Veterans plus depleted uranium
plus the Law
BY SUSU JEFFREY
In 1944 the U.S. Congress passed the G.I. Bill
of Rights, providing help to World War II veterans for medical care,
education and the purchase of homes, farms and businesses.
By 1951, 8 million vets had gone back to school
at a federal cost of $14 billion. Higher education was no longer
restricted to the elite, and served as a safety valve during the
transition from war to peace. G.I. Bill opportunities helped to
move hundreds of thousands more people into the middle class.
My dad, Harry Jeffrey (R-Ohio), was a co-author
of that bill and spent his only congressional term writing, and
then selling the G.I. Bill of Rights to the American people. Since
then, the social experiment in support of ex-military personnel
has slowly been gutted, especially since the Vietnam War. But, in
fact, the fallout from Iraq Wars One and Two will be never-ending
since the poison from American depleted uranium (DU) weapons is
dangerous to all life for 4.5 billion years.
“Considering the tons of depleted uranium used by the U.S.,
the Iraq war can
truly be called a nuclear war,” Bob Nichols wrote in a Project
Censored article about the mushrooming DU scandal at the Veterans
Administration. The effect of exploding uranium weapons into contaminated
dust is that both the target and the targeters get nuked.
In the last century’s world wars the disability
rate for U.S. military personnel was about 5 percent. The rate doubled
with the Vietnam War to 10 percent where the chemical Agent Orange
was used extensively. Of the 580,000 soldiers involved in the first
Iraq War, 11,000 have died and by 2000, an astonishing 325,000 were
on permanent medical disability—more than half!
Iraq War vets have less than a 50-50 chance
of coming home whole. DU is more than a radiological and chemical
toxin; nano-sized radioactive dust is produced with each exploding
DU munition. The desert winds blow contaminated particles around
for everyone to breathe and eat. DU, a heavy metal (like mercury),
lodges in the body and attacks the victim’s DNA, resulting
in a plethora of symptoms depending on the vulnerability of the
person.
Unfortunately the immediate victim is not the
only target of DU poisoning. Sexual partners of DU-exposed vets
have been internally contaminated, according to geoscientist Leuren
Moret in “DU: A Death Sentence Here and Abroad.” In
a study of 251 Mississippi soldiers who had normal children during
pre-Iraq War, 67 percent of their post-war babies were born with
severe birth defects—cyclops (single eye), infants missing
arms, legs, organs. And if those children live and reproduce, will
their genetic damage be inherited?
When natural uranium is enriched for nuclear
power fuel, more than 99 percent is removed. This by-product is
shipped around the nation to holding and processing facilities and
eventually converted into solid bars. Alliant TechSystems (ATK),
headquartered in Edina, cuts the bars to size for the innards of
a variety of bullets and shells. ATK’s uranium munitions are
fired from weapons mounted on tanks, helicopters and airplanes.
In 2004 ATK reported $3.1 billion in sales.
Twin Cities peace activists have held vigils
at the corporate headquarters of the bomb makers since 1968. When
Honeywell spun off its weapons division creating Alliant TechSystems
in 1991, the peace community moved from Minneapolis to Hopkins,
and now to Edina, and from the activist group name “Honeywell
Project” to the current “AlliantACTION.”
More than 2,600 arrests for peaceful trespass
resulted in 100-plus trials in which juries and judges were educated
about land mines, cluster bombs, Trident nuclear submarine systems
and uranium-core shells. These weapons and delivery systems cannot
distinguish between soldier and civilian, and are therefore indiscriminate
weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).
The contract law firm for the City of Edina was humiliated recently
by losing three jury cases to AlliantACTION amateurs acting as their
own lawyers. Speaking in front of “a jury of their peers”
in misdemeanor criminal court, these citizen experts repeatedly
convinced juries of their right to uphold the greater law. This
is not a reference to God’s law but to the U.S. Constitution
which names treaties between sovereigns “the supreme law of
the land.”
So the lawyers got together and changed the
law.
ATK lawyers and Edina city lawyers wrote 20-some pages of e-mails
discussing legal strategy for the mutual benefit of their corporate
and municipal clients. The new law reduces the trespass charge from
a misdemeanor to a petty misdemeanor—from a charge where you
can get a jury, to a judge-only trial. The legality of the new law
is under appeal at this time.
AlliantACTION peace activists continue to take
it to the streets every Wednesday morning at 7 a.m.; they are also
taking it to the state Legislature. A bill to test returning veterans
stationed in hot areas in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kosovo is in play
at the Minnesota Capitol. A similar bill is already law in Louisiana
and Connecticut and is being considered in New York State.
Depleted uranium is dangerous for 4.5 billion
years, that is to say—forever. (Human beings have been around
for 2 million years.) To pretend this evil is legal, is suicide
to justice. Justice becomes just us. We are watching America devolve.
“The wrong people are on trial,” Sister Jane McDonald
says.
The reason there is no exit strategy from Iraq is because U.S. contractors
are building 14 permanent bases in the middle of the oil reserves.
When those bases are history, depleted uranium will still be rearranging
the DNA of any local life forms.
Please phone your state senator (651-296-0504)
or representative (651-296-2146) and encourage them to support the
armed forces health screening bill.
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