“…Indeed, when inhaled, tear gas can cause various incapacitating respiratory symptoms, ranging from trouble breathing, coughing, salivating, and choking to vomiting and, at worst, to respiratory failure. These are often accompanied with various eye and skin symptoms, from tearing and temporary blindness to itching and chemical burns (Brown et al., 2021). Depending on spheric matters, such as the time and closeness of exposure, or openness of the exposed area, and various physiological features, such as pre-existing medical conditions, such atmospheric violence can lead to severe pain-impulses, involuntary processes on the glands, autonomous reflexes on muscles, and altered breathing patters, that together incapacitate the body to varying degrees (Bessac and Jordt, 2010).…”