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	<title>Fokai FXV &#187; EthicAndEtiquette</title>
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		<title>PacMan,TheForce,&amp;Money</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/theforcepacmanmoney/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jan 2014 08:56:34 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[1008]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[EthicAndEtiquette]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Copied and Pasted from www.yahoo.com Manny Pacquiao challenges Floyd Mayweather to a fight for charity By Carlo Pamintuan &#124; Yahoo PH Sports – 4 hours ago Email Print Yahoo PH Sports &#8211; Will Pacquiao &#8211; Mayweather Jr. fight ever happen? To prove he doesn’t want a fight against Floyd Mayweather for the money, Manny Pacquiao has offered [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Copied and Pasted from www.yahoo.com</p>
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<h1 class="headline">Manny Pacquiao challenges Floyd Mayweather to a fight for charity</h1>
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<p><cite class="byline vcard">By <span class="fn"><a href="http://ph.sports.yahoo.com/blogs/author/carlo-pamintuan/" rel="author" data-rapid_p="4">Carlo Pamintuan</a></span> | <span class="provider org">Yahoo PH Sports</span> – <abbr title="2014-01-20T03:59:34Z">4 hours ago</abbr></cite></p>
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<div class="yom-art-lead-img"><img title="Will Pacquiao - Mayweather Jr. fight ever happen?" src="http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/edJZnL5LIYeCJHgKUf_KBA--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Y2g9NDUwO2NyPTE7Y3c9ODAwO2R4PTA7ZHk9MDtmaT11bGNyb3A7aD0zNTU7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en-US/video/video.pd2upload.com/video.yahoophsports.com@0038f02f-48e1-3b4d-9557-e2f558862165_FULL.jpg" alt="Will Pacquiao - Mayweather Jr. fight ever happen?" width="630" height="355" /></div>
<p>Yahoo PH Sports &#8211; Will Pacquiao &#8211; Mayweather Jr. fight ever happen?</li>
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<p class="first">To prove he doesn’t want a fight against Floyd Mayweather for the money, Manny Pacquiao has offered a fight with proceeds going to charity. In an <a href="http://sports.inquirer.net/140591/pacquiao-to-mayweather-lets-fight-for-charity" target="_blank" data-rapid_p="1">interview with Aquiles Zonio of inquirer.net</a>, Pacquiao opened up about the verbal jabs being thrown his way.</p>
<p>“I’m not desperate to fight him just for the sake of money or material things. I’m not the one seeking this fight; rather it’s the boxing fans all over the world,” Pacquiao said in the interview.</p>
<p><strong>ALSO READ:</strong> <a href="http://ph.sports.yahoo.com/news/mayweather-pacquiao-39-desperate-now-211741792--spt.html" target="_blank" data-rapid_p="2">Mayweather says Pacquiao is desperate</a></p>
<p>“I am ready to submit myself to any kind of stringent drug testing. Above all, I challenge him to include in our fight contract that both of us will not receive anything out of this fight,” Pacquiao challenged. “We will donate all the proceeds from the fight—guaranteed prize, should there be any, gate receipts, pay-per-view and endorsements—to charities around the world.”</p>
<p>Pacquiao added that he is not desperate for a fight as what Mayweather is suggesting. He said he is comfortable about how his career holds up in boxing history. “There’s no reason why I should be desperate to fight him. But since boxing fans worldwide are seeking and demanding a Pacquiao-Mayweather fight, I don’t want to disappoint them,” he added.</p>
<p><strong>ALSO READ:</strong> <a href="http://ph.sports.yahoo.com/news/freddie-roach-pushing-for-pacquiao-mayweather-on-september-031208493.html" target="_blank" data-rapid_p="3">Roach pushing for Mayweather-Pacquiao in September</a></p>
<p>“As to my tax problem, my lawyers are fixing it already,” Pacquiao told Zonio. “I’m paying my taxes religiously. It is just a matter of reconciling our records with the tax agencies both here and abroad. Should there be any discrepancy, rest assured, I will settle it. I’m a lawmaker and I’m a law-abiding citizen.”</p>
<p>Reacting to Mayweather’s announcement that he will be retiring from boxing in September next year, Pacquiao shot back at Mayweather. “The public clamor for a Pacquiao-Mayweather bout is getting stronger. The only way he can avoid facing me in the ring is to retire from boxing,” Pacquiao said.</p>
<p>“Floyd, if you’re a real man, fight me,&#8221; Pacquiao closed. &#8220;Let’s do it for the love of boxing and for the fans. Let’s do it not for the sake of money. Let’s make the boxing fans happy.”</p>
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		<title>via Governor of Guam: Eddie Calvo</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/viagovernorofguameddiecalvo/</link>
		<comments>https://v1.fokai.tv/viagovernorofguameddiecalvo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 May 2012 22:11:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[EthicAndEtiquette]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/?p=7465</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[GoodStuff: Policy Speech on Federal Unfunded Mandates, Practical Considerations of U.S. Government Policy on Guam Delivered in Okinawa By Guam Governor Eddie Baza Calvo May 22, 2012 Hafa adai and thank you for inviting me today, Guam has a long tradition of military service … so much so that our sons and daughters have the [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong>GoodStuff:</strong></p>
<p><strong>Policy Speech on Federal Unfunded Mandates, Practical Considerations of U.S. Government Policy on Guam</strong></p>
<p>Delivered in Okinawa<br />
By Guam Governor Eddie Baza Calvo<br />
May 22, 2012</p>
<p>Hafa adai and thank you for inviting me today,</p>
<p>Guam has a long tradition of military service … so much so that our  sons and daughters have the highest enlistment rate in the United  States.  Since the Second World War, that generation of Guamanians  passed down to the generation of today an unwavering patriotism and  support for what the United States represents.  Since then, we, like  Okinawa, have hosted a large U.S. military presence.  Okinawa accounts  for less than 1% of the total area of Japan, yet 18% of your island is  occupied by the U.S. military… and you host 75% of all the U.S. troops  in the country.  Similarly, on Guam, one-third of our island is owned  and occupied by the U.S. military.</p>
<p>Okinawa has done much to focus attention on the heavy burden that it  has had to bear to support such a large U.S. military presence.  Guam  has always welcomed the U.S. military .</p>
<p>Yet today, as our two islands move in opposite directions in their  relationships with the U.S. military, recent events have marked a stark  contrast in how our national governments view their relationships with  each of us.  The Noda Government and the Diet have continued their  entreaties to the people of Okinawa in return for the sacrifices you  make as you bear the bulk of the burden of the Security Treaty between  the United States and Japan.  The government of Japan is finally  understanding your frustrations and reaching out to you. Your sovereign  is helping you to build your infrastructure and to expand your tourism  industry, not just to allay the impact of the treaty, but to help your  economy grow.</p>
<p>Yet, on the other side of the Philippine Sea, on Guam, there is a  certain irony in that, until recent, the only assurances we had that our  infrastructure would be improved to absorb the military buildup came  from Japan.  Now that the number of Marines coming to Guam has been  reduced, and the financial commitments of both countries have been  adjusted, what was once certain has now become uncertain and ambiguous.  We on Guam are left wondering whether anyone, even our own sovereign,  will give Guam the practical financial offsets it needs to absorb the  impact of the coming troops.</p>
<p>While the government of Japan is offering you assistance with your  economy as you seek to reduce the U.S. presence of troops in Okinawa, we  have to petition our federal government to do the same as it seeks to  increase the U.S. presence of troops on Guam.</p>
<p>Our commitment to our sovereign is undiminished. Yet, I can’t help  but question our sovereign’s commitment to us when it has unfairly  treated us in the past and even today saddles us with severe unfunded  federal mandates.  Despite this, it has been slow to grant us the  economic tools we need to improve our economy ourselves.  Okinawa has  made clear to Tokyo its feelings about how you have been unfairly  treated in the past. Guam is also trying to make its voice heard in  Washington, D.C.</p>
<p>Because we are less than a State, the U.S. government has often  ignored the impact of some of its national decisions on us.  As the most  prominent example, over 25 years ago the United States signed a compact  of free association with several Micronesian countries that created the  most liberal immigration policy in recent memory.  That compact  promised to improve the economies of these Micronesian countries so they  could be self-sustaining members of the global community.  Instead, it  created a rush of migration to Guam, without any significant assistance  from our federal government to help us absorb the cost of this massive  migration.</p>
<p>Guam belongs to a brotherhood of Pacific Islands, and we are a  welcoming people.  But when the unreimbursed cost of helping the  migrants with public housing, public welfare, employment programs,  education, and medical care exceeds 15% of our local government  revenues, we can’t help but be angered. And this is not anger aimed at  our island brothers and sisters, but at a national sovereign who fails  to recognize the practical implications of its unmet obligations.  How  can any local government survive a 15% drain of its local revenues?  How  would Okinawa feel, how would it fare, if Tokyo imposed an immigration  policy that immediately drained 15% of your local government revenues?</p>
<p>Our public programs are falling short in providing services to our  residents because of this immigration policy. Instead of providing Guam  with the corresponding funds to offset this impact, the U.S. government  limits what we receive for federal social programs far below what it  provides to every other State in the nation on a per-capita basis.  And  as we struggle to provide basic public services because of the federal  burdens placed on us, , the U.S. government sues us for not providing  such basic services as trash collection and disposal, water and waste  water treatment, mental health care, and even housing prison inmates.  This has forced us to borrow hundreds of millions of dollars, over a  billion dollars in total, to meet the U.S. government’s demand on what  is a minimally acceptable level of service for our people.</p>
<p>We, like you, have gone to our federal government asking it to treat  us fairly…  Asking it to help us absorb the cost of these federal  mandates and immigration policies that drain so much of our local  revenues.  For over a decade, our pleas have fallen on deaf ears.  Now  we are being asked to absorb the additional cost of the U.S. Marines  coming from Okinawa. You will understand the skepticism that I have when  I am being told by the same government not to worry… to trust it to  take care of the cost and the impact of the buildup.  This is the same  government that has ignored the financial impact of its previous  mandates… that reduced our federal benefits to a fraction of what other  citizens of the United States receive.  My skepticism is such that I  must tell you that I had more confidence in Japan’s commitment to help  us improve our infrastructure than I have now in our own government.</p>
<p>But, still, we are a patriotic people.  We love our country, and we  are proud to be Americans.  We are proud to play a role in preserving  the security of our country, Japan, Asia and even the world.  We just  need our government to listen to our pleas to treat us fairly, as your  government has begun to listen to your pleas.</p>
<p>As this buildup moves forward and you transition your economy to one  less reliant on the U.S. military, we are transitioning ours to one that  considers increased military spending. There are limitless  opportunities between our communities.</p>
<p>Our sovereigns may have complete control over this buildup, but our  economy is mature enough to ensure the viability of our island, if our  government would let us control our own destiny.</p>
<p>Last summer, I testified before our U.S. Congress, and last week I  wrote a letter to our President, asking them to help us by allowing us  to help ourselves.  Since taking office last year, I and my  administration have worked unceasingly in trying to get our government  to approve a China visa waiver program. This will allow Chinese visitors  to come to Guam visa-free so that we can expand our tourism  industry.  So it was with great interest that I observed the Japan  government’s efforts to help Okinawa expand its tourism industry by  approving a multiple-entry China visa for Okinawa.  Yet, on Guam, we  continue to wait for our government to take action…  To give us the  opportunity to improve our economy ourselves. If we have to continue to  absorb the cost of the existing unfunded federal mandates, and if we  have to absorb the cost of the military buildup, we at least have a  fighting chance with tourism.</p>
<p>As I have done in earlier trade missions to other parts of Asia, I am  here to encourage all Okinawans, Japanese, Chinese, Koreans, Taiwanese,  Russians, and everyone else in Asia, to visit our shores.  I know that  some will see Guam and Okinawa as competitors in the same tourism  market.  I prefer to see us as kin, sharing a common bond and a common  aspiration.  Sharing common experiences and frustrations with our  respective national government.  Sharing a similar history of an  independent people who were first colonized and then incorporated into  another nation.  Sharing a similar identity of a people who are part of a  larger country, yet who even after hundreds of years, still have a  unique language and culture that distinguishes us from our parent  country.  On Guam, instead of saying “Welcome” we say “Hafa Adai.”  In  Okinawa, instead of saying “Yokoso” you say “Mensore.”  We are an island  culture – you are an island culture.  There is something in being an  islander that I think makes us more welcoming – maybe it’s the  year-round sun and the sand that makes a people friendlier.</p>
<p>We have a lot in common, and perhaps that is what makes the economic  potential between our communities so great.  The geopolitical importance  we’ve shared for the past half-a-century, though on separate sides of  the Philippine Sea, can help shape a relationship and a mutual  understanding of where we can go.  We should seize this day as two  communities who have been subjects of a sovereign, and who are proving  to the world that we can build futures more reliant on what we can do  for ourselves than what our national governments can do for us.</p>
<p>Thank you so much for your hospitality and for your time today.  This  will go down as one of the most memorable days of my tenure.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>FokaiRoad:viaRDC&amp;66Degrees</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/fokairoadviardc66degrees/</link>
		<comments>https://v1.fokai.tv/fokairoadviardc66degrees/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 May 2012 13:04:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1008]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Video Edit by JohnnyH of 66degrees in discussion of the FokaiProductDevelopment]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><object width="560" height="315"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/zndfy9-haiA?version=3&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/zndfy9-haiA?version=3&amp;hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="560" height="315" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>A Video Edit by JohnnyH of 66degrees in discussion of the FokaiProductDevelopment</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>FokaiFemme:MariaDunn</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/fokaifemmemariadunn/</link>
		<comments>https://v1.fokai.tv/fokaifemmemariadunn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Aug 2010 00:23:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[EthicAndEtiquette]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/?p=5533</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the women&#8217;s event, Maria Dunn earned her team&#8217;s second gold medal in her weight division, pinning Chuuk&#8217;s representative early in the first round. With the win firmly in hand, Dunn gave credit to her opponent for stepping up a division and competing in a male-dominated sport.&#8221;When I first started competing, I was all about [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the women&#8217;s event, Maria Dunn earned her team&#8217;s second gold medal in  her weight division, pinning Chuuk&#8217;s representative early in the first  round.</p>
<p>With the win firmly in hand, Dunn gave credit to her  opponent for stepping up a division and competing in a male-dominated  sport.&#8221;When I first started competing, I was all about winning and  beating everybody,&#8221; said the 24-year-old, who, despite her age, has  competed at the international level several times over. &#8220;I&#8217;ve toned down  a lot, and I&#8217;m more about the progression of women in competition.&#8221;  &#8220;Some of these women are from the outer islands,&#8221; she said. &#8220;It takes a  lot for them to break those barriers &#8230; to come out and compete.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Truth:ToxicTestimonial13N144E</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/truthlotstoreadcutpastepassiton/</link>
		<comments>https://v1.fokai.tv/truthlotstoreadcutpastepassiton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 26 Jun 2010 04:00:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/?p=5291</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[the truth is finally coming out &#8212;&#8211; Forwarded Message &#8212;- From: EAC/HAC &#60;ecris64@teleguam.net&#62; To: Anjen Dee &#60;a8783@teleguam.net&#62; Sent: Fri, June 25, 2010 2:05:29 AM Subject: Re: Toxic Testimonial from Navy Veteran stationed on Guam Email Received : This Months Specials C-4 #8 VetNet Headlines New VetNet Poll Q. Agent Orange Equity Act hits the Pay-Go [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>the truth is finally coming out</div>
<p><span style="font-family: Tahoma; font-size: x-small;">&#8212;&#8211; Forwarded Message  &#8212;-<br />
<strong><span style="font-weight: bold;">From:</span></strong> EAC/HAC  &lt;<a href="mailto:ecris64@teleguam.net" target="_blank">ecris64@teleguam.net</a>&gt;<br />
<strong><span style="font-weight: bold;">To:</span></strong> Anjen Dee &lt;<a href="mailto:a8783@teleguam.net" target="_blank">a8783@teleguam.net</a>&gt;<br />
<strong><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sent:</span></strong> Fri, June 25, 2010 2:05:29  AM<br />
<strong><span style="font-weight: bold;">Subject:</span></strong> Re: Toxic  Testimonial from Navy Veteran stationed on Guam<br />
</span><br />
Email  Received : This Months Specials<br />
C-4 #8</p>
<p>VetNet Headlines<br />
New  VetNet Poll Q.<br />
Agent Orange Equity Act  hits the Pay-Go wall<br />
Benefit Buzz New on TV Hour<br />
Veterans History  Quiz</p>
<p>June 12, 2010<br />
Subject: Re: Toxic Testimonial from Navy  Veteran stationed on Guam</p>
<p>Lengthly personal account by Vancil  Sanderson stationed 1966 on Guam.  Read<br />
comments, too.<br />
<a href="http://veteransnetwork.net/newnote.php?id=01479261f8f25f7" target="_blank">http://veteransnetwork.net/newnote.php?id=01479261f8f25f7</a></p>
<p>08/13/07  3:13 pm<br />
Van Sanderson<br />
branch: Navy</p>
<p>comments:<br />
My name is Vancil Sanderson and in 1966 I was a part of  the illegal and<br />
immoral experiments performed on military<br />
personnel  on Naval Station Guam, Cocos Island, Guam. A radioactive substance<br />
was<br />
being put into our food.<br />
Many years later, 1983, I started having  severe health problems. In 1993 I<br />
was<br />
forced to apply for SSD and  for my service<br />
connection. After 2 years of trying to get my military  records,<br />
Congresswoman<br />
Barbara  Vucanovich assisted me in getting my<br />
records. We found out that the  military had purged the records of the<br />
experiment on<br />
Cocos Island.  Other parts of my records<br />
were also purged. With the purging of my  records I was forced to research my<br />
military service to prove my case for disability<br />
compensation and  that it is service connected. The following is what I have<br />
found<br />
about  the island of Guam and it\&#8217;s serious<br />
contamination problem.<br />
In  1944 the Battle for Guam was fought. Many men died on both sides. Almost<br />
20,000<br />
people were killed in the battle. About<br />
5,000 US and 15,000  Japanese. The war in the Pacific was coming to a climax.<br />
Guam<br />
was  a key part on the attack of Japan.<br />
With all the dead on Guam and the  war still raging a huge problem arose.<br />
Filth Flies<br />
and other disease carrying insects were<br />
multiplying by  the billions on all the dead. There weren\&#8217;t enough people to<br />
do  away<br />
with all the  bodies to stop the problem. The<br />
answer to the problem was DDT. The  island wide use started just after the<br />
battle.<br />
The entire island  was sprayed by air day<br />
after day, month after month. The use of DDT  by air may have gone on for<br />
years. DDT<br />
was also used in the disposal of many<br />
of the bodies.  The bodies were DDT\&#8217;d, wrapped or bagged then DDT\&#8217;d, then<br />
put in<br />
graves  and DDT\&#8217;d again. DDT wasn\&#8217;t the<br />
only pesticide being used. DDT was  used on Guam until it\&#8217;s ban.<br />
Herbicides were being used in the building and maintenance of the<br />
infrastructure  of<br />
Guam. I believe 10 military installations,<br />
both Navy and  Airforce, were built right after or during the war. Andersen<br />
AFB is<br />
the largest attack base in the world. It was<br />
used in the bombing of  Vietnam. There were numerous Navy installations as<br />
well, NCS,<br />
Barricada  Station, Guam Naval<br />
Complex(6 bases) and Naval Station Guam, Cocos  Island. Herbs were used  to<br />
build<br />
these bases and to maintain them. The<br />
first herbicide  used according to WWII veterans was Agent White. Veterans<br />
have also<br />
testified  to the use of Agent Orange as<br />
early as 1955. Guam was a staging area  for Vietnam and was used to store the<br />
rainbow<br />
herbs. At least as early as the Korean<br />
war the US was  storing the rainbow herbicides on Guam. Agent Purple has been<br />
reported  by the DOD as having been stored<br />
there during Korea, for use in  Korea. I personnally am in contact with 5<br />
vets who<br />
used AO on Guam in the sixties, the earliest<br />
being 1962  and the latest 1969. Veterans who worked in the storage areas of<br />
Guam<br />
have  taken pictures of the various<br />
herbicides. They have also written  letters in support of the pictures and<br />
also<br />
stated they used these herbicides on Guam. It was<br />
even used  in aerial spraying according to veterans.<br />
Silvex,2,4,5-TP, another of  these herbicides can be found  throughout the<br />
drinking<br />
water system of Guam, as well as 2,4-D,<br />
2,4,5-T,  2,3,7,8-TCDD. The Northern Guam Lens Aquifer was the sole-source<br />
drinking<br />
water  aquifer for Guam and is<br />
contaminated by every substance the military  had to offer and some. Fena<br />
Lake is the<br />
water supply for the Navy and the Fleet<br />
that ported on  Guam. The lake is surrounded by the Naval Magazine and is<br />
contaminated.  The only way for these substances<br />
to get into the Northern Guam Lens  Aquifer and Fena Lake is through military<br />
use or<br />
disposal. The aquifer, at the north end of<br />
the island, was  contaminated by the 3 bases that sit atop it, Andersen AFB,<br />
NCS and<br />
NAS.  The first year tested for Silvex in<br />
the aquifer was 1983 at the NCS  wells. Silvex, which can contain more dioxin<br />
than<br />
Agent Orange, tested high at .21ppm. .05<br />
is the MCL for  Silvex.<br />
Dioxin, the main substance of concern in these herbicides,  can be found all<br />
over  the<br />
island. The highest amount in the world<br />
I have been able to  find is on Andersen AFB. 19,000ppm in the soil. Higher<br />
than<br />
anywhere  in Vietnam. This amount<br />
represents, not just dioxin from herbicides,  but from the disposal of dioxin<br />
forming<br />
substances by burning. Burning substances<br />
like oil,  organochlorine pesticides like DDT, fuels, PCB\&#8217;s and a host of<br />
others.<br />
These  burning ponds were on Navy bases as<br />
well. Wind patterns I have  looked at for the island of Guam, would have been<br />
sending<br />
dioxin all over the island. During<br />
Vietnam and after the  amounts must have been astronomical. I know PCB\&#8217;s are<br />
dioxin<br />
forming  when burned and the island of<br />
Guam was not allowed to ship PCB\&#8217;s  off island until 1993 or 94 per the EPA.<br />
What<br />
this means is that for years this substance<br />
and many more  were disposed of on Guam. It didn\&#8217;t change until the EPA came<br />
into<br />
being  and it wasn\&#8217;t until 1978 the  military<br />
complex of Guam found they had a very serious problem with  contamination.<br />
Especially<br />
in the drinking water.<br />
What I have  tried to describe is a very small island with a huge military<br />
presence.<br />
Pesticides were used in all facets of the<br />
military, especially on  these pacific islands. Insecticides like DDT were<br />
used<br />
against the  disease carrying insects. Herbicides like<br />
Agent Orange, Silvex and  2,4-D were used against the plant life. This is the<br />
way the<br />
military did things. Guam is just the worst<br />
case scenario.<br />
Next  I found, starting with the Nuclear Weapons testing in the Pacific,<br />
Operation<br />
Crossroads,  that Guam was used as a<br />
staging area. Guam between 1946 and the end  of the testing, 1963, was a part<br />
of the<br />
radiation zone for the testing in the<br />
Pacific. It was also  being used as a decontamination site for the ships of<br />
the<br />
testing.  Apra Harbor and Cocos Lagoon were the<br />
areas I  found that were being used. (Cocos Island and lagoon tests high for<br />
pcb\&#8217;s,265  times allowed and for Sr89 and 90 at<br />
4121ppm on the base).Guam was  also a storage area for contaminated munitions<br />
from<br />
the testing.  Guam would have been<br />
receiving radiation from the bomb testing by way of water, air and<br />
contaminants  from<br />
the storage and decontamination. I would<br />
like to take a  quote from the \&#8221;Blue Ribbon Panel Committee Action Report\&#8221;<br />
on<br />
Guam.\&#8221;What was perpetrated against this<br />
region was the largest  ecological disaster in human history. This disaster<br />
was no<br />
less  than the detonation of over 108,000<br />
kilotons of nuclear explosive  directly up jet stream of Guam. The amount of<br />
contamination was 42 times the approximately 150<br />
million  curiesreleased as a result of testing in the United States of<br />
America.\&#8221;  The<br />
report indicates that significant amounts of<br />
fallout from the  testing existed until about 1974. I  know the US Government<br />
had the<br />
Univ. of Washington testing the  food<br />
supply, water and some vegetation from 1954 to about 1979. They  have some of<br />
the<br />
samples archived. Other ways for<br />
radioactive  contamination would have also come from the decontamination of<br />
planes.<br />
As I have said Guam was a part of the<br />
radiation zone and  planes monitoring the bomb blasts followed and measured<br />
the<br />
fallout.  The planes got pretty hot and some<br />
times the planes had to sit on  the runway area to cool down before<br />
decontamination.<br />
This runoff from the planes was ending up<br />
in the  aquifer as well. Radiation contamination was a fact on Guam and it<br />
had  many<br />
sources.<br />
Next is the contamination to the aquifer by way of  military procedures or<br />
the way<br />
things were done for the time. The<br />
number one  contamination problem for the military on Guam may have been TCE.<br />
Or  it<br />
would be better stated that the<br />
synergistic effect  of all the substances may be the big problem. Whatever<br />
way you<br />
look  at it, it adds up to a lot of<br />
contamination of the most toxic  substances the military uses. And it was<br />
running off<br />
unabated into  the water supply for Guam<br />
and the fleet for at least 34 years. Feb. 1978 Andersen AFB, Guam, the<br />
airforce<br />
finds  it has a serious problem with TCE<br />
contamination to the water supply.  The 11 wells of the Marbo Complex are<br />
contaminated, some severely.  TCE continued to<br />
be a serious problem for the aquifer even after the discovery. The<br />
military\&#8217;s  only<br />
way to combat the problem was to dilute the<br />
wells. Take the  water from less contaminated wells and mix with the severely<br />
contaminated wells before consumption. Levels<br />
even then were high.  Dilution isn\&#8217;t a an efficient way to clean drinking<br />
water. At<br />
best  it\&#8217;s a bandaid solution, if that. It wasn\&#8217;t until<br />
about 1995 that  the technology was developed and  installed on Guam. This<br />
technology<br />
was developed for the military  at<br />
McClelland AFB, Calif in the late 80\&#8217;s.<br />
While stationed on  NCS, Guam in 1966 and 67 I could taste, see and smell<br />
what<br />
appeared  to be a solvent in the drinking<br />
water. According to ATSDR the level of TCE would have to have been at  least<br />
1,000,000ppb. What this means is that all the<br />
levels of  contaminants in the drinking water would have been much higher<br />
than<br />
indicated  by the DOD. With my personal<br />
knowledge and hearings held before congress in Nov. 1987, this shows the<br />
contamination  was extrememly high.(Page 84 of<br />
the Mike Synar hearings before  congress explains that all the readings<br />
released by<br />
the airforce  for Andersen AFB were diluted<br />
figures and didn\&#8217;t represent the true contamination levels of the<br />
aquifer)GAO<br />
reports  for Guam support the dilution and when it<br />
started. In the GAO April  and May 1987 reports it is stated that  base<br />
commanders<br />
immediately started dilution upon the<br />
discovery  of the contamination. It was discovered in Feb. 1978 and all<br />
readings<br />
after  this time, Mar. 1978 on, were diluted.<br />
What this means is that there  was a lot of contamination going into the<br />
aquifer and<br />
ultimately being consumed by military and<br />
civilian  personnel.The TCE levels were a huge problem because of all the<br />
types  of<br />
uses and how the military did things during<br />
Vietnam and  before. TCE was the solvent of choice and used to washdown<br />
planes after<br />
each flight. It was a mixture of TCE<br />
and water.  Andersen AFB was the largest attack base in the world and all<br />
flights  for<br />
B-52\&#8217;s attacking Vietnam originated and<br />
ended on Guam in  1965, 66 and into 67. This represents 1000\&#8217;s of flights<br />
just for<br />
the B-52\&#8217;s. After each sortie the planes are<br />
washed down  with the TCE mixture. The mixture then went into the drainage<br />
system  and<br />
into  the aquifer. Andersen\&#8217;s drainage<br />
system and numerous dumby wells  (Dumby wells were punched all over Andersen<br />
for<br />
better recharge of  the aquifer. May be<br />
as many as 200 of these wells) carried all the  contamination directly to the<br />
aquifer. Any contamination that didn\&#8217;t make it to the<br />
drainage  systems would have been runoff by the heavy rainfalls by way of the<br />
many<br />
sinkholes  and dumby wells on the island.<br />
These sinkholes provided rapid  transfer of contaminants from the surface to<br />
the<br />
aquifer, per the GAO, and were all over the<br />
island. The  military was using some of these sinkholes as dumps. Some<br />
drainage<br />
systems  were tied directly to the sinkholes and<br />
dumby wells. I would venture  to say over 100,000 flights of B-52\&#8217;s tookoff<br />
from<br />
Andersen. Add in all the other types aircraft<br />
stationed,  serviced and overhauled on Andersen and you could have had over a<br />
1,000,000  planes done at Andersen  just<br />
during Vietnam. Veterans who worked on the flightline also have  told me<br />
after the<br />
B-52\&#8217;s left on a sortie, the bunkers, where  all<br />
the prep work for the B-52\&#8217;s was done, were sprayed with the TCE  mixture.<br />
Every<br />
bunker had a drainage system tied to the<br />
main drain for the  flightline. TCE was the most widely used solvent for all<br />
airforce<br />
operations.<br />
The  way the military handled it\&#8217;s toxic waste for years, was by dumping or<br />
burning<br />
and that was how it was done until the<br />
80\&#8217;s. On Guam you  have 3 military installations over the Northern Guam Lens<br />
drinking  water aquifer. One is Andersen AFB<br />
which is an NPL site. The amount  of contamination generated by Andersen<br />
during<br />
Vietnam would have been the highest in the<br />
world. All of  this had rapid transfer to the aquifer. This is substantiated<br />
by the<br />
PHA  and bioenvironmental engineering well<br />
reports for Andersen. The PHA  shows how high dioxin and  other toxics are on<br />
Andersen, the highest amount being<br />
19,000ppm  of TCDD in the soil. The bioenvironmental reports show the array<br />
of<br />
chemicals.  There are many other sites with<br />
high amounts of dioxin. Site No. 31,  Chemical Storage No. 4(CS-4), had<br />
dioxin rates<br />
as high as 130ppm. This site is<br />
up-aquifer from NCS  wells 1 and 1a(are now NCS A and B) The herbicide silvex<br />
is in<br />
high  amounts in the NCS wells,<br />
.21ppm per GEPA in 1983.  Dioxin(2,3,7,8-TCDD), 2,4,-D, 2,4,5-T and many more<br />
pesticides and chemicals can be found in<br />
the NCS wells, still today.  There can be no drift, because the north end of<br />
this<br />
island is all  military all the time. Just ocean and<br />
military. And the military is  the only one using most of these substances.<br />
The naval installations were also contaminating the aquifer, just not to  the<br />
extent<br />
of Andersen. NCS and the NAS are<br />
superfund sites.  Quite possibly NAS should have been an  NPL site. They did<br />
things<br />
the same way as Andersen, dump and<br />
burn.  Same types of toxic waste. Same washdown procedures that contaminated<br />
the<br />
environment.  Same creation of dioxin by<br />
burning. Used the same types of  insectides and herbicides, for the most<br />
part.<br />
Applied and stored them the same. The Navy<br />
was handling the  toxic waste just as the airforce was, that was for the<br />
times. This<br />
is  just the north end of the island and the<br />
contamination to the  sole-source drinking water aquifer.<br />
The south end consists of the Guam Naval Complex, less the NAS. The  Naval<br />
Magazine<br />
surrounds the drinking water<br />
supply, Fena Lake,  for the navy and the ships that ported on Guam. The<br />
magazine is a<br />
superfund  site. All of the insecticides<br />
and herbicides(pesticides) were used in the same manner as other  military<br />
installations. The base contaminated the environment<br />
around  it including the lake. This lake, during and  after WWII, would have<br />
been<br />
sprayed with DDT for control of  disease<br />
carrying insects. Herbicides were used as well for control of  weeds in and<br />
around<br />
the lake.<br />
In all, the military is  responsible for, and I believe this number is<br />
growing, there<br />
are 207 contaminated sites, 28 or more<br />
superfund  sites and 2 NPL sites on Guam. The island of Guam is about 30<br />
miles  long<br />
by an average of 8 and 1/2 miles wide.<br />
Massive amounts of  pesticides were used in the military buildup and<br />
maintenance of<br />
the military complex on Guam. After the<br />
complex was  built it was expanded and the military controlled about 2/3\&#8217;s<br />
of  the<br />
island at the pinnacle.<br />
There are health problems that  coincide with the military buildup,<br />
neurodegenerative<br />
disease. It has many names but is best<br />
described  by ALS/PDC. Neurodegenerative disease got to epidemic proportions<br />
between<br />
WWII  and the middle 50\&#8217;s for<br />
Guam natives, the  Chamorro people. I know the DVA is studying this disease<br />
in<br />
military  personnel, stationed on Guam, at the<br />
VA center in Reno, Nevada. Same  time frame. The study has been slowed due to<br />
a high<br />
response by  veterans stationed on<br />
Guam. The problem with the study is that it doesn\&#8217;t cover a broad  enough<br />
time<br />
period. The Board of Veterans Appeals(BVA)<br />
has  found cases of Guam ALS in military personnel, who were stationed on<br />
Guam,  as<br />
late as the early 70\&#8217;s. These aren\&#8217;t the<br />
only health problems  associated with Guam. According to David B. Cohen in<br />
2004,<br />
Deputy  Assistant Secretary of the Interior<br />
for Insular Affairs, about Guam,  \&#8221;We see alarmingly high rates of diabetes,<br />
hypertension, obesity and many types of cancer<br />
and other diseases\&#8221;. I  know in the Mike Synar hearings in 1987 the congress<br />
was<br />
initiating  studies or already had of cancer, for<br />
a base or bases on Guam. I am  or have been in contact with  maybe as many as<br />
100<br />
veterans, and or family members, and or<br />
friends  of these veterans who have these catastrophic illnesses. I have been<br />
contacted  by some of the Chamorro people of<br />
Guam who are having numerous  health problems. Whole families can be affected<br />
with<br />
diseases.<br />
What we have is a small island that was strategic  to the military buildup<br />
during and<br />
after WWII. Guam is still  strategic to the<br />
US. Government document after government document  supports the massive<br />
contamination<br />
to this island. The military pesticide<br />
manual  explains totally how to use these substances and for what. All<br />
military<br />
installations  on Guam followed the manual. The<br />
rainbow herbs, silvex and DDT were  all used or stored on Guam. Veterans<br />
confirm the<br />
use of herbs like Agent White, during<br />
and after WWII.  Agent Purple was stored on Guam for use in Korea. Agent<br />
Orange was<br />
used  maybe as early as 1955, but I<br />
know  veterans who used AO during the 60\&#8217;s and as early as 1962. I saw these<br />
herbicides  being used in 1966 and 67. Many<br />
other veterans witnessed the use or  used them. Veterans have pictures of the<br />
herbs<br />
and the naval yard  where they were stored.<br />
DDT was passed out like condoms. If you need it use it. All our forays  into<br />
the<br />
jungle, we had to use the DDT. Whenever the<br />
bug  problem started to pick up, DDT was used on the perimeters and some<br />
distance<br />
into the jungle. Pesticides were used<br />
regularly around the barracks.<br />
We have a wide array of pesticides,  VOC\&#8217;s, Benzene, Toulene, PAH\&#8217;s,<br />
SVOC\&#8217;s,<br />
radionuclide and many  other of the most<br />
toxic substances the military uses and all of this  contamination was ending<br />
up in<br />
the drinking water. Of course there was contact<br />
through the  skin and through inhallation upon the disposal and use of these<br />
toxics<br />
as  well. Then you take and add in the Nuclear<br />
Weapons  Testing from 1946 through 1963 and the use of Guam as a staging area<br />
for  the<br />
testing and it was used for the<br />
decontamination of ships and  storage for radiation contaminated munitions<br />
and<br />
equipment. You  add all this up and there is a<br />
huge contamination problem. The health problems of the people of Guam  and<br />
military<br />
personnel prove this. The hearings before<br />
Congress  prove it. The EPA and GEPA documents prove it. The many GAO reports<br />
prove<br />
it. ATSDR proves it. The DOE<br />
and DOD proves it. And last and most  importantly veterans and there sworn<br />
testimony<br />
prove it.<br />
To  support all the documents and all the statements made by me, A professor<br />
Luis<br />
Szyfres from the University of Gaum has<br />
come forward and blown the  whistle to all the contamination on gaum. Every<br />
document<br />
he  presents is peer-reviewed. Many of<br />
the documents are the same as in  my case. ATSDR, GAO, DOE, DNA and many<br />
others. He<br />
is a  highly respected scientist in<br />
his field and his field is  contamination, at least one of them. His<br />
credentials are<br />
impeccable  and he\&#8217;s studying the contamination<br />
to Guam. He says that civilian  and military personnel would have been<br />
exposed by the<br />
air that they breathe, the food and the<br />
drinking  water. Much of the work he\&#8217;s done is for the US Government.<br />
What  Guam has is a huge contamination problem with substances like<br />
insecticides,<br />
herbicides, vocs, svocs, pcbs, pahs,<br />
other pesticides, solvents,  fuels, various radioactive substances like<br />
cesium and<br />
strontium  90. All of this was ending up in the<br />
sole-source drinking water  aquifer under Andersen AFB, NAS and NCS. All drew<br />
their<br />
water from this aquifer. 75% of the<br />
islands water supply is  drawn from the aquifer under these bases. Studies<br />
have been<br />
done  on the cancer rates to military<br />
personnel on Guam, per GAO and  Congress. Page 52 of the Mike  Synar hearings<br />
points<br />
this fact out. Guam was the major<br />
staging  area for WWII, Korea, Nuclear Weapons and Viet Nam.<br />
That means the  Viet Nam era herbicides were stored and used there. This is<br />
supported<br />
by the veterans that used them,<br />
scientists, well reports, GAO, GEPA  and EPA reports. The burnsite on<br />
Andersen that<br />
has dioxin in soil  at 19,000ppm was<br />
used to dispose of pesticides. Herbicides are a  pesticide. This is per the<br />
2002<br />
ATSDR report for the site. Although this report<br />
is a Public  Health Assessment, it shows what the military was being exposed<br />
to on  a<br />
daily basis. Dioxin is everywhere on the<br />
base. It was and still  is in the drinking water of Guam. I have contacted<br />
ATSDR and<br />
they have told me their information only<br />
goes back to  about 1989. Most of the contamination already had happened. And<br />
before<br />
1978  there was no effort to stop the<br />
contamination because the military  says they  didn\&#8217;t know about it. All of<br />
this<br />
supports the fact that  military personnel, stationed<br />
on Guam, were contaminated with a wide  array of contaminants and sometimes<br />
in<br />
massive amounts such as the  DDT, radiation<br />
and rainbow herbicides.<br />
Thankyou for your time.<br />
Vancil I.  Sanderson</p>
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<p>Visitor Comments<br />
I  was married to a Marine and was at Camp Pendleton the year it was  declared<br />
a Superfund site in 1978, the year I gave birth to our daughter at NRMC.  I<br />
became very ill during the ptrgnancy. Silvex, PCBs, VOCs, metals  were found<br />
there. High levels of lead in the drinking water also. I  now have A<br />
neuroendocrine cancer with inoperable right ovarian tumor (Carcinoid<br />
cancer),  A blood cancer, was CIN 1 cervical cancer, prediabetic, heart<br />
problems,  migraines, asthma and other medical issues.<br />
My dad was stationed  on Guam from about 1958 or 59 until 1961 or 62. The<br />
ritual, almost  every day, was to get home from school and wait for the<br />
misquito  truck &#8211; every kid on base rode their bike behind it and then went<br />
to  the chiefs club for a soda &#8211; I have always wondered what long term<br />
effects this might have on me &#8211; Jack<br />
I was stationed at Naval  Communications Station Finegayan(sp), Guam from<br />
1965-67. This was my  last duty station before retiring after 20 years of<br />
service. I am now  approaching 80 years of age and have had numerous health<br />
issues over the years, including Diabetes, Melanoma, 3 bouts of bladder<br />
cancer  and other maladies which I think are related to my tour of duty on<br />
Guam.<br />
Carl<br />
hi  my name Walt i was on guam for a month in 1976 for iwas in the navy<br />
aboard a navy ship. Because I got diabetes Mellitus, type 2 i,ve known  it<br />
about it since 1985 I was diagnosed then.<br />
My Dad had boils all  over his body while serving in  Guam in World War II. At<br />
least that is what he thought they were and  they lasted for 5 days. It was<br />
not written much in his records, but  he wtrote my mom and told her. We still<br />
have those letters. Half of  his records are missing and he has an S on his<br />
records and The VA wants to know what he did he the War to have them  sealed.<br />
We know it is against the law, but we have been having a hard  time. He is<br />
still living and he has cold sweats and is out of it at  times. He was in the<br />
3rd Marine Division and the second wave that entered Guam late 1942 or  very<br />
early 1943. He was one of the few that survived his platoon. All  this is<br />
very scary and I wonder if that is the reason he has so many  problems.<br />
Sandy Balkin<br />
<a href="mailto:sbalkin@aol.com" target="_blank">sbalkin@aol.com</a><br />
i  would like to know how much rainbow agents where use on NCS as I was<br />
station  there from 65 to67 and stood post on the base I  know they spray<br />
around thee barracks and it smell awful for three or  four day and nothing<br />
grew<br />
I was stationed at Andersen Air Force  Base Guam for 18 months in the 1972-73<br />
time frame. I lived in one of  the barracks in the Marbo annex and drank the<br />
water on a daily basis. In 2004 I was diagnosed with end stage liver<br />
disease.  Later I lost my kidneys as a result. In 2007 I got a liver and<br />
kidney  transplant. Do you know if there could be a correlation ?<br />
<a href="mailto:allen@allenwestbrook.com" target="_blank">allen@allenwestbrook.com</a></p>
<p>My Dad was in Japan from \&#8217;46-\&#8217;47 as part of the occupying force.  and then<br />
in Japan for R&amp;R or other duties (prisoner escort etc)  while fighting in<br />
Korea 51-52. He passed away 9 Mar 2008. We are  going through the grueling<br />
task of getting DIC for his wife (stepmom). He was declared 100%  disabled<br />
but VA in their wisdom can\&#8217;t see a connection to his  disability and his<br />
death.</p>
<p>Fred<br />
Your article is very  interesting!! My husband was stationed in Guam during<br />
the Vietnam  War. He is now 61 years old and having numerous heath problems;<br />
skin  irritations(sores), digestive and hypertension problem and his liver<br />
profiles usually come back abnormal. He filed a claim for VA  compensation<br />
after hearing about herbicides and pesticides being  stored in Guam. His<br />
claimed was denied for the following reason;  There was no reason in the<br />
available evidence of records to establish service connection for his<br />
illnesses  and that most of his problems occurred 35 years after discharge.<br />
He  did have problems earlier on but we just didn\&#8217;t know until recently  they<br />
could be caused by the chemicals used in Guam. We plan to appeal the  VA\&#8217;s<br />
denial of his claim. Do you have any suggestions as to how we  can prove to<br />
the VA that even though he has been out of the service  for 30+ years,  that<br />
his health problems could indeed be service related? Thanks for  your help<br />
and your very enlighting article.</p>
<p>Betty<br />
Dear  Vancil,<br />
My name is Sandra Smudzin, born Oct 15 1946, daughter of EMC  Walter Stanley<br />
Smudzin USN born september 30, 1918 and Theresa Catherine Smudzin, born  Oct<br />
31 1925. My father was on Guam in the mid 1950\&#8217;s for about one  year before<br />
my mom and I joined to live with him in a metal building.  I remember being<br />
sprayed everynight by \&#8221;Smokey Joe\&#8221; we called him. My dad spent the  entire<br />
war in the Pacific then on to retire from the Navy after 21  years.<br />
After returning from Guam my mother had to enter a mental  hosipital and I<br />
began having anxiety problems. I have fibromyalga and other ailments.  Loss<br />
of energy has been experienced by both my parents and myself.  Our dear<br />
friend, who lived by us on Guam died of cancer at age 62.Her  daughter now 50<br />
has lupis. My mother developed precancerous  condition in her throat and was<br />
operated on in the early 1960\&#8217;s.  They also suffer from hypertension, high<br />
cholesterol, and mom and I  are pre diabetic among other ailments.</p>
<p>The nervous disorders that  I have experienced all my life since leaving Guam<br />
makes me wonder if they haven\&#8217;t something to do with the atomic bomb  fall<br />
out and poisons. A man on the destroyer the Fletcher saw the  bomb(Bravo)<br />
near the bikini Island explode from the ship. I believe I  was on Guam at the<br />
time.</p>
<p>I am so sorry for all the peoples of Guam. The native  Islanders were always<br />
very kind to us children. They would climb  coconut trees and cut the husk<br />
and give the juice and meat to us.  They would weave us hats to wear. They do<br />
not deserve what is happening to them. I have a friend who was exposed  to<br />
massive ammounts of DDT and it is now DDE in her body. She has no  immune<br />
system. I have a poor immune system.</p>
<p>I am glad this  problem is being brought to light. I was urged to look into<br />
it by my  Doctor who was a research scientist studing these things.<br />
I am most  devistated by what has happened to the native populations in Guam<br />
and  the area.<br />
Anyone I can help or wants to text me my e-mail is <a href="mailto:sss445@live.com" target="_blank">sss445@live.com</a>.<br />
Thank  you,<br />
Sandy Smudzin<br />
Hello, Am VietNam Vet having served @Tahkli  thailand 12/66 &#8211; 12/67. Trying<br />
to service connect DMII due to direct exposure to herbicides since 2001.<br />
Denied  at RO, BVA, and is now remanded from Court of Appeals for Veterans.<br />
Was  in 4252 Strat Wg, (SAC) with HQ at Andersen AFB, Guam. Had occasion to<br />
visit Guam during an extensive telecommunications outage. Wondering if I<br />
should  have approached the claim from this standpoint. Immediately went on<br />
medication  for Thyroid, cholesterol, and HBP, within a few months of<br />
retirement (Aug 1987). Would  like to hear from you, if you wouldn\&#8217;t mind<br />
sharing current info,  etc. email: <a href="mailto:autley@austin.rr.com" target="_blank">autley@austin.rr.com</a>.  Thanks.<br />
Dear Vancil,<br />
We once had an activist, former Senator  Angel Santos fighting for our rights<br />
that the military stole our land and alot of contaminants in our soil.  This<br />
explains WHY alot of folks being diabetic 2 and other illness.  Cancer is a<br />
growing problem on our island. I\&#8217;ve seen people dying  slowly because they<br />
can\&#8217;t afford the medical cost. It\&#8217;ll be nice if the military will  offer<br />
some assistance towards the medical cost for those who are  affected.</p>
<p>Thank you for your comments and I will pass this  message to my friends.</p>
<p><a href="mailto:a_mesa56@hotmail.com" target="_blank">a_mesa56@hotmail.com</a></p>
<p>Mr.  Sanderson,</p>
<p>This is a very interesting document. I worked for the  Navy for over 35  years<br />
and served as Safety Specialist/Manager at the Ship Repair  Facility, Naval<br />
Air Station, Naval Supply Depot, Naval Magazine,  Naval Hospital Okinawa<br />
Japan, returned and worked at ComNavMar at  Naval Station after 1965. I will<br />
print it out, highlight some areas that I feel are very important for me  and<br />
my family.</p>
<p>I came from a family of sixteen (16) children  and we have history of<br />
diabetes, cholesterol, high blood pressure,  etc.</p>
<p>I\&#8217;d like to communicate/get back to you soon.</p>
<p>Vicky Taitano,  Piti, Guam (671) 888-5064</p>
<p>I am currently 45 yrs young. I\&#8217;m  local &amp; very concerned about these<br />
contamination issues. I live  in the southern side of the island. I\&#8217;ve<br />
always thought that we were in the cleaner(contaminant wise) side. Now  we<br />
understand that the whole lagoon is and has been contaminated for  many many<br />
years. Just to give you and anyone a quick lesson in the  eating habits of<br />
the  chamorro people when it comes to fish; parrotfish is also eaten raw<br />
cooked  in lemon juice and salt, unicorn fish, internals eaten after fry or<br />
barbeque.  These are just a couple ways and examples and the local people<br />
have been eating these fish from contaminated waters for years. It is my<br />
hope  that these issues are brought to light as well and that some type of<br />
health  test program started and compensation provided to people still alive<br />
today, of course all paid by the fedgov\&#8217;t because it\&#8217;s their mess. I  would<br />
really like to know the contamination area resulting from the  Cocos Island.<br />
I see below that the whole lagoon is identified but  what data is that based<br />
on? I wonder if it is much larger and was spread much more inland due to  all<br />
the typoons throughout all those years.<br />
I was a sailor and  civilian on Guam in the mid sixties, late sixties and<br />
again in the  late seventies. I haven\&#8217;t heard of the problem. It  doesn\&#8217;t<br />
surprise me though. With the cost of waste disposal the  military would have<br />
taken the cheapest route they could. I have  experienced health problems in<br />
my later years myself. However, these  are not associated with the problems<br />
described herein. I know Guam is made from coral and is very porus. It  will<br />
absorb like a dry sponge.<br />
I have heard about all this  contaminants in Guam, Guam have the most cancer,<br />
and dibectic for the  size of the island. I know lots of local people die<br />
from cancer, very young. In fact my brother is only 50 years old die  from<br />
cancer.<br />
&#8230;and here\&#8217;s the federalis blaming the brown tree  snake for decimating our<br />
island\&#8217;s bird population. &#8211; poo poo!! Is  that why a lot of our people are<br />
dying at a young age &#8211; 55 &#8211; 65? My co-worker who passed away 2004,<br />
remembered  running behind, along with her village friends in Sinajana, a<br />
military  jeep that was spraying DDT!!! She died from pancreatic  cancer.</p>
<p>HERE COMES THE \&#8221;MILITARY BUILDUP\&#8221; with their  anti-environment construction<br />
and disposal of all sorts of waste! God  bless our Island of Guam and its<br />
people!</p>
<p>Si Yu\&#8217;os Ma\&#8217;ase\&#8217;.<br />
Hang in there and don\&#8217;t give up; my prayers are with you and all others<br />
affected.<br />
I  am from Guam and have lived there since 1943-1962, then was back there<br />
again  in 1972-73. Many of my sibblings have developed thyroid, hypertension,<br />
and other ailments. Would these contaminants have contributed to our<br />
problems.</p>
<p>B.  Santos<br />
Hi Vancil,<br />
Do you know if they had remainder of agent  orange in Korea between<br />
1971-1973.</p>
<p>You may email me at <a href="http://a_mesa56hotmail.com/" target="_blank">a_mesa56hotmail.com</a><br />
Hi Vancil,<br />
I read your column and it\&#8217;s very interesting. I\&#8217;m from  Guam and alot of<br />
the native islanders\&#8217; are suffering from diabetic  and cancer. I don\&#8217;t<br />
understand why the military cannot provide those  affected on those dates<br />
with full medical  coverage. Right now their\&#8217;s a serious problem about<br />
medical  coverage on our island. Old folks can\&#8217;t afford the premium so they<br />
die  slowly because our island is too expensive.</p>
<p>4 years ago, my  niece and I were walking and touring and enjoying the little<br />
shops on Coronado Island, San Diego. My granddaughter caught the  attention<br />
of a resident and he asked where we were from. I had told  him I was visiting<br />
from Guam and he just gave me a very peculiar  look, he told me he was on<br />
Guam during the 50\&#8217;s and 60\&#8217;s. Moments into our conversation<br />
he  told me that he hasn\&#8217;t forgotten about his mission out in the Pacific<br />
and  that he often wondered about the impact of that mission on the nearby<br />
islands which included Guam. He said that they were doing tests on the<br />
Bikini  Islands<br />
which has been proven to be very harmful and that those  tests would have<br />
affected the air and the surrounding locations. He  has carried that on  his<br />
concience all those years and he asked that I contact the local  media on<br />
Guam to research this. I mentioned to him that my mother,  Grandfather and<br />
many of my relatives had died of cancer but didn\&#8217;t  know what connection it<br />
would have to this incident. He sounded so sure that it had some bearing  on<br />
the tests that were done in the 50\&#8217;s and 60\&#8217;s. This person  retired from<br />
the military and lived on Coronado Island. I never got  his name although he<br />
was so persistent that I bring awareness to this particular military<br />
activity.  It doesn\&#8217;t seem like he would be making this up ..for what? Now<br />
that  I think abut it, people always comment that we lived on paradise; fresh<br />
air, no pollution, no smog, nice sunshine and tropical climate, all the<br />
requirements  for good health. But where did all this lytico and bodig, and<br />
the  high rates of cancer and diabetes are coming from? Alot of our food is<br />
blamed but chamorro food is so  similar to Thai food. I\&#8217;m wondering if the<br />
Thai and Indonesian  people have the same health problems. If not, then this<br />
definitely is  something to look into. P. June Terlaje</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>FokaiUK:PulpFiction!</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/pulpfiction/</link>
		<comments>https://v1.fokai.tv/pulpfiction/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 May 2010 06:43:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[EthicAndEtiquette]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Special Forces]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In thYou know-for the most part, we try not to post anything here BUT Fokai-related stuffs. But something disturbing came to our attention and that is THIS&#8211; In the movie PulpFiction, Samuel Jackson told si John Travolta that, in the UK, a Quarter Pounder was called a McRoyale with cheese&#8211;  simply because the UK  used [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/IMG00610-20100301-0647.jpg"><br />
</a>In thYou know-for the most part, we try not to post anything here BUT Fokai-related stuffs. But something disturbing came to our attention and that is THIS&#8211;</p>
<p>In the movie PulpFiction, Samuel Jackson told si John Travolta that, in the UK, a Quarter Pounder was called a McRoyale with cheese&#8211;  simply because the UK  used the metric system and measured weight in kilos and not pounds.  Fair enough.We found this to be educational and enlightening. Truth to tell&#8211;even our souls felt smarter. But after a brief visit to Bristol England a few months back, much to our dismay we discovered&#8211;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/IMG00610-20100301-0647.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4963" title="IMG00610-20100301-0647" src="http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/IMG00610-20100301-0647.jpg" alt="IMG00610-20100301-0647" width="439" height="329" /></a></p>
<p>Broken hearts Bruh!</p>
<p>But Ronald recovered well keeping us safe and sound knowing that McD&#8217;s UK is down with the Black and Gold!</p>
<p>And truthfully speaking&#8211;this is a part of Fokai becasue McDonald&#8217;s is a part of everybody!</p>
<p>You deserve a break today&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Toast:ChamoruTimeand2010</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/toastchamorutimeand2010/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jan 2010 00:56:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1008]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Have never been good with gracing the table becasue theres so much to cover that theress so much can be left out. First for whatever was spoken before blessing the table at Ralfys for the second rendition of the grasshopper inc season celebration&#8212;its sincere and heartfelt. Forgot to mention to Thank DaraRoberto and the staff@Ralphy&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Have never been good with gracing the table becasue theres so much to cover that theress so much can be left out. First for whatever was spoken before blessing the table at Ralfys for the second rendition of the grasshopper inc season celebration&#8212;its sincere and heartfelt. Forgot to mention to Thank DaraRoberto and the staff@Ralphy&#8217;s for the always-meomorable venue, SteveShimizu and crew@TheBuzz Cafe for the ever-so-good catering, and FokaiInternationalLogisticsl backbone,Carlo Dela Cruz for facilitating the road to January 9th, 2010. Great Company, GreatFood, Great Times.</p>
<p>There was defintiely alot to be thankful for in 2009 and i think just as much there was enough to be sorrowful for. but we wont drown in our sorrows we will surf happily int he gratitude that ultimately is a gift from above. Hopefully that we find strength in this and keep the blessings flowing to those who might be less fortunate  and not as a selfish method to elevate ourselves. Some have said that the secret to life is to live for others. and the best way to do this is not to live above, but to live among. Thanks for welcoming us into your homes and families. in alot of ways&#8211;you are more than welcome to ours. This whole FokaiThing is only successful because of your support and its this understanding, appreciation, and call-of dutythat has not only been with us sinceeversince but will stay with us ForLife.</p>
<p>For God, in our imperfections, there isa lways a Sorry and a Please. but hopefully in everything we might be looking for for ourselves or even for others&#8212;that we may never forget the ThankYous.</p>
<p>For Ralphy&#8217;s, Purebred, Scooterworld,BuzzCafe, Ambros and TheKingOFBeers, DNA Inc, LotusSurf,GuahanNapu, and anyone else who mightve left out&#8211;A ChamoruTime toast for everyone who was kind enought o join int he celebration. a standing invitation for you to be a part of the next.  And a truly rooted spark for the goodthings we hope to find you in 2010 and beyond.</p>
<p>Still&#8211;Rock and Roll. GodBless</p>
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		<title>EnRouteThrough2010</title>
		<link>https://v1.fokai.tv/enroutethrough2010/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Jan 2010 06:56:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1008]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Big goals are set for FokaiInternational in 2010. Looking forward to a few new video projects. taking it to the next level in product development. Getting in touch with our feminine side with a multilevel project in FokaiFemme. Ultimately, in humble gratitude, looking to bring you the best in extended services and more than a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/IMG_4477.JPG"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3822" title="IMG_4477" src="http://www.fokai.tv/fxv/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/IMG_4477-300x225.jpg" alt="IMG_4477" width="319" height="239" /></a></p>
<p>Big goals are set for FokaiInternational in 2010. Looking forward to a few new video projects. taking it to the next level in product development. Getting in touch with our feminine side with a multilevel project in FokaiFemme.</p>
<p>Ultimately, in humble gratitude, looking to bring you the best in extended services and more than a pocket full of fun and goodvibrations.</p>
<p><strong><em>AllDay&#8211;CarpeDiem.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><span style="color: #800000;">theguysandgals@fokaiindustries</span></strong></p>
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		<title>Exhaust.Proceed.Cultivate</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2009 01:13:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<title>FanohgeChamoru:DavidAndGoliath</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2009 12:10:06 +0000</pubDate>
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