This Podcast Will Kill You - Ep 207 Tear Gas: How can a chemical weapon be “humane”?
Episode Date: April 14, 2026Tear gas is an expected, normalized part of protests today. But its use in international war is banned. How can that be? That’s just one of the questions we investigate in this episode. First, w...e take you through the long history of tear gas and its emergence alongside deadlier chemical weapons before discussing how its use became routine, fueled by industry interests. Then we delve into what’s in tear gas that causes the painful physical reaction and consider whether claims of non-toxicity are backed up by research (spoilers: not really). This is an info-packed episode that will leave you with many questions answered, but not all of those answers will be satisfying. Support this podcast by shopping our latest sponsor deals and promotions at this link: https://bit.ly/3WwtIAuSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Now tear gas canisters were plummeting everywhere behind the barricade,
through the trees.
A huge cloud of gas rolled over the barricade,
and cops with gas masks on came over the barricade in an assault wave,
with shotguns and rifles using the butts as clubs on anyone in sight,
knocking people down and standing on them.
Gas, gas was the cry,
as if poisonous snakes had been loosed in the area.
Thousands streamed across the park toward Clark Street,
and panic started, headlong running, the sudden threat of being trampled by your own people.
The tear gas was catching up with us, a sharp menthol sort of burning on the cheeks and burning
in the eyes, but though some people ran from it, most of us kept on walking.
Now the tear gas began really burning, making the eyes twist tightly closed.
And if you rubbed it, the burning got worse, as if your eyeballs were being rolled in fire.
The medics were shouting, keep your eyes open, let it tear away, water, wash your eyes with
water. The information on how to handle the tear gas passed rapidly and with a warm feeling from one person to another. The gas drifted over Old Town and the citizens came out of their houses, coughing and gritting their eyes angrily.
Yeah. So. So.
So that was excerpted from a book that was published in 1969 called No One Was Killed by John
Schultz. And it's about the 1968 protest in Chicago at the Democratic Convention, the National
Democratic Convention, and in which police, tear gas was used extensively by police along with other
forms of violence.
Yeah.
It feels like it could be from any old day these days.
Erin. It does. It does. Hi, I'm Aaron Welsh. And I'm Aaron Olman-Updike. And this is, this podcast will
kill you. And today we're talking about tear gas. We're talking about tear gas. Not just a timely topic,
a timely topic for any part of, well, almost the entire 20th century, 21st century. Yeah.
So we really wanted to, yeah, as we'll learn. We really wanted to kind of get into what it is we know about tear gas and why many
countries allow its use on its own citizens despite the fact that it is banned in international
warfare.
Yeah.
So kind of a big deal.
Kind of big deal.
There's a lot to cover.
A lot to cover.
Where that came from.
Yeah.
Good.
Yeah.
We'll get there.
But first.
But first.
It's quarantine time.
What do we drink in this week?
This week we're drinking the tearjerker.
We are.
I'm drinking the tearjerker.
It's got elder flour syrup, lemon juice, club soda, sprig of rosemary.
It's a nice little Bev for a not nice topic.
Yep.
There is.
Sums up most of our quarantini's, I think.
That's so true.
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But if you want to see like the full list, anytime that I read a book or reference a book on the podcast in any episode or for our book club episodes or whatever, bookshop.
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Are we ready to get started?
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
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Tier gas is prohibited in war.
Yet, many countries, including the United States, permit tear gas to be used against their own citizens.
Yeah.
Like more countries than not, I think.
It was surprisingly hard.
I was Googling like Tier Gas banned.
Yeah.
And it...
You can't.
No.
Yeah.
There's not like a curated list.
Right.
Here's all of them.
Right.
No, it's used like extensively across the globe for crowd control purposes.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
And proponents of tear gas claim that it is a safe and more humane tool to control riots.
While opponents of tear gas question its alleged harmlessness and point towards the many instances where tear gas.
is deployed as a weapon to quell legal and peaceful protests,
not a tool of de-escalation used as a last resort,
but a frontline weapon of political suppression,
one that is not evenly utilized across the political spectrum.
So there are statistics I found from the U.S. Crisis Monitor
that showed that in the early 2020s, can we say that yet?
Yeah, sure.
Okay.
From like 20, I don't remember the exact years,
but in the early 2020s,
Police were three times more likely to use force in protests organized by left-leaning groups such as abolish ICE and Black Lives Matter.
Three times more likely?
And this is not just about tear gas.
This is just the use of force in general.
In general.
In general.
Okay.
Yeah.
And also this uneven use, like we're going to call out the U.S. a lot throughout this, but this uneven use is not restricted to the U.S. alone.
No.
Our mental image of protest today is incomplete without a police officer spraying a demonstrator in the face with pepper spray, that infamous image, that they tried to get wiped from the internet and it had the opposite effect, the stricent effect, as it happens.
Or, you know, these images of launching a canister of tear gas into a crowd of peacefully and legally assembled citizens.
Right.
Those thick choking clouds are chilling reminders that, quote, unquote, peace.
full assembly is in the eye of the beholder.
Oh, God, Erin.
Was this the intention of tear gas when it was invented?
If not, what was the claimed intention?
And why has tear gas followed such a different trajectory than other agents of chemical
warfare?
That's the story that I want to tell today.
Okay.
Yeah.
I can't wait.
Tier gas is not, in fact, a gas.
I know you're going to get into this in more detail later on, Aaron, but, and it's also
not one thing at all.
It is an umbrella term that encompasses chemical compounds that are lacrimatory agents, as in they produce tears.
And historically, they were also referred to as harassing agents.
And I'm not going to go into the individual histories of each of the different compounds that make up this tear gas category.
But rather, I want to take us through the overall history of tear gas as one discrete unit and how its idealized image of a safe, non-toxic tool to protect citizens is really.
rarely borne out in reality.
It's just the idea of it being non-toxic entirely.
Right.
To protect citizens is the other one.
To protect citizens.
Yeah.
The history, this history, begins in World War I,
when chemical weapons, including tear gas, chlorine, fosgene, mustard gas, and others
were first developed and used extensively.
While chemical warfare had been utilized as early as 400 BCE in the Peloponnesian War,
between the Spartans and the Athenians.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
400 BCE?
400 BCE, yeah.
People have been trying this for ages.
They're just like, we'll throw things.
They're like, what else can we do?
Yeah.
But it was really only in the early 20th century that the scientific and technological advancements
made during the Industrial Revolution could actually be applied to war.
So it was like, let's use all this new scientific and technical knowledge to better kill people or harm them.
To better kill people.
Yeah.
To kill people more efficiently.
To kill them more efficiently.
And when chemical weapons were introduced in the First World War, the reaction was one of utter horror.
A military chaplain describes what he saw in April 1915 during the first use of chlorine by German troops in Ibra, Belgium, on French forces.
Okay.
Quote, a greenish-gray cloud had swept down upon them, turning yellow as it traveled over the country, blasting everything.
it touched, shriveling up the vegetation. No human courage could face such a peril. Then they're
staggered into our midst French soldiers, blinded, coughing, chest heaving, faces in ugly purple color,
lips speechless with agony. And behind them, in the gas choked trenches, we learned that they had
left hundreds of dead and dying comrades. The impossible was only too true. It was the most fiendish,
wicked thing I have ever seen, end quote.
Yeah.
And that's horrific.
There are so many accounts.
Like we really should do some of these other gases someday as well.
But like the accounts were like something out of a horror book.
Right.
Like it was like unimaginable.
I mean at first, unless I think so many people until they saw it themselves or were part of it themselves did not know the scale of
I guess just agony and terror and it's hard to I think even imagine or conceptualize when it's just that
I mean it's it's everywhere right it's not like you control where a gas or a smoke or whatever
goes when you when it's released it's just everything in its path I mean and that's a big part of like
tear gas today is that it's it's indiscriminately applied and as affected by it is also indiscriminate
It's the wind changes.
Yeah.
We'll get there, Aaron.
Yeah.
The IPRA gas attack with chlorine was the first to garner widespread attention due to its
extreme lethality.
And it prompted the development and distribution of protective equipment like gas masks.
Okay.
It would not be the last attack, nor would chlorine be the only chemical agent deployed.
Mustard gas and fosgene also contributed to the 91,000 gas deaths in World War I.
Wow.
91,000. It's a lot. And it's interesting. Like there are so many of these chemical warfare books that were published either in the 1920s or during World War II period that were still like, we chemical warfare is the best path forward. This statistic is positive for them. They're like, oh, it caused 25% of all of the casualties, all of the injuries, all of the things that kept people from being able to be in battle. But it only caused.
this many deaths.
And it's just like, it incapacitated plenty.
It incapacitated.
Long-term effects, forget about it.
No one died.
You know, it's like that kind of thing.
Oh, God.
Okay.
But before there was chlorine, fosgene, or mustard gas, there was tear gas.
Before those.
Before those.
The first use of gas in battle in World War I was in August 1914 when French troops
fired tear gas grenades into German trenches.
Huh.
Yeah. And apparently the amount of chemicals was so low that no one noticed, but it set off an arms race where different countries sought to out-compete each other in devising more and more deadly gases and better protective equipment. It was just like, all right. And that's, yeah. Strictly speaking, the use of asphyxating agents like chlorine was against the Hague conventions that had been set in place in the late 1890s. Tier gas was not banned under.
this agreement. Okay. Only like, asphyseating. Yeah. Okay. But these agreements were so vague as to be
taken as suggestions at best. Like the loophole was absolutely enormous. It was just like, well,
you could argue your way out of any of it. Right. And when World War I concluded in November of
1918, the perception of chemical warfare was divided along two very different lines. It was either
the most humane form of weaponry ever created or the,
least.
Yeah.
I just.
I know.
The argument is mental gymnastics at its finest, I guess.
Humane weaponry, period.
Like, sorry.
And that's what really kills me about some of these arguments that people made then and
still make today.
And they're like, listen, if we're going to have war, war is unavoidable.
And you can't say that one weapon is right.
Right.
So that's like, first of all, what, how many assumptions are you asking us to agree with here?
So we've already had to leap, okay, this far down the line.
It's all inhumane.
But anyway, so we've got these two different camps.
Chemical warfare is humane.
Chemical warfare is not humane.
And those who experienced gas attacks firsthand, which is many veterans,
more often fell into the latter camp, that it's the least humane weaponry.
It's horrible.
With some expressing that they were more afraid of gas than of shell fire,
The effect of gas was not only physical, but it was hugely psychological.
It caused widespread panic and chaos, which often left troops more vulnerable to artillery fire.
And this was often, again, like a feature, not a bug.
This is the intention.
And this is later on, it was like, oh, but it's not harmful.
And it's like, no, but you introduced tear gas to then kill people better.
In order to do harm.
Right.
In order to do harm.
Yeah.
Protective equipment didn't always live up to its promise either. The unwieldy awkward masks made it more difficult to maneuver. And then you've got something like mustard gas, which will burn your skin through clothing. Yeah, it's awful.
Okay. Gas overall, gas weapons were designed to induce suffering or at the least harm. For those who believed it to be the most humane form of weaponry, these qualities,
were points in favor of chemical warfare.
And among these proponents was U.S. General Amos Fries,
pro-military anti-communist, xenophobic, racist, white supremacist,
champion of the chemical warfare service and author of the 1921 book Chemical Warfare,
in which he claims.
Oh, yeah, it's a really dark read.
It's a how-to.
It's like, oh, so you want to try?
Yeah, it's a little bit of a persuasive argument at the beginning.
It's like, this is the best thing that's ever happened.
And then let's go through them all.
And how do you recognize them?
I'm pretty sure it's that one.
I read another book on chemical warfare, or not all of it, but like I found another book on chemical warfare from 1944.
One of them has a poem that's supposed to help you remember how to detect the different.
The different types?
Yeah.
That's gross.
It's really grim.
It's really grim.
But anyway.
So in Amos Freez Chemical Warfare, he says at one point, quote, instead of gas warfare being the most horrible, it is the most humane where both sides are prepared for it.
While against savage or unprepared peoples, it can be made so humane that but very few casualties will result, end quote.
Erin, there's a lot in that savage.
Yeah, there's a lot.
Against SAC. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. It's cool to use it in war. Everyone's got a gas mask and it's cool to use it against.
Against people, not in war, even if they don't have a gas mask. Even if they don't have a gas mask. It's all good.
Right. The ends justify the means. Of course, they always do.
Right, right. And so for Frees and others in the pro gas camp, chemical weapons represented the future of war.
and the anti-gas sentiment that emerged after World War I threatened Friza's relevance and his career.
Nevertheless, many world leaders disagreed, and this was in alignment with the overall anti-war sentiment that prevailed throughout many countries after the horrific loss of life from World War I.
Discussions over the future use of chemical and biological warfare in this interwar period led eventually to the Geneva Protocol, which was signed in 1925, and it prohibited the use.
of both biological and chemical weapons in international armed conflicts.
Okay.
The language here is kind of important.
So I'm going to break apart these a little bit so we understand what's being prohibited and what's not.
Okay.
Okay.
It prohibits specifically, number one, the first use in war of, quote, asphyxating, poisonous, or other gases,
and of all analogous liquids, materials, or devices, end quote.
Okay.
And number two, the first use of bacteriological methods of warfare.
We're not going to pay attention to that in this episode.
Still interesting because it only says bacteria.
Okay.
Exactly.
That's one of the things I was like, hmm.
But what the Geneva Protocol, this version of it did not do, was prohibit the research, development, testing, or stockpiling of such weapons, chemical or biological, or the domestic use of tear gases or herbicides.
Of course not.
nor did it prohibit things like concealment smoke or incendiary weapons like napalm.
Tier gas was a more contentious issue.
Did it fall under other gases or analogous liquids, materials, or devices?
Does it?
I mean, yes.
It could be argued either way, right?
Like, something just depends on do you like tear gas or do you not like tear gas?
So some said, of course it does.
Others were like, no, that needs to be banned.
Right.
Or someone's like, yeah, I don't know.
it doesn't count. And so because there was such confusion over this and just making sure that the
precision in language was there, in 1930 a conference was convened in which all but one country
that attended, which I think was like 13 countries overall, all but one country agreed that
tear gases were covered by the ban because it was difficult to draw a line between lethal
and incapacitating gases. Okay. So going back to the language of that protocol, the protocol,
the protocol prohibits, it forbade the first use of these gases.
And so that means that retaliation is permitted.
So if someone gasses you, you can go ahead and gas them.
But they were the ones who did wrong in the first place, but two wrongs make a right.
Two wrongs make a right.
All is fair and war.
And war.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so they essentially that a lot of the countries who were like no tear gases also need to be banned were imagining a scenario in which
let's say that a cloud of choking gas is released over a group of soldiers.
They don't know how to discern between tear, despite the lovely little rhymes that are included in textbooks.
But they don't know how to discern between tear gas versus chlorine versus, you know, it's not something that maybe immediately you are able to, you're able to tell.
Is this one of the band gases or not one of the band gases?
And so before you even find out, because you're allowed second.
To retaliate, you could then retaliate with a more lethal deadly gas like mustard gas chlorine, even if tear gas was the first use, one of the allowed gases.
Allowed gases.
That makes sense where it's like if you don't know, then it's just tit for tat and you're going higher and higher each time.
Right.
Tier gas would easily escalate or start a conflict in that way.
Okay.
And so that is why its use is banned in war.
That is why.
That is why.
Its use is banned in war.
Okay.
Well, that's an answer at least.
It's an answer.
But you know how I said all but one country agreed to this?
Guess who?
Guess who objected?
How, what a hard guess.
The United States?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The country that likes to say no to all the things.
No, like you're not my mom.
Stop telling me what to do.
I can use two guests if I want to.
I mean, that's basically how I imagine.
The U.S., especially Amos Freeze, who had campaigned.
very hard by this point.
Like, by 1925, he had campaigned so hard to make tear gas acceptable.
And so the U.S.'s...
I'm sorry, I'm just imagining the slogans compared to today.
Oh, there will be some slogans in here.
Okay, great.
But the U.S.'s response was that they were unwilling to bind themselves, quote,
to refrain from the use in war against any enemy of agencies which had been adopted for peacetime use
against our own population.
Agencies adopted on the ground that, while causing temporary inconvenience, they cause no real suffering or permanent disability.
End quote.
We're using it against our own people.
Of course, we're going to use it in more.
This is fine.
Yeah, we're already using it.
Aren't we all using this?
Right.
It's not funny.
None of this is funny.
None of this is funny.
It's just, I don't even know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The fact that that's not the argument that you think it is.
You're missing the point.
You're missing the point.
You're, yeah, yeah.
But I will say that like the discussion of whether domestic use of tear gas should or should not be banned was never on the table for this protocol or a protocol like this, really.
It wouldn't be, from my understanding, for a country to agree to external policing by another.
Right. So to me, the question is not why didn't the Geneva Protocol also ban domestic use of tear gas, but instead, why did these countries permit the use of this chemical weapon against its own citizens?
In the first place, yeah.
As you just heard, by 1925, the U.S. had already begun transforming tear gas from a war weapon to one that police could wield against citizens in peacetime.
they were not alone in this.
Many countries would have not only also refused to ban domestic use from if it had been on the table in these discussions,
but these countries also, many countries continue to use tear gas today against their citizens.
As we said, it's harder to find countries that have banned it than those who have not.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Period.
And in the U.S., leading the charge was General Freeze, who, within months of the war ending, embarked on a campaign to make over the reputation of
tear gas, singling it out as a safe and humane policing tool.
It's, yeah, tear gas was one of the earliest recipients of the PR treatment with public
demonstrations, marketing campaigns, paid spokespeople, like doctors saying, like, I attested the
safety of this tear gas.
This is why we can't have doctors promoting things.
Okay, thank you.
And smear tactics against those who questioned its safety, who were like, this is bad.
I've experienced this firsthand and I, this is not acceptable to use. So there's a 1921 profile that
was written about Freeze and it described how he was, quote, firmly convinced that as soon as
officers of the law and colonial administrators have familiarized themselves with gas as a means
of maintaining order and power, there will be such a diminution of violent social disorders
and savage uprising as to amount to their disappearance.
The tear gases appear to be admirably suited to the purpose of isolating the individual from the mob spirit.
He is thrown into a condition in which he can think of nothing but relieving his own distress.
An advantage of the milder form of gas weapons in dealing with a mob is that the responsible officer need not hesitate to use his weapons, end quote.
Oh my God, Aaron.
Like, not only do they just make it so clear that we will use this to shut up anyone who is fighting against us.
Right. Any dissent.
Who do voices of dissent.
Any dissent, we can shut it down.
And also, we can just use our weapons much more freely.
That, because I feel like so much of the time, the proponents of tear gas, whether, you know, since the 1960s,
60s and beyond, tear gas has always been framed, and today is framed as a weapon of last resort,
of like a, not even a weapon, a tool of last resort, right?
A tool.
It's only when we are worried about bodily harm.
It's only when we're worried about the safety of our citizens and private property, naturally.
Private property.
Private property.
Private property.
So it's only when these things are on the table is tear gas ever used.
And that has never, it's like it is literally that this is what he was pushing.
for is that you don't have to hesitate to use it.
This is a frontline weapon to be used. Right. This is the first thing you can reach for.
Don't worry about it. Because it won't do damage. Yeah.
Lasting damage. Right. That's in air quotes. Yeah. There was pushback against the military,
the use of military weapons against citizens. And many veterans strongly objected to the characterization
of any gas as humane. But they were dismissed as liars or exaggerators. These,
were the people that Freeze was like smear campaigns. Smeer campaigns. Oh, they just want benefits.
Oh, they just, whatever. They don't know what they're talking about. Yeah.
Freeze was strongly in favor of using military tactics to quell dissent domestically.
But it was more than that. There was a whole industry to consider a burgeoning industry, Aaron.
The late 19th and early 20th centuries were witnessing a chemical revolution, not just in scientific knowledge, but also industry.
many chemical companies stood a lot to gain by keeping gas on the table.
And if they couldn't get approval to keep manufacturing all wartime gases,
then maybe tear gas could still be a nice revenue stream.
Ugh, gross.
Where would that revenue come from?
Well, you've got police departments, prisons, the National Guard, and private security.
Ample opportunity there.
And, I mean, it wasn't a hard sell at all.
The incorporation of tear gas essentially began the militarization of police in this country.
Ugh.
Tier gas, yeah.
Tier gas was framed in a positive light as the best and safest alternative to lethal force.
As though if tear gas were taken away, the only option would be to use lethal force against a crowd,
not nonviolent, non-lethalation techniques, just lethal force.
And so, yeah, it's this false dichotomy between.
Yeah. It reduces the options down to two. Tear gas or lethal force.
Or lethal force. That's it. Those are our only two options in dealing with crowds or anyone saying anything that we don't want. We can either kill you or, quote unquote, not harm you that bad. Incapacitate you.
Incapacitate, yeah.
Those are our only two options. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, my God. It's horrific.
Yeah.
tear gas lowered the threshold for deciding to use force.
Yeah.
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The development of tear gas technology reveals that the intention for
harm was built into the devices themselves.
Tear gas shells were meant to be fired directly in someone's face to be, quote, unquote,
effective.
For best efficacy, fire this into someone's face.
They were desirable, yep, written about as desirable for their ability to cause, quote, unquote, walloping pain.
Mm-hmm.
Tests measuring the efficacy of tear gas were deployed specifically against unarmed individuals,
again demonstrating that causing injury was not a bug but a feature.
By the end of the 1920s, tear gas had been heartily embraced by many policing forces in the United States,
and it had begun to be used to suppress labor movements, such as in the Panama Canal, and political protests,
like when the bonus army lobbied outside the White House to demand their overdue wartime payments.
The publicity surrounding the use of tear gas served in these specific instances,
served as advertisements for many policing forces. It normalized its use and it demonstrated how
effective it could be. Oh, wow. Look how great we did with tear gas. Look how great. Yeah. Getting these
veterans to get down. Yeah. Mm-hmm. The tagline of Lake Erie chemical company, which was their line of
tear gas products. They were one of the biggest manufacturers of tear gas products, was, quote,
one man with chemical warfare gas can put to flight a thousand armed men,
an irresistible blast of blinding, choking pain, no permanent injury.
End quote.
No permanent injury.
No permanent injury.
That promise did not reflect reality.
Severe head injuries were not uncommon after protests or strikes were tear gassed.
And this wasn't just about, you know, long-term effects in terms of it.
I know you're going to talk about this, you know, effects on or damage to vision, damage to your lungs, GI tract burns.
But also the canisters themselves can often cause tremendous harm.
They still do.
And head injuries.
Yes.
Yeah.
And even though at the time there were supposed to be restrictions on who could actually buy tear gas, those were often ignored.
And a committee that was investigating the chemical warfare service found that between 1933,
in 1937, over $1.25 million worth of old-time money of tear gases was sold in anticipation
of strikes.
Wow.
Labor movements, man.
Dangerous things.
Ooh, so dangerous to demand equal pay.
Days off.
Disrupting labor disputes and breaking up political protests, they were just two demonstrated
uses of tear gas.
The weapon was also.
readily wielded by colonial administrators, particularly in British colonies.
It didn't start out that way. Following World War I, Britain was actually opposed to the use of
tear gas, feeling that it was uncivilized and could not possibly be used against citizens when its
use in war was prohibited. So logical. Like what? Yeah. But after a few violent suppressions
of colonial uprisings in which colonial authorities killed at least 400 and possibly 50.
100 unarmed people in India protesting new authoritarian legislation.
And there was a lot of outcry, public outcry, shame, negative public opinion that followed this.
And so they were like, you know what, maybe this blanket ban on chemical warfare, it's a bit extreme.
Maybe the use of tear gas could help us out in this way, public image versus safer.
I don't know.
I was not there to.
But again, it's the same thing that we already talked.
about it's this false dichotomy oh well we accidentally killed too many people we better find a way to
get these people in line yeah without killing them all without killing them without changing the who's
wielding the force the weapon right without them yeah yep oh god uh yeah and so um they began to adopt
the use of tear gas in their in british colonies beginning in the 1930s and then later they were used in
tear gas was used in northern Ireland during the troubles. And while England or the UK did not
play a big role in the manufacture of tear gas, unlike the U.S., they did do extensive research on
deployment strategies, you know, how much to use, when to use, just like how best to gas people.
How to guide. Here's a pamphlet. And the U.S. found this extremely helpful throughout the
1960s, particularly in the later half of the decade with the civil rights movement and anti-war
protests. Tear gas was extensively deployed on so many peaceful demonstrations, disrupting sit-ins,
marches, assemblies at meeting halls. It was not used as it was claimed to be to put a stop to
violence, but rather it introduced it, forced people to run wildly and flee in terror as they
struggled to breathe. So I read a book for this called tear gas by Anna Faganbaum, and there's a
quote I'm going to read that describes the psychological impact of tear gas. Quote, in escalating
force and arousing derision from onlookers, tear gas implicates protesters and often bystanders in a
violent and chaotic scene. It turns civilians into criminals, end quote. Yeah. When people are bombarded
by tear gas and they begin to run and panic,
some police then might feel justified to beat them,
taser them, shoot them in order to restore the peace
that they themselves had destroyed.
Right.
So wielded in this way,
tear gas became the grounds for police violence,
a punitive weapon to threaten what would happen
if you dared to challenge the political authority.
Just like we see with abolish ICE protests
and Black Lives Matter marches today,
if what you stood up for was not in line with what was deemed politically acceptable,
your action, legal or peaceful, though it may be, would be deemed illegitimate or violent through the use of tear gas.
Right.
And in the 1960s in the U.S., things kind of came to a head in 1968 at the Democratic National Convention held in Chicago.
So this is where our firsthand account comes from.
10,000 people marched on the city for civil rights and to put an end to the war in Vietnam.
Police deployed staggering amounts of tear gas, so much so that it warmed its way into buildings covered entire city blocks.
There was no escape, not from the tear gas and not from police beatings.
An estimated 400 people were treated for injuries from tear gas, but no one was killed.
No one was killed.
So this event was later described in an official.
report as a quote unquote police riot due to the excessive violence. And the entire event
captured headlines across the country. It was on like so many news reports. It was like one of the
biggest demonstrations of the excessive use of force and tear gas. The whole world is watching.
The whole world is watching. Yeah. And it didn't slow down the use of tear gas. In fact, it wasn't
that much longer afterwards that Reagan, who was governor of California at the time, ordered.
ordered a military helicopter to drop a bunch of tear gas on protesters at a park in Berkeley.
So there you go.
Yeah.
And it's just, it is really interesting because the increased visibility, what did it do?
I don't, I don't know.
I don't know.
Right. I mean, it's like the same thing today where we have cell phones and we can capture the fact that people are just sitting at a protest.
They're dressed like frogs for goodness sake.
or chickens and there's tear gas being deployed for absolutely no reason.
And it's still or an aid convoys.
Yeah.
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And yet we can see it.
And it still is ongoing.
Yeah.
It is an interesting outcome.
Right.
The increased visibility should lead to increased accountability, but it almost just like normalizes its use.
in a way. Because if like you see it, no one does something about it. You see it again. No one does
something about it again. You just expect that no one will ever do something about this.
Yeah. It's dangerous. Yeah. And so tear gas, that is what happened to tear gas in the 1960s. It emerged from
this decade as a weapon that framed protesters as dangerous enemies, not as citizens exercising their rights.
And because its use had become so normalized, alternatives like negotiation and nonviolent de-escalation were rarely
pursued resources
instead went into producing
more and more tear gas and
better ways to efficiently deliver it.
More tear gas weapons.
More tier gas weapons.
With all of these resources
pouring into the optimization of tier gas,
was there any leftover to look
into its health effects?
There actually
was, a small amount at least.
There was research carried out
in the UK, but
few, if any,
just gets worse, of the 20,000 military volunteers who underwent testing at the Ministry of Defense's Portendown
Military Research Facility, few of these volunteers were told what substances they were being exposed to,
which included tear gas, but also the nerve agent sarin, mustard gas, and smoke bombs.
I'm sorry, just without knowing what it is that you're being exposed to.
Cool, cool, cool.
And you have a lot of control over that.
being in the military.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
By the 1970s, with the news reports of tear gas being used against protesters, a renewed call for its ban was made by many countries.
And so there was some, like, anger.
This did incite some like, hey, wait a second.
Let's reconsider this.
Yeah.
But the U.S. and the U.K. resisted.
And in February 1970, British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart announced that, quote,
C.S. smoke is considered to be not significantly harmful to man in other than wholly exceptional circumstances.
And we regard C.S. and other such gases accordingly as being outside the scope of the Geneva Protocol.
Right. So it's just like, this is our, we decided this is the truth.
We decided that it's fine.
It's fine. So it's fine.
It's fine. It was not received well, that conclusion, that declaration.
quite good. But then came the argument that not only was tear gas not harmful, it was actually
life-saving because who knows how many people would have been killed in protest by police if not for
tear gas. That's the same thing all over again. It's the same thing. The argument is still in use
today and it implies that we should accept police violence as inevitable. And so it's on us to choose the lesser
of two evils. Here you go. Here are your two options. Oh, you're going to choose gun violence? No,
we don't choose that. No. It's ridiculous. That's a ridiculous argument to make. I know. So much is
ridiculous in this world that you're in like this. Utterly ridiculous. Those are your only two choices.
A gun in your face or a tear gun. Right. And it's also like this is what I was, I was trying to figure out
when I was looking up like countries that had banned tear gas, I was trying to be like,
is there any data even to support this argument?
Yeah.
And I know there's a lot of other factors in terms of, is there an authoritarian government,
how much of this would be silenced just in general, any sort of state-sponsored violence.
But I don't, I don't know.
Right.
It's a shockingly horrible argument.
It really is.
Yeah.
But.
But going back to the medical research.
research on tear gas, what did they find? Many of the early reports, such as the Hemsworth
report, which is still referenced today, were carried out in an official governmental capacity,
and they were largely unreliable. So for instance, people with epilepsy who had a seizure
after exposure to tear gas, it was concluded often that, like, well, we don't really know
that it was tear gas. It's probably that they just forgot to take their meds. Like, we can't
tell. We can't tell. You can't. You can't do that study, really. Right. So,
cool, cool, cool, cool. That's sort of, that's just a little, a little sample of that.
There were also, there were reports, like people were instructed to follow up on reports
where people had died after tear gas exposure, and they found it impossible to find any more
information. The police were like, nope, nothing to see here, move on. There's nothing. Just don't
worry about it.
Just we swept it under the rug. It's fine.
The incentives for downplaying the medical effects of tear gas were just too great.
As a political and policing weapon, it discouraged political protests or labor strikes,
and it painted peaceful protesters as violent dissidents. And as a product, it was very lucrative.
The United States exports both the substance itself as well as the weapons to deploy it.
So, for instance, in 1989, the U.S. exported $6.5 million worth of tear gas and tear gas weapons to Israel, where it was thrown into Palestinian homes and hospitals and schools and mosques.
But the U.S. is far from the only country to profit from this weapon.
I came across a new phrase in my research for this, the riot control industrial complex.
Gosh.
It's very grim, very grim.
Grim and specific.
It is an incredibly profitable international venture of which tear gas is a substantial part.
Tier gas is manufactured in most countries in Europe.
It's manufactured in Canada, Turkey, India, Pakistan, China, and South Korea.
That's not all.
There's many more.
I looked up the current projections for the tear gas market, which was projected to be in
$2026, $1.45 billion.
And guess what, Aaron, it's predicted to experience robust growth because of,
of increasing civil unrest.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
That we have statistics like that, and I bet the economists are like, woo-hoo.
Right.
This sector is growing.
Yeah, I know that it's, I know dystopian is essentially.
It's the bottom line.
That's what I have written, truly dystopian.
That really is.
Yeah.
Projected to increase because of growing civil unrest.
What a great sector to be in.
Ugh.
Yeah.
Okay.
we're almost done.
I'm almost done.
Yeah, I know, I know.
I mean, and this is, that's the thing is that like the history of tear gas is still being written today every single day.
It is an indelible mark of protests around the world where it is increasingly used against people exercising their legal right to assembly.
What I have presented here is far from a comprehensive history of its use, which is largely as a weapon.
of political oppression and state endorsed violence.
But there are glimmers of hope in this history as well.
Scientists who fight for objective research on the harms of tear gas,
street medics that attend protests and have extensive firsthand knowledge of these chemicals
and how to treat them immediately,
people who design better masks or treatments to protect from tear gas exposure
and then make that information freely available,
groups that disseminate this information and pave the way for collective
resistance. Artists turning tear gas canisters into exhibits, cities like Berkeley banning the use of
tear gas, which happened in June 2020, although they've considered rolling it back. Today, with the advent of
social media and basically everyone carrying a camera with them at all times, the use of tear gas is more
publicized, just like we talked about. These images are shared and shared again around the world
and can act as powerful icons of unity or resistance.
And hopefully they will be used to increase accountability
and change things for the better.
Yeah.
The jury is out on that one.
That maybe makes me a little cynical,
but I'm just like, who's ever going to be held accountable
for anything ever?
Right now, that's a valid question.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But at the very least, what these images do is they serve,
to question the status quo, the normalization of tear gas, even at a legal, peaceful protest.
Right.
And questioning is what we should be doing. We should be asking why the threshold for tear gas deployment is so low.
Who is making money off of tear gas production? Great question. And what harm it can cause.
Most of all, though, we should be questioning the reasons that we have been given for why tear gas is legal in this country to use a
against its citizens when it is outlawed in international warfare.
Yeah.
And so now, Erin, I'll turn it over to you to tell me what we know about the health
effects of tear gas.
Oh, let me tell you.
It's a lot to cover here, Aaron.
Oh, I know there is.
Tear gas, like you mentioned, Aaron, it's one of several.
It's not one thing.
It is one of several riot control agents, they're called, or sometimes.
They're called harassing agents.
Okay.
There's lots of other names for them as well.
And there's several different types of chemicals that make up this umbrella term to your guess.
I'm going to mention three of them by name, but then I am going to just kind of lump them all together because we can.
Okay?
Yeah.
So the three that are most common, one is called CN or one chloroacetaphenone.
It's also known as Mace.
That's the brand name.
It used to be probably the most commonly used tear gas, but it's been largely replaced by a newer one called CS or O-Clorobenzlydean malone nitrile.
I'm very impressed that you were able to get through that.
I came close.
I messed it up a little.
So the reason that CN was replaced mostly by CS is because CS is far more potent, meaning at
much lower concentrations, it has an effect.
We love an efficient weapon, don't we?
Don't we?
Although supposedly CN was more toxic, which means that someone out there admitted that
CN can be toxic.
I wonder if it was like the competition between different tier gas companies and they're like,
that one's really, that's the only time is when you just to make more money off of the toxins.
To make another version.
Yeah.
In any case, mostly CN has been kind of repriments.
replaced by CS.
And those are what is most often used when people say tear gas.
But then there's also pepper spray, which I am going to lump under tear gases as well.
And that is the fancy name is Oloresin capsacum or OC.
Now pepper spray, the main ingredient in pepper spray is capsaicin, which comes from pepper
plants, is actually extracted from pepper plants.
Same stuff that burns your tongue.
Right.
But the Skullville units on Capsacin, like pepper sprays, are like up to 2 million.
And it's not just Capsacin.
There's like tons of active compounds that are in a pepper plant that make up this pepper spray.
Right.
And because, like we've learned in all of our In Defensive Plants crossover episodes, not all plants are the same, there can be really varying concentrations of all of the different active ingredients that are in.
pepper spray essentially.
So, okay, so these are not artificially manufactured.
These are extracted from.
They're not synthetic.
Yeah, they're not synthetic derivatives.
Yeah, we do, there is a synthetic derivative version of it, but these are, these are
extracted from pepper plants.
Dada, now, you know.
But I am going to lump all of these, including pepper spray, under this tear gas
umbrella.
I'll probably just mostly call it tier gas or maybe riot control agents going forward,
because they do share more similarities than differences, at least when it comes to understanding what they're doing and how they cause the symptoms that they cause.
Okay.
So the first thing to know, and you said this already, Aaron, tear gas is not a gas.
Generally, these things are solids, they're solid chemicals, and they're put into dispersal systems, either dissolved in a solvent so that you end up with a liquid formulation that you can spray from a pressurized dispenser of some kind.
like your personal pepper sprays or like pepper guns that are, you know, spraying pepper spray liquids.
Or it's a powder that's put into a delivery system that includes some kind of pyrotechnic.
That means something like what's in a gun or a grenade, something that can cause this
powder to be released as a smoke or a fog.
You've got the tear gas substance itself and then you've got all these other things that
are going into the air and your lungs and your eyes and your GI tract and your respiratory tract.
You sure do, Aaron. And very often, all of these other solvents and chemicals that are used as part of
this mixture are also hazardous to our health. Not to mention just how dangerous the projectiles are
if you get hit with them. And that happens all the time. All the time. People lose their eyes because they
got hit in the face with one of these pepper balls or gas canisters or whatever it is.
And no one talks about the effect of all of those other chemicals when they're talking about
the toxicities of tear gas.
So just throwing that out there.
Okay.
We're off to a horrible start.
We are.
In general, all of these chemicals produce a similar suite of symptoms.
They all work really instantaneously.
So either right away or within a matter of.
of seconds, they're causing irritation of the eyes, nose, mouth, skin, and respiratory tract.
And what this leads to is pain, itching, burning, and of course, lacrimation. That's tear formation.
And the amount of tears and crying can be so severe that it can result in temporary blindness
because of how much tears you're producing. And when we inhale it, this also irritates our
respiratory tract, which leads to coughing.
Sometimes the sensation that you're choking, like you cannot get air in, even though, like, if you checked in oxygen saturation, people might be technically saturating well.
They're getting air, but it feels like you are choking.
Yeah.
Right.
And if the exposure is large enough, it can also get into your GI tract and then end up causing nausea, vomiting, even diarrhea.
Direct contact with the skin can result in, like, rashes and burns, which can range from preemptive.
pretty mild to like significant burns with like blistering like what we would consider like second
degree.
We don't really call them degrees anymore.
It's thicknesses.
We'll get there under this season.
Yeah, we will.
Yeah.
And a lot of the literature says that most of these symptoms will last anywhere from like 20, 30 minutes to an hour or so.
But it so depends on the duration and the dose of exposure.
So it's not uncommon that people have much more prolonged symptoms.
So we can talk a little bit more about that in a bit.
But I want to tell you about how these things are actually causing the symptoms that they're causing.
Because even though there's a lot of different chemicals, then I didn't even list them all that we could consider under this tear gas umbrella.
They all share a common mechanism, even if the specific things they're binding to are a little different, right?
And that is that they all activate what are called our nosusceptors.
And these are our pain sensory nerves.
So they are literally binding to and activating nerve endings in our body that are responsible for sensing pain.
And if we want to get more specific, which you know I do, pepper spray activates the same pain sensors that are activated by heat, like touching a hot pan or getting burned by your toaster oven.
Right.
And that's why when you eat.
eat a hot pepper, it feels like your tongue is burning, right? Yeah.
CS and CN, among some of the other tear gases, activate pain sensors that are also activated by
cold burns, like think liquid nitrogen burn on your skin. This is diabolical. I know. The fact that,
like, let's engineer this compound to directly target pain receptors so that the sensation that you feel is
overwhelming pain. Pain. Pain. Burning pain, right? And I mean, a cold burn versus a hot burn,
you can't really distinguish those, right? And we have these pain receptors everywhere. Our skin,
our eyes, our mucous membranes. Pain is a signal to our brain that something bad is happening,
something harmful is happening. And that is why activating these receptors,
activates these reflex loops that cause things like tearing, fluid production.
We're trying to, our bodies are trying to clear away, wash away this noxious stimulus.
Do whatever it takes to stop this feeling.
Right.
And we see the release of a really wide variety of neurotransmitters and other inflammatory markers
that are promoting inflammation, exacerbating pain because we know that inflammation can also exacerbate.
pain. We see increases in things like vascular permeability, smooth muscle contraction. We see
fluid production, which is going to then cause that coughing and difficulty breathing.
Some of the things that are released as part of this reflex arc are actually directly involved,
we think, in the pathogenesis of asthma, which is why we can see exacerbations of asthma
and other respiratory conditions. Whoa. So that's...
that is how these things are working.
And while one of the hallmarks of all of these tear gas agents is supposed to be that they have a so-called wide safety margin between what is considered an incapacitating dose, that's what it's called, the irritant dose or the incapacitating dose, and what would be considered a lethal dose.
How do they determine these different, the ends of the spectrum here?
Yeah, it's a good question.
So the irritant doses were determined either by animal models and in some cases human studies.
So to see like at what dosage do people detect this and can they not stand it, have to leave the room, that sort of a thing.
And then the lethal dose, the LC50s are all based on animal studies.
And then you extrapolate out to humans.
But that does not mean that there can't be more severe effects.
And the idea that these are completely benign, not quote unquote harmful is factually incorrect.
Right. In our eyes, these agents can cause significant swelling, what's called corneal edema, that most of the time gets better with time.
But in some cases can be much more severe lead to ulceration and scarring and eventually, essentially cataract formation and blindness.
and especially in people who wear contacts, that's an especially big risk because the contacts can
trap these chemicals on your eyes for longer, which can then just lead to prolonged exposure
and more damage to the eye.
On the skin, I already said, we can sometimes have really severe burns, like blistering
and really severe rashes.
It's also thought that there's like a sensitization, like allergy type component.
So if you're exposed once, you might have an even worse reaction.
on any subsequent encounters.
Okay.
And that is for like any of the symptoms, whether it's respiratory skin, anything?
That's more specific for skin.
But in theory, yes, could happen to any.
But we see it's more visible on the skin, I think, with the severity of rashes.
Okay.
But the most common severe reactions to tear gases in the respiratory system.
Because if you think of it, what tear gas is doing, like if you think what it's doing to your eyes, right,
where it's causing this intense degree of tear and fluid formation.
If it does that in our lungs, it's causing this intense inflammatory response, a lot of fluid production, and fluid in our lungs is incredibly dangerous.
There's nowhere for it to go.
Yeah.
So this can cause something called pulmonary edema, and that can and has been fatal in cases.
But it's harmless.
It's humane.
It's harmless.
It's humane.
And it's also been shown that it can put people at risk for secondary infections and people
who have asthma or COPD or other respiratory diseases.
We see that can trigger exacerbations of those diseases.
And there's other, like, that's, that is not all of it.
There have been some case reports of miscarriage associated with tear gas exposure.
And there is other literature that suggests there is not risk to pregnancy.
So it's a little bit, like the data is not entirely clear.
But I will say there's a lot of survey studies that report disruption in people's menstrual cycles after exposure.
What exactly is the cause of that?
We don't really know.
But the other thing that's often overlooked in descriptions of the symptoms of tear gas exposure is the intense psychological pressure that these chemicals put onto people.
Huge.
Huge, right?
The intense amount of discomfort that these cause, because, you know,
because they are literally triggering your pain receptors.
But in combination with the stress of the situations that they're used in,
this can cause a huge amount of anxiety,
which can increase your blood pressure leading to other complications,
and putting people at risk for things like depression, anxiety, and PTSD after the fact.
So it's like these agents are not benign.
And not even done.
The impact is not even across.
Like there are people who are more susceptible and people who are,
Who, yeah, have, tend to experience more severe outcomes with exposure.
A hundred percent.
Children, the elderly.
Yeah.
Children, the elderly.
Because that's the thing about the safety studies that we do have, because it's not like we have no data, right?
We have some data on this.
But the vast majority of these safety studies are either in animal studies, which is just like to determine dosages, etc.
Or they were done in young, healthy military recruits, most of whom were white males.
And again, this is mostly just to determine, like, irritant thresholds.
And there's very little data that we have on long-term exposures.
We have some data on, like, repeat exposures or, like, different durations of exposures, but not much.
And so what all of the data that we have and what the, like, you know, thresholds or, like, what is considered safe and things like that, what these short-term studies don't take into account are all of the conditions under which someone might be exposed.
and the characteristics, like you said, of the people being exposed.
Yeah.
So if you have asthma or COPD or any other chronic lung condition, you're at higher risk of injury.
If you are a child, kids have a completely different surface area to volume ratio than adults.
Kids also breathe more than twice as much air per minute than adults do.
That's wild.
I had no idea.
And it makes sense, but I just didn't think about it.
Because they're breathing much faster.
Yeah.
Their faces also sit lower to the ground because they are small and these chemicals are heavier than air.
They are not actually gases.
And so their faces are being exposed to more of these chemicals.
So they have a much higher risk of exposure and toxicity from exposure to these chemicals.
And we are not studying these on children.
If you're a very old person or if these chemicals are being deployed in confined spaces with no ventilation,
if you're wearing contact lenses, the effects of these chemicals is also amplified by certain
conditions like high heat or high humidity. So the situation in which you're exposed, as well as
your individual characteristics, are also going to affect the severity of your symptoms.
Yeah. And none of this is being studied in all of the data that we have. So to say that there's
no long-term effects, like we don't really have data to show that there's no long-term effects of
these. I have to wonder about the research incentives too. Like, who is there funding to do studies on
this? Who's funding it? And yeah. Exactly. These are the great questions. Right. There are some
studies that have been done. Like, there was one out of Turkey that looked at people who had been
repeatedly exposed to tear gases that did find higher rates of chronic respiratory illness, things like
COPD or asthma developing after repeated exposure. But again, these are like these studies are
few and far between. There are some animal studies that point to potential carcinogenicity or things
on some of these chemicals, but not all of them. Right. Then that's a whole separate dimension is
like the different types of chemicals. Yeah. Yep. And the exposure and the exact level and for how long.
Like there's so many variables and we just, we don't understand. And the thing is that these are
being used in completely uncontrolled situations, right? Right. First of all, there are no
no federal regulations on the use of these chemicals.
None, Aaron.
Like, there are none.
I'm trying to think of what federal regulations would look like for this.
It's a great question.
I don't know.
Yeah.
But it's not, which also means like the use of these is not reported, et cetera.
Like there is a lot that goes into that.
Yeah.
But there's not.
Like there isn't a UPA.
The use isn't reported.
That's.
You should.
Okay.
Okay.
Just keep going.
And I mean, maybe it is on a local level.
I don't know.
I don't know where you get that information from.
Right.
The EPA has like an exposure, an acute exposure guideline only for one of the tier gases, and that is CS.
But it's not a regulation on its use.
Like you can't use this much of it in an environment or anything like that.
It is guidance on how much is likely to cause an effect for emergency responders to be aware of if they are exposed during the
course of duty.
That's the only like federal level regulation that exists in all of the reading that I did
about any of these.
And the thing is that it's not just the United States.
Tear gases, all of the ones that we talked about and so many more are used primarily
by governments against their own citizens for so-called crowd control across the
entire globe.
There's a couple of really great, and by great, I mean horrific.
maps that Amnesty International put together, one that is Amnesty International U.S., that's just
looking at places where tear gas was used against peaceful protesters and not just tear gas,
it's other, quote, unquote, less lethal forms of crowd control in the U.S. in just 2020 during
Black Lives Matter protests. And then there's another map that they put together that's like
500 instances of tear gas and other weapons, less lethal weapons, being used against
protesters for no reason. No reason. Right, right. Right. I'm sure that a reason exists and whether it is an
acceptable or logical or humane reason is up for debate. Exactly. But they documented this across
like 31 different countries and that's just based on their reporting. Like I think like we've talked about,
it's harder to find places where this is not allowed to be used than trying to figure out where it is used.
And it's not just governments.
Tier gas is also used as an agent of terror.
And there was a paper that I found from 2020 that in the cases they were able to identify what agent was used, tear gas was used in 21% of chemical attacks.
So it's like it's accessible and it is used across the globe.
Yeah.
Accessible.
Yeah.
You can just.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
And like we kind of already talked about, I think that being able to.
to witness the use of this so much over the last few years because of our smartphones and because
of our access to being able to video what is actually going on, we can see with our own eyes
the circumstances under which these weapons are being deployed against peaceful protesters,
against people trying to get aid from aid trucks, against like human beings. And I think it
makes it a lot harder to spin this narrative that protests are violent and it is required that
we use this kind of force. It doesn't mean that the propaganda machine isn't propagandaing.
I was going to say, yeah, like the narrative will be spun no matter what. It's just an endless
vomit of complete nonsense, but harmful, malicious nonsense. Exactly. And I think everyone knows at this point,
unless it's your first time tuning in.
This is not a medical advice podcast.
And so I'm not going to give you medical advice, but...
You are going to tell us.
I am going to tell you about...
Treatment sexes?
Yeah, there are no treatments.
Yeah, that's what I figured.
We have no specific therapeutics.
There are people who are like, we need to develop therapeutics, because there's also a whole
discussion to be had about how much medical professionals do not know about tear gases,
in part because when someone's exposed at a protest, we have no way of knowing what
they're exposed to, right? It's not like the police are like, hey, guys, just so you know,
today we're using pepperballs. Yeah. Right. Everyone okay with that? Great. Yeah.
Right. No. So, and so it's really, it's hard to know, like, what people are even exposed to,
but all, all that said, there's also not as much data as there should be on the best ways to decontaminate.
But many people listening might be going to protest and engaging in lawful protests and be
exposed to these agents because they're being used so frequently. So frequently. So,
So Physicians for Human Rights is one organization that I know of that has some really great infographics and information sheets on ways to protect yourself as a protester, which includes preventing exposure to tear gas by having things like face masks to cover your respiratory tract, goggles or glasses or something to protect your eyes.
ideally not wearing contact lenses to avoid chemicals getting trapped under your contacts, long sleeves and gloves to prevent skin contact.
And then once exposure happens, the general recommendation is that anyone who's small, like kids or things like that, should be lifted to higher ground in order to reduce exposure.
Getting out of exposure as quickly as possible is important.
And then removing all contaminated clothing as soon as you can after exposure.
And then for direct contact with eyes or mucus membranes, the best recommendation is just to rinse it profusely for like 10 to 15 minutes.
With plain water if you have it, but salty water, if that's available.
So like saline solution.
Saline solution.
Okay.
Or some people recommend like a dilute soapy solution with something like a very gentle baby soap or something.
Right.
Because that can help to like bind to and wash away any other remaining.
chemicals that are there. But that's not based on that grade of data, but that's kind of the best
that we have right now. Wow. Yeah. So it is that's such a, that's such a terrifying point about like,
we don't know what you're being sprayed with. So it could be their treatment might not be. That's
I know. It just drives home yet another horrific point. Right. And there's now, like there's so
many, some of the, a lot of the pepper balls that they're using in the U.S. today are mixtures. And so
They have both CS and pepper spray in them.
And then, of course, they're fired from a projectile, which can cause damage as well.
So, yeah, no, it's really truly horrific.
Yeah.
It's really awful.
And that is tear gas.
Tear gas.
Sources?
Sources.
I have a bunch of different sources.
I'm going to shout out two in particular.
One I already mentioned during the episode itself, tear gas by Anna Faganbaum.
Really great overview.
of the entire history of tear gas.
I think it's a great place to start.
Actually, start and end.
There's a lot more out there, but there is also so much packed into that.
And then also I found a paper from 1989 that was quite interesting called tear gas, harassing agent or toxic chemical weapon.
And that was by Hugh at all.
And it's published in JAMA.
But there's more that I have.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I also had quite a number of papers for this, but a couple that I think were.
really good overviews and things.
One was by Brown at All from 2021, titled Re-Evaluating Teargas, Toxicity, and Safety from the journal Inhalation Toxicology.
And then another by Rothenberg at all from 2016 called Tier Gas and Epidemiological and Mechanistic Reassessment.
And that was from the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
But there was a bunch more, including I will make sure to post those links to the two Amnesty International Maps that I mentioned.
And then I also have a few, in addition to, like, journal articles, just a few, like,
news articles and things about recent uses of tear gas in the U.S. and abroad.
So you can find all of that on our website.
This podcast will kill you.com under the episodes tab.
You can.
You can also find links to Bloodmobile, who thank you, Bloodmobile.
You provide the music for this episode and all of our episodes.
Thank you for doing that.
We so appreciate it.
We do.
Thank you also to everyone at exactly right, especially Leanna and Tom and Pete and Mark and
Jess and everyone else.
Everyone, everyone.
And thank you to you. Yes, we do. And thank you to you, listeners. You are the reason we do this. So thank you for tuning in. Yeah, yeah. And especially a shout out to our patrons. Thank you so much for your support over on Patreon. It really does mean the world to us. It does. It does. And until next time, wash your hands. You filthy animals?
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