06-15-2010, 04:44 PM | #401 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i hear that...i just watched obama's curious televised pep talk about the gulf. i may have been hallucinating but i would swear he said something about 90% of the oil being captured within like a month. i am entirely unclear how that is to happen given the reality that appears to be unfolding but it's obvious that we don't know in some basic ways what's going on. besides, we are assured that the boys in the lab are on the case and that it's a really swell lab and lots of smart people are walking purposively about.
but really, i don't know what i expected him to say. i thought in a sense the entirely tenor of the pep talk absurd, all the military metaphors and references to world war 2 and such. but i don't know what i would have said. i don't know what i expected him to say---what? that the Leader is personally doing many things and Knows about Many Other Things all of which are happening and there are Plans and these Plans are being Implemented somewhere. references to shrimp fishing. references to god. i dont know what i expected but this clearly was not it. criminy.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-15-2010, 05:01 PM | #402 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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I know Obama is the president and everything, and public displays of optimism are a part of that, but I can't understand how, at this juncture, anyone can offer---with any confidence---any assurances or lofty goals (if only we would keep our chins up). It's been nearly two months and we still are mostly just figuring out just how bad it is. They still have had next to no impact on the situation.
I mean, a nation can topple a brutal regime in under two months, but we can't stop an oil spill at the bottom of the ocean? It would be nice to be able to capture 90% of it within a month. I truly hope they figure that out.
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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 |
06-15-2010, 05:13 PM | #403 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i hope it happens too. but i dont see any obvious way from here to there. but maybe today was a bad day to judge by given that there was a fire on a drilling ship so bp stopped collecting oil...which perhaps explains the immense clouds of oil one could see on the multiple feed platforms. but i hope there's tons we don't know and that something can happen.
the main difference between invading iraq and addressing this oil disaster is that the us had the technology and a bad plan in iraq where with the oil spill the us has neither the technology nor a plan because the set-up relied on the corporate sector to tell the us what the technologies needed to be because they made the plan. this is a fundamental reason why this is such a clusterfuck. i don't really see going on television and talking all Presidential about this changes anything. it doesn't. it's a pep talk and, in a sense, a capitulation to the right. which i was glad to see obama go after and blame squarely for the regulatory fiasco that both enabled this oil spill and prevented anything like a co-ordinated effective strategy to deal with it. but it still is what it is, a monumental disaster. and i dunno...a pep talk?....i suppose there may be people who it affected. i wonder where they are.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-15-2010, 05:41 PM | #404 (permalink) |
WHEEEE! Whee! Whee! WHEEEE!
Location: Southern Illinois
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Reading this thread, I am SO GLAD that TFP posters have absolutely zero input into energy, oil spills, or any public safety policy. There is a bad case of "talking above your paygrade" around here, and entirely too much reliance on op/ed rags for pertinent "information".
But carry on, knights of justice. |
06-15-2010, 05:57 PM | #405 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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well gee fugly that sounds like a claim to expertise.
you have Real Information? so if you're saying anything---which is doubtful----then how about it? put up or shut up.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-15-2010, 06:18 PM | #407 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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all i've been doing is gathering information from a range of sources and trying to pull it together.
there's a fair amount of documentation in the thread, but you'd have to actually look at things to know that. but hey, why bother when you can have no particular information and do none of the work but still see yourself as in a position to drive by and say stupid shit. whatever.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-15-2010, 06:28 PM | #408 (permalink) |
WHEEEE! Whee! Whee! WHEEEE!
Location: Southern Illinois
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Information that runs through your editorial filter, rb. You are entitled to your opinion--I agree with most of it, to be honest--but portraying yourself as some sort of "watchdog" who's going to give us the "truth" is laughable. I tried to follow this thread, but it rapidly became apparent that this is nothing more than a platform for propaganda. That's fine--this is a message board, not a news outlet--but don't parade it around as an "honest" or "informed" dissertation on the situation in the Gulf.
Frankly, it smacks of the same hand-picking of information that is the trademark of Faux News and other so-called "news" organizations. Last edited by FuglyStick; 06-15-2010 at 06:31 PM.. |
06-15-2010, 07:28 PM | #409 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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What do you mean? Things aren't so bad in the gulf? Are you actually going to make a counterpoint?
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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 |
06-15-2010, 08:22 PM | #410 (permalink) | |
WHEEEE! Whee! Whee! WHEEEE!
Location: Southern Illinois
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Quote:
And I'm fucking done on this subject, if people don't see the value of reliable information instead of jumping on the village mob bandwagon. Last edited by FuglyStick; 06-15-2010 at 08:26 PM.. |
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06-16-2010, 04:02 AM | #411 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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actually fugly, i havent presented myself as anything and i dont think of myself as doing anything particular beyond researching within the limits of the wall of pseudo-information that is the press a disastrous situation. it's happening too fast for there to be many layers of publicly available information: there are reports, there's layers of commentary and there's a scattershot level of documentation. these layers operate in that order in terms of speed. in terms of reliability, it's like anything else, a function of the sources that you isolate and how you use them.
for the news stuff, it's mostly guardian, ny times, financial times, washington post. for the commentary, the oil drum for the documents, things are more diffuse, but the links often come from one of the previous two. there's not a whole lot of original research. if anyone wants to pay me for my time.... anyway, if i think about the thread at this point as anything other than a thread on a messageboard, it's a space that i can use to position a bunch of information in one place and that may help me and maybe other folk figure out ways to make sense of what's happening. but no-one's stepping outside the media bubble. it's just being organized on the fly in a more horizontal way than it sometimes is. there is an interpretive line that i've developed anyway that i present, when i do, as an interpretive line. it's pretty accurate within the limits of available information and types of expertise. if you dont think it accurate, make a counter-argument. drive-bys aren't counter-arguments. the main limitation in that line is the emphasis on the ways bp has set up to control information makes it difficult to treat bp as a viable information source on its own. the same has extended to noaa and the coast guard. so there's a problem in moving into and out of those more official sources. i don't know any more than what i just said about the legitimacy of the suspicion that underpins this. but in any interpretation you take your chances based on the information you have. i dont know where you get the idea that there's any "watchdog" function happening. to think that way for real would require being unhinged from reality, confusing posting to a messageboard with political action in meat-space. when you're writing about political questions it seems almost inevitable that rhetoric will turn up that gives the appearance of a confusion in registers reality of messageboard/reality in meatspace. but thats usually rhetorical. when it stops being that there's meds that can help.
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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; 06-16-2010 at 04:13 AM.. |
06-16-2010, 09:39 AM | #415 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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FT Alphaville Who’s not trading with BP?
meanwhile: Quote:
meanwhile, bp agreed to the 20 billion dollar escrow account. washingtonpost.com i find this curious given that there's no way to know the extent of this mess yet and so i wonder if there's any way in which this is more than symbolically meaningful. it's hard to say at this point, yes? the dancing continues all the way around. oil continues to pour into the gulf. people meet BP bosses arrive at White House for crucial talks with Barack Obama | Environment | guardian.co.uk they have chats and other people show up to do something washingtonpost.com and so on while people in chairs debate the presidentialness of obama's speech. this is french but why not? Marée noire : Obama part en guerre, mais sans plan d'action - LeMonde.fr washingtonpost.com
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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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06-16-2010, 11:31 AM | #416 (permalink) |
Asshole
Administrator
Location: Chicago
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I found out today that BP does NOT have any insurance that will cover this sort of loss. So they'll be paying all of this out of their own bottom line.
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06-16-2010, 01:04 PM | #417 (permalink) |
Still Free
Location: comfortably perched at the top of the bell curve!
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Well, they have insurance to cover the rig, but not insurance to cover the damage caused by the oil. Right?
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06-16-2010, 01:10 PM | #418 (permalink) |
Asshole
Administrator
Location: Chicago
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No, actually. Transocean owned the rig and they had the insurance to cover any physical damage to it. Since it sank, there will be payments on that, but I suspect that it won't be very much in the greater scheme of things. It certainly won't include any liability payments, just payments for the loss of the rig itself.
__________________
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - B. Franklin "There ought to be limits to freedom." - George W. Bush "We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo |
06-17-2010, 03:17 AM | #419 (permalink) | ||
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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another whole cluster of damage vectors:
Quote:
it's hard to get my head around all this. the coverage of the story with its focus on bp---particularly on the financial consequences of the disaster---i can't help but think of as a performance of the subordination of human beings to capital. but it's also part of one fundamental aspect of the narrative. bp is a (problematic) collective agent in the generation of disaster. but in what way? through a network of subcontracts---where did transocean go in all the coverage? what about halliburton? what other subcontractors were involved? did the people actually running the rig when it blew up work for bp? what is bp anyway? through corporate policies about cost-cutting. through informal (?) histories or customs that took shape through a pattern or patterns of getting over on minerals management. through a particular sequence of actions spread over a specific duration that centered on particular individuals not noticing indicators that a particular set of very very bad things were happening in the well.... bp operated in a regulatory environment and so was as it was in the gulf as a function of a symbiotic relation. the fixation on the spill itself. this is clearly a Problem. a massive problem. but it's also relatively discrete. the rov feeds show images of clouds of oil billowing into the water sometimes more sometimes less. how much and from where? there's almost no context. (this is why the oil drum is so useful.) there's a drama involving Technology and Problem that's playing out. it's good for television, which can only deal with one thing at a time typically and relies on metonymic devices to account for contexts or structures (the part stands for the whole) and in this case the part refers back to bp. the drama becomes the leak and stopping it. the vast amounts of oil spilling into the gulf are secondary to it. then there's coverage of the adventures of the oil in killing off the gulf. it's a diffuse story because of all the (problematic) dispersants used to keep the oil off the surface (because.....there's a bunch of reasons. we sitting around in chairs are presented with them. we typically don't have context. we can't really choose. is it true that the oil will do less harm at greater depths? isn't it true that oil dissolves and its toxicity decreases? if that's the case, shouldn't it be closer to the surface? but if it's at the surface it's likely to hit shore. that's bad. isn't it also bad in enormous plumes well below the surface? how toxic are the dispersants? is this all a game being played around the theme of visibility/invisibility? how do we know? does anyone know?) meanwhile, oil drilling gets suspended (which makes sense, yes? the regulatory frame is obviously flawed. environmental concerns have been secondary for a long time. but there's not always massive oil spills...so wait....) and people's lives are affected directly and indirectly. and the shore-line is getting fucked up. and its hot. really really hot outside. yet it could be worse: Quote:
these stories about the niger river delta. this is at least the 3rd i've seen over the past couple weeks. what do you imagine their function to be? personally, i think the implication is clear: if anyone thinks for a minute that big oil gives a shit about people who live near Resources beyond the absolute minimum that political and other pressures force them to, you're dreaming. you imagine petro-capitalim benign? look at the niger river delta. this could be you. at the same time, it's odd that outside the small world of folk who track the glorious march of capitalism from multi-to-transnational forms of exporting its worst features away from the metropole (a condition of possibility for the neoliberalism and other forms of retro-asshattery) this is how conditions along the delta are getting exposed. a little at a time. here and there. but if the message is "this could be you"---then what about the folk who live along the delta? meanwhile. we all had been hope to whomever one hopes to about such things that this information is not true: http://www.theoildrum.com/node/6593/648967
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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; 06-17-2010 at 03:24 AM.. |
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06-17-2010, 06:23 AM | #420 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
__________________
"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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06-17-2010, 06:38 AM | #421 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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well gee, ace, what words in the comment that you quoted are giving you the trouble?
i'd be happy to decipher any of those english words you don't get. maybe if you expanded your attention to include the whole section that paragraph comes from you wouldn't have such comprehension problems.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-17-2010, 07:51 AM | #422 (permalink) |
I change
Location: USA
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Hi rb,
re: "meanwhile. we all had been hope to whomever one hopes to about such things that this information is not true:" Yes, I got an eeire sense when reading this account of the items that were being checked off, one-by-one. I recall thinking at the time those statements (essentialy PR attempts by BP to manage the news - still ongoing, of course) were being made that the most amazing thing was that they were obviously false and transparently so. Strange that the gov as well as the "news media" (read "infotainment system") simply takes these statements and runs with them. Of course, lately, there is some skepticism expressed, even while the newest - and obviously execrable - misrepresantations are channeled along as so much documentation and reporting...so much for realism...and the so-called "real world." This has reached the level of a Debordian spectacle.
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create evolution |
06-17-2010, 07:51 AM | #423 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
__________________
"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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06-17-2010, 08:08 AM | #424 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Jersey
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There is still time to get a front row seat for the apocalypse
This is a thread from the website the Oil Drum
Scroll down to the comment by "dougr" A little too big to copy/paste A little too scary to ponder The Oil Drum | Deepwater Oil Spill - A Longer Term Problem, Personnel - and Open Thread 2 |
06-17-2010, 08:22 AM | #425 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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art: that is the trick i suppose: the corporate information management system, whatever it's local orientation (so whatever the strategy that's involved) has created enough infotainment chaos that even folk with some degree of expertise are left either piecing together what's happening through the organization of fragments (which is in this case a very very bad thing if what's pieced together turns out to be true) or piecing together reverse images of disinformation through the organization of fragments.
it's a hell of a situation, the extent to which it is obvious that the whole of the infotainment environment we operate in is subject of distortion. we can't get straight information about the well-head situation. we can't get straight information about oil flows. nor about dispersants. nor about oil slicks and what they mean. nor about where exactly this one is. nor about what's happening on the shorelines. fragments though. that's all. fragments without context. and this is one of the things that's interested me in the thread, assembling an image of the image-space, trying to find context, failing repeatedly to find it. the society of the spectacle, but in its disaster-face mode. not the usual happy domination through the colonization of dreams... ==== ace: the superficiality about capitalism is entirely yours. it is not real interesting to me what your aesthetic relation is to the noun capitalism, nor am i real interested in the arbitrary features you hang around it to make it pretty for yourself. i'd explain something of the ways in which it's possible to see capitalism as a mode of production, but you wouldn't understand it. you wouldn't see the point if the words explaining it were in bold over and over. you'd "ask simple questions" and wonder why "they don't get answered." so be as mystified as you like about why the niger river delta material is in the thread. seriously. enjoy yourself.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-17-2010, 11:01 AM | #426 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
You have often made reference to the regulatory frame work. It is clear that there was no failure in regulation the failure was in enforcement of regulation. You desperately want to believe there was some system failure based on a capitalist frame-work and conspiracy to cover it up. This position can not be supported when challenged.
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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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06-17-2010, 11:22 AM | #427 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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ace--i don't know how you did it, but you've somehow managed to convince yourself that my interpretation of the regulatory regime is almost the opposite of what it is.
if for some reason you find yourself interested in what i've actually been putting together about the regulatory set-up and the relation between that set-up and this disaster is, read the thread. it's all here. ============= rather than keep this to a useless post refuting a non-position, i found this business from texas rep. joe barton kinda amusing, in a pathetic-to-craven kinda way. Quote:
the article itself is hotlinked. no comment seems needed. live stream of the hearings: http://www.c-span.org/Watch/C-SPAN3.aspx
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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; 06-17-2010 at 11:37 AM.. |
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06-17-2010, 12:24 PM | #428 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
Oh, and a news flash....A for profit company makes decisions to increase profits... Another news flash...A for profit company takes actions to improve public opinion... Another news flash...A for profit company takes actions to minimize the perception of damages... BP failed, but there was evidence of BP's failings long before this event, but "we" took no action. According to many BP failed/lied/etc. after the accident, but "we" took no action. So... how many links or references do you need to understand this? So, my questions focus on the broader issue of what are the regulatory changes you expect, and why? You make vague references to what you want and take shots at capitalism and I simply seek elaboration. Barton is 100% correct what Obama did is a shake-down. This is obvious. {added} On the $20 billion number look at my post#318 on 6/7. I think the $20 billion number was there "expected" cost.
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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; 06-17-2010 at 12:35 PM.. |
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06-17-2010, 12:45 PM | #429 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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that's funny stuff, ace. apparently you think barton was more correct than barton does:
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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06-17-2010, 01:35 PM | #431 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
The $20 billion number was not a number pulled out of thin air. BP projected its costs early on and they refine the number constantly, I expect they have a number now that is going to be in the range of about $30 billion that they will have to set aside over the next decade or so. Again, looking back at my posts, I illustrated a hypothetical call Obama could have made to the CEO of BP, in that call what I described was a shake-down, pure and simple and it happens every day. Obama's administrations actual actions on their very real call was a shake-down. You and everyone else can play pretend if you want - I prefer not to. I agree, drilling a relief well in advance would have been a good idea. ---------- Post added at 09:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:25 PM ---------- Quote:
Oh, and then the thought that a for profit company will make a legal political donation or use a lobbyist...oh my. How about voting for people with integrity and conviction - no amount of money would change my core beliefs.
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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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06-17-2010, 06:01 PM | #432 (permalink) | |||
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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ace....i haven't implied anything of the sort. i said that the regulatory system was far too passive from the state side. far too reactive to industry. that's what i said.
you could i suppose twist that around to be the simple inverse of your position, but that would be what they call making a straw man. as for your tedious projections about i think....as quaint as the idea is that you'd bother projecting about little old me, the fact is that you are once again just making stuff up. ---------- Post added at 02:01 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:05 AM ---------- first i thought a follow-up on the barton escapades Quote:
meanwhile, in another corridor, folk smell a connection to the cheney commission but there's still alot of murk in the way. Quote:
it feels right but the fit just isn't q u i t e there. and is this what you meant by lobbyist for bp ace? Quote:
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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; 06-17-2010 at 04:07 PM.. |
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06-18-2010, 03:31 AM | #433 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i find this to be an interesting side-bar:
Quote:
perhaps i move through peculiar circles but i've not encountered much in the way of "mob mentality" here in tiny town or anywhere else directed against bp. that may be because of the location though--the locals i know are deeply connected to the marsh so much of what gets said, beyond the usual stuff about criminal negligence and unbelievably sort-sighted regulations, is routed through a kind of mourning for the coastal regions of the gulf and the wider ecosystems...there's little doubt this is a form of projection, but so is everything else. that's one of the beauties, i suppose, of living in a society of the spectacle. projections are all there are. anyway, i haven't heard much about boycotting bp. folk talk about it, but in general they seem to recognize something of the franchise food chain. i think the boycott is about a desire to do something to injure the bp logo. i neither support nor oppose it, frankly. i just find it curious as a kind of effect of repetition on television. but this raises a more basic question: how is a transnational corporation to be held accountable to local populations in anything like a democratic manner? simple answer: they aren't accountable. what are the mechanisms of democratic power? well, in the us model of democracy-lite there are two basic paths: voting--so acting on the one day every 2-to-4 years when you could argue, with some difficulty (information stream problems you see. they matter) that the american polity is free---or organizing into interest groups. a boycott is an interest group, but one that is in this case trying to act against a logo. without the desired effect. unless the desired effect is to generalize brand damage. THAT would hurt. fact is that transnationals are not accountable. o sure, a neoliberal could argue from a position on his knees in front of an imaginary ceo that they are "accountable" through "market mechanisms" or "shareholder actions"---and it's the case in a very general sense that pressure=by=proxy can operate through the channels of economic aristocracy, so that the problems encountered by the little people could be relayed to the Sovereign through the mediation of shareholder organization. but through demand? horseshit. not if you don't accept the conflation of the economic and political. but that's a center of neoliberal dogma. look where that's got us to... i find it an interesting question: how can localities--which include nation-states--hold transnationals accountable for their actions? we all know at least something about what happens when such mechanisms do not exist in the petro-capitalist context---the niger river delta. but here, in the fading empire, homey dont play that---even though there is no coherent mobilizations to bring pressure from outside the state onto bp AND the state.... except a boycott of gas stations. maybe we've been convinced that we have no power and that's ok so long as nice corporations continue to provide us with the commodities they say we want and shareholders continue to extract value across the process. what else could anyone want? accountability? proactive concern for stakeholder interests? proactive concern for the environment? (what is the environment anyway? where does it stop and start?)
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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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06-18-2010, 06:52 AM | #434 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Are you surprised when a company, person or any entity acts in a manner that they think is beneficial to their interest? At one of the most basic levels this question illustrates why I am confused by your posts or at least what I take from them. Isn't it expected that in a adversarial situation both sides have to be diligent to ensure fairness? Is it your expectation that there will or can be a time when fairness can be taken for granted? Given what we know based on the article, it is clear that the advocates for the plaintiffs need to get this judge off of any case where there is a conflict of interest. The "system" is equipped to handle these things.
---------- Post added at 02:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:45 PM ---------- Just to be clear. What do you think would have happened to BP if they refused to cooperate with Obama's request for the $20 billion to be administered by his appointee? How would you define, a shake-down?
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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." |
06-19-2010, 07:09 AM | #435 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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Quote:
Gulf oil spill: A hole in the world | From the Guardian | 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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06-19-2010, 11:21 AM | #436 (permalink) |
immoral minority
Location: Back in Ohio
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I just wish Obama had the balls to tell the American people that this was our fault. We demand all this oil, and now we have to go to harder and harder places to get it.
At least Jon Stewart got it right. Jon Stewart teaches a history lesson on oil dependence | Video Cafe |
06-19-2010, 03:23 PM | #437 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Whatever house my keys can get me into
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yeah, i'm sure once we run out of oil completely we'll change. until that happens, not much will be different. too much entrenched power and money. the infrastructure of the US is designed to promote the use of automobiles, not mass transit (mass transit presumably being the alternative).
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These are the good old days... formerly Murp0434 |
06-20-2010, 01:30 PM | #438 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
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Quote:
Use of Energy in the United States - Energy Explained, Your Guide To Understanding Energy Within that category about a third is automotive: Oil is a major factor in our way of life and will be for a long time even if you do significantly reduce the amount consumed in automobiles. {added} This is an interesting chart also, it shows petroleum use by automobiles staying steady even given more vehicles and miles driven over the period. There has been a focus on automobile fuel efficiency and it is making a difference. And another showing use per vehicle: Energy Use for Transportation - Energy Explained, Your Guide To Understanding Energy
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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; 06-20-2010 at 02:02 PM.. |
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06-21-2010, 05:19 PM | #439 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Whatever house my keys can get me into
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Doesn't really change the point: we won't change until we're forced to. All those wide-spread uses are all excellent reasons to continue using fossil fuels to fuel our lives until the last possible second, or until it gets so freakin prohibitively expensive that we finally are forced reluctantly to turn away from our oil lovin' ways.
glad to see my prius is helping in some small way though. I thought I just was one of those suckers who overpaid to accomplish nothing. well not NOTHING but it's hard to tell sometimes. So to move this along a little, I actually live in Louisiana and was considering signing up for one of these oil-cleanup jobs. The work is hard, and long, but the pay is excellent. No benefits, no long-term guarantee of a job, but definitely an excellent short-term possibility. Do I leave my decent-paying, career-minded job at a good company to chase money? It pays about twice what I make now, but I kinda need the insurance seeing as how my wife and I have a baby on the way.
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These are the good old days... formerly Murp0434 |
06-21-2010, 07:08 PM | #440 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i find this rhetoric to be really interesting. on the one hand it indicates the obvious Problem that people whose basic position is fuck it drill anyway there's cash money to be made and popular opinion concerning the rickety-at-best "regulatory" situation be damned...capital is more important than them there fucking people anyway.. but it gets better because you see corporate persons are now being discriminated against in the way that, say, arab-americans were after 911.... craven bidness i'd say. but hey, that's why you hire lawyers. they are specialists in the legal frame and much of navigating a legal frame is, in the end, rhetorical. but i wonder what you make of the notion of an ecology of business.. i think it's an interesting move, discursively, to go here. this because i think there's a sense in which an economy is properly understood as a kind of ecology. this is way more accurate than thinking of an ecology in terms of markets or economics (think i'm just making this up? evolutionary psychology or most genetics-based forms of thinking evolution, or even the popular notions of biological evolution which crunch darwin and spenser into each other and rely upon the pervasive, thick cloud of stupid produced by the american educational system to not disentangle the two, and so write neoliberal economic horseshit into popular conceptions of bio-system development).... do you think the term ecology applies to business? how? do you think it should apply? why or why not?
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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; 06-21-2010 at 07:10 PM.. |
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Tags |
101, apocalypse, booming, fails, fire, front, gulf, katrina, louisiana, obama, oil, rig, row, school, seats, spill, time |
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