PODCAST · society
Larry Talks
by Dr. Larry Doyle, Sr.
Welcome to a podcast where real thoughts meet real life, a space for honest conversations, reflections to share, one day, one topic one breath at a time.
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9
The VA's Game Plan
Internal policies and training structures strongly discourage treating clinicians from making certain diagnoses or from linking conditions to military service.“Do not provide nexus opinions.” Clinicians are told this repeatedly. “Document symptoms, not disability determinations.” This is standard language in VA onboarding.
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8
Freedom of Information and the Secrets of Okinawa and Beyond
When systems fail, the burden shifts to those least equipped to carry it. They are asked to reconstruct decades-old events, to supply evidence that should already exist, to relive trauma in search of validation. Then there are the questions that linger in the shadows — about Okinawa and beyond. Stories of exposure, of materials moved and stored, of records incomplete or inaccessible. Whether through classification, fragmentation, or neglect, gaps in transparency deepen suspicion and erode public confidence.
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7
The Okinawa Cover-up and the Collapse of the Rule of Law
How an event like Agent Orange can cripple and begin the collapse of the rule of law, when transparency and honesty is not upheld.
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6
What the FOIA System Has Taught Me
The Freedom of Information Act isn't just a paperwork - it is a lesson in patience, persistence, and perspective. What it taught me is that transparency is not automatic, it often has to be pursued.
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5
Follow the Money, Follow the Silence
"There is no evidence Agent Orange was shipped to Okinawa", but what is the 1963 Machinato Shipping Document?!
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4
The Payment They Said Didn't Exist
This episode isn't about a payment. It's not about a consultant. It's not even about a set of reports. It's about a system that was designed to hide the truth- and the fact that the truth is finally breaking through.
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3
Agent Orange on Okinawa
There’s a part of history that lives in the shadows—not because it’s unclear, but because it’s uncomfortable.Over the years, U.S. service members have come forward describing barrels of herbicides leaking, being stored on bases, even buried or disposed of improperly. Okinawan workers have shared similar stories. Independent investigations have found dioxin contamination near former U.S. military sites—levels that don’t appear by accident.So the question isn’t just “Was Agent Orange there?”The deeper question is what happens when lived experience collides with official denial?For many veterans, this denial has real consequences—no VA recognition, no healthcare coverage, no compensation. For Okinawan families, it raises painful questions about health, land, and accountability.
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2
How Money Erodes the Rule of Law
In this episode, How Money Erodes the Rule of Law, we explore how financial power can quietly weaken systems that are meant to serve everyone equally. When wealth buys access, shapes policy, or shields wrongdoing, the promise of justice under the law starts to fracture.
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1
The Rule of Law
In this episode, we explore the meaning and importance of the rule of law and why it matters in our everyday lives. From protecting individual rights to holding leaders accountable, the rule of law is the foundation of a fair and just society.
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