Lyrics by Agent Orange

  1. Bloodstains
  2. Bored Of You
  3. ...So Strange
  4. A Cry For Help In a World Gone Mad
  5. America
  6. Bite The Hand That Feeds, Pt. 1
  7. Bloodstains [Darkness Version]
  8. Bloodstains [Original Version]
  9. Breakdown
  10. Broken Dreams
  11. Cry For Help In A World Gone Mad
  12. El Dorado
  13. Electric Storm
  14. Everything Turns Grey
  15. Fire In The Rain
  16. I Kill Spies
  17. I Only Want To Be With You
  18. In Your Dreams Tonight
  19. It's In Your Head
  20. It's Up To Me And You
  21. Just Can't Seem To Get Enough
  22. Last Goodbye
  23. Let It Burn
  24. Living In Darkness
  25. Make Up Your Mind And Do What You Want To Do
  26. Miserlou
  27. Mr. Moto
  28. No Such Thing
  29. On A Plain
  30. Pipeline
  31. Reoccurring Nightmare
  32. Say It Isn't True
  33. Seek And Destroy
  34. So Close And Yet So Far
  35. Somebody To Love
  36. Speed Kills
  37. Tearing Me Apart
  38. The Last Goodbye
  39. This Is All I Need
  40. This Is Not The End
  41. Tiki Ti
  42. Too Young to Die
  43. Truth Should Never Be Concealed
  44. Unsafe At Any Speed
  45. Voices (In The Night)
  46. What`s The Combination
  47. Wouldn't Last A Day
  48. You Belong To Me

Agent Orange is a chemical herbicide and defoliant, one of the tactical use Rainbow Herbicides. It was used by the U.S. military as part of its herbicidal warfare program, Operation Ranch Hand, during the Vietnam War from 1961 to 1971. It is a mixture of equal parts of two herbicides, 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D. In addition to its damaging environmental effects, traces of dioxin (mainly TCDD, the most toxic of its type) found in the mixture have caused major health problems for many individuals who were exposed, and their children. Agent Orange was produced in the United States from the late 1940s and was used in industrial agriculture, and was also sprayed along railroads and power lines to control undergrowth in forests. During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military procured over 20,000,000 U.S. gal (76,000,000 L; 17,000,000 imp gal), consisting of a fifty-fifty mixture of 2,4-D and dioxin-contaminated 2,4,5-T. Nine chemical companies produced it: Dow Chemical Company, Monsanto Company, Diamond Shamrock Corporation, Hercules Inc., Thompson Hayward Chemical Co., United States Rubber Company (Uniroyal), Thompson Chemical Co., Hoffman-Taff Chemicals, Inc., and Agriselect. The government of Vietnam says that up to four million people in Vietnam were exposed to the defoliant, and as many as three million people have suffered illness because of Agent Orange, while the Vietnamese Red Cross estimates that up to one million people were disabled or have health problems as a result of exposure to Agent Orange. The United States government has described these figures as unreliable, while documenting cases of leukemia, Hodgkin's lymphoma, and various kinds of cancer in exposed U.S. military veterans. An epidemiological study done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that there was an increase in the rate of birth defects of the children of military personnel as a result of Agent Orange. Agent Orange has also caused enormous environmental damage in Vietnam. Over 3,100,000 ha (7,700,000 acres) or 31,000 km2 (12,000 sq mi) of forest were defoliated. Defoliants eroded tree cover and seedling forest stock, making reforestation difficult in numerous areas. Animal species diversity is sharply reduced in contrast with unsprayed areas. The environmental destruction caused by this defoliation has been described by Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, lawyers, historians and other academics as an ecocide. The use of Agent Orange in Vietnam resulted in numerous legal actions. The United Nations ratified United Nations General Assembly Resolution 31/72 and the Environmental Modification Convention. Lawsuits filed on behalf of both U.S. and Vietnamese veterans sought compensation for damages. Agent Orange was first used by the British Armed Forces in Malaya during the Malayan Emergency. It was also used by the U.S. military in Laos and Cambodia during the Vietnam War because forests near the border with Vietnam were used by the Viet Cong.

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