
Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”
The 1925 Geneva Protocol forbids the use of any asphyxiating gas or agent in warfare. Most of the world has signed it. The United States and Japan have not – one more step leading to what we now see: the use of tear gas in America against American Citizens. This is happening at a time when a pandemic is in full swing against the United States – a pandemic of a disease which most obviously affects respiration.
As an officer candidate I was exposed to tear gas in a controlled environment as part of my training. I was healthy then – for a smoker – but it certainly was no walk in the park. But, as someone said recently somewhere, “‘For example’ is not proof.”
================================================================
Tear Gas Is Way More Dangerous Than Police Let On — Especially During the Coronavirus Pandemic
ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.
When Amira Chowdhury joined a protest in Philadelphia against police violence on Monday, she wore a mask to protect herself and others against the coronavirus. But when officers launched tear gas into the crowd, Chowdhury pulled off her mask as she gasped for air. “I couldn’t breathe,” she said. “I felt like I was choking to death.”
Chowdhury was on a part of the Vine Street Expressway that ran underground. Everyone panicked as gas drifted into the dark, semi-enclosed space, she said. People stomped over her as they scrambled away. Bruised, she scaled a fence to escape. But the tear gas found her later that evening, inside her own house; as police unleashed it on protesters in her predominantly black neighborhood in West Philadelphia, it seeped in.
“I can’t even be in my own house without escaping the violence of the state,” said Chowdhury, a rising senior at the University of Pennsylvania. On Wednesday, she said her throat still felt dry, like it was clogged with ash.
The Philadelphia protest was one of many instances in recent days in which police launched tear gas — a toxic substance that can cause lung damage — into crowds. In a statement, Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said that officers had no choice but to release it after protesters threw rocks at them and refused to disperse, and that officers also used nonchemical white smoke to minimize the amount of the irritant “while maintaining a deterrent visual effect.” She called it “a means to safely [defuse] a volatile and dangerous situation.”
But tear gas is not safe, according to a number of experts interviewed by ProPublica. It has been found to cause long-term health consequences and can hurt those who aren’t the intended targets, including people inside their homes.
This would be enough of a problem in normal times, but now, experts say, the widespread, sometimes indiscriminate use of tear gas on American civilians in the midst of a respiratory pandemic threatens to worsen the coronavirus, along with racial disparities in its spread and who dies from it.
“As an immunologist, it scares me,” said Dr. Purvi Parikh, an allergy and immunology doctor at NYU Langone Health. “We just got through a brutal two months, and I’m really scared this will bring a second wave [of COVID-19] sooner.”
It puts black communities in an impossible situation, said Dr. Joseph Nwadiuko, an internist and researcher at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. Thirteen of the 15 coronavirus patients in the intensive care unit where he works are black, he said. “I worry that one of the compounding effects of structural racism is you’ll see a second wave of black patients, including those who were out there defending their lives.”
On Tuesday, an open letter signed by nearly 1,300 medical and public health professionals urged the police to stop using “tear gas, smoke, or other respiratory irritants, which could increase risk for COVID-19 by making the respiratory tract more susceptible to infection, exacerbating existing inflammation, and inducing coughing.”
Here’s what you need to know about tear gas and how it’s being used by law enforcement in recent days.
Tear gas can cause long-term harm, by making people more susceptible to contracting influenza, pneumonia and other illnesses.
Tear gas is the generic term for a class of compounds that cause a burning sensation. Most law enforcement agencies in the U.S., including the Philadelphia Police Department this week, use a chemical called CS, short for 2-chlorobenzalmalononitrile.
CS activates a specific pain receptor, one that’s also triggered by eating wasabi, said Sven-Eric Jordt, a professor of anesthesiology at Duke University. But CS is much more powerful, up to 100,000 times stronger than the sting from wasabi, he said.
“They are really pain nerve gases. They are designed to induce pain.”
CS is particularly painful when it gets on your skin or in your eyes. (Doctors have advised protesters not to wear contact lenses.) When inhaled, the pain induces people to cough. The compound degrades the mucus membranes in your eyes, nose, mouth and lungs — the layers of cells that help protect people from viruses and bacteria.
Scientists know little about how CS affects the general public. The most comprehensive studies were conducted by the U.S. military on thousands of recruits who were exposed to tear gas during training exercises. Afterward, it left them at higher risk for contracting influenza, pneumonia, bronchitis and other respiratory illnesses.
The soldiers were generally healthier than the average person, with fewer underlying conditions like asthma or heart disease. Studies of civilians in Turkey found that people who are repeatedly exposed to tear gas are more likely to have chronic bronchitis or chest pains and coughing that can last for weeks. It may also be linked to miscarriages.
The effects worsen as people are repeatedly exposed to higher doses, Jordt said, but it’s hard to measure the concentrations of tear gas during chaotic protests, and many who are affected will be reluctant or afraid to seek medical help.
Parikh, the Langone Health doctor, is particularly worried about children at the protests. Their lungs and immune system are still developing, and tear gas could lead to neurological problems or permanent skin or eye damage if it’s not washed off quickly.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, severe tear gas poisoning, particularly if the gas was released in an enclosed space — can blind or kill people through chemical burns and respiratory failure. Prisoners with respiratory conditions have died after inhaling tear gas in poorly ventilated areas. On Wednesday, an inmate at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn died after guards sprayed him with pepper spray, another kind of tear gas that causes similar health effects as CS.
In a statement, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Prisons said the inmate, Jamel Floyd, was caught “breaking the cell door window with a metal object” and “became increasingly disruptive and potentially harmful to himself and others.” Medical staff “immediately responded to assess the inmate, found Mr. Floyd to be unresponsive, and instantly initiated life-saving measures.” An investigation is underway.
Tear gas can increase the spread of the coronavirus and might make some people more vulnerable to catching it.
It’s too early to know exactly how tear gas affects coronavirus patients. But Parikh said they both cause lung inflammation. “Anything that’s an irritant can cause that same inflammatory response,” she said. “Your lungs can fill with mucus and it can be very difficult to breathe. The muscles narrow; it’s almost like breathing through a straw.”
People with asthma and other respiratory illnesses already have higher baseline inflammation that makes them more susceptible to catching infections like the flu or the common cold, Parikh said, so tear gas could trigger an asthma attack or weaken the body’s ability to stave off COVID-19.
“If your lungs are already wheezing and coughing, working hard to expel this tear gas or this irritant, it’s unable to have that reserve to fight off any infection, whether a virus or bacteria,” she said.
Talia Smith, a graduate student at the University of Nebraska, said it only took a whiff of tear gas to trigger an asthma attack when she was protesting in Omaha last Friday. She could barely feel it in her eyes, but her throat “just immediately started closing,” she said. Smith had brought her inhaler, but the medication inside was running low. She’d only had one asthma attack in her life before this. Smith had a burning feeling in her chest for days afterward, and she went to get tested for the coronavirus; the results are pending. She worries that if she catches the virus while still feeling the effects of the gas, she’d be fighting off the disease while her lungs aren’t at full capacity.
Parikh said there’s not enough data on asthma and the coronavirus in general. While asthmatics are at higher risk for all respiratory infections, asthma isn’t among the top chronic conditions for the most severe coronavirus patients. “We are still seeing many asthmatics get it,” so it’s too soon to say there’s no risk at all, she said.
Tear gas weakens the demonstrators’ protections against the coronavirus, said Dr. Abraar Karan, a physician at Harvard Medical School who’s working on the coronavirus response. Infections increase when people cough or talk loudly, he said, and even if someone is wearing a mask, when they’re hit with tear gas, they’ll take off the mask as they’re coughing. “Not only are you vigorously coughing, you’re vigorously inhaling to try and get more air in.” Panic can cause a stampede, forcing people into close proximity as they’re expelling large droplets from their mouths, he said, perfectly describing the situation that Chowdhury experienced on Monday.
Karan said he’s worried that protests could turn into superspreading events, yet he also understands why people feel they must be there. “At the same time, I’m worried about my patients who’ve been destroyed by systemic racism. So racism is killing them as much as a pandemic is.”
It will take at least another week before researchers can study whether the protests led to outbreaks. Even then, it will be hard to tell whether the infections were caused solely by the large gatherings or whether tear gas contributed to the increase.
Protesters aren’t the only people at risk. Tear gas is entering homes and businesses.
Jordt said he was surprised by the sheer quantity of tear gas used by police in recent days, based on what he’s seen in online videos and news clips. Instead of reserving it for the most extreme situations, “it’s more like fumigating and flushing people out,” he said. “Tear gas has become a 1st line response, not a last resort,” he added in an email.
Because many protests are occurring in residential neighborhoods, tear gas is now seeping into homes. Parikh compared it to secondhand smoke. “It’s a terrible situation,” she said. “To be honest there’s not much you can do.”
Chowdhury, the UPenn student who participated in the Philadelphia protest, said she couldn’t keep out the gas, even when she stuffed T-shirts and towels under the doors and windows. She could still smell it the next morning.
If the gas gets indoors, people should wipe down their countertops and other surfaces with large amounts of water and soap, Jordt said. Any food that wasn’t in a closed container could be contaminated and should be thrown out, and in extreme cases with large amounts of tear gas, residents and business owners may need to contact fire departments for recommendations of professional cleaning services, he added.
Companies like Aftermath offer services for biohazard and infection control. Its website’s section on “tear gas removal” says the chemical “leaves behind residue that can present serious health hazards if not properly treated. … Tear gas residue can seep into porous materials like furniture, mattresses, clothing, carpet and even hardwood floors, and continue to irritate the mucous membranes of anyone residing in or visiting the property long after the incident.”
Police tactics and tools can make matters worse.
There are many different forms of tear gas and many ways to use it, said Anna Feigenbaum, the author of a recent book on the history of tear gas and an associate professor of communication and digital media at Bournemouth University in England.
Police can spray it from cans, shoot canisters or throw grenades. Manufacturers sell grenades that produce light and noise as they expel tear gas and “triple-chaser” canisters that break into multiple pieces when they land so the gas can cover a larger area.
The technology for deploying tear gas is advancing far more quickly than scientists’ understanding of the impacts, Jordt said. “While use of these [compounds] is escalating, there is a vacuum of research to back up the safety of high-level use.”
Feigenbaum said the current situation is dangerous because law enforcement has used tear gas “at close range, in enclosed spaces, in large quantities, fired directly at people, used [it] offensively as a weapon and in conjunction with rubber-coated bullets as a force multiplier.”
Last weekend, a college student in Indiana lost his eye when a tear gas canister hit his face.
Tear gas is banned in international warfare, but it is classified as a “riot control agent” that law enforcement can use for crowd control. Yet instead of calming the situation, tear gas can sometimes “cause counter aggression,” Jordt said. “It just doesn’t work well, and it hits the weakest people the most, and causes the most complications in them.”
One of the most controversial events occurred on Monday, when law enforcement in Washington, D.C., used tear gas on peaceful demonstrators to clear the way so President Donald Trump could walk to a nearby church for a photo op. A statement from the U.S. Park Police said they used “pepper balls” with an unspecified irritant powder and “smoke canisters.” (A reporter with WUSA9 tweeted photos on Thursday of CS containers that he and his team said they found at the site.) The CDC uses “tear gas” as the catch-all term for many “riot control” compounds with similar effects.
Monica Sanders, who lives across the river in Alexandria, Virginia, said she could see the smoke from her house, like something from a “dystopian reality.”
A University of Delaware professor who specializes in disaster management, Sanders said she’d thought about attending that protest but decided against it because her lungs were still weak from an earlier infection that might have been the coronavirus. Although she never got tested, Sanders said she came down with a respiratory illness in mid-February that almost sent her to the emergency room. She is a triathlete with no history of asthma. Last October, she swam a 5K race. Today, she can’t even swim a mile.
She said, “There are other ways to do crowd control that don’t involve creating respiratory ailments during a pandemic, in a city that doesn’t have enough [medical] supplies.”
Maya Eliahou and Caroline Chen contributed reporting.
Filed under:
/>================================================================
Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, I might say we should have seen this coming, in 1925, and in every year thereafter that the United States dragged its feet on signing the Protocol, under Presidents and Congresses of both parties. But it fell through the cracks. If and when – I hope when, and I hope soon – we again have a Democratic President and a Democratic Congress, please do not let us forget that this needs to be rectified. Andits use in “riot control” also needs to be drastically reevaluated.
The Furies and I will be back.
================================================================
13 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #218”
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

The well known militarization of police departments across the country has been criticized before. I am surprised to find that tear gas is unlawful in war, but okay domestically. Was was among those gassed at the March on the Pentagon, which I recall as NOT being in 1967, as a brief search stated, (based ion where I was living at the time). I have a photo of me there, taken by a fellow I’d known in college, by coincidence. But, I wander.
So, IF we can gain control of congress, it may be wise to change the law that allows the use of this garbage, among other things.
If we sign the protocol, we will be on record as committed to the principle that it is illegal in war. That could help in passing legislation to make it illegal domestically. And there are a few other things in the protocol to which it is shameful that we have not committed.
I don’t remember being tear gassed in boot camp, though I’m sure we were. I definitely do remember the burning building training though. I was worried about getting lost in the room(s).
Such an awful, dangerous act, plus the violence going on now towards the peaceful protesters. Now with the covid19, it’s even more dangerous, not only for the welfare, health and comfort of those being attacked, but the compromised folks out there.
It truly saddens me to read of this going on and the hurt and misery inflicted on our citizens. Shameful behavior from potus on down…it should be banned. (like him).
Thanks, Joanne for this educative post.
I do remember being tear gassed in Basic training, clearly. Fort Campbell, Kentucky. They took us all out in the woods to this concrete shed, we went in with masks off, ten at a time, got gassed, put masks on, came and out and mostly threw up. Not something you forget.
The state of policing in America, right now, is out of control. Local police have been militarized and that is something that needs be reversed and never again allowed. We need major reforms in virtually every aspect of civilian society to truly level the playing field, end generational poverty, racism and discrimination in education, housing, employment, healthcare. Everywhere. We need to rebuild America completely. That’s how we make America great again. First step, continuing the protests until those reforms are made nationally and locally, second step, vote republicans out of office at every level of government, third step, repeat in perpetuity.
Is it time to abolish the use of tear gas for crowd control? I am wondering if we should have a petition for this.
It’s actually long past time. But it wouldn’t be the first petition I have seen or signed whoch said “It’s time” when it is in fact long past time.
CDC has made statements on the health harms akin to the health professionals statement (only going to post their fact sheet link here to not exceed limits) including one saying tear gas was used in DC:https://emergency.cdc.gov/agent/riotcontrol/factsheet.asp ”A federal judge late Friday issued a temporary restraining order against the Denver Police Department, restricting police from using projectiles and chemical agents against peaceful protesters. A group of protesters had sued the department, alleging DPD’s actions violated their First Amendment rights.”
“Under the ruling, police are allowed to use chemical weapons or projectiles only with an on-scene supervisor’s authorization. The supervisor must personally witness acts of violence or destruction of property before making the call. Non-lethal force can’t be used indiscriminately in a crowd, and all officers must wear functioning body cameras.”” All officers working a protest crowd must have body cameras on at all times. Officers may only use chemical agents such as teargas after giving a verbal warning to disperse. And officers, after delivering orders to disperse, must give people time to comply.”https://denverite.com/2020/06/05/federal-judge-halts-denver-police-from-using-chemicals-or-projectiles-on-peaceful-protesters/Thanks Joanne–the disregard of public health and safety by an agency charged to protect the public’s health and safety is vile and twisted and an abuse of power requiring far more change than I’ve seen proposed yet.
Thanks for the informative article about Tear Gas, Joanne.
I had read, seen in old war/history scenes, but until last week, I thought it wasn’t something even used now..
It’s appalling to think that they used it on friendly peaceful protesters last week, so the stinking leader could cross the street to take photos in front of the church. Which caused even more chaos.
I would like to see them make a law, that it would be illegal for police to even have access to it.
On top of already having the Covid-19 virus pandemic happening, we certainly didn’t need to have them adding this Tear Gas to the environment where it was used. Making people suffer like that, they should be punished, starting at the top with the wicked leader, his cronies and the ones who shot it.
Thanks Again.
I have never been tear-gassed – nor want to be.
But this barbaric use of, quite literally, chemical weapons by our own police forces against OUR OWN CITIZENS is appalling!
Sadly, given the current Oval Office occupant’s entire lack of any concern whatever (except for himself) – it is not a bit surprising.
As a Trivia Note WRT “CS, short for 2-chlorobenzalmalononitrile”: The “CS” does NOT stand for any type of chemical abbreviation for Carbon or Sulfur. In fact, it is not any type of organic (carbon) compound at all.
The “CS” name for tear-gas comes from its history …
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CS_gas
I hope they are spinning in their graves over the uses to which it has been put.
Another excellent article, Joanne. I’m afraid, however, that the use of teargas in the US has little or nothing to do with not signing the Protocol as this type of chemical weapon used all over the world by law enforcement to control riots and disperse crowds — from the United States to Hong Kong, to Venezuela, to Israel. I’m quite sure that most, if not all, European countries have used teargas controlling riots in the past.
From Dutch Wikipedia: The use of tear gas in fighting riot by the Dutch police is also subject to strict regulations; for example, this should only be used by trained police officers (SWAT) and only in open spaces. An arrest team is allowed to use the gas indoors.
But Dutch citizens are forbidden to buy or use teargas or pepper spray. Ironic isn’t it?
Nevertheless, the fact that teargas is called a pain nerve gases, designed to induce pain by damaging protective mucus lining in parts of the body exposed to it, should be enough to make it fall under the nerve gas protocol and therefore illegal to use. Having people coughing droplets into the air while it is known that the coronavirus is transmitted through such droplets is unconscionable.
As far as I know, almost all Black Lives Matter protests across the world were peaceful and if it was not, no teargas was employed anywhere but in the US. While the use of it should be forbidden globally, most governments seem to use some caution in using it. Something that can’t be said of anything America’s current Administration does.
Update:
Thanks, Joanne –
Two points I’d like to stress –
* COVID-19 is spread through coughing & sneezing – and the use of any form of tear gas (pepper spray etc) guarantees that protestors who may be asymptomatic will inevitably scatter the virus around them, especially as desperation to breathe has many pulling off their masks. So – on one hand resistance is reduced by this action & on the other hand, probability is contagion is increased. Doubly criminal, in my opinion
* “Yet instead of calming the situation, tear gas can sometimes “cause counter aggression,” Jordt said.” – I can confirm this from my own experience! I participated in peaceful demonstrations when at university, but as I was on crutches at the time, I was there more as an observer & voice than as an active protestor. However, the military police sent to control the demonstration started firing tear gas cannisters from outside the campus … & one passed between my crutch & my leg. That was IT – furious, I threw myself into the active resistance as best I could! Throwing cannisters back towards the police, then (when we realised it was an effective action) helping bring fire buckets & emptying them onto cannisters when they landed – preventing most of the gas from affecting us.
As a contact lens wearer, I had problems with burning eyes for days afterwards …
Great piece, JD.
I can’t count the times I was tear gassed in 1960s demonstrations against the war and for civil rights. It was a favorite of New York’s counter-protest Tactical Patrol Force. (We called the TPF Tasmanian Pig Fuckers). Later that term was shortened to Pigs.