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Serving a Corporate Criminal Culture

The National Republican Senatorial Committee has released a devastating ad against President Obama’s handling of the BP oil spill vs Obama’s political words as a candidate.

h/t LATimes

“Never again” is easy political talk. Too easy.  And while this ad plays gotcha politics (and fairly so), it also reflects just how bipartisan the anger and frustration has become over the grossly skewed functioning of our government.  Because it is government failure that is at the heart of this spill.

As Bob Herbert points out in the NY Times:

The oil companies and other giant corporations have a stranglehold on American policies and behavior, and are choking off the prospects of a viable social and economic future for working people and their families.

President Obama spoke critically a couple of weeks ago about the “cozy relationship” between the oil companies and the federal government. It’s not just a cozy relationship. It’s an unholy alliance. And that alliance includes not just the oil companies but the entire spectrum of giant corporations that have used vast wealth to turn democratically elected officials into handmaidens, thus undermining not just the day-to-day interests of the people but the very essence of democracy itself.

Forget BP for a moment. When is the United States going to get its act together?

And that is what the American people are demanding to know, regardless of whether they are part of the tea party or not.   According to Gallup:

Two-thirds of those surveyed this week describe themselves as “angry” about the way things are going in the USA, the highest percentage in the decade the question has been asked. By nearly 2-1, they would rather vote for a candidate who has never served in Congress over one with experience.

“We’re just going to have to clean house and get people in who really care about the country,” says Stephen Besz, 63, of Hokendauqua, Penn., who was among those called in the poll. He worries about the future for his son, an electrical engineer who has been looking for a job for 18 months.

So while Republicans may find political satisfaction in pointing fingers (and rightly so) at Obama’s abysmal response, I can’t help wondering what part of this oil spill and response would have been different with the Republicans in charge?   Because, in the past, the Republicans have not exactly worked for the best interests of the American people.

Putting aside the issue of Bush’s response to Katrina for the moment lets compare apples to apples.

In a must read article at Truthout, Scott West, a former EPA investigator, exposes our government’s response under a Republican president in “How Bush’s DOJ Killed a Criminal Probe Into BP That Threatened to Net Top Officials“:

Mention the name of the corporation BP to Scott West and two words immediately come to mind: Beyond Prosecution.

West was the special agent-in-charge at the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Criminal Investigation Division who had been probing alleged crimes committed by BP and the company’s senior officials in connection with a March 2006 pipeline rupture at the company’s Prudhoe Bay operations on Alaska’s North Slope that spilled more than 200,000 gallons of oil across two acres of frozen tundra – the second largest spill in Alaska’s history – which went undetected for nearly a week.[snip]

In a wide-ranging interview with Truthout, West described how the Justice Department (DOJ) abruptly shut down his investigation into BP in August 2007 and gave the company a “slap on the wrist” for what he says were serious environmental crimes that should have sent some BP executives to jail.[snip]

“I don’t think BP learned any lessons,” he said. “They were just doing what corporations do. It’s the government that failed us. Now there’s the disaster in the Gulf. When I first heard about it, I said to my wife that it’s probably a BP rig and I was right. I will bet that when the investigations into the explosion and leak are complete we’re going to find out it had something to do with BP cutting corners.”

West even goes so far as to describe BP as having a criminal corporate culture in this interview with CNN.

And West is not alone. In another must read at Truthout, “Ex-EPA Officials: Why Isn’t BP Under Criminal Investigation?” former EPA special agent Bob Wojnicz who worked with West investigating the 1999 Olympic Pipeline explosion in Bellingham, Washington explains:

In the case of the Olympic pipeline explosion, which killed three children, Wojnicz said the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), one of the agencies involved in the investigation, treated it “like an accident.” But EPA “got involved right away and we looked at the incident and found apparent crimes and were able to make recommendations for charges. You can’t really get to that point unless you have preliminary criminal investigation into what happened.”

So how Is BP somehow above being treated like any other criminal suspect?” asked Wojnicz, who is also an attorney. “Recall that they are not just criminal suspects – they are convicted criminals still on federal probation. This whole affair needs to be aired out thoroughly. There is more than enough information available to justify initiating a criminal investigation. The fact that this has not yet happened is evidence of either gross incompetence by government officials or complicity by those officials in covering-up the true nature of BP’s conduct. Either of those possibilities is completely unacceptable and should be dealt with immediately and harshly.”

And Jeanne Pascal, an EPA debarment counsel with more than a decade working on issues related to BP’s environmental crimes convictions, discloses to Truthout:

This is a company that views itself as above the law,” Pascal said. “Now why is that? The only thing I can come up with to explain the failure to launch a criminal investigation is that BP has so much political influence. Congress needs to step up if the president won’t do the right thing. The FBI ought to be investigating this matter criminally along with EPA and [Department of Interior]. This is the fifth major incident committed by this company in 10 years.”

She said the power the company wields might be due, in large part, to the fact that BP supplies the military with 80 percent of its fuel needs. Because of that, she had to proceed with caution. BP pled guilty to a felony in connection with a March 2005 explosion at BP’s Texas City refinery, which claimed the lives of 15 employees and injured 170 others; BP pled guilty to a criminal misdemeanor for two oil spills in Alaska in March and August 2006 due to a severely corroded pipelines on which BP failed to perform maintenance; and, BP entered a deferred prosecution agreement related to price fixing scheme involving propane trading.

“If I had debarred BP while they were supplying 80 percent of the fuel to US forces it would have been almost certain that the Defense Department would have been forced to get an exception,” Pascal said. “There’s a provision in the debarment regulations that says in a time of war or extreme need exceptions can be granted to debarment so that federal agencies with critical needs can continue doing business with debarred contractors. I was in a quandary. If I moved forward with debarment we would have had a major federal contractor doing business with the federal government with no governmental oversight or audit provisions. I felt oversight terms and conditions were critical with BP, so I pursued settlement of the matter in the hopes of getting oversight and audit terms.”

Our government has proven time and again, that it can and does work exceptionally well at serving the interests of corporations and industries.  We all have seen plenty of evidence of that in the last few years alone with regards to the health care, credit card, banking, auto, oil, agri business industries. Unfortunately, time and again, this skewing towards corporate interests has proven disastrous for the American people.

Yes, we need more than words. We need leaders. And thinkers. And just plain common sense doers. But every person in government, whether working inside the White House, on Capital Hill, or in offices scattered across the US must be honest, knowledgeable and committed (first, last, and always) to working for and protecting the interests of the American people!

Unfortunately for us, neither party has moved beyond the politics of words and finger pointing to become a government of deeds when it comes to serving the American people.

____

Just in case you haven’t heard.  Today on Face the Nation (via The Washington Post) presidential adviser Carol Browner said:

The “American people need to know that it is possible we will have oil leaking from this well until August when the relief wells will be finished,”

Browner also warned that the spill could get worse for several days as BP attempts to put in place another containment structure. That effort will involve cutting a pipe that rises from the seabed, and because a kink in the riser may be limiting the flow, cutting it could release as much as 20 percent more oil over a period of four to seven days..

Say a few prayers everyone.

  • Breeze

    -
    With your permission, Linda, let’s celebrate Memorial Day for a few minutes.

    Here’s Kate Smith singing God Bless America
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCavKL2zdjM

  • susiepuma

    Great article Linda – I’m one of those who has said many times that random names picked from the phone book and sent to Washington couldn’t do any worse than the corrupt bunch there right now -  just as an example – instead of concentrating on the fact that this administration has broken the law so many times and should be proscecuted – instead we hear, but bush did it – I don’t give a shit who did it  – it’s being done now and it needs to stop – isn’t there anybody left in this country who puts values, ethics and integrity over money?  Don’t they know they can’t take that money with ‘em with they die?  These big corporations treat the deaths of workers the same as the big military brass and all of those non-serving congresscritters treat the deaths of our military men and women – they are considered disposable, just cannon fodder for their greed – dirty rotten ratbastards – hope they all rot in hell

    Just wonderin’ – if we replace all the assholes in Congress right now with new people – any odds on how long it takes for them to forget why they were elected?

  • oneilma

    Sarah Palin managed to control the oil companies in alaska.  If she had been vice-president she might have looked into safety procedures before the catastrophe and prevented the whole thing.  If she hadn’t been able to prevent it, she would have gotten it under control much sooner.

  • susiepuma

    Yeah I agree oneilma – but then again, she’s a woman & women aren’t treeated a whole lot better in this country than anywhere else – we just don’t have to wear the shrouds – one thing I know for absolute certain – she is head and shoulders above the fraud in knowing exactly what to do – something about having that executive experience – ya know – that little bit of info – nah not important – he’s ‘the one’ – fuck em

  • Wisewoman

    “Just wonderin’ – if we replace all the assholes in Congress right now with new people – any odds on how long it takes for them to forget why they were elected?”
    Don’t worrry about the odds on them forgetting.  We have to replace them then replace the new ones and keep doing that until they all get the message that they are answerable to the people instead of their party and the special interests.

  • sowsear

    Does anyone have the link to BO and MO’s stock holdings and the inter-relationships between BP/CEO and GoldmanSachs etc, I posted last week? I’m looking for it but haven’t come up with it yet. Pertinent here.

  • mgm

    Sarah Palin wants drilling in ANWAR and  deep water areas off Alaska.   The horrendous problems in dealing with this spill would be magnified many times over in the Arctic regions.  Bad, bad idea. But I agree that she would have acted more decisively than Obama—anyone would have. 

  • susiepuma

    Really – how do you know that?  The water they want to drill in is less than 100 feet deep – the problem is that the seas freeze there – drilling on land is much better and if BP can have 24/7 coverage on them – no more spills………………..

  • susiepuma

    BTW – wonder how come that water freezes – wasn’t that the goreacle’s thing – global warming – arctic ice gone???????

  • Breeze

    -
    Sowsear -

    Click on your name, then on’View Details’ and it will take to all your
    posts and you can track it down by going back over them.

  • Guest

    Do the Obamas have ownership in Petrobras ??? The company which we just loaned 10 billion at low interest….money we don’t have….to drill. The company Soros put $900 million into.  They are also a top player in the European Climate Exchange, btw, which is in turn half owned by the Chicago Climate exchange.

    Soros then pays Obama, DeLauro, Pelosi, etc to prevent US drilling.

    This is so obvious it stinks. The US federal government is as corrupt as any on the planet,

  • HARP
  • HARP

    The Top Kill method was started and suspended several times. It was being attempted only half heartedly. The reason is, there is no money to be made with a solution that simple.
    The real money is in the use of dispersements.
    There is a company called NALCO. They make water purification systems and chemical dispersements.
    NALCO is based in Chicago with subsidiaries in Brazil, Russia, India, China and Indonesia.
    NALCO is associated with UChicago Argonne program. UChicago Argonne received $164 million dollars in stimulus funds this past year. UChicago Argonne just added two new executives to their roster. One from NALCO. The other from the Ill. Dept of Educaution.
    If you dig a little deeper you will find NALCO is also associated with Warren Buffett, Maurice Strong, Al Gore, Soros, Apollo, Blackstone, Goldman Sachs, Hathaway Berkshire.
    Warren Buffet /Hathaway Berkshire increased their holdings in NALCO just last November. (Timing is everything).
    The dispersement chemical is known as Corexit. What it does is hold the oil below the water’s surface. It is supposed to break up the spill into smaller pools. It is toxic and banned in Europe.
    NALCO says they are using older and newer versions of Corexit in the Gulf.. (Why would you need a newer version, if the old one was fine?)
    There is big money and even bigger players in this scam. While they are letting the oil blow wide open into the Gulf, the stakes and profit rise.

    http://www.blogster.com/joannemor/bombshell-expose-the-real-reason-the-oil-still-flows-into-the-gulf-of-mexico

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    That’s nice. Another justification for Obama’s inaction by saying well, Bush and the Republicans have or would have done the same thing.

    Bush was lax with Oil Company transgressions on safety and the environment, so it’s ok if the next Doofus in Chief does the same. Even if he did sell himself as different. After all, political campaigns and speeches are just “Rhetorical Hyperbole”.

    Every party leader and President offers incentives to candidates to sway the outcome of a political race, so what’s the big woo when the next Doofus in Chief does the same.

    Laws against it? So what. Everybody breaks them, no sense enforcing them now.

    Red lights? Everybody runs them, it’s ok if we all do it.
    Speeding? Everybody does that too. Let’s all do it more.
    Driving Under the Influence? Come on, the Kennedy’s are All Time Champs at that one. It should be A-Ok for everybody else.
    There’s no sense in enforcing any of these silly laws.

    Murder – how many people get away with that every year? I want in!

    The Alaska Pipeline and the Exxon Valdez were easy to sweep under the rug because they are so out of sight from the human population to start with.

    Deepwater Horizon? The planet has never seen the likes of the angry mob that is forming for this one. There is no place to hide this disaster.

    Give BP and Obama credit for trying to hide and keep the press away.

    One of the most interesting aspects of this disaster is this: Where are the turf wars? Every agency wanted a piece of the NYC Times Square Bomber. That is what bureaucracies do. They need to justify their budget and their need for bigger budgets.

    No one wanted Deepwater. A real leader lives for the prime time. When the game is on the line, they want the ball. Obama? He does not even want to be on the field.

    David Gergen was right. If these clowns masquerading as leaders were in charge in the 40′s we would all be speaking German.

    If we set the bar any lower it will be low enough to clog the Deepwater Well.

  • sowsear

    If we set the bar any lower it will be low enough to clog the Deepwater Well
    Snark of the year award!

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    “random names picked from the phone book”

    That would be better than an election. Odds are at least one of them would be honest.

    I can see the liberals complaining that it would disinfranchise the poor because many of them don’t have phones.

  • oowawa

    Ah, the life so short, the muck so much to rake . . .

  • Linda Anselmi

    NLBiB -

    I’m not making excuses for anyone.  My point was that no one has clean hands in this.  And the American people deserve better.  We need more than political fingers pointing at the other side.  We need a real government of, by and for the people.  And we, the people, have got to demand it each and everyday and in every way possible until we get it.

  • AnnieCarmel

    Yes, and it sounds as if the on land “leak” they had up there last week was contained by safety features and therefore no damage.  Sarah wrote in her book about seeing the Exon Valdez disaster as a young woman and the impression it made on all Alaskans, including her, and vowing not to let the oil giants do this again.  She is fearless in taking on the powerful.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Nice digging Harp – You really make the case for following the money.

    Not much profit to be made in mud.

    Unless it is the mud used by the umpires to rub down baseballs. There is only one guy with the secret to find and market that magic mud to MLB, and I’d sure like to be him.

  • AnnieCarmel

    I believe Soros is invested in the Brazilian drilling our government has funded this year as well.  Hasn’t Soros understood that “he’s made enough money”?

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    The US federal government is as corrupt as any on the planet.

    Quit stealing words from my head!

  • AnnieCarmel

    We can certainly leave that to 0zer0!  He’s earned a master’s degree in lowering the bar.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    He does have to share his pie with MeeChelle.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    LA, I understood your point. But I have been reading so much of excuses for Doofus that I have induced bulimia. I could not get past Bob Herbert’s points.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    One more complaint about O’Doofus – What a shitty golf swing. The 5 lb divot went further than the ball.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    LA, regarding the Republican Video, Doofus does make it sooo easy for them.

    Where is that flash of the penguin getting slapped through the ice? I will forever have the image of O’Doofus when I see a penguin.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Outside in with a dip and a hitch. Charles Barkely strikes the ball better.

  • Guest

    http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/tag/dispersit/

    A promising alternative to the highly toxic oil dispersant being used in the Gulf is finally being tested, but slowly.

    Dispersit was approved 10 years ago by the Environmental Protection Agency for emergency cleanup use. In lab comparisons, it’s twice as good at breaking down South Louisiana crude oil as Corexit 9500, the primary dispersant used by British Petroleum and the U.S. Coast Guard. It’s also half as toxic.

    Even as British Petroleum has started using Corexit in the Gulf and ordered 15 million gallons from the manufacturer, those early tests are being run yet again on Dispersit. The Coast Guard and British Petroleum have not ordered Dispersit in bulk, which could potentially save valuable days if Dispersit is judged effective for field use.

    “They’re performing the same lab tests that were done originally in the EPA approval testing. They’re not even testing it at sea,” said Bruce Gebhardt, an executive at U.S. Polychemical corporation, Dispersit’s manufacturer. “That’s the frustrating part.”

  • HARP

    Speaking of lowering the bar. These guys may be trying out for a spot in the Administration.

  • oowawa

    How low can you go?!?!

  • lorac

    Where is that flash of the penguin getting slapped through the ice?

    Uppity Woman keeps it on her side bar.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    LA, I do have one disagreement with you. Why is “Gotcha Politics” a dirty word? Are we not going to point out duplicity, discrepancy and contradiction? How exactly do we want to hold them accountable when they stray?

    I think the press should be doing a lot more “Gotcha”. It’s their freeking job.

  • oowawa

    LOL HARP–we’re channeling our inspiration from the same transcendent source . . .

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  • Linda Anselmi

    Agree with you NLBiB.  I don’t think gotcha is bad, I said the ad was fair and just.  I just don’t think gotcha is enough when the ones pointing fingers are as bad as ones being pointed at.  Especially when every governmental function has become degraded as it has.

  • Peggy Sue

    Brava, Linda.  No, no one has clean hands in any of this.  And to pretend that Republicans would be johnny-on-the-spot is delusional.  We have one party in this country and it’s the Corporate Party.  Until we acknowledge that nothing is going to change but the faces and names.  The Republicans have never hid their corporate allegiences.  But the Dems are no better now.  And the American public?  We’re an afterthought.  Except at election time but even that’s become theater.

    We do need leaders.  What we have now and have had are too many pretenders to the throne, who have entirely forgotten what public service is.  They’ve joined their corporate masters’ mantra:  I’ve got mine, I feel fine and the hell with you.

    Sad days for the Republic.

  • PainkillerJayne

    lmao beantown……..5 lb divot

  • beyond_words

    Great video…

    I like ”
    “….he is not the kind of guy to show up and take command of the situation…”

    And folks that’s exactly what a Commander-in-Chief is supposed to do. We can thank the American Idol brainwashed masses and the MSM media storm coupled with massive political correctness & affirmative action gone wild in our society for putting a non-qualified bullshitting race baiting muslim in charge of a superpower.

  • Armymom

    I don’t think it’s “gotcha politics” . It’s about freaking time someone, somewhere gets the word out about this POS. While I’m not a republican, nor I have ever been, I like this ad and can think of a hundred more that should be made. If that’s “gotcha politics”, then so be it. I will clap everytime I see one of these. And people, you can freaking Bush all you want, but Obama’s been in office well over a year and have put HIS people where he wanted them. If that’s Bushes fault, well, then there is no help for you. BP was given a pass by OBAMA’S ADMINISTRATION, not Bush’s, just recently. There could have been a lot more “regulation”, if that was what was needed, in the past 18 months. Someone please explain to me the fact that there wasn’t, under Obama’s presidency, is now Bush’s, Cheney’s, Palins or anyone else these freaks want to blame? Nope, Obama could have done a lot more, he has been President for going on 2  years. He owns this, along with BP. And I would argue that he owns it more because as CIC, he’s taken over the banks, cars, healthcare and yet it’s someone else’s fault that he didn’t show leadership on checking on regulations on the oil industry.

  • Armymom

    That should have read” freaking blame Bush”.

  • Linda Anselmi

    Well said Peggy Sue.  And thank you.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    The Republicans? They have no room to talk….

  • Armymom

    So we continue with the same shit?

  • jwrjr
  • jwrjr

    Ozero is well suited for leading lemmings off of a cliff … and nothing more.

  • My other site

    “Giant corporations have a stranglehold on American policies”  That’s all we need to know.

  • My other site

    Peggy Sue:  exactly right.  We have no leaders who care about creating a high quality life for Americans.  We’re just getting closer and closer to a 3rd World despotism.

  • My other site

    Wisewoman:  I believe we need some changes in the government.  The only thing I know that would be simple and effective is term limits.  Then, you wouldn’t get career politicians who so easily forget they are not the government, they just represent the electorate.

  • My other site

    Susiepuma:  I’m a puma too.  The only trouble with that phone book system is that’s what Communists do after they take over.  They kill all the government officials, all the educated people, and all the upper class people.  They take workers out of the fields, the factories, etc. and put them in positions of power.  This is why China still sends students to the First World for college; the educated class was killed off in the Communist Revolution.  France was unstable for a century because they did this same thing in their revolution.  Don’t know what the answer is, but we should be careful.   

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Unlike Obama, these guys have talent and are fun to watch.

  • sowsear

    Buffet had declined a congressional request to come to testify about the 2008 financial bust; they have now subpoenaed him. While they have him there, maybe they could ask some other pertinent questions.

  • beyond_words

    Nice post Armymom. More truth.

  • sowsear

    Is that MO?

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    He could plant a tree in that hole, and the tree huggers will love him.

  • sowsear
  • POdVet

    Since the Sestak denial came out. I’ve been hearing a lot of Deomcratic strategists defending Obama by saying. “Reagen and Bush 43 both did it…should we have prosecuted them?”

    Well DUH! Yes you should have morons! A crime is a crime, I don’t give a damn who committed it! Just because the democrats were either too clueless or too spineless to go after Reagen or Bush for it, is not a valid excuse to let Obama get away with it.

  • carol haka

    Oh no, they all have cell phones!

    :-D

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  • Breeze

    -
    It seems that Pelousy is the ‘leader’ of the new “Blame Bush” campaign.  
     
    Joe Klein and others have picked it up too…..
     
     
     
    Time’s Joe Klein:
    Oil Spill is ‘Bush’s  Second Katrina,’
    ‘Republicans  Look Worse Than Democrats’  
       
    NewsBusters,  
    by Brad Wilmouth     
     
    Original Article  
     
    5/30/2010  
     
    On Sunday’s syndicated Chris Matthews Show, Time magazine columnist Joe Klein joined the ranks of left-leaning media figures in blaming the Gulf oil spill on the Bush administration. As the panel discussed President Obama’s handling of the disaster, Klein opined that “this is more Bush’s second Katrina than Obama’s first,” and, after agreement from host Matthews, Klein continued: “Yes, because it was the Bush regulations, it was Dick Cheney’s deregulation, and lording over the Minerals Management-”

  • hattip

    Typical Marxist BS: THe “Evil Corporations”. Linda tell me, just what goods and/or services do you provide? I doubt you could profiatble run a hardware store. Democrats daily expose that they are not capable of productive labor,all they can do  just syphom off the cahs from product corporations.

    And no, Bush has ablosutleyl NOTHING to do with this, none at all. He was not “lax” with the Oil companies. BTW, if you did nt regultate the snot out of the oil business they would not have to go that far off shore!. In any event, how are we ever going to lear n how to tap into that if we do not try. How effeminate you leftist are, who lacking in coursge. What luddites.

    “Evil Bush!” “Evil Corporations!” Stop blameing other people for your lot in life.
    If you want to see real corruption lool at the Democrat Party. Look at every socialist regime on the planet.

    Lastly, corprations are giveng us a better future; it is socialism that is robbing us of our future, not capitalism.

    Linda, grow up and figure out how the real word works.

  • Breeze

    -

    Frank Rich Blames Oil Spill on Bush, Cheney,
    Beck, Palin, Tea Party and Rand Paul

    NewsBusters,
    by Noel Sheppard   

    Original Article

    5/30/2010

    With the Gulf Coast oil spill appearing to spin out of control, the Obama-loving media are now working overtime to shelter the President from any possible blame. Exhibit A: New York Times columnist Frank Rich’s pathetic piece published Sunday. Almost incomprehensibly, “Obama’s Katrina? Maybe Worse” is more of hit piece on the Bush administration than a serious analysis of the failings of the current White House to do anything to prevent the environmental disaster slamming the Gulf Coast after that oil well exploded almost six weeks ago.

  • Breeze

    -
    HERE’S THE LINK TO FRAN RICH’S ARTICLE IN THE NYTIMES:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/30/opinion/30rich.html?ref=opinion

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    other - you describe exactly what occurred in Vietnam after the US left/defeated in 1975.

    Those that were lucky enough not to be killed were sent to reeducation camps where many were still killed. Those even luckier spent days or weeks packed in boats floating to any country they hoped would take them.

    And today they are a bunch of Buddah loving capitalists, God Bless Them! That’s what 25 yrs or so of just rice and fish and Pol Pot for a neighbor will do to ya.

  • lorac

    If you want to see real corruption lool at the Democrat Party

    Oh, yeah, because we’re all in love with the Democrats here, especially since May 31, 2 years ago.  Maybe you should lurk on websites before insulting regulars.  We’re fed up with both parties here.  You obviously have NO idea what people on this site feel.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Barkeleys Swing – I’d take that over Obama’s crater divot any day.
    Hey Obama that’s not where we wanted the basement, quit digging.

    Barkeley Gets Lessons from Hank Haney. I love Sir Charles. Always one of the funniest and fun guys in sports.

    Maybe Obama could get a lesson from Haney. But since Haney quit coaching Tiger over Tiger’s issues, I doubt he’d want Obama.

  • ogee

    The corexit is so toxic that there are whispers of it evaporating into the rain clouds and raining onto the eastern half of USA killing everything and destroying half of USA.
    Obama was out today at the basketball court looking to pick up a trick for the bath house then he met up with MEchelle and the kids at Farakhans for free barbecue, booze and coke afterwards. They are plotting the take over. His personal military he speaks of “that is just as strong and just as well funded and just as powerful as the current US military” is the Nation of Islam security guys that he’s refering to. The Black Liberation Theology is the basis for everything BHO does. He’s not really a globalist though he has his puppets fooled. He is totally and completely Black Liberation theologist. Think about it and piece it together and lots of holes will be plugged even if it’s not the oil leak. This is a race war by design. This is not a joke. BHO already paid off black farmers mortgages and gave them all 50,000 dollars to the total tune of billions. BHO wants payback and what better way to hate whitey than to destroy everything whitey holds near and dear like USA? Remove our defense systems, close NASA, bow to dictators, let the problems we have grow beyond repair, take jobs away from the private sector and nationlize them, pull support of Israel, remove missle defense systems in Poland on and on. Farakhan is to BHO what Billy Graham was to Bill Clinton.
    Hell even the Mexican cartel has blackmailed him.

  • POdVet

    Sorry ogee we don’t subscribe to the racist rhetoric here, so your plan to paint this as nothing but a racist blog will fail! Blatant lies and the crap you spew deserves the flag I just put on your post. Have a nice day now :D

  • glennmcgahee

    So we have the dispersants that are toxic yet it seems that they do a good job of keeping the oil from the surface of the water (keeping us from seeing how much area is effected. How is skimming the oil possible then? And isn’t that more dangerous to the wildlife since it saturates the water and theres no place for sealife to escape to?
    You can have term limits but that won’t do a thing until we stop the incestuous relationship that gives lobbyist jobs and executive positions to the politicians after they leave office.

  • getfitnow

    I’m sorry but msm support of excusing of That One is one of the best examples of why many people are against Affirmative Action or aspects of it.

    So much has been invested, literally and figuratively in this guy, they will say and do anything to keep him propped up. HE’S TOO BIG TO FAIL–they think! >:o

  • getfitnow

    We the citizens need to become the masters. The finger we point at them, needs to boomerang right back to the uninformed voters and those that sit on their hands and complain but just can’t make it to the polls. There are many examples around the county where the people beat the machine. We need to pick them off one at a time.

    Stay vigilent! >:o

  • getfitnow

    Corexit: Is it true than the UK has banned it’s use?

  • Noogan



    How do we punish BP?

    http://www.slate.com/id/2255170/
    BP Collects Billions in U.S. Government ContractsAccording to USASpending.gov, BP has received more than $9 billion in defense contracts since 2000. Contracts with Veterans Affairs, Transportation, Commerce and other federal agencies total additional millions.Pro Publica reports that the Environmental Protection Agency is considering a ban on BP getting government contracts:  Over the past 10 years, BP has paid tens of millions of dollars in fines and been implicated in four separate instances of criminal misconduct that could have prompted this far more serious action. Until now, the company’s executives and their lawyers have fended off such a penalty by promising that BP would change its ways. That strategy may no longer work.More Here..http://news.muckety.com/2010/05/28/bp-collects-billions-in-us-government-contracts/26301

  • CentralMass

    BP f’ng up on land is not uprecidented…

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prudhoe_Bay_oil_spill

    “The Prudhoe Bay oil spill (2006 Alaskan oil spill) was an oil spill that was discovered on March 2, 2006 at a pipeline owned by BP Exploration, Alaska (BPXA) in western Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. Initial estimates said that up to 267,000 US gallons (6,400 bbl) were spilled over 1.9 acres (7,700 m2), making it the largest oil spill on Alaska’s north slope to date.[1] Alaska’s unified command ratified the volume of crude oil spilled as 212,252 US gallons (5,053.6 bbl) in March 2008.[2] The spill originated from a 0.25-inch (0.64 cm) hole in a 34-inch (86 cm) diameter pipeline. The pipeline was decommissioned and later replaced with a 20-inch (51 cm) diameter pipeline with its own pipeline inspection gauge (pig) launch and recovery sites for easier inspection.[2] In November 2007, BP Exploration, Alaska (BPXA) pled guilty to negligent discharge of oil, a misdemeanor under the federal Clean Water Act and was fined US$20 million.[3]

  • CentralMass

    I doubt BP and the related companies would have perfromed any better in their role in the unmitigated disater in the Gulf if she had been elected back in 2009.
    http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2010/05/30/documents_show_earlier_concerns_over_bp_rig_safety/

    “WASHINGTON — Internal documents from BP show that there were serious problems and safety concerns with the Deepwater Horizon rig far earlier than those the company described to Congress last week.

    The problems involved the well casing and the blowout preventer, which are considered critical pieces in the chain of events that led to the disaster on the rig.
    The documents show that in March, after several weeks of problems on the rig, BP was struggling with a loss of “well control.’’ And as far back as 11 months ago, the company was concerned about the well casing and the blowout preventer.
    On June 22, 2009, for example, BP engineers expressed concerns that the metal well casing that the company wanted to use might collapse under high pressure. “This would certainly be a worst-case scenario,’’ Mark E. Hafle, a senior drilling engineer at BP, warned in an internal report. “However, I have seen it happen so know it can occur.’’
    The company went ahead with the casing, but only after getting special permission from BP colleagues because the casing violated the company’s own safety policies and design standards. The internal reports do not explain why the company allowed for an exception to its guidelines. BP documents released last week to The Times revealed that company officials knew the casing was the riskier of two options.”

  • CentralMass

    I would suggest a good start would be to send some Federal Marshalls to arrest everyone At BP who was in the the decison loop for that well.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/30/us/30rig.html?pagewanted=1&hp
    “nternal documents from BP show that there were serious problems and safety concerns with the Deepwater Horizon rig far earlier than those the company described to Congress last week.

    The problems involved the well casing and the blowout preventer, which are considered critical pieces in the chain of events that led to the disaster on the rig.
    The documents show that in March, after several weeks of problems on the rig, BP was struggling with a loss of “well control.” And as far back as 11 months ago, it was concerned about the well casing and the blowout preventer.
    On June 22, for example, BP engineers expressed concerns that the metal casing the company wanted to use might collapse under high pressure.”

    “The company went ahead with the casing, but only after getting special permission from BP colleagues because it violated the company’s safety policies and design standards. The internal reports do not explain why the company allowed for an exception. BP documents released last week to The Times revealed that company officials knew the casing was the riskier of two options.”


    In April of this year, BP engineers concluded that the casing was “unlikely to be a successful cement job,” according to a document, referring to how the casing would be sealed to prevent gases from escaping up the well.
    The document also says that the plan for casing the well is “unable to fulfill M.M.S. regulations,” referring to the Minerals Management Service.
    A second version of the same document says “It is possible to obtain a successful cement job” and “It is possible to fulfill M.M.S. regulations.”
    Andrew Gowers, a BP spokesman, said the second document was produced after further testing had been done.
    On Tuesday Congress released a memorandum with preliminary findings from BP’s internal investigation, which indicated that there were warning signs immediately before the explosion on April 20, including equipment readings suggesting that gas was bubbling into the well, a potential sign of an impending blowout.
    A parade of witnesses at hearings last week told about bad decisions and cut corners in the days and hours before the explosion of the rig, but BP’s internal documents provide a clearer picture of when company and federal officials saw problems emerging.
    In addition to focusing on the casing, investigators are also focusing on the blowout preventer, a fail-safe device that was supposed to slice through a drill pipe in a last-ditch effort to close off the well when the disaster struck. The blowout preventer did not work, which is one of the reasons oil has continued to spill into the gulf, though the reason it failed remains unclear.
    Federal drilling records and well reports obtained through the Freedom of Information Act and BP’s internal documents, including more than 50,000 pages of company e-mail messages, inspection reports, engineering studies and other company records obtained by The Times from Congressional investigators, shed new light on the extent and timing of problems with the blowout preventer and the casing long before the explosion.
    Kendra Barkoff, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, declined to answer questions about the casings, the blowout preventer and regulators’ oversight of the rig because those matters are part of a continuing investigation.
    The documents show that in March, after problems on the rig that included drilling mud falling into the formation, sudden gas releases known as “kicks” and a pipe falling into the well, BP officials informed federal regulators that they were struggling with a loss of “well control.”
    On at least three occasions, BP records indicate, the blowout preventer was leaking fluid, which the manufacturer of the device has said limits its ability to operate properly.”

    continnued…