Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: Yellow Rain
Episode Date: July 17, 2019After the Vietnam War, the Hmong people told the world a toxic weapon was being used on them. Thus began a mystery that still remains today, which might have been solved when it was chalked up to bee ...poop. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
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We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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Hey, and welcome to short stuff.
I'm Josh, and there's Chuck, and there's Josh over there,
and this is short stuff.
Giddy up, Chuck.
All right, we're gonna go to the late 1970s.
I love the 70s.
The Vietnam War is well over.
Yeah, well for America at least.
Well, that's true.
But Vietnamese and Laotian people started noticing over there
that periodically there would be a sticky yellow rain
when it was really sunny out coming down,
and that this substance killed plants
and made people sick, especially among the,
among the Hmong, which is to say H-M-O-N-G,
which were people in Southeast Asia
who fought with France against the communists
since the 1950s.
Yeah, they were mountain people in North Vietnam
and in Laos.
Yeah, I think they probably, oh, never mind.
I was about to discuss a deleted scene in Apocalypse Now,
but we don't have time for that.
Are they the ones that they dine with?
They have dinner with them?
I think so.
I think there were French and Hmong, but...
It would make sense because the Hmong cast their lot
with the French, and then later on,
the Americans when the CIA showed up,
because remember, we've talked about this
in multiple episodes.
One of the things the CIA did
is they would drop behind enemy lines
and say, oh, you hate the people we're fighting to?
Well, let's assemble a guerrilla army,
and the Hmong fought with them.
Well, that led to big time trouble for the Hmong
after the Americans withdrew, and I believe 1975,
because that left the Hmong holding the bag.
Everyone knew that the Hmong had fought
against the communists, and the communists
had just become successful in the Vietnam War,
and so the communists turned their ire against the Hmong people
who no longer had any American backing.
So as they were kind of driven from their homes
and to refugee camps across the border into Thailand,
they were harassed by the communist government,
and from that experience,
this idea that something was being sprayed on them
kind of took root, this yellow rain,
that was thought to be some sort of biological weapon
that was being deployed by the Vietnamese government,
and the Americans took it quite seriously
and got their hands on some samples,
and in, I think, 1981, Alexander Haig,
who was Secretary of State at the time, said, yep,
it's some sort of biological weapon.
We think it's trichothocene, which is a mycotoxin,
and we think that the Soviets are supplying it
in flagrant violation of anti-biological weapons
conventions that have been around since 1925.
You didn't do your Alexander Haig?
That was my Alexander Haig.
Okay. It didn't come through.
The whole thing was.
Oh, well, goodness, sorry, Al.
Can you do one? Let's hear yours.
Oh, I would just have said something
about the Soviet Union like that.
That's Henry Kissinger.
Oh, you're right.
Yeah.
Alexander Haig didn't talk anything like that.
I was totally thinking Kissinger,
and it's funny, as soon as you said that,
I got a mental picture that went from Kissinger to Haig,
because I totally remember Al Haig now.
Yeah, for sure.
All right, maybe he liked to impersonate Kissinger.
Everybody wants that.
Yeah, behind his back, and it wasn't very flattering.
All right, so, and we're gonna leave that in there,
even though it's short stuff, I don't care.
That was a classic SYSK moment, my friend.
So, first of all, we should point out
that this idea that it would be something like that
after we had dropped Agent Orange all over the place
for 10 years, you can't blame them
for thinking something like that is going on.
However, something kind of smelled hinky
in the nose of one, Matt Messelsen,
who was a biologist at Harvard University,
and he said, this doesn't really make sense to me.
So, a couple of years later, in 1983, he got some samples,
and he said, you know what's in here?
It's really weird.
He said, there is a lot of hollowed out pollen
that's indigenous to this area,
and this would mean that the Soviet Union
is taking pollen, hollowing it out,
filling it with poison, and bringing it back,
and dropping it down on sunny days like it's rain.
It's a very bad idea, it's very outlandish,
it's not a very effective dispersal method,
and the concentration of mycotoxins in there anyway
was not really any different than samples of leaves
and plants anywhere else in Southeast Asia.
Right, his position was like, yes,
these people are being harassed,
but I don't think this yellow rain
is actually a biological weapon being supplied by the USSR,
that there's something else going on.
It's like you said, it's just too outlandish
what the process would require for this to be what it was.
So, he was a biologist, like you said,
and he knew enough to know that bees,
specifically giant Asian honeybees that lived in the area,
actually will eat pollen,
but they don't eat the outer shell of the pollen,
they eat the protein inside the pollen.
So when they poop, they poop out regular pollen,
or they poop out hollowed out pollen, okay?
Yes.
So he said, I think this might just be a case
of honeybee poop.
I think that's what everybody's freaked out about
is it's just honeybee poop.
But people were saying, okay, yeah, that's true biologically,
but what you're talking about,
for that for something that looks like yellow rain
to be produced would require a mind-boggling number of bees
to all poop at once in the same area.
So explain that, Mr. Messelsinn,
Mr. Harvard-trained biologist, you can't, can you?
Then he said, I will, right after this message break.
And he said, I will, right after this message break.
And he said, I will, right after this message break.
And he said, I will, right after this message break.
On the podcast, PayDude the 90s called
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bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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but we are going to unpack and dive back
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All right, so Messelsen takes a message break.
You're right.
Everyone's like, what's that?
You're right.
And he said, I just had to use a bathroom.
Oh, well, that's normal enough.
But we don't call it message breaks.
So there was, well, he used scare quotes, so.
Oh, gotcha.
So he said, there's some other inconsistencies here, too,
because you interviewed a lot of people.
And there's a lot of people that said
that there were no planes around when
this stuff was raining down, which is a problem.
Yeah, because I mean, that's how you disperse
biological weapons, typically, is from a plane.
So where's this, you know, where's the plane?
How is this stuff happening if there's no plane?
And he also said that, you know, all these health problems
that are going on, he said it's really probably just people
with dysentery and nutritional deficiencies.
And, you know, it seems like you're asking very leading
questions to me.
This whole thing really stinks at this point to Messelsen.
Well, also check, there's one other thing.
So I went back and I was reading some, like,
an article in Science from the time.
And they were saying, like, there is indeed
some sort of mycotoxic poison that is hurting people.
And so that was a big reason why this is still yet resolved,
because there was mycotoxic poisoning.
Messelsen's position was, well, these people are living
in refugee camps.
It's not like they're eating top-of-the-line food.
I'm sure some of them are eating moldy food
and are suffering ill effects from it.
So that would explain this appearance
of mycotoxic poisoning.
And in that guy's defense, that trichothocene
is supposedly was discovered in the USSR
from people eating moldy food.
That's how it was first found.
Amazing.
Yeah.
So a few years later, 1989, I'm about to graduate high school.
And Messelsen teams up with some Canadian biologists
to figure this whole thing out, because the whole idea of,
like, why, you know, you know how many bees it would take
to poop down yellow rain on everyone?
Right.
And they said, well, we're going to find out just
how many bees it would take.
They realized that it was falling on hot, sunny days,
which is a first big clue.
And they measured the body mass of these bees
before they left their hives, and then
after they came back to the hives,
and they found out that while they were gone,
they lost 20% of their body weight on the return flight.
That is a big old poop.
That's a big old poop.
So they would leave together in these big giant swarms,
thousands of them.
They would poop.
They would come back to care for their little larvae.
And they said, this is also happening most frequently
on really hot, sunny days.
So we think we've kind of figured this thing out.
Right.
So what they figured out was that the Asian honey bees,
the larvae, as they're developing, if they overheat,
they will deform, basically.
They will develop incorrectly, I guess.
And so to keep the temperature in the hive lower,
especially on hot, sunny days, the bees in the hive
will fly out and excrete waste all at once, basically,
or in one trip.
And then when they come back, since they've lost 20%
of their body weight, the temperature inside the hive
is that much lower, because their weight is not producing
that much more waste heat.
So they actually figured out that that's
what bees will do, at least Asian honey bees,
to regulate the temperature in the hive
so that the larvae can develop normally.
And they said, we think we just solved
the mystery of yellow rain.
That's right.
More research in later years pretty much confirmed this.
And everyone is basically on board,
except for the fact that Kissinger and Alexander
Hague never came back and retracted their statements.
So officially, I don't know if that stuff matters or not.
But officially, we have never retracted that statement
as a nation, that it was not the Soviet Union.
I just got finished watching Chernobyl.
Oh, I got to see it.
I'm at a fever point of the truth and toxins,
because the Soviet Union still says, or I'm sorry,
Russia still says, 31 people died.
How many people did die?
Oh, they don't know.
Anywhere between 4,000 and 90,000 is what it said,
depending on how you count cancer 20 years later
and stuff like that.
Should we do, I was talking to a friend,
Blair, who is a friend of both of us, a photographer.
And he was like, you got to do one on Chernobyl.
And I'm like, everybody knows about it now.
Should we do one?
Maybe.
OK, because I'd love to.
It's a fascinating topic, but if everybody already
knows about it, it's like, what's the point?
It was a heck of a show.
I'll say that.
All right, well, at least watch that.
All right, so to finish up here, though,
the Hmong, for their part, things haven't gotten a lot better.
They continue to suffer to this day.
Very small amount of them made it over to the United States.
Some people returned to Laos.
Some people returned to Vietnam.
Like we said at the beginning, a lot of them
were going to Thailand as refugees.
But in 2009, the Thai government shut that down
and sent away thousands and thousands of the Hmong.
And it's really just sort of a sad situation.
But as this article points out, the one silver lining
is that this whole thing, anytime
there's a new theory about what happened
or anytime it makes the news, the Hmong also make the news.
Right, which I think is really worth pointing out for sure.
One of the articles we used for this
was called The Mystery of Yellow Rain.
It was written by Jacob Roberts for Distillations,
which is a blog of the Science History Institute, which
is very good stuff.
All right, well, that's it for short stuff.
See you later.
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