anything positive has come out of today, I can say that it was one simple thing that I have been waiting for over the last 37 years of my life…..  To see my Father, Harry C. Mackel Jr., an active member of The United States Air Force for nearly 10 years, who voluntarily served 2 “Boots On The Ground” tours in Vietnam, in his USAF Military Uniform.  Yes, that is correct, for my entire life I have never seen a photo of my Father in his uniform, until now.  Included in the ceremony events are the names and photos of all of the Vietnam Veterans being honored today.  I received a photocopy of the picture being used in the booklet early last week.  It took me several days to convince myself that it was even my father.  My husband insisted that it was.  In the picture, he was probably just 17 years old, making it the youngest photo I have ever seen of my father.  For days, I traced the harsh lines of a photo that came out of a copy machine and then tri-folded for mailing.  For days, I had no idea who this man was in the photo, thinking it had to have been a mistake. For days, as I have done many times over the years, I questioned my own Identity.  Until I finally stared at his eyes.  They are unmistakable, they are mine.

Yet, as I write this story, I am filled with A Heart Of Rage.  The kind of rage that only a daughter of a Vietnam Veteran who has long been dead would know.  The rage of her Father being taken away.  You see, there is even more to this story then one could possibly imagine.   I found out about “In Memory Day” on a week night at 8:00 p.m.  Only 6 short hours before that, I received a different phone call.  One informing me of a situation which I knew in my heart would come one day, a situation I have been running from since I was a teenager.

AGENT ORANGE AGAIN RIPPING THE LIFE AWAY FROM YET ANOTHER LOVED ONE OF MINE. 

Who you ask?  The only other man that I have ever called my father.  A man that is now suffering the effects of Agent Orange and Dioxin.

My adopted Father.

 © Kelly L. Derricks
Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance

 Below I have included the booklet that was at the Ceremony.  I have also included the link to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund for anyone interested in applying for the program.  In addition, you will find the original article written about the PA Vietnam Veteran also being honored.

In Memory Day Ceremony Book

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Originally published as an article column in the Chicago Tribune, Mary Schmich on June 1, 1997 imagined what she would say if ever invited to speak at a graduation ceremony:

“Inside every adult lurks a graduation speaker dying to get out, some world-weary pundit eager to pontificate on life to young people who’d rather be Rollerblading. Most of us, alas, will never be invited to sow our words of wisdom among an audience of caps and gowns, but there’s no reason we can’t entertain ourselves by composing a Guide to Life for Graduates.

I encourage anyone over 26 to try this and thank you for indulging my attempt.  Ladies and gentlemen of the class of ’97:”

Shortly after the original article was published, Artist Baz Luhrmann put it to music.  Not just your typical song though, actually he recited Mary’s original words as a speech, not as a song.  Since 1997, these words have become responsible for some of the most inspirational graduation ceremonies across the nation.

The statements made are timeless and eventless.  Advice that on any given day can inspire anyone who listens and at times has personally brought tears to my own eyes.

I am happy to be able to share the video with all of you and hope that it will be passed on and enjoyed.

Kelly L. Derricks

Youtube Video – Everybody’s free to wear sunscreen – Baz Luhrmann

 

© 2013 ‎(COVVHA) Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance INC
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