05-13-2010, 07:24 PM | #121 (permalink) |
Junkie
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So now it comes out that the well is likely letting out 70,000 barrels a day instead of 5,000 as thought..... This is equivalent to the exon-valdez incident every four days. I honestly don't think the gulf of mexico will recover within the next 20 years from this.
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05-14-2010, 06:10 AM | #122 (permalink) |
Who You Crappin?
Location: Everywhere and Nowhere
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ace, I don't understand why you're going out of your way to defend and/or downplay BP's role in this. Are you arguing for the sake of arguing? Is your 401k tied to BP stock? This doesn't seem to be a right vs. left debate, so why are you spending so much time trying to explain away what seems like a pretty simple case of negligence?
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05-14-2010, 07:20 AM | #123 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this is grand.
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yeah, there's no reason to assume bp is operating in questionable faith here, now is there? meanwhile transocean is trying to get the liability limits that are in place--you know, the cap on losses for those excellent petroleum corporate persons--applied to them. meanwhile, i hope the estimates from the environmental groups are wrong. an amount equal to that dumped by the exxon valdez every 4 days? what the fuck?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-14-2010, 09:48 AM | #124 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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more on the minerals management service and its non-regulation of oil production:
U.S. Said to Allow Drilling Without Needed Permits - NYTimes.com this just keeps getting better, doesn't it?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-14-2010, 09:53 AM | #125 (permalink) |
Still Free
Location: comfortably perched at the top of the bell curve!
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Wait until the oil hits foreign shores and they (rightly so) demand the U.S. clean it up.
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05-14-2010, 11:39 AM | #126 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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the political class of the gulf states seems to have been purchased by oil corporations.
how else to explain the call to continue drilling in the middle of the deepwater horizon fiasco? Quote:
some other information from the center for responsive politics (cited above) on oil/gas corporations and campaign contributions/wheel greasing: Oil & Gas: Long-Term Contribution Trends | OpenSecrets
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-14-2010, 12:47 PM | #127 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: New York
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Granted, problems like this fiasco need to be fixed, but let's drill for oil and do it right. What we don't need is Obama deciding he needs to add trillions to the federal debt subsidizing nonsense like methanol production. |
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05-14-2010, 01:21 PM | #128 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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well first thing is that i'm mostly in information gathering mode in this thread. it's become interesting to me assembling various fragments from different sources and putting them together in an effort to see something of what's happening around the deepwater horizon.
the regulatory system came up as problematic quite early on--in the thread via a post from mit press that referenced the author of a book on a spill that took 20-odd years to be cleaned up in california--i had little idea of how central that would become and how many problems with regulation would be revealed through this accident. if regulation we are to call it, really. that seems to me a basic, basic problem---that there's way way too much reliance on corporate reporting and way too much emphasis on cheerleading the extraction of oil at the expense of oversight and/or protection of even access to the resources not to speak of the surrounding environment. this system hasn't even caught up with the language of stakeholders so isn't even set up to take into consideration the interests of adjacent activities/industries that are directly affected by things going south on a rig (think fishing. shrimp for example. big big bidness. potentially fucked in a big big way)...you'd think that there'd be comprehensive regulation/oversight of the gulf (for example) as a commons from which lots of types of capital is extracted...this wouldn't be in the interest of any particular sector/industry though the protection of the resource/commons would be in the interest of all...allowing private sector domination of--or in the case of oil evacuation of--regulatory oversight in the interest of the narrowest imaginable bidness objective (shareholder profits) is simply not acceptable. that's what the deepwater horizon has made really really obvious. i'm not particular advocating yanking the plug on all offshore drilling...the only real conclusion i've come to so far based on the information i've been assembling and reading is that the regulatory frameworks that shape the activities already underway are seriously flawed. but everyone knows that now. so that would have to be addressed. and there are twitching moves in that direction--whether they're damage control or substantive in a bigger sense is impossible to say at this point, yes? it would also seem to me that the assumption that things on the 400-odd rigs off lousiana are correct or even safe is now a Problem as well. and this is the place at which it seems to me to make little sense to simply say "keep drilling"....the **only** interest that seems served by that are the profits of oil corporations. it's too simple to say: yank the plug. and its too simple to say: keep drilling. past that, i'm still putting together a view of what the regulatory set-up was, who the actors in this are and what happened, much like anyone else. and i've spent way way too much of my life around folk who work(ed) for oil companies to indulge rapid reactions to this. so i can only say where my thinking is heading. what's your take on the regulatory system? what should be done at that level? obviously this is not a panacea (fix the oversight, make it real, introduce accountability, stop giving hand jobs to oil interests, that kind of thing or a restatement of it) but it's the aspect of this that seems to jump out when i read this information...
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-14-2010, 02:07 PM | #129 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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I personally, of course, am not a fan of the Government regulating things. But as this incident (among many others) has shown, it's not usually a good idea to leave the fox guarding the metaphorical hen-house. My thinking on this specific situation (and others like it) is basically this. A: The only reason BP/Transocean/Halliburton are able to get away with this kind of laxity is because no effective method of sanction is in play. Part of the reason for this that, as "Corporate citizens," such entities are a very lucrative source of funds for our cash-strapped Government: the US has the second-highest corporate taxation rate in the world (.5 of one percentage point behind Japan), and this makes "don't bite the hand that pays you" a serious dynamic in all such cases. If the Gov't sanctions such a company too aggressively, that company might just pack up and leave, depriving the Government in question of access to billions of dollars in tax revenue. Additionally, the nature of Corporate Personhood means that actually -hurting- these companies (and the people within them making boneheaded decisions) is very, very difficult. B: Since the Gov't will not or cannot sanction such Corporations effectively, consumers and the market should step in. This is where I regard the de-legitimization of Corporate Personhood as essential. Using the Deepwater Horizon accident as an example, an environmental catastrophe like this -should- be opening up the principal actors (BP, TO, HB) to enormous and crippling lawsuits by millions of plaintiffs. Those lawsuits should stand, and those lawsuits should STING. But because the Gov't is dependant upon Corporate tax revenues (while at the same time being beholden on the individual-legislature level to Corporate lobbyists), neither is likely. If past behaviors are any example, the lawsuits may be allowed to proceed, but none of the principal actors (or their numbnutted employees who made these decisions) will pay a cent. Twenty years on, and Exxon -still- has not paid a red cent of their fine for the Prince William Sound spill. C: As a result, I am in favour of a multi-part approach such as the following: 1: Remove the market distortion known as Corporate Personhood. I've made my thoughts on this step clear in other threads and earlier here, so I won't elaborate. 2: Consumer's groups (J.D. Power & Associates, for example) should step up to the plate and compile the same kind of quality reports for oil/gas firms, nuke plants, etc...that they already do for automobiles, consumer goods, etc. If a firm or product passes below an acceptable threshold, that firm should be slapped with the kind of bad press that sinks gunmakers (Smith & Wesson), electronics firms (Fuji) and auto manufacturers (Chrysler). If that product causes actual -harm- (as in BP's drilling fuckup)... 3: Lawsuits. BIG ones. Lots of them. Against not only the offending firm (BP, say) but also against the persons -within- that firm responsible for the decision(s) which led to the litigable harm. If the CEO of British Petroleum had to come to the US (or send his lawyers) to defend against lawsuits from essentially the entire Gulf Coast of the US, -plus- the Mexican east coast, -plus- all the people (seasonal workers, tourists, travel-agents, seafood resteraunts, etc) who have been harmed by this...methinks he'd make sure his company was a bit more careful. It like "Fight Club" in reverse. What if, instead of figuring out if a company could afford lawsuits more than they could afford a recall, "Jack" had to have been employed as an auditor looking out for lawsuits-in-waiting because, should he -miss- one and someone get hurt, his jackass boss would have been sued down to his skivvies along with the company itself? Combine this with the power of the advocacy groups mentioned above, and the possibility exists for a very responsive and very thorough feedback/sanction system which would not only provide a marvelous incentive to deal with these kinds of problems pro-actively. If negligence of this scale was enough to sink a company and impoverish its' officers, this kind of thing would be a -lot- less common. 4: Unions. I know, I know, you never thought to hear a right-wing loony like me advocating Unions. But here is where I think they could have a serious impact and in the best possible way. Unions should step in to say to their employers "Look, if you guys get stupid, we're all out of a job. So we're here to make sure you don't get stupid. We'll help you find the stupid and get rid of it...but if you bring it back, we're walking out. All of us." And I think this is one area where Unions still have a very, VERY big voice and need for existence: keeping their employers smart. This is pro-active: if the Union decides or observes that the company is getting dumb, they can put pressure on the company from within well -before- something goes catastrophically wrong. If a Shop Steward representing even 50% of the workers on Deepwater Horizon had emailed BP and said "Look, we just finished a pretty important test out here, and my guys are getting edgy 'cause a big piece of safety equipment failed on us. This needs fixin' or we're outta here, 'cause we don't wanna get caught in the fallout when this thing goes kablooey" it would have gotten somebody's attention. Even moreso if that Shop Steward hit everybody on his/her email address-book with that same email. All of a sudden every manager and safety wonk in BP would know something was up, and every Union member would too. And just because someone doesn't join a Union doesn't mean they can't act in support of that Union when it's releasing vital safety/employment-related information. A general Union/non-Union walkout, or even the threat thereof, is the kind of thing that could make BP or someone like them sit up and pay attention, especially since it would be the kind of thing that would presage the likelihood of crippling lawsuits and bad press (as above). Just my notions and ruminations. YMMV. |
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05-14-2010, 02:42 PM | #131 (permalink) |
Alien Anthropologist
Location: Between Boredom and Nirvana
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Doesn't it seem odd that the U.S.A. can have NASA land a rover on Mars with cameras, but no one is able to cap a 22 inch hole in the Gulf of Mexico to stop the oil leak? It seems like we are more worried about star wars than our southern coast.
I find this most distressing!
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"I need compassion, understanding and chocolate." - NJB |
05-14-2010, 03:14 PM | #132 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Second, everyone knows the risks in drilling oil a mile down in open water. Now we pretend that it could have been done without risk??? Third, given the alternative of drilling on land in Alaska, much less risk to the environment, tourism, and other industries we have no open minded consideration of that, but we have Obama one week wanting to expand drilling off-shore and the next wanting to stop it completely. Can we get someone to think this stuff through? Fourth, we have Congressional show hearings before the leak is capped - what is that all about, other than politics and it is shameful in my view. Fifth, using an example - if company A has a policy for workers to wear a certain type of shoe, and a worker comes to work in an unsafe shoe and has a fatal slip and fall accident due to the shoe - sure we can blame the company for not having a person check each employees shoes every time they enter the work site. But at some point we have to understand that with "systems", real people are involved and a company no matter how well intentioned may encounter work-place accidents due to human error and judgment. The issue is not to first demonize the company, but to learn and apply lessons learned. There are other issue that also have my panties in a bunch, in summary I am tired of political show boating and I am tired of people just regurgitating what they hear in the media. Other than that, I am, as usual, always looking for a good debate or argument - it is my nature. Feel free to keep that in mind.
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"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." Last edited by aceventura3; 05-14-2010 at 03:19 PM.. |
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05-14-2010, 03:27 PM | #133 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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I'm wondering who has technology to deal with something like this. The US Military does not. Maybe NASA has something to deal with this but that is unlikely. There are very few machines capable of operating at that depth let alone actually repair a leak. |
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05-14-2010, 03:35 PM | #134 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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---------- Post added at 11:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:28 PM ---------- Quote:
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"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." |
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05-14-2010, 04:33 PM | #135 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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ace, what you fail to take into account is the whole reality of the regulatory set-up. it is absurd under that arrangement to expect the federal government to break out of the reliance on industry self-reporting "from day one"---it's not how reality works in this area. this is a main reason i started posting so much about the regulatory system---you know how it actually worked, not how you'd prefer to pretend to yourself it worked so you can find some way to pretend to yourself that the bush people would somehow have been more manly or some shit about this (like they were with katrina...but that's another matter).
so reality was organized so that bp was the source of information about the leak. and if you read the article i posted this earlier about the estimates concerning the amounts that are leaking, bp---which AGAIN is the informational center of this mess---obstructed efforts to get something like an accurate assessment. why would they do that? pubic relations, obviously. it's pretty clear that bp was hoping they could downplay the magnitude of the problem in the hopes that they could get it under control quickly. it didn't work. and it's disengenuous to pretend that reality was organized otherwise. its good to actually read stuff, i think. you learn things. your second point above is little more than nationalist wanking. fact is that the technologies were not in place to deal with this kind of mess because and only because the regulatory arrangement didn't require it and the exclusive emphasis on profits precluded its development according to "business reasons"---what this sort of thing does is dismantle the pollyanna worldview of neoliberals who like to pretend the private sector will take care of everything...such obvious nonsense. but i do find your snippy accusations about the state to be funny, given how inefficient and ineffective your metaphysics usually require that the state be.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 05-14-2010 at 04:37 PM.. |
05-14-2010, 08:28 PM | #136 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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05-15-2010, 04:42 AM | #137 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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dunedan: interesting idea. what you outline sounds to me like a stakeholder association almost, a forum in which organizational expressions of the various groups/interests that would be impacted upon by drilling in the gulf would come to have some impact on drilling in the gulf and the policy orientations that shape it. presumably it would be an intermediate body that had effective power to force shareholder action. that's what a stakeholder forum would sooner or later have to do: in it's more interesting (to my mind) variants, the notion of stakeholder undercuts the primacy of ownership. it de facto forces resources out into the commons and makes claims concerning the management based on the way multiple interests/activities/communities interact with the same "resource context"---so for example, for bp the gulf of mexico is a site for the extraction of oil and a potential management problem should things go wrong---their leasing of a particular spot for drilling from the state (presumably) would from bp's viewpoint also be a redefinition of that space within the gulf as a resource/profit extraction space--which would tend to exclude other meanings, other types of usage, so other stakes in the same environment. which is lunacy. but without that private-property based lunacy, the present fiasco in the gulf would never have happened, i don't think. so i think this a step in a good direction.
i'm not sure i see the link to corporate personhood as directly as you do, but i will say that the notion of corporate personhood is particularly ...um...pungent as an allegory for one of the central problems that the private ownership model sets up, which is that the interests of wider communities are subordinated to the interests of capital. the fiction of corporate personhood simply makes the mechanism for this subordination explicit: a corporate entity engages in contractual relations as a corporation so is de facto acting as an individual, so why not give that individual rights, make it over into the legal fiction that is a person? in that way types of claims are flattened---human beings have no more rights than do corporate abstractions---so conflicts come to a matter of resources. and people almost always loose. it's capitalism in action. the exception is some massive fuck-up that shakes the passive consent that folk are conditioned (and i use this word knowing what it implies) to give away to this system which is predicated on their subordination to phantoms and fictions....it's stunning to think the magnitude of incident that seems required to jolt people from their political slumbers, but there we are. legal remedies---lawsuits and lots of em---seem a cumbersome way to substitute for the subordination of shareholders to stakeholders really. and the basic inequality that is set up through the superficial equalization of persons and corporations reappears in it. what i am seeing---through all the pr---is the collapse of a type of consent behind the existing arrangement as it pertains to oil extraction, particularly in the form that the right has for some time been trying to use for its own political benefit---as an aspect of a general "concern about the environment is for wimps" viewpoint that plays somehow as reasonable in some quarters--even as i know the way this position is marketed i can't say i understand it's appeal at all. but anyway, i see such traction as that stuff ever got dissolving at speed. but mostly i see a disaster to the ecosystems of and around the gulf of titanic proportions and it's kinda difficult to imagine what chain of responses in the shorter term could do anything about it. hopefully something. so far nothing's worked. and it's starting to hit land: Oil spill from Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion begins to reach land | Environment | guardian.co.uk
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-15-2010, 12:15 PM | #138 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Companies have an obligation to have safety policies and procedures. If they don't they should be forced out of business. Employees have an obligation to follow company safety policies and procedures. If they don't they should be fired. Companies have an obligation to ensure employees follow safety policies and procedures. If they don;t they should be forced out of business. Government has an obligation to oversee and regulate safety policies and procedures based on "best practices" within each industry holding all accountable to those standards. Our judicial system has an obligation to administer justice based on the above. How does your view differ from mine? Some liberals want to punish the entire industry for the actions of one company, I do not see that as justice. However, to the degree that there are costs to society that can not be allocated to one company those costs should be dispersed to the industry through taxation. Obama's notion of increasing taxes on all companies because of BP's failure is wrong in my view. If BP truely failed they should incur the burden and be put out of business if need be - so in that regard, yes, I want government to come in.
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05-15-2010, 10:20 PM | #140 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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05-16-2010, 05:46 AM | #141 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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the points you lay out ace are all very nice & in some alternate fantasy capitalist universe they'd be adhered to (the initial points about obligations of various organizational layers)..but all you've really done here is restated the "bad apple" explanation for why things go wrong with capitalism. in your fantasy capitalism the system is perfect but people let it down. in your fantasy capitalism people are entirely dominated by capital, but that's cool with you, good even because capital does not let you down the way imperfect humans do. capitalism is a kind of god-term.
particularly given the realities of the regulatory arrangement in this situation. which you don't seem to have bothered researching even though there's alot of material you could have read posted to this thread. the regulatory arrangement was set up around assumptions exactly like yours, ace. that bidness knows better than regulators, that capitalism is a perfectly rational system, that profit uber alles works as an orientation for the greatest good for the greatest number and that profit taking and environmental "stewardship" aren't mutually exclusive. this in the face of instance after instance after instance in reality that show none of these metaphysical assumptions obtain in the actually existing world (strip mining anyone? for a particularly egregious example)... in reality, ace, the regulatory arrangement was such that it is amazing that something like the deepwater horizon hadn't happened before. the regulatory arrangement was such that it more or less guaranteed something like this would happen again. profit-taking leads to cutting corners particularly when you dont take seriously the regulations that enforce environmental considerations. there's abundant information to back this up in the thread, and even more out there in the world of information. i assume that when you write that statement about "some liberals" wanting to "punish an entire industry" what you really mean is that not everyone buys your bad apple theory nonsense. in that you are correct. but it's not about punishing an industry: its about recognizing the regulatory problem that petroleum corporations have created around themselves through their political and lobbying activities that resulted in a set of rules that made this disaster in the gulf of mexico possible.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-16-2010, 06:14 AM | #142 (permalink) | |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Quote:
The Gulf Oil Spill: Conceivable and Precedented | Jamie Friedland's Blog
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
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05-16-2010, 08:39 AM | #143 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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it's interesting in a cynical awful kinda way that bp would resist efforts to work out how much oil is in the water. the response is basically "why measure? we're trying to fix this" while of course it's not being fixed and bp as every interest in any and all attempts to minimize the public image of the damage that's happening. so this is a kind of pyhrric brand triage it seems to me. meanwhile, there's no agreement about what these plumes are or are doing: bp wants to spin them as evidence that the dispersants are doing something, while the scientists are concerned about the oil hoovering oxygen and turning the gulf of mexico into an underwater wasteland. it's like the scientific community and bp aren't talking about the same thing at all.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-16-2010, 09:06 AM | #144 (permalink) |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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Not without any risk no, most things have a risk factor, hell even crossing the street, but had they had a relief well drilled before this happened, if relief wells were mandatory, rather than starting it after it's already spewing oil, the leak wouldn't have been as bad, but them starting the relief well after this one already blew, and that relief well taking 70-90 days to drill doesn't really help anything.
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05-16-2010, 12:05 PM | #145 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this paragraph makes the problem with the use of dispersants more clearly than in the ny times piece above:
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ladies and gentlemen i believe that we are entering the space of a genuine clusterfuck here. that would be my interpretation. yes it would.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-16-2010, 01:30 PM | #146 (permalink) |
follower of the child's crusade?
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This whole thing is pretty bad
I understand the world economy needs oil, that as long as capitalist conditions exist there is no possibility really to move away from oil until it is too sparse and expensive to get... but you have to question why it is the case that BP is given a license to drill a mile under the sea when the only effective (or known to be effective) fix to a problem takes 2 to 3 months to implement. This is the problem of an international structure where the demands or finance and capital take precedence over any social, environmental, or human need. BP dont deserve ALL the stick they are getting, but they are not helping themselves by trying to spin things and hide the real extent. The worst case scenario I have heard is 7000 barrels a day, say going on for 100 days... Is it the end of the world? No. Its the end of the US fishing industy on one side of the coast probably, the destruction of whole eco systems. If you drive your car recklessly when drunk and go out of control and hit somebody, you probably would go to jail. If endemic greed causes you to scimp on the maintenance of vital safety equipment, not invest the time and effort in strong health and safety procedures, and there is an accident that kills 11 people and pollutes half an ocean and costs billions of dollars and 1000's of local jobs... somebody should go to jail for that.
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05-17-2010, 08:09 AM | #148 (permalink) | |||||||
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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To be clear - in my view, people control capital. Quote:
Here we go again. You can't resist this kind of stuff can you? So, you want people to believe that I have not done research but you have, correct? I can be honest and say, I have done some research but there is still much I don't know and that I don't understand - for me this is a process, including, doing research, asking questions, doing more research, presenting my thoughts, doing more research and responding to questions and challenges. I am to assume that you come to the table having done all the research there is to do, or that you have all the answers, that you are perfect, that you sit in judgment of all others, that you are superior to me and the rest of us. Please, please, give it a rest - it is not working for ya! ---------- Post added at 04:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:55 PM ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 04:09 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:03 PM ---------- Quote:
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"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." |
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05-17-2010, 09:45 AM | #149 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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you know, ace, i really don't care what you think of how i write. i could be much more blunt about your specious reasoning and frequently bogus information, but i guarantee you that you wouldn't like it.
but it's nice that you think people control capital. shame it doesn't really square with anything you say. meanwhile, out in the world of stuff that matters.... Quote:
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-18-2010, 05:28 AM | #150 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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when folk talk about "punishing an entire industry" and they're conservatives, you can bet they're mean: what's gonna happen with the drilling off alaska? given that meme was central to the sarah-palin wing of the concern-about-the-environment-is-for-persecuting-elitists school. well, turns out that the massive oil spill in the gulf is forcing shell to say a whole lot of things about how very safe they'll be when they start drilling. if they do.
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that the plug has not been yanked on this as a matter of prudence is astonishing to me. that there's ***any*** possibility of proceeding with new drilling off the coast of the united states until a different regulatory arrangement is put into place--or better yet at all--is astonshing.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-18-2010, 05:43 PM | #151 (permalink) |
Crazy
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And what I find even more astonishing is that even in the midst of the commotion we still don't have any real idea of what the extent of this calamity actually is. Right now there is serious reason to believe that the well is gushing far far more than 5,000 barrels a day and nobody seems to be interested in actually quantifying this. BP seems just fine using a bunch of coagulants to keep things below the surface so to speak. So much for getting even a trace of accountability for their blunder.
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05-19-2010, 06:30 AM | #152 (permalink) | |
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Location: essex ma
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Measuring or even getting a real sense of the scale of the disaster is not a priority for any of the corporate interests involved any more than it is for any of the "regulatory" agencies. nor is it a priority for the obama administration. everyone is like a rat from a sinking ship on this one now. meanwhile the oil appears to have reached the gulf currents and its getting pulled a very considerable distance away from the origin.
and meanwhile politico-types are saying that a basic rethink of this off-shore drilling business is obviously in order while at the same time the head of interior is trying to prevent that rethink for affecting expansion of drilling. it's lunacy. but read on: Quote:
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-19-2010, 12:55 PM | #153 (permalink) | |
Eat your vegetables
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Location: Arabidopsis-ville
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I'm a bit shocked that it took this long for people to realize tourism is suffering:
Quote:
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"Sometimes I have to remember that things are brought to me for a reason, either for my own lessons or for the benefit of others." Cynthetiq "violence is no more or less real than non-violence." roachboy |
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05-19-2010, 10:30 PM | #154 (permalink) |
Insane
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BP Fails Booming School 101 Gulf Oil Spill
YouTube - BP Fails Booming School 101 Gulf Oil Spill (MIRROR)
They have no idea about how to contain the oil. Or the problem is too big for them. Also see: Giant Plumes of Oil Found Under Gulf of Mexico - NYTimes.com Disaster unfolds slowly in the Gulf of Mexico - The Big Picture Blog Archive Gas Leak 3000 Times Worse Than Oil
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Blog One day there will be so many houses, that people will be bored and will go live in tents. "Why are you living in tents ? Are there not enough houses ?" "Yes there are, but we play this Economy game" Last edited by pai mei; 05-19-2010 at 10:33 PM.. |
05-20-2010, 04:52 AM | #155 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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more on the controversy over bp and noaa's attempts to obstruct something like accurate assessments of what's happening.
you really have to wonder what any of these institutions hope to gain by this sort of action. Quote:
though perhaps bp/noaa/mms are looking more at the leak itself and not so much at what it's doing...the separation is lunacy in this context however. it does follow from a very basic capitalist rationality though---abstraction, separation---pathways to an illusion of rational mastery. the illusoriness is sometimes more apparent than others...
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-21-2010, 10:24 AM | #156 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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as if there was some prize at stake for generating maximum ambivalence, if you follow this link:
GlobalWarming.House.Gov | Oil Spill in the Gulf LiveCam alternate link: http://www.bp.com/liveassets/bp_inte...ov_stream.html and watch a live feed (sometimes) of the oil spilling from the deepwater horizon wreckage into the gulf. as you'll see if you go to the first page, rep ed markey is pretty proud of having forced bp to make this stream public. i assume the motive was to maintain public pressure by enabling folk to click onto the spill. but it's also a really bizarre choice, and i think it poses some interesting problems, this stream. like: what are we looking at? is *this* the reality of the spill? is the spill the continuing flow of oil, so is it a matter of origin? or is it a matter of extent? if it's both, why is the feed from the origin separated from all other data? when i've been able to get on, i've spent much of the time sitting while i'm supposed to be working, head in the palms of my hands trying not to say the phrase "what the fuck?" too loud because i'm at work. but seriously....what other response is there? what do you make of this?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-22-2010, 03:00 PM | #158 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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well, maybe an explanation for the wholesale lack of preparation for such a contingency is in part that the ms and epa didn't bother to press bp about it, but mostly because taking envrionmental considerations seriously just isn't how bp rolls.
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the **only** good thing that's been coming of this is a general exposure of the absurdity of the existing regulatory set-up and the actions that set-up has enabled, which allow oil corporations and the royalty gathering segments of the federal government to be complicit in what seems to be a marginalization (at the least) of environmental concerns---and bp in particular, which seems to have found it cost-effective to deal with these concerns by waiting until the shit hit the fan and paying the fines. obviously this cannot go on as it has. it's one of those corrupt arrangements between state and corporations that could have continued endlessly so long as it was invisible. but now it's not any more. it's hard to imagine a way in which any change would enable anyone to say that this spill is therefore somehow "worth it."
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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05-24-2010, 08:18 AM | #159 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this is becoming a rather grim task i've undertaken for myself.
today's unfortunate development: BP admits Deepwater rescue is capturing less oil | Environment | guardian.co.uk and this provides daily updates of the fiasco, including maps that outline the extent of the spill and also helpfully show just how much of that extent is already caught in gulf loop currents. Deepwater Horizon Response the administration threatened today to pull bp off the efforts to stop the leak while at the same time saying that it's only the oil industry that can stop the leak. so there is no governmental white knight to ride in to save us. there are only fucking capitalists, the same people whose laxity with respect to planning and stewardship and those other aspects of plundering natural resources that are not cost-effective to think a whole lot about. you know, the people who caused this disaster in the first place.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-24-2010, 11:41 AM | #160 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this is an interesting side-bar: the efforts bp continues to go to in order to manage independent press access to the beaches off louisiana which are affected by the oil spill, with the full, um, co-operation of local "law enforcement" people:
?It?s BP?s Oil? | Mother Jones just in case you may be under the mistaken impression that information about this situation is not being managed. o yeah--if you go into the media area from the "official" site linked above, you'll also get a nice glimpse of how infotainment is being streamed, who's doing it, for what ends and that sort of thing. it's good, if not happy-making, to know that in **any** situation of any size flows of information without prior shaping are now seen as being a Problem in this o-so-democratic united of states. yeah.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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101, apocalypse, booming, fails, fire, front, gulf, katrina, louisiana, obama, oil, rig, row, school, seats, spill, time |
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