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Reply #30 posted 05/25/10 9:56am

thejason

noimageatall said:

thejason said:



at the very least don't use/buy BP (or it's subsidiaries) fuel or related products...I've always used Castrol oil in my vehicles, owned by BP...never again...


I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???

BPs own website has a pretty good overview of it's products and services other names...and a quick google gave me a few more names...

personally, I think all the protesting in the world isn't gonna do anything...but there has to be a call to action...regulation & control...I'm a fan of it...when used wisely, it works wonders...
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Reply #31 posted 05/25/10 10:02am

Dreamer2

avatar

thejason said:

noimageatall said:



I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???

BPs own website has a pretty good overview of it's products and services other names...and a quick google gave me a few more names...

personally, I think all the protesting in the world isn't gonna do anything...but there has to be a call to action...regulation & control...I'm a fan of it...when used wisely, it works wonders...


I disagree protesting is the only power the small people of the world have, don't by BP make the choice not to use products by the company.

It's the dollar / pound / euro they worship not god or nature!
mad
Eye Was Born & Raised On The Same Plantation In The United States Of The Red, White And Blue Eye Never Knew That Eye Was Different Til Dr. King Was On The Balcony
Lying In A Bloody Pool......Call me a Dreamer 2 - R.I.P - James Brown and Michael Jackson
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Reply #32 posted 05/25/10 10:28am

peb319

avatar

noimageatall said:

thejason said:



at the very least don't use/buy BP (or it's subsidiaries) fuel or related products...I've always used Castrol oil in my vehicles, owned by BP...never again...


I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???


my current vehicle gags on their gas anyway..

no more castrol...
whats a good high mileage substitute for theirs??

i've got a small tester garden started already waiting to see how it does.
tomatoes,squash, greenpeppers., cucumbers and cantelopes and water melon..

i dont even know if a letter to Obama would get read at this point..

it's sad that BP is thinking of themselves
and not the devestation this is causing..
and the long range effects
sun 'why y'all trying to say goodbye? I didn't go anywhere, I'm right here, im all around you,always..' sun

in a line from my dream, I heard a voice and saw a silhouette in a chair..
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Reply #33 posted 05/25/10 10:29am

noimageatall

avatar

peb319 said:

noimageatall said:



I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???


my current vehicle gags on their gas anyway..

no more castrol...
whats a good high mileage substitute for theirs??

i've got a small tester garden started already waiting to see how it does.
tomatoes,squash, greenpeppers., cucumbers and cantelopes and water melon..

i dont even know if a letter to Obama would get read at this point..

it's sad that BP is thinking of themselves
and not the devestation this is causing..
and the long range effects


Well, maybe not "A" letter, but thousands might make him take notice. wink Isn't he all for corporate accountability anyway????
"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #34 posted 05/25/10 10:33am

shortnsweet

avatar

LIVE4LUV
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Reply #35 posted 05/25/10 10:38am

SHOCKADELICA1

avatar

noimageatall said:

thejason said:



at the very least don't use/buy BP (or it's subsidiaries) fuel or related products...I've always used Castrol oil in my vehicles, owned by BP...never again...


I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???


I'm sure a zillion other people are already sending him angrey letters. And I'm hoping he's going to put his foot up BP's ass in some form or fashion. pray beg
"Bring friends, bring your children and bring foot spray 'cause it's gon' be funky." ~ Prince

A kiss on the lips, is betta than a knife in the back ~ Sheila E

Darkness isn't the absence of light, it's the absence of U ~ Prince
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Reply #36 posted 05/25/10 10:40am

noimageatall

avatar

shortnsweet said:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20100525/pl_politico/37725


A majority of Americans, by 51 percent to 46 percent, now disapprove of Obama’s handling of the crisis, according to a new CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll. An Associated Press-GfK survey taken less than two weeks ago showed that only one-third of those polled gave Obama low marks for his response.


confused

“We as a country have not put in place a system for regulating or responding to complex and costly frontier drilling,” Holstein said. “The Obama administration simply does not have at its disposal the kind of expertise and equipment” to cap the well.

“The frontline of response lies with oil company field generals and not the administration — and that puts the president at a disadvantage,” he added.



Sometimes the gov does need to 'take over' and make things right. This is bullshit. mad
"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #37 posted 05/25/10 1:26pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

If Obama (the government) has no resources or ability to fix this, he needs to be laying it at the feet of the GOP with their unregulated Market bullshit. It's over a month and the gulf is dying. I can't believe Obama has been so silent on this. He needs to be raising holy hell and BP should be executed over this. Unbelievable. God help us all. We are killing the planet.
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #38 posted 05/25/10 2:04pm

thepope2the9s

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

If Obama (the government) has no resources or ability to fix this, he needs to be laying it at the feet of the GOP with their unregulated Market bullshit. It's over a month and the gulf is dying. I can't believe Obama has been so silent on this. He needs to be raising holy hell and BP should be executed over this. Unbelievable. God help us all. We are killing the planet.


uh,..yeah...he is so much different from the last president.
tricked again!
Stand Up! Everybody, this is your life!
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Reply #39 posted 05/25/10 2:45pm

InsatiableCrea
m

avatar

noimageatall said:

thejason said:



at the very least don't use/buy BP (or it's subsidiaries) fuel or related products...I've always used Castrol oil in my vehicles, owned by BP...never again...


I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???


Not sure how this will help at all. considering there's been virtually no response from the Obama administration, i doubt a letter will fix things shrug

no offense to you, of course.
cream.
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Reply #40 posted 05/25/10 3:13pm

RodeoSchro

What worries me is that BP does not know how to fix this. So, we allow oil companies to drill baby drill, but in the event the worst-case scenario happens, no one knows how to fix it.

That's just mind-boggling.
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Reply #41 posted 05/25/10 3:19pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

RodeoSchro said:

What worries me is that BP does not know how to fix this. So, we allow oil companies to drill baby drill, but in the event the worst-case scenario happens, no one knows how to fix it.

That's just mind-boggling.

The unfortunate thing is that Cowardly Obama and the Cowardly Democratic party will not seize on this to change our priorities and energy policy.
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #42 posted 05/25/10 5:47pm

noimageatall

avatar

InsatiableCream said:

noimageatall said:



I have already stopped using their services or products. Although it's difficult to know just what products they DO make since many are listed under different names. I'd like to think there was much more we could do in the way of protesting, etc. without it ending up costing 'us' more in the long run, as in prices of fish and veggies skyrocket, and BP ends up with more profits.

I'm going to email a very angry letter to Obama. Any other suggestions???


Not sure how this will help at all. considering there's been virtually no response from the Obama administration, i doubt a letter will fix things shrug

no offense to you, of course.


Well, dig this!!!!

http://www.upi.com/Scienc...274710346/


Iran Renews Offer to Help with Gulf Spill

Published: May 24, 2010 at 10:12 AM

TEHRAN, May 24 (UPI) -- Iranian energy companies stand ready to help respond to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico if asked by U.S. officials, Iranian oil executives said.

Mehran Alinejad, the director of drilling operations at the National Iranian Drilling Co., said Iranian companies had experience controlling vast oil spills in the region. He told the official Islamic Republic News Agency that technical teams in Iran had "major achievements in oil well capping."

"There is, at any rate, an ecological disaster in the Gulf of Mexico and its negative consequences will affect everyone," he added. "That is why if we receive a suitable response from relevant (U.S.) officials we can examine the issue and contribute to its resolution."

NIDC officials said in early May that Iran was ready to overlook the U.S. push for new sanctions at the U.N. Security Council as there is an urgent need for action in the southern coastal regions.

The Deepwater Horizon oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico caught fire and sank in April. Oil has gushed from a broken riser about a mile under the surface for more than a month.

BP, the operator at Deepwater Horizon, has tried unsuccessfully to plug the leak. The company said it would launch an effort this week to inject heavy drilling fluids into the well in an effort to stop the leak. It expressed uncertainty that the unconventional method would work, however.

"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #43 posted 05/25/10 5:52pm

noimageatall

avatar

Obama to return to the Gulf Coast

By Michael D. Shear May 25, 2010; 2:42 PM ET
President Obama will travel to the Louisiana Gulf Coast on Friday to assess the efforts to stop the oil leak there, White House officials said Tuesday. It will be his second trip to the region and will come just days after BP makes another attempt on Wednesday to plug the leak.

Obama is scheduled to leave Washington on Thursday for a long weekend in Chicago. But aides confirmed that he would travel to the Gulf amid growing concerns about the inability of the the oil company and the government to stem the environmental disaster.


http://voices.washingtonp...id=topnews
"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #44 posted 05/25/10 6:00pm

noimageatall

avatar

eek confused mad

The actual report is included in the article.

Interior Department IG Report: Regulators Accepted Oil-Company Gifts, Lunches, Sports Tickets

05-25-10 12:08 PM

The government regulator with oversight of offshore drilling allowed industry officials to fill in their own inspection reports and federal employees accepted gifts -- including meals and tickets to sporting events -- from oil and natural gas companies, according to a new report by the Interior Department's Inspector General.

In addition, Mineral Management Service employees viewed porn on government computers -- similar to a recent scandal involving the Securities and Exchange Commission -- according to the report.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar called the latest report "deeply disturbing," stating that it demonstrates the need for reforms, including a plan to split up the agency and replace it with three new entities.

The report "is further evidence of the cozy relationship between some elements of MMS and the oil and gas industry," Salazar said Tuesday. "I appreciate and fully support the Inspector General's strong work to root out the bad apples in MMS."

In the wake of the nation's worst oil spill currently polluting the Gulf of Mexico, with headlines trumpeting the agency's lax regulation of the oil industry, the report is sure to prompt even more calls to overhaul MMS though none of the activities described relate to the tragic accident. Already, the agency has been criticized for allowing the industry to largely regulate itself, ignoring environmental permits and for skipping monthly inspections of oil rigs, among other problems. The agency has a checkered history -- in 2008, another IG described a "fraternity-house atmosphere" in which MMS officials engaged in illicit sex with employees of energy companies, used cocaine and accepted golf and ski trips from industries they were regulating.

Acting Inspector General Mary Kendall wrote to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar that her "greatest concern... is the environment in which these inspectors operate -- particularly the ease with which they move between industry and government. While not included in our report, we discovered that the individuals involved in the fraternizing and gift exchange -- both government and industry -- have often known one another since childhood."
The report was prompted by an anonymous letter dated October 28, 2008 which alleged that several MMS employees accepted gifts, including skeet-shooting contests, crawfish boils and fishing trips, from the Island Operating Company, an oil and gas production company that works on oil platforms. Among the employees was an MMS supervisor in the New Orleans office, who was later fired.

One inspector was flown on an oil company plane to the Peach Bowl college football game to watch LSU play the University of Miami. Later, the official emailed his colleagues that "The 40 to 3 ass whipping LSU put on Miami was a lot more impressive in person. My daughter and I had a blast."

In addition, MMS employees admitted using crystal meth -- one IG source "claimed to have heard that this inspector might have used these drugs offshore on the platforms." And the IG found that staffers were sending emails to each other containing "inappropriate humor and pornography on their government computers."

Among the most serious cases, the IG found that one government inspector conducted four inspections of platforms run by Island Operating Company (IOC) after engaging in employment negotiations with the oil company -- he was later hired by IOC.

The New York Times, which first obtained the report, noted that MMS officials "allowed industry officials several years ago to fill in their own inspection reports in pencil -- and then turned them over to the regulators, who traced over them in pen before submitting the reports to the agency...'

To illustrate the cozy relationship between industry and regulators, MMS Lake Charles District Manager Larry Williamson told the IG that many agency inspectors had worked for oil and gas companies and continued to be friends with industry representatives:

"Obviously, we're all oil industry," he said. "We're all from the same part of the country. Almost all of our inspectors have worked for oil companies out on these same platforms. They grew up in the same towns. Some of these people, they've been friends with all their life. They've been with these people since they were kids. They've hunted together. They fish together. They skeet shoot together... They do this all the time."


http://www.huffingtonpost...88755.html
"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #45 posted 05/25/10 6:28pm

peb319

avatar

noimageatall said:

peb319 said:



my current vehicle gags on their gas anyway..

no more castrol...
whats a good high mileage substitute for theirs??

i've got a small tester garden started already waiting to see how it does.
tomatoes,squash, greenpeppers., cucumbers and cantelopes and water melon..

i dont even know if a letter to Obama would get read at this point..

it's sad that BP is thinking of themselves
and not the devestation this is causing..
and the long range effects


Well, maybe not "A" letter, but thousands might make him take notice. wink Isn't he all for corporate accountability anyway????


one to a million..
can only hope
sun 'why y'all trying to say goodbye? I didn't go anywhere, I'm right here, im all around you,always..' sun

in a line from my dream, I heard a voice and saw a silhouette in a chair..
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Reply #46 posted 05/26/10 7:45am

shortnsweet

avatar

phunkdaddy said:

shortnsweet said:



And I'm not exactly sure how it's related but I was throwing a fit yesterday because I paid $250 for ONE cucumber. My Mom said it was because of the BP deal.....I'm about to grow my own food. Sick of this.


That's the way to go. I started my veggie garden the first of the
month. Last year i grew a good crop of okra. This year i'm going for
okra,squash,tomatoes,bell peppers,and cucumbers.


Had to laugh yesterday driving down the road and was listening to "Style" "style is growing your own food....." This post just popped in my head. Made me giggle, had to share.
Back to the oil situation, they should have just burned the ish immediately!! And forget the fines, these jerks need to do jail time for this!!
LIVE4LUV
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Reply #47 posted 05/27/10 11:43am

dag

avatar

XxAxX said:

lazycrockett said:

A dying baby Heron.



bawl why couldn't they rescue this one?

They were busy taking pix. Damn, this makes me so MAAAAAD! When they are smart enough to figure out how to get the oil out from under the sea, they should be smart enough to know how to stop it!!!! I hate, hate, hate this and what pisses me off the most is that this isn´t constantly being reported as the number one news. This is one of the worst things happening right now. The whole world should be going crazy trying to solve this..... Just lock up everyone responsible.

bawl
"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
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Reply #48 posted 05/27/10 12:08pm

noimageatall

avatar

http://news.yahoo.com/s/a...e/us_obama


Fixing oil disaster my responsibility, Obama says


Administration Official Resigns Over Spill


By JENNIFER LOVEN and TOM RAUM,

– 18 mins ago
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama defensively and sometimes testily insisted on Thursday that his administration, not oil giant BP, was calling the shots in responding to the worst oil spill in the nation's history.

"I take responsibility. It is my job to make sure that everything is done to shut this down," Obama declared at a news conference in the East Room of the White House. The Gulf of Mexico oil spill dominated the hour-long session.

He called the spill, now in its sixth week, an "unprecedented disaster" and blasted a "scandalously close relationship" he said has persisted between Big Oil and government regulators.

Obama announced new steps to deal with the aftermath of the spill, including continuing a moratorium on drilling permits for six months. He also said he was suspending planned exploration drilling off the coasts of Alaska and Virginia and on 33 wells under way in the Gulf of Mexico.

The president's direct language on being in charge of the spill response, which he repeated several times, marked a change in emphasis from earlier administration assertions that, while the government was overseeing the operation, BP had the expertise and equipment to make the decisions on how to stop the flow.

As recently as Monday, the top federal official in charge of dealing with the oil catastrophe, Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, declined to broadly say the federal government was "in charge." Instead, when asked about that, Allen told reporters that BP was responsible for the cleanup and the government was accountable to make sure the company did it. "I would say it's less a case of 'in charge,'" Allen said when asked about that phrase.

Yet with each passing day, public frustration with Obama's administration has grown, and his poll numbers on the matter are dropping.

Claiming control carries its own political risks for Obama, because any failure to stop the gusher will then belong to the president. But he could suffer politically if his administration is seen as falling short of staying on top of the problem or not working hard to find a solution.


"The American people should know that from the moment this disaster began, the federal government has been in charge of the response effort," Obama said. He was reacting to criticism that his administration has been slow to act and has left BP in charge of plugging the leak.

Obama said many critics failed to realize "this has been our highest priority."

"My job right now is just to make sure everybody in the Gulf understands: This is what I wake up to in the morning, and this is what I go to bed at night thinking about. The spill."

"There shouldn't be any confusion here. The federal government is fully engaged," he said, underscoring his central point.


As he spoke, BP worked furiously to pump mud-like drilling fluid into the blown-out well.

It was an untested procedure but seemed to be working, officials said Thursday, even as new estimates showed the spill has surpassed the Exxon Valdez in Alaska as the worst in U.S. history.

Obama said while the "top kill" procedure being used by BP demonstrated his administration's willingness to try "any reasonable strategy" to stop the gusher, the process "offers no guarantee of success."

Asked about inevitable comparisons between his handling of the disaster with his predecessor's handling of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Obama said: "I'll leave it to you guys to make those comparisons and make — and make — and make judgments on it, because — because what I'm spending my time thinking about is how do we solve the problem?

"And I'm confident that people are going to look back and say that this administration was on top of what was an unprecedented crisis," he added.

"This has been our highest priority," he said. He conceded that "people are going to be frustrated until it stops."

As an example of the government's hands-on approach, Obama said that BP had wanted to drill a single "relief" well in an effort to eventually stop the leak in several months if all else failed. Instead, the administration insisted on two relief wells being drilled, Obama said.

Over and over, the president sought to counter criticism that the administration was giving too much leeway to BP PLC. "Make no mistake, BP is operating at our direction," he said.

"We will demand that they pay every dime they owe for the damage they've done and the painful losses that they've cost," he said. Still, he acknowledged, "We've got to get it right."

He denounced what he called "the oil industry's cozy and sometimes corrupt" ties with government regulators.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg , D-N.J., a critic of offshore drilling, said Obama had taken an important step to halt the most imminent environmental threat to the Atlantic coast, but he said the danger will remain until there is a permanent ban on drilling in the Atlantic.

"BP's oil catastrophe in the Gulf is a wake-up call for our nation. Giving Big Oil more access to our nation's waters will only lead to more pollution, more lost jobs and more damage to our economy," Lautenberg said.

Obama said the federal government "has acted consistently with a sense of urgency" on the spill. But, he acknowledged a "sense of complacency on the government's part in planning how to deal with the worst-case scenario" before it happened.

He said a cozy relationship between industry and government didn't change when he came into office.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar "came in and started cleaning house. But the culture had not fully changed at MMS. And surely I take responsibility for that."

But, he added, "there is no evidence some of the corrupt practices that took place earlier took place under the present administration's watch."

He spoke shortly after the head of the troubled agency that oversees offshore drilling, Minerals Management Services Director Elizabeth Birnbaum, resigned under pressure.

"I found out about her resignation today. I don't know the circumstances under which this occurred," Obama said
.

"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #49 posted 05/27/10 3:35pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

I'm sorry but Obama's press conference doesn't cut it. I don't doubt that they have been working to try and fix this from day one but the appearance is that he hasn't done shit.

He needs to get the hell out of mellow calm mode and cowboy up and cut off some heads.
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #50 posted 05/29/10 3:55pm

SherryJackson

XxAxX said:

lazycrockett said:

A dying baby Heron.



bawl why couldn't they rescue this one?




crycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycry
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Reply #51 posted 05/29/10 3:59pm

SherryJackson

XxAxX said:

lazycrockett said:

A dying baby Heron.



bawl why couldn't they rescue this one?




crycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycrycry
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Reply #52 posted 05/29/10 4:07pm

PositivityNYC

avatar

Hag. Muse. Web Goddess. Taurean. Tree Hugger. Poet. Professional Nerd. Geek.
"Resistance is futile." "All shall love me and despair!"
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Reply #53 posted 05/31/10 1:27pm

dag

avatar

Gulf oil spill threat widens, BP shares drop

VENICE, Louisiana (Reuters) – Oil from BP's out-of-control Gulf of Mexico oil spill could threaten the Mississippi and Alabama coasts this week, U.S. forecasters said on Monday, as public anger surged over the country's worst environmental disaster.

U.S. government and BP officials are warning that the blown-out deepwater well feeding the catastrophic spill may not be shut off until August as the company begins preparations on a new but uncertain attempt to contain the leaking crude.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder will meet with federal prosecutors and state attorneys general in New Orleans in Tuesday. It will be Holder's first trip to survey the damage before what legal experts believe will be a criminal investigation into the disaster.

The London Stock Exchange and Wall Street were closed for holidays on Monday, but BP shares in Frankfurt sank 7 percent to close at around 5.40 euros ($6.62) on the news of the company's weekend failure to halt the oil leak.

BP's stock has lost nearly a quarter of its value since the oil spill started six weeks ago, wiping nearly 29 billion pounds ($42 billion) off BP's market value, according to Reuters data.

The disaster, in its 42nd day on Monday, is already the largest oil spill in U.S. history and officials are treating it as the country's biggest environmental catastrophe.

Although Louisiana's wetlands and fishing grounds have been the worst hit so far by the spill, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said moderate southerly and southwesterly winds this week may start moving oil closer to the Mississippi Delta.

"Model results indicate that oil may move north to threaten the barrier islands off Mississippi and Alabama later in the forecast period," NOAA said in its 72-hour prediction on the expected trajectory of the huge oil slick.

Mississippi and Alabama have escaped lightly so far, with only scattered tar balls and oil debris reaching its coasts.

But the NOAA forecast was a sober reminder that oil from the unchecked spill, broken up and carried by winds and ocean currents, could threaten a vast area of the U.S. Gulf Coast, including tourism mecca Florida, as well as Cuba and Mexico.

Following the failure this weekend of BP's attempt to plug the spewing mile-deep well, public anger over the spill and how it occurred is growing, as tens of thousands of Gulf Coast residents face a pollution impact on their livelihoods.

A group calling itself Seize BP, which has already staged anti-BP protests, said on Monday it would organize demonstrations in more than 50 U.S. cities from Thursday to Saturday to protest the damage from the leaking oil.

The group demands that BP's assets be immediately seized and held in trust to pay compensation for the spill triggered by the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig.

"JOBS VANISHING, CREATURES DYING"

"The greatest environmental disaster with no end in sight! Eleven workers dead. Millions of gallons of oil gushing for months (and possibly years) to come. Jobs vanishing. Creatures dying. A pristine environment destroyed for generations. A mega-corporation that has lied and continues to lie, and a government that refuses to protect the people," Seize BP said in a statement.

The public anger and frustration over the spill poses a major domestic challenge for President Barack Obama, who has been forced to admit publicly that the U.S. government and military do not have the technology to plug the leaking well and must leave this to BP and its private industry partners.

Obama, who made his second visit to the Gulf disaster zone on Friday, is sending three of his top energy and environmental officials back there this week. He is trying to fend off criticism that his administration acted too slowly in its response to the spill, the worst in U.S. history.

The crisis could swell into a political liability for the Democratic president as his administration and party, bloodied by bruising healthcare and economic policy debates, head toward key mid-term congressional elections in November.

Louisiana's commercial and recreational fishing industry already has been dealt a blow by the spill. Fishing boats bobbed idle on Monday at the Venice Marina in Louisiana, which would normally be a hive of activity during the long Memorial Day weekend.

"Just take a look around, it's quiet," marina owner Bill Butler said as he sat wistfully looking at the idle boats.

As a health precaution, U.S. authorities have closed all fishing in 25 percent of Gulf of Mexico U.S. federal waters.

The Gulf Coast is one of America's richest ecosystems and a vital breeding ground for a $6.5 billion seafood industry.

ULTIMATE HOPES IN RELIEF WELL

BP executives say the company will try several immediate options to try to control the leak, including the planned deployment of a containment cap in the next few days, but the ultimate solution may only lie in the drilling of a relief well that is expected to be completed in August.

The drilling of two relief wells, which began in May, is an expensive but more reliable way to intercept and cap the leaking well.

The Gulf spill has surpassed the Exxon Valdez disaster off Alaska in 1989 as the worst U.S. oil spill, with an estimated 12,000 to 19,000 barrels (504,000 to 798,000 gallons/1.9 million to 3 million liters) leaking per day.

BP is now preparing a containment cap to place on top of a lower marine riser package (LMRP), a piece of equipment that sits atop the failed well blowout preventer on the seabed.

Remote vehicles have begun cutting away pipes atop the blowout preventer to allow a tight fit with the cap, and will saw through the main riser pipe in "next day or two," a BP spokesman said on Monday.

The White House said the company would begin cutting a pipe that rises out of the so-called LMRP on Monday or Tuesday.

If the containment operation works -- and BP expects to know later this week -- then at least some of the leaking oil could be piped to the surface.

(Additional reporting by Blaise Robinson in Paris, Katharine Jackson in New Orleans; Jeremy Pelofsky in Washington; Pascal Fletcher in Miami, and Chris Baltimore in Houston; Writing by Pascal Fletcher and Mary Milliken; Editing by Sandra Maler and Bill Trott)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100531/us_nm/us_oil_rig_leak

THEY GOTTA BE KIDDING!!!! By that time, the oil will get to Europe!

"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
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Reply #54 posted 06/03/10 7:18pm

lazycrockett

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[img:$uid]http://i124.photobucket.com/albums/p3/Lazycrockett/oil2.jpg[/img:$uid]

[img:$uid]http://i124.photobucket.com/albums/p3/Lazycrockett/oil1.jpg[/img:$uid]

[img:$uid]http://i124.photobucket.com/albums/p3/Lazycrockett/oil.jpg[/img:$uid]

The Most Important Thing In Life Is Sincerity....Once You Can Fake That, You Can Fake Anything.
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Reply #55 posted 06/03/10 7:23pm

PurpleDiamond2
009

oh wow

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Reply #56 posted 06/03/10 7:41pm

PurpleDiamond2
009

i found these also sad

bawl

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Reply #57 posted 06/03/10 7:45pm

Timmy84

Sometimes there's things that made me sick of this world and the pictures of this are a reason and the government and the White House and people responsible for this ain't doing nothing to fix this. NOTHING. mad pissed cry

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Reply #58 posted 06/03/10 8:23pm

babynoz

What kills me is that scumbag BP executive having the nerve to say he wants his life back. eek

WTF?! In a perfect world he should trade places with the wildlife in those pics.

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #59 posted 06/03/10 8:48pm

paintsprayer

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Now I'm older than movies, Now I'm wiser than dreams, And I know who's there
When silhouettes fall
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