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Voice of the Environment's mission is to educate the public regarding
the transfer of public trust assets into private, mostly corporate, hands. |
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July 17th, 2010Pandora’s Box in the Gulf: Does Hope Remain?Lewis Seiler & Dan Hamburg/Common Dreams"From the moment this disaster began, the federal government has been in charge of the response effort," Obama said. "BP is operating at our direction." (White House press conference, May 26, 2010)
Americans, especially those unfortunate enough to reside along the Gulf coast, are beginning to get a glimpse of what life is like in an occupied country. The occupying power, in this case, is British Petroleum, a foreign corporation that has committed grievous crimes yet is allowed to continue to lord over us, despoiling our land and sea, poisoning our people even while denying their constitutional rights.
We’re now three months into the BP blowout and while our president has managed to extract a relatively paltry concession from the oil giant, the physical and economic damage, and the violations of US law and the US Constitution mount by the day.
A leader with backbone would have asserted immediate control over the disaster inflicted on the Gulf region and dictated terms to BP. He would have reminded BP and the nation that this was just the latest in a series of major accidents in this company’s American operations. He would have placed the company in receivership and under public authority. BP’s efforts would have been supervised by appropriate departments of the US government along with the immediate opening of an investigation by the Justice Department and the FBI.
Despite claiming that he is “in charge”, Obama dithers, leaving BP to call the shots in the Gulf, even hiring private security to deny citizens access to public land and open seas.
Why has BP been allowed to direct this effort, even while their incompetence and illegal behavior become more evident by the day? It is because they are actually more powerful that the US government. As Jeffrey St. Clair of Counterpunch put it this week in an interview on Pacifica, the oil companies “run the show”, regardless of which party is theoretically in power.
We know, for example, that during the Clinton administration, deepwater drilling was encouraged by giving oil companies a huge break on payment of royalties to the government. Under the leadership of MMS Regional Director in the Gulf region, Chris C. Oynes, and the strong urging of former Colorado senator and current Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, deepwater drilling boomed.
And so did the Deepwater Horizon. It boomed and with it went the lives of eleven men and more than 200 million gallons of crude so far. (By comparison, the Exxon Valdez disgorged 11 million gallons.) The disgorgement of all this oil has only been made worse by the application of the dispersant Corexit 9500, a chemical reported to be four times more toxic than oil but that has never been tested by the EPA and is illegal in most countries. The EPA instructed BP to stop using Corexit when they had only discharged 250,000 gallons; by now BP has used nearly two million gallons, probably in an effort to minimize fines that will be levied per gallon of oil lost in the Gulf. So who’s really in charge?
There are many more crucial questions regarding this worst environmental catastrophe in the history of the United States:
1. Why was BP allowed to drill in this location? Both the MMS and BP geologists cautioned against drilling in the location of the Deepwater Horizon due to evidence of a highly volatile methane bubble beneath the seabed. They warned that if this bubble was disturbed and exploded, it could cause a 200 foot tsunami that would virtually wipe out six Gulf states! In spite of all this, MMS waived environmental impact studies for the rig and well.
2. Why aren’t all oil companies exploiting the land and seas of the United States, required to drill relief wells and to have equipment at the ready to deal with accidents?
3. Why aren’t the perpetrators of this disaster being charged for negligence, manslaughter, or worse? Whistleblowers pointed out before the explosion that the last several hundred feet of the well borehole lacked protective cement casing, a dangerous situation that increased the chances for an explosive event to occur. Just five hours before the rig went up in flames, an expert who’d worked with the US Army extinguishing oil fires in Iraq was flown to the rig for consultation. He informed BP that if they continued to pump saltwater into the hole it would blow. He then demanded immediate evacuation for himself and his men. The Transocean Corporation, whose blowout preventer failed to operate on April 20, advised BP to stop drilling after receiving negative pressure test results. Despite these warnings BP did nothing, allowing eleven men to die, and inflicting incalculable damage on the lives of Gulf coast residents, the environment and economy that will take decades, if not centuries to recover.
4. Is it just coincidence that BP CEO Tony Hayward unloaded a third of his personal holdings in BP just a month before the blowout? Did Hayward know that the Deepwater Horizon well was a disaster waiting to happen and figure he would at least save a few million pounds if the worst happened?
5. Did someone tip off Goldman Sachs? The brokerage firm that’s faced scrutiny from regulators in the past year over the shorting of mortgage related securities seems to have had very good timing when it came to dumping BP stock. According to regulatory filings, Goldman sold 4,680, 822 shares of BP, 44% of its holdings, in the first quarter of 2010. Goldman’s sales were the largest of any firm during that time and saved the company approximately $96 million.
6. Why did Halliburton Corporation buy the world’s largest oil disaster service company, Boots & Coots, just two weeks before the Deepwater Horizon exploded?
7. Who advised Vanguard Corporation, the investment firm in which Michelle and Barack Obama’s personal wealth is held, sell off 1.5 million shares of BP stock in the weeks before the disaster? Another coincidence?
8. Why was the Coast Guard allowed to create a 65 foot “safety zone” around spill sites, denying media access? While the Coast Guard says that this rule was urged upon them by local government officials, none have come forth to corroborate this claim. To this day, the public is being denied full disclosure of the enormity of the losses while rumors of toxic rain, methane explosions, a “bleeding” seabed, and the possibility of mass evacuations ricochet around the net.
9. Cleanup crews have been denied the right to wear protective gear! This is incredible! Under what authority does BP tell people that if they try to protect themselves from the toxic oil, gases, and dispersants, they will be fired? Already, thousands have been made ill just so that BP can minimize potential liability. Thousands of workers who cleaned up after the Exxon Valdez have either died or become chronically ill from exposure to chemicals and dispersants that are absorbed through the skin and cause blood and kidney damage resulting in headaches, respiratory problems and even death. These same chemicals are being used at the BP spill sites.
As we write this, BP has placed a “stacking cap” atop the well in a procedure that professor and marine conservationist Rick Steiner called “either a smart idea or a spectacular mistake.” (The “spectacular mistake” would be a blowout between the fractured seabed and the oil reservoir.) Based on BP’s performance so far, and in many previous events in which public safety has been subordinated to profit, we are cautious. Even if BP does manage to close down the enormous faucet a mile beneath the ocean’s surface, there will remain massive damage with dire consequences extending far into the future.
According to Greek mythology, when Pandora defied Zeus and opened that box, all manner of evil escaped. By the time she had closed it, all that was left was Hope.
Bill Clinton was “the man from Hope”. The poster of Barack Obama with the single word “Hope” beneath his face became the iconic image of the 2008 presidential campaign. But does hope remain for the people, the economy and the environment of the Gulf coast? Does hope remain for the United States in the face of this epic catastrophe that has become a metaphor for the self-destructive hubris of industrial society?
Obama came to office with a window of opportunity. Americans were justifiably alarmed by the crash of the financial sector and the loss of their homes and jobs. Had he addressed these issues, rather than getting into a year long struggle that resulted in a “health reform” package that no one much liked, perhaps his job approval ratings wouldn’t be sliding toward 40%. The BP disaster has again spotlighted the president’s tendency to follow the dictates of big business.
Obama’s margin of error is now razor thin. Unless we can see some change, time will soon run out on hope.SOURCE
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July 17, 2010 Pandora’s Box in the Gulf: Does Hope Remain? Americans, especially those unfortunate enough to reside along the Gulf coast, are beginning to get a glimpse of what life is like in an occupied country. ... more
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June 19, 2010 Obama's Oily Waterloo President Obama's handling of the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico can be aptly described, in the words of the great Yogi Berra, as "déjà vu all over again". ... more
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May 22, 2010 The Buck Stops on Obama’s Desk One of the hopeful promises Barack Obama made to the country in 2008 was that if elected, his administration would reinstitute science-based decision making. ... more
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March 11, 2010 A Challenge to Corporate Feudalism? For the first time in more than four decades, a militant student movement is taking shape across the country. ... more
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December 30, 2009 Leading an Empire in Decline: Obama’s First Year Almost a year ago, in an editorial [1] published on this site we called on Barack Obama to be the hero our country so sorely needed. ... more
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Heavy Metal Series by Pamela Levin, R.N.
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May 17, 2010 Study: A Link Between Pesticides and ADHD Studies linking environmental substances to disease are coming fast and furious. ... more
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February 25, 2010 Do Toxins Cause Autism? Autism was first identified in 1943 in an obscure medical journal. Since then it has become a frighteningly common affliction, with the Centers for Disease Control reporting recently that autism disorders now affect almost 1 percent of children.
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January 23, 2010 Is the Environment to Blame for the Rise in Autism Cases? Autism cases are on the rise. Or so the most recent data would have us believe. ... more
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December 29, 2009 Budget Crisis Leaves Therapists Without Jobs, Autistic Kids Without Treatment In 2009, Maria Forsell's life was about to get more complicated. ... more
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January 16, 2010 EPA Wants Farmers to Spread Toxic Coal Waste on Fields The U.S. government is encouraging farmers to spread a chalky waste from coal-fired power plants on their fields to loosen and fertilize soil. ... more
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December 24, 2009 Farmers Encouraged To Spread Toxic Coal Ash On Fields Despite what coal industry executives and opponents of renewable energy research would have you believe, America is running out of this filthy, costly, fossil fuel- and not a moment too soon. ... more
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October 16, 2008 Fertiliser kills marine life In the past, a typical Fijian household would have a knife, fork and spade to till the land. In today's commercial agriculture modern technology and chemicals have been added to the normal tools to ease the burden of everyday cutting and digging. This includes spray tanks, weedicides and fertiliser. ... more
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April 14, 2008 Sludge fertilizer program spurs concerns Scientists using federal grants spread fertilizer made from human and industrial wastes on yards in poor, black neighborhoods to test whether it might protect children from lead poisoning in the soil. ... more
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June 21, 2005 Heavy Fertilizer Use May Transform Lakes for Centuries, Study Suggests The widespread use of phosphorous-rich fertilizers by industrial agriculture could permanently alter the chemistry of nearby lakes, a new study suggests. ... more
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June 22, 2010 High Court Delivers Ruling that Leaves Ban on Planting of Roundup Ready Alfalfa in Place in First-Ever Case on a Genetically-Engineered Crop The United States Supreme Court announced its decision today in Monsanto v. Geerston Farms, the first genetically modified crop case ever brought before the Supreme Court. ... more
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June 21, 2010 Justices Back Monsanto on Biotech Seed Planting In its first-ever ruling on genetically modified crops, the Supreme Court on Monday overturned a lower court’s ban on the planting of alfalfa seeds engineered to resist Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide. ... more
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May 17, 2010 Haitian Farmers Commit to Burning Monsanto Hybrid Seeds The Peasant Movement of Papay (MPP) has committed to burning Monsanto's seeds, and has called for a march to protest the corporation's presence in Haiti on June 4, for World Environment Day. ... more
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February 27, 2010 Stop GMO Contamination of Organic! Don't believe Monsanto's greenwashing. Genetically modified organisms (GMOs), aren't meant to feed the world or be resilient when there are droughts and floods - they're designed to sell pesticides. ... more
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February 24, 2010 The Happy Story of GM Crops Since the first commercial cultivation of Genetically Modified (GM) crops in 1996, Monsanto and the rest of the big six Biotech seed companies, (Pioneer/DuPont, Syngenta, Dow, BASF and Bayer) have become masters at the art of story telling. ... more
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March 9, 2006 The Green Scare On January 20th, eleven people were indicted in Oregon by a grand jury
investigating acts of sabotage linked to the underground Earth Liberation
Front (ELF). ... more
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January 9, 2006 Study strikes salvage logging beliefs A new study by Oregon State University researchers suggests that burned-over forests recover on their own as well or better than those that are logged and replanted.
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January 8, 2006 A Donor Who Had Big Allies In a case that echoes the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling scandal, two Northern California Republican congressmen used their official positions to try to stop a federal investigation of a wealthy Texas businessman who provided them with political contributions. ... more
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December 23, 2005 Cutting of private trees could be banned under new law A Board of Supervisors committee approved legislation Monday that would give city officials wider powers to protect large trees in San Francisco, including those on private property. ... more
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November 26, 2005 USDA Forest Service Continues Losing Billions to Log National Forests In the face of the overwhelming social and economic benefits from protecting our national forest for their amenities, the Forest Service and Congress continue their unabashed funding emphasis on logging to manage our national forests.
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April 26, 2010 Largest Discrimination Lawsuit in U.S. History Gets Green Light After nearly a decade of pre-trial wrangling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled today in a 100-page decision that hundreds of thousands of female Wal-Mart current and former employees who have worked at Wal-Mart stores at any time since June 2001 are entitled to proceed with a massive class action lawsuit charging sex discrimination by America’s largest retailer.
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January 25, 2010 Wal-Mart cutting 11,200 jobs at Sam’s Club Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will cut about 11,200 jobs at Sam's Club warehouses as it turns over the task of in-store product demonstrations to an outside marketing company. ... more
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August 20, 2006 An unbelievable truth Is the megacorporation going green or just greenwashing its problems?
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August 17, 2006 Eye on Election, Democrats Run as Wal-Mart Foes Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware, a likely
Democratic presidential candidate in 2008, delivered a 15-minute,
blistering attack to warm applause from Democrats and union organizers here
on Wednesday. ... more
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May 3, 2006 Unions Protest Wal-Mart Health Care Unions representing six million workers planned to rally Wednesday in 35 cities from New York to Los Angeles to protest what they called inadequate health care coverage by Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the nation's largest employer. ... more
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Voice of the Environment is a 501 (c-3) not-for-profit Montana-based corporation formed in 1991.
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