 We would spray, and in small areas you're not flying high and fast, you're flying low and slow. The deployments would come into the helicopter, we'd be drenching the defoliant, all our gear, all our food and sea rations on the helicopters, our water canteens, our daily flight gear that we wore as we went out the flyer, all contaminated. My name is Charles Martian, I'm 69 years old. I served in Vietnam from 1967 through 68. I don't believe anybody, not anybody older ever knew that these contaminants were that poisonous. We never even talked about it, we just went out and did our job, came back. At first I thought it was Agent Orange, but when I looked at the photos with the blue stripes on the barrels I realized it was Agent Blue, that's how they can notice the difference. It was Agent Blue, Agent Orange, Agent Purple, Agent White, the whole rainbow of colors. Agent Blue was the only one that had cacodilic acid, which is arsenic in it. When I first found out that I had bladder cancer, I went to the VA and I wanted to put a claim in and he told me, don't even bother, it's not a presumptive list and they're not going to pay. So at that point I just let it go and ten years after I was first diagnosed the cancer came back and became invasive. They'd taken out my bladder, they'd taken out my prostate and after we're a pouch now. When I was here in the Army, the most honorable thing I ever did in my whole life was serving my country. God knows, I'm so proud of that. I am. Nobody could ever do more than that with their life. It's just put your life on the line and you come back and say, hey, I did it, you know, and that's the end of your story with it. You're keeping it back your head all the time, it stays here, you don't talk about it, but it's an honorable thing. And then you get this, I feel like the government's kind of letting me down with this thing. But I don't hold anything against my country. I can't do that.