05-27-2010, 03:57 PM | #241 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: My House
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Thank you, ring, I'm sure I will need a lot more before this is all over. I find it really difficult to even read this thread, I'm no ostrich, but I really wish I could just bury my head in the sand and pretend this never even happened, I'm sure I'm not the only one who feels this way, it's a damn shame it is.
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you can tell them all you want but it won't matter until they think it does p.s. I contradict my contradictions, with or without intention, sometimes. |
05-27-2010, 04:14 PM | #242 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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idyllic: alot of my empathy and sadness---more than that---over this follows from the fact that when i look out my window i see a salt marsh. i am endless fascinated by it, by this type of environment, and i find it unbelievable and entirely unacceptable that this catastrophe has happened, that it continues, that so little has been done to protect the wetlands, so little co-ordination so little concern for any co-ordinated anything-----except on the part of bp's media crisis team. i'm also disgusted with the federal and state governments, but more shocked by the regulatory set-up that's been in place, which made something like this inevitable, from accident to inability to deal with it---even as this particular case remains an accident. so yeah, i feel this even as i live in new england. these places that are being destroyed are special. it's beyond tragic because its entirely unnecessary.
================ ace, i've made my positions clear. what you call a "tizzy" is nothing more than exasperation at the fact i find myself bothering to engage with someone who simply refuses to do the work required to be taken seriously. it bothers me that against my better judgment i waste my time interacting with you. as for your pissy ridiculous "questions"....i've already answered them. to summarize: i have made it clear what the directions are that the research has taken in this thread. i have tried to integrate these directions of research through interpretations that in some details have changed as the information i have at hand changes. but the overall line has been clear. the condition of possibility for this accident was the regulatory regime itself. i've posted alot of information about how that regime operated. i've posted information about minerals management. i posted a copy of the lease for the fucking site the deepwater horizon was on that allow anyone who looks, including you if you bothered, to see exactly what bp was exempted from providing. there's plenty of information--more than enough----to render you're claims in defense of bp meaningless. moreover, there's material in this thread about bp's history of cutting corners on safety and environmental considerations in the gulf in particular. and there's ALOT of information about bp not following their own procedures in this particular situation. there's ALOT of information about negligence. and it's all public record. if you bothered to read, you'd see it. that an accident reflects long-term problems and is ringed round with general and specific problems on bp's part, on halliburtons part and transocean's part does **not** mean that what happened wasn't an accident. no-one outside of the straw-man machine you seem to have in your brain has said anything other than that. where the problems of regulatory scheme and bp converge for real is in the 37 days that's passed since the accident. what's happened follows in a straight line from what conditioned or enabled it. you're stuck on some idiotic claim that bp "had a plan"---that idiotic claim has been demolished over and over by me, by jazz, by jay, by others. there was no plan functionally to deal with problems that could arise with deepwater drilling like this in significant measure because mms did not require bp to generate the scenarios that would have been the basis for developing the technologies and contingency plans that should, obviously, have been in place. period. there is nothing you can say that changes this. the documentation is in the thread. my politics are clear. i make no secret of them. i don't have anything else to say.
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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; 05-27-2010 at 04:18 PM.. |
05-27-2010, 05:00 PM | #244 (permalink) | |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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Comparing it to having a fire station next door is well to use your own term, complete idiocy. Last edited by silent_jay; 05-27-2010 at 05:49 PM.. |
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05-27-2010, 05:21 PM | #245 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: My House
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rb, av, I'm beginning to believe your both beating the same dead horse, just opposite ends, and neither one wants to admit they got the ass, funny thing, it's a two-assed horse, no brain in site regarding bp and this travesty to the environment or it's people, with the government bringing up a sloppy second rear.
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you can tell them all you want but it won't matter until they think it does p.s. I contradict my contradictions, with or without intention, sometimes. |
05-27-2010, 06:31 PM | #246 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i think i have a pretty good bead on how this disaster was possible.
and to tell the truth, alot of it is at the feet of the free marketeers, the neo-liberal set who put regulation in a position of introducing distortions into the otherwise fabulously efficient world dominated by the private sector and profit motives...all a crock of shit really...particularly when the "resource" or "raw material" of a capitalist production process involves myriad stakeholders--and this because the myopic logic of capitalism, with its abstractions and separations, makes it almost impossible for any given firm or sector to deal rationally with the commons absent some regulatory apparatus---which has to be proactive and aggressive as over against the conservative preference of reactive and passive. i lay alot of the blame for the general conditions that enabled this disaster on the right's doorstep, from their contempt for environmental issues (drill baby drill) to their surreal, ridiculous economic ideology (see above) to the upside-down conception of regulation which is of a piece with it. and i am beyond sick of conservative obsessing on news cycles as if dominating the next cycle is all that matters and the constant tweaking of the nitwit talking point of the moment around dominating the next news cycle---whence the pathetic, stupid calls for the federal government to swoop in and save everyone even though the entire regulatory apparatus puts the government in the position of having to wait until oil corporations take the initiative---which they never have to do if those corporations provide tickets to peach bowls and access to parties and promises of lucrative jobs in the future to the hopelessly corrupt and ineffectual people who occupy positions within the regulatory system, who are put there by conservatives who see regulation as ineffectual and corrupt anyway...so this is what you get when things go south. so dont give me this nonsense that ace and i have anything to do with each other. people who think the way he does are responsible for the general conditions that enabled this fiasco in the first place--and now they have the gall to act all outraged because stuff the logic of the system **THEY SET UP** precludes from happening what they're calling for. it'd be hypocritical were most of these people not so fucking stupid. meanwhile marshes are killed off and ecosystems wiped out and its all boo hoo....which is fine so long as the folk whose politics are responsible for the worst aspects of this disaster dont use the boo hoo to evade the fact of the matter, which is that its **your** way of seeing things that set this up and what you're seeing is the consequence of it, **your** way of seeing things...it's expression, it's result, what it leads to, what it is.
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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; 05-27-2010 at 06:36 PM.. |
05-27-2010, 08:39 PM | #248 (permalink) | |
Psycho
Location: My House
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Quote:
So the "accident" is our own fault, nice.... and our whining is useless because we voted in the people who are the system we cry about, nice.... why didn't you just say so to begin with, I am sure none of us realized this, as blinded by our self centered, corrupt, capitalism we must be, hummm? You know, I was doing well I thought, in understanding how you appeared to feel, but now I wonder if your whole content wasn’t more of a "I told you so". thumbing your nose at our government. It is true, I am desperately angry at what I feel is a bunch of bureaucracy and plan old bs too, but I sure as hell don’t want to alter the free market of this nation just to “attempt” to insure the prevention of disasters like this, for in truth, to lose our way of democracy and laissez faire, to me, that would be the greatest travesty of all. And I am not stupid to believe in my government or the people I elect into it, I would be stupid if I stopped believing in the system that has created my nation, that doesn’t change that they have really let me down here, but we will rally. This “accident” is another painful learning experience, but from it we will grow, together, stronger, because it is what we do in this country, we may fight like siblings, but we all still love this country, at least I do, and I still believe in the American people and the American way of life. Your right, we created it, damn, I never thought I would have to defend an oil spill in the process of defending my country, how did this go here, how can one blame an entire country of people who fundamentally believe in basic freedoms for every individual on earth, and suggest that that freedom alone is our own true corrupter? I must be confused, I'm sure I must be confused, right?
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you can tell them all you want but it won't matter until they think it does p.s. I contradict my contradictions, with or without intention, sometimes. |
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05-28-2010, 03:37 AM | #249 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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you miss my point i think.
i am tremendously bothered by the way in which the federal government and oil corporations came to interact with each other across the regulatory system. the more i find out about that system the more appalling i find it to be. like i've said, this is the central thing i've found out about for myself in across this thread and it is the main factor that's shaped the situation in general---it is the condition of possibility for some kind of disaster for reasons i've already spelled out---and the regulatory regime has shaped the responses to the disaster from the start. people on the right are blaming the federal government for being trapped in the information flows that were set up in law through this system. and that system is a neoliberal product for the most part, a shining brilliant example of just how bad an idea it is to assume that the private sector knows and the state/regulation introduces distortion, just how bad an idea it is to allow the private sector and profit motives to determine uses within the commons, just how bad an idea conservative economic ideology is. it's lunacy that deepwater drilling was allowed without a detailed disaster plan and the technologies required to implement it in an ecosystem as valuable (in every sense) as the gulf of mexico. it is lunacy. but it happened. blame minerals management. blame the epa. but mostly blame bp. and for bp blame our collective addiction to oil. in that respect no-one is terribly righteous since petroleum and its derivatives are everywhere. the paradox in that is that given the regulatory apparatus, you can't say we were let down. the apparatus ran as it was set up to run. it was legal for minerals management to exempt bp from planning for a disaster. it was legal to exempt bp from the drain on profits that designing the required technologies. it was legal because the regulatory system put oil corporation profits first. and the oil industry paid ALOT of money to get things set up that way. they bought ALOT of political influence. the oil industry is heavily knit into the economies in louisiana in particular, but along the whole coastal region. they're a big player. so long as the money was rolling in people didnt care so much, did they? it happens everywhere. here's no exception, where i live. it just turns out that this area doesn't have some 4 thousand oil rigs offshore. an industry goes long enough without a major meltdown and has a political structure bought and paid for and a population ok with whatever to a point so long as they get paid and a regulatory apparatus that's in the interests of the corporations and a kind of routinized corruption in the oversight agencies and maybe it makes sense somehow to start seeing environmental protection as an unnecessary drain on profits or an annoyance so you get mms to exempt you because hell what could happen? what could happen? its not good. none of this is good. but because of the way the game was set up, you aren't in a position to say you are being let down by the way the leak itself has been handled. on the other hand, and this is different and i've not talked about this because i stupidly thought that clean-up efforts were real and happening in reality---but they're not in the main----this lack of action on cleaning up the spill itself, particularly given its magnitude is unbelievable. tragic. stupid. unnecessary. **that** seems to me a breakdown at **every** level of government in the co-ordination of resources and putting technologies and people into place to protect the coast, protect ecosystems to the greatest possible extent. and that i have no explanation for. patriotic stuff doesn't work for me, btw. never has, never will. i don't see this in those terms at all. i see this as following from routine venal corruption that leans on a petroleum-based model of capitalism that is not sustainable. i think everyone knows its now sustainable but avoids making any hard choices because the money flows, or did, and things seem to operate, or did, and when things get difficult you can always run away into flag waving and abstract statements about freedom and pretend that capitalism isn't at the center of all things american. it's the rigid commitment to the neoliberal version of capitalism that's speeding the plow of fading empire. but that's another story. ======= btw it appears that there are problems with the pressures in the well...it's apparently not clear that the mud is all the way down because oil and other stuff is leaking into it. so it was suspended overnight. these leaks were called yesterday afternoon by some of the folk who have been following this on the oil drum...which for understanding better than tv will get you to what you're looking at with the live feeds, so what's happening and what's at stake in the process at its various stages, it's a good resource. on the present state of things: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environmen...kill-oil-spill again, putting aside thinking about how this was possible and the many problems that have surfaced since, we should all hope this procedure works because if it doesn't we are fucked. the gulf of mexico is already seriously affected, but this could be nothing if the top kill doesn't work. this could go on until august. august. unbelievable. so if you pray this is a time to do it. the next 48 hours.
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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; 05-28-2010 at 03:47 AM.. |
05-28-2010, 07:18 AM | #250 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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there are apparently some quite considerable problems with this top kill operation.
but assessing the situation is a problem because it's now obvious that bp has a...um....transparency issue let's say. this thread on the oil drum is about the most current i've seen: The Oil Drum | Deepwater Oil Spill - Top Kill Update, Restarting the Mud, and Comment Thread and is interesting consistently, even as for a layman (and i am one) separating wheat from chaff when everyone is writing in that particular mode of self-assurance that engineers seem to drop into when they're discussing engineering problems. the upside is that there's at least some oil engineers posting. you know, people who've actually worked on rigs and understand the set-up. there's also a diagram of the blow-out preventer thing that shows where the live feed is originating. a link to the bp feed, for convenience: Live video link from the ROV monitoring the damaged riser
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-28-2010, 08:02 AM | #251 (permalink) | ||||||
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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---------- Post added at 03:56 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:38 PM ---------- Quote:
Your thoughts on regulation are not clear. Are you suggesting that a different regulatory structure is required, if so what? Are you suggesting inadequate regulation, if so what type of regulation eliminates the possibility of a major oil spill? There are other questions, but I doubt you will respond. In my view what you present would do nothing to prevent or minimize the next disaster, because I don't think you understand the root cause of this one. Quote:
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---------- Post added at 04:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:56 PM ---------- If you think there is no substance in what I present, the answer is simple - ignore what I write. I admit that I should be better and not respond to silliness with silliness, but I am flawed.
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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; 05-28-2010 at 07:58 AM.. |
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05-28-2010, 08:27 AM | #252 (permalink) | |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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05-28-2010, 08:36 AM | #253 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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ace...all this is about is your childish attempt to force onto me and onto a non-cooperative reality your ridiculous way of framing the questions you ask and/or the issues you pretend to raise.
i've already answered the "point" you "make" about planning multiple times above. the regulatory arrangement that frames drilling in the ocean needs to fundamentally change. the old conservative-style joke of an arrangement has been shown inadequate in the most basic ways. there may well have been a file on someone's desk at bp with the title THE PLAN on it, but it was obviously not adapted to deepwater conditions. this has been amply demonstrated through events, documents and testimony, so there's no point in continuing to humor you as if your "point" is serious. it isn't. find something else to obsess about. would a different regulatory regime prevent accidents? no. but they'd go a whole lot further than this one has in assuring that if there is an accident that there is a plan fitted to the situation. we are 37 days in already, ace. there was functionally speaking no plan to deal with an accident on the deepwater horizon. ========= meanwhile back in the world of consequence, it appears that something bad happened this morning. maybe. it's hard to know with all the conflicting information, much of which seems geared around stumbling through the day without the story falling apart so that americans can go to sleep on reality for a few days. frame by frame here: pas au-delà intepretive questions on the oil drum. there's lots and lots of conflicting information flying around. it's a bit of a farce.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-28-2010, 08:51 AM | #255 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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a clip of the explosion. it's really hard to say what's going on in it. except that something blew up. one narrative is that this was the mud getting blown back because something let go in the concrete casing---another is that this was a junk shot. so much dis/conflicting information. all that's sure is the claims the uscg are making about the oil having stopped are false. even bp is saying as much, and they're hardly a model of transparency.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-28-2010, 09:08 AM | #256 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Ah, the forces of nature mixed with the meddling of humans....
__________________
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 |
05-28-2010, 09:19 AM | #257 (permalink) |
Still Free
Location: comfortably perched at the top of the bell curve!
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Edit: Went to your link and saw the frame by frame. Looks like something bad happened. So, things really can get worse...
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Gives a man a halo, does mead. "Here lies The_Jazz: Killed by an ambitious, sparkly, pink butterfly." Last edited by Cimarron29414; 05-28-2010 at 09:25 AM.. |
05-28-2010, 09:30 AM | #258 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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yeah, but it's a bit maddening to see that as a clip, then again frame by frame, to read mutually exclusive interpretations on the oil drum (explosion? junk shot?) and see nothing about anything in the press-machinery. this even though the stream is an aspect of alot of press coverage.
i'm left thinking deep things like: "um....what was that?" like i keep saying, though, we should all hope this works. the alternatives are really bad.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-28-2010, 09:39 AM | #259 (permalink) |
Still Free
Location: comfortably perched at the top of the bell curve!
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Yeah, terms like "The Second Dead Sea" are starting to fill my head. Chilling to the bone.
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Gives a man a halo, does mead. "Here lies The_Jazz: Killed by an ambitious, sparkly, pink butterfly." |
05-28-2010, 10:07 AM | #260 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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22-mile oil plume under Gulf nears rich waters | New Orleans News, Local News, Breaking News, Weather | wwltv.com | Gulf Oil Spill
3 million feet of boom in Gulf, but does it help? | New Orleans News, Local News, Breaking News, Weather | wwltv.com | Gulf Oil Spill
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-28-2010, 10:14 AM | #261 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
Or, was your comment above just a throw-away-statement not to be take seriously?
__________________
"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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05-28-2010, 10:23 AM | #263 (permalink) |
Husband of Seamaiden
Location: Nova Scotia
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I was going to post this in the "post a random image" thread, but it just seemed more appropriate here:
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I am a brother to dragons, and a companion to owls. - Job 30:29 1123, 6536, 5321 Last edited by Lucifer; 06-10-2010 at 08:07 AM.. |
05-28-2010, 10:32 AM | #265 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Apparently we'll know by Monday whether the mud-pumped junkshot worked.
__________________
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 |
05-28-2010, 10:48 AM | #266 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Then give me the post number, so I can read it.
What is the problem with elaborating on the points you make, answering questions, clarifying statements, I in particular, find amazing? For someone who is serious and dismissive of others for a lack of seriousness, should we expect more from you? Everyone makes statements blowing off steam etc, but that is not what you are doing is it? You have made attacks and charges against me as an individual, at this point I won't relent until you take them back, give up, or justify your position relative to mine.
__________________
"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." |
05-28-2010, 11:00 AM | #267 (permalink) | |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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Seems funny though, someone complaining about being 'attacked repeatedly', yet they themselves have admitted to 'posting certain things for the entertainment value', what's the word for someone who does that again? Last edited by silent_jay; 05-28-2010 at 11:04 AM.. |
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05-28-2010, 11:14 AM | #268 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i'm not sure if this is the same plume that was referenced above (260) or yet another one...but more deepwater oil, in apparently very large amounts:
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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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05-28-2010, 11:49 AM | #269 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
I am guilty of using humor, am I the only one? Perhaps, you should report me.
__________________
"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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05-28-2010, 11:57 AM | #270 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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folk on the oil drum over the last half hour have been arguing that the explosion this morning wasn't an explosion at all, but rather the remote operating vehicle moving away from the riser, with the debris being kicked up by the thrusters.
it's really hard to say, isn't it? a little lesson in the opacity of surfaces maybe, the non-transparency of images, that they may "put you there" but they are not necessarily any good at letting you know where "there" is or what's happening....
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-28-2010, 12:00 PM | #271 (permalink) | |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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Quote:
As for reporting you, I could care less, I'm not the one pissing and moaning in multiple threads about how I was attacked, shall we draw you a picture of how the 'report post' button works? I'm only asking because it seems to be another concept you are unable to grasp, or you just like to complain for complainings sake as I've stated before. Last edited by silent_jay; 05-28-2010 at 12:03 PM.. |
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05-28-2010, 12:02 PM | #272 (permalink) |
Still Free
Location: comfortably perched at the top of the bell curve!
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I guess I can see that. Scale, distance, and velocity are completely distorted in the BP liveasset video. I've been watching it all day. The only thing I've learned is that it is possible to become a bit seasick simply from watching an underwater sub video.
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Gives a man a halo, does mead. "Here lies The_Jazz: Killed by an ambitious, sparkly, pink butterfly." |
05-28-2010, 01:11 PM | #274 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this isn't good.
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in part because when they release pressure on the well all the mud that's been injected gets blown back out again, so it's back to square one. it's possible that something has happened on the riser area as well, but i'm not going to pretend that my speculations concerning what the bp feed is showing are accurate in any way. nor am i going to try to sort through the various interpretations from the oil drum people about it. what's emerging as a consensus there, and in a couple other places, is that the best and safest bet at this point is probably the relief wells. but that's really really not good. really not good at all. the feed link again: Live video link from the ROV monitoring the damaged riser the oil drum thread that's about today's installment of the top kill show: The Oil Drum | Deepwater Oil Spill - Top Kill Update, Restarting the Mud, and Comment Thread yikes. this is grim business and i think sometimes the scale of it gets to me. i am constituted as a meat-space person to try to understand things that bother me once avoidance, which is always my first instinct, doesn't work. and it rarely works. though i keep trying it out for short periods of time. anyway, this is reaching a point of being a grind for me. i think i'm taking the evening off. maybe the morning too. no more feed watching for a bit.
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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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05-28-2010, 01:26 PM | #275 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
Why do you find it o.k. for you to do what you are doing but wrong if someone else does it?
__________________
"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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05-28-2010, 02:09 PM | #277 (permalink) |
Her Jay
Location: Ontario for now....
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What am I doing ace? You going to say I'm 'attacking' you? Show me this percieved attack, should be good for a chuckle. This is pointless, you'll just play the victim card over and over and over again, it's like a broken record, have fun ace, I'm done conversing with you, it's pointless, maybe I'll go watch the grass grow instead.
Last edited by silent_jay; 05-28-2010 at 02:11 PM.. |
05-28-2010, 02:56 PM | #278 (permalink) |
still, wondering.
Location: South Minneapolis, somewhere near the gorgeous gorge
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If enough people say it's pointless discussing/debating, they tend not to be talking about the topic at all. Admittedly, talking about the leak doesn't fix it. That our current president won't be able to start a war over this might make it seem less...wrong...than 9/11, but I don't think it is, in the long run. Economists? Politicians? Bacteria. I haven't volunteered anything useful. I think it's sad we let sharing information come between us in these ways.
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BE JUST AND FEAR NOT |
05-29-2010, 07:13 AM | #279 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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operations are ongoing it seems. the speculation from the oil drum is that bp is trying junk shots and mud injections then backing off to see how things worked out, which allows the oil to push the mud and other stuff back out again.
here's the commentary thread at the oil drum, which is still very good: The Oil Drum | Deepwater Oil Spill - Deciphering The New Activity (Top Kill, Junk Shot, Etc.), Watching the Flows, and a Live Comment Thread and this post from the comments to this thread written by someone whose screen name is rockman helped me feel like my grip on the top kill process is a little better Quote:
apparently bp has stopped drilling one of the relief wells. this without particular explanation. meanwhile, the rhetorical conflict over the clean-up, such as it is at this point, continues to happen much more quickly than does any actual cleaning up: Gulf oil spill is public health risk, environmental scientists warn | Environment | The Guardian
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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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05-30-2010, 05:35 AM | #280 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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you probably know already that the top kill failed.
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and this from the ny times is a kind of analysis i suppose but one of those that talks about things which are said to float about in some american mind. i dont know what that mind is, but i read about it from time to time when i allow judgment to lapse. this time, what's being affected is an american belief in technology, in the idea that it is a kind of deus ex machina Our Fix-It Faith and the Oil Spill - NYTimes.com ugh. the top kill failure is terrible news. one can only hope that the containment/cleaning up is taken WAY more seriously than it currently appears to be. my heart goes out to the people along the gulf.
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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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