The EU Knows — and It’s on Record
- agentorangechild
- Jul 19
- 1 min read
18/7/2025

This week, something important happened behind the scenes.
After submitting evidence of TCDD (Agent Orange) harm and international legal breaches to multiple EU contacts, I received confirmation that my complaint was forwarded internally by the Directorate-General for Environment — one of the European Commission’s main departments responsible for enforcing environmental protection laws.
That means my evidence reached the European Commission — and they moved it.
Quietly. Internally. Without denying it.
Their reply avoided legal engagement, which is standard.
But the fact that they acknowledged internal handling tells me one thing clearly:
The EU has seen my case. And they passed it on.
They didn’t reject it.
They didn’t say it wasn’t relevant.
They said they “can’t take it further” — which means it went far enough to raise flags.
This is how institutions behave when they’re afraid of liability.
When the truth is too close.
When the words Persistent Organic Pollutants, binding treaties, and crimes against humanity can no longer be ignored.
It’s not just on record now.
It’s in the system.
And they can’t say they didn’t know.
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