
Check out my new mix
http://dnbshare.com/download/SoundBoy-CockTailMix.mp3.html
Tracklist :
1. John b - red sky
2. High Contrast - metamorphosis
3. Nu:tone feat Natalie williams - system (Matrix & Futurebound remix)
4. State of mind feat Laura pacheco - good love
5. State of mind & Chris SU - Flawless
6. Peshay & Dj SS & Influx Uk - Make some noise
7. Trei - Day away
8. Contour - Shooting Star
9. Baron - Decade
10. Dj Fresh & Adam F - When the sun goes down (radio edit)
11. Phetsta - From my eyes
12. Noisia - Crescent Sun ( Chris SU remix)
13. Survival - Flashlight
14. Concord Dawn - T
15. Ed Rush & Optical - Bacteria ( pendulum remix)
16. Survival - Silencer
17. Unknown Error - Alone
18. Insight & Voytek - The end
19. Dj Fresh - Gold Rush
20. Loxy & INk - Liberation
21. Dose & Teknik - The jackal
22. Drumsound & Bassline Smith - Rock your body
Astept parerile voastre. (feedback)
Don't try to understand me, i'm too complicated. If you found something about me , i'm gonna kill ya . ( it's a must)

I'm Agentul Portocala.
LIMEWAX - AGENT ORANGE
Agent Orange is the code name for a powerful herbicide and defoliant used by the U.S. military in its Herbicidal Warfare program during the Vietnam War. During the Vietnam War, an estimated 80 000 m³ of Agent Orange were deployed in South Vietnam.[1]
Agent Orange's usage from 1961 to 1971 was by far the most used of the so-called "Rainbow Herbicides" used during the program. Degradation of Agent Orange (as well as Agents Purple, Pink, and Green) released dioxins, which have caused health problems for those exposed during the Vietnam War. Agents Blue and White were part of the same program but did not contain dioxins.
Studies of populations exposed to dioxin, though not necessarily agent orange, indicate increased risk of various types of cancer and genetic defects; the effect of long-term low-level exposure has not been established.
Since the nineteen-eighties, several lawsuits have been filed against the companies which produced agent orange, among them; Dow Chemical, Monsanto, and Diamond Shamrock (which produced 5%[2]). U.S. veterans obtained a $180 million settlement in 1984, with most affected veterans receiving a one-time lump sum payment of $1,200.
American veterans of the Vietnam war were seeking recognition of agent orange syndrome, compensation and treatment for diseases that they and their children suffered from; many exposed to agent orange have not been able to receive promised medical care through the Veterans Administration medical system, and only with rare exception have their affected children received healthcare assistance from the government.
Vietnam veterans and their families who brought the original agent orange lawsuit alleged, 25 years ago, that the government "is just waiting for us all to die". They alleged that most of those still alive would succumb to the effects of toxic exposure before the age of 65.
In Australia, Canada and New Zealand, veterans obtained compensation in settlements that same year. In 1999, South Korean veterans filed a lawsuit in the Korean courts. In January 2006, the Korean Appeal Court ordered Monsanto and Dow to pay US$62 million in compensation. However, no Vietnamese have received compensation, and on March 10, 2006, Judge Jack B. Weinstein of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York dismissed the lawsuit filed by the Vietnamese victims of agent orange against the chemical companies which produced the defoliants and herbicides.