Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Widows, Orphans and Workers
I want to be shocked but it's too late for that. Oil vampires used the plight of unemployed oil workers to demand that they be allowed to continue sucking the life out of our earth for their short term gain. They say it is important to keep on the oil economy because we depend on it. Yes, a third of Louisiana workers are directly tied to oil. So that makes it all the more important that we get on with the business of change, especially since this non-renewable death spiral must end soon in any case. Our economic lives are chained to an industry that destroys our physical lives. So we need to kill the industry, not ourselves.
First step, seize BP. To fight this common sense response BP points to the plight of pensioners and others who depend on BP stocks to support their retirement funds. First of all, the stock market does not exist to serve the needy, it exists to serve the greedy. They drag our beloved widows and orphans into the fight on their side. But I look for the swindlers who sold us this load a junk in the first place. We want pensioners to live in dignity, we never said they must use oil money to do it. A pension is a promise. If some manager has made the mistake of tying my grandmother's survival to that of BP then that manager should apologize and fix his mistake, not drag us all into a poisoned future.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
New Orleans weather
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Moratorium resisters
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
the President speaks
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Famous Potatoes
Monday, June 14, 2010
The Taking Boy
Sunday, June 13, 2010
They don't want to stop the oil
I’m sure you’re aware that the energy secretary, Steven Chu, appears to be opposed to the idea of blowing up the well to bring it under control.
He seems to oppose using nuclear weapons. The approach I favor is a conventional demolition, not nuclear. Any combination of explosives that could be used to break the well and bury it under a lot of rock could be effective.
Why hasn’t that been done?
I’m very skeptical about why we haven’t done it. I think the reason is that when the oil companies are in charge of bringing the solutions to the table, they are going to advocate solutions that allow them to continue recovering the oil.
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For a while I allowed expert opinion to dismiss the idea because such an explosion could create more leak sites and multiply the problem. This lie is easy to see through. We all know that the rig floated nearly a mile from the Gulf floor but that's when the drilling started. The drill hole is less than 20 inches wide and close to four miles long. No explosion we are capable of creating could blow a four mile hole in the bottom of the Gulf. A moderately massive explosion of the type that our military is so fond could easily create a lovely plug.
Another story that I've been carrying around for a while is at least as sad. The rig didn't have to collapse like it did. If the rig had been allowed to burn to the water line it never would have collapsed the riser pipe. In this scenario the disaster would at least have been located at sea level. Instead they poured tons and tons of water on the uncontrollable fire (water on an oil fire?) in what looks like an attempt to save the equipment. Certainly some rescue firefighting was urgently needed, but any talk of this crushing weight of water to save lives is another BP lie.
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Catastrophizing
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
When Corporations Ruled the Earth
I wanted to have this catchy title and simply post a big picture of the poison spewing from the Gulf floor. When my blogging skills improve I'll be able to do that. In the meantime, here's a good link: