A Bitter Fog: Herbicides and Human Rights

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CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2014 M12 9 - 368 pages
A Bitter Fog is a true story of people living in the forests of Oregon fighting to protect their families and environment from Agent Orange poisons sprayed on them from the air. It puts human faces on those who defied profiteering corporations and indifferent government agencies and fought to protect their homes and families. It is the story of a struggle that spawned a still-vibrant environmental movement. This updated edition adds to the meticulously researched information of the 1983 edition, which exposed deception and outright fraud by chemical manufacturers and government complicity in covering up human health and environmental problems. The story is still relevant as the threats to human health and the environment are still happening, exposing millions to the senseless destruction wrought by pesticides, fracking, genetically modified food, and other assaults on the environment and human rights. A Bitter Fog was awarded the Christopher Award for 1983. The awards salute media that "affirm the highest values of the human spirit" and "encourage audiences to see the better side of human nature."

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About the author (2014)

Carol Van Strum is a writer, bookseller, ruthless editor, chronic book reviewer, and seasoned troublemaker. In addition to A Bitter Fog, she wrote No Margin of Safety (Greenpeace 1987) and The Politics of Penta (Greenpeace 1989). She has also written numerous articles and book reviews for a wide variety of publications, including USA Today, the Washington Post, and the New York Times. She lives in rural Oregon.

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