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20 November 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
On August 14, Obama did what he
does best, deceiving and betraying the public. Again
it was on the Gulf disaster, saying:
"Today, the well is capped, oil
is no longer flowing into the Gulf, and it has not
been flowing for a month....I also want to point out
that as a result of the cleanup effort, beaches all
along the Gulf Coast are clean and safe and open for
business....But I won't be satisfied until the
environment has been restored, no matter how long it
takes."
False on all counts. The Macondo
well was capped, but video and other evidence show
continued leakage, an organization called Concerned
Citizens of Florida (CCF), saying:
"....government cannot be relied
upon to impart all the information that we need to
make informed and necessary decisions. We know that
they will not (and have not) respond(ed) quickly (and
adequately) enough to this unfolding disaster or
perform to the standard that is required to meet it
head on." Nor will the major media, "act(ing) as a
mouthpiece for both government and industry."
On November 14, CCF headlined an
article, "Oil and Gas Leaks Continue Unabated at
Macondo: Photos document oily fluid all over the
seafloor," saying:
BP's announcing Macondo shut last
July, was "just empty rhetoric and part of (its)
elaborate Mass Deception Act. First of all....the oil
leak....was never (fully) killed and could never be
killed." In fact, experts say the Gulf seabed is
fractured. Even BP confirmed damage inside Macondo,
well below the seafloor. Why else would much of the
Gulf sea floor be covered with two-inch thick oil
layers. More as well showing up in giant plumes, and
reports confirming "fresh oil coming ashore."
Though unverified, a report by
Anatoly Sagalevich, director of Deepwater Submersibles
Laboratory at Russia's Shirshov Institute of
Oceanology, said the Gulf seabed is fractured "beyond
all repair," a potentially disastrous condition he
called "beyond comprehension." Using one of the
Institute's Deep Submergence Vehicles, his analysis
was based on close-up seabed observation and
analysis.
Besides Macondo, he claimed at
least 18 other sites were leaking oil, the largest
seven miles from where Deepwater Horizon sank, gushing
an estimated two million gallons daily. Several times
on CNBC and MSNBC, oil expert Matthew Simmons was firm
in reporting another giant Gulf leak, miles from
Macondo. Last August, he mysteriously drowned in his
bath tub - the purported cause, a heart attack.
Unanswered questions remain.
On November 13, CCF said:
"We have been lied to, through
and through....The gas-oil spill continues unabated
(to) this day. (The well-capping) was just a 'dog &
pony show' to fool the world. There is a constant need
to spray" dispersants. It's ongoing daily, mainly at
night but brazenly during daytime as well, according
to fishermen and coastal residents.
On November 12, CCF headlined,
"Mounting Evidence Points to 2 Wellheads at Macondo,"
saying:
Rumors suggested that "BP had
drilled two wells," side by side. "Lately, (based on
video evidence) we have also seen the corrosive
effects of the 'potent mixture' that is pouring out
not only from the broken wells but also through the
crevices in the seafloor."
More Evidence
of A Far Greater Disaster
Dr. Gianluigi Zangari is a
theoretical physicist at Italy's National Institute of
Nuclear Physics at Frascati National Laboratories. A
climate research and analysis expert, he said massive
amounts of Gulf oil, much on the seabed, caused a
disruption of the Gulf's Loop Current. It caused a
dramatic weakening in the Gulf Stream and North
Atlantic Current's vorticity (a mass of whirling water
or air) as well as a 10C drop in North Atlantic water
temperatures.
The oil/dispersants combination
is causing the warm Gulf and Caribbean to die, he
believes. Contaminated oil covers half the Gulf
seafloor. No effective cleanup method is possible.
It's also flowed up America's East Coast, into the
North Atlantic, and beyond - the North Atlantic
Current becoming the Norway and Canary Currents.
As a result, global waters and
weather patterns have been affected. The Obama
administration's irresponsible handling of the
disaster may cause catastrophic fallout later on - to
millions of people and the environment, including
long-term (perhaps permanent) Gulf contamination.
Zangari said the Loop Current
broke down around mid-May, generating "a clock wise
eddy, which is still active. (Currently), the
situation has deteriorated up to the point in which
the eddy has detached itself completely from the main
stream, therefore destroying completely the Loop
Current....It is reasonable to foresee the threat that
the breaking of a crucial warm stream (like) the Loop
Current may generate a chain reaction of unpredictable
critical phenomena and instabilities due to strong
non- linearities which may have serious consequences
on the dynamics of the Gulf Stream thermoregulation
activity of the Global Climate."
He added that the Loop Current
affects "all life on the planet. The Gulf Stream is a
strong interlinked component of the global network of
ocean conveyor currents, which drive" planetary
weather. That, in turn, may cause droughts, floods,
crop failures, and global food shortages.
His main worry is that there's
"no historical precedent for the sudden replacement of
a natural system, with a dysfunction man-made (one).
That is, except for" nuclear bomb blasts, widespread
radiation, nuclear waste contamination, and events
like Chernobyl. As a result, he worries what this new
phenomenon portends for the future, suggesting
potentially dire planetary consequences will follow.
Other
Disturbing Evidence
Experts and local residents
express concern about a combination of widespread
contamination, growing illnesses, and environment
destruction. Besides the above, it's a lethal mixture,
impacting the lives of growing millions, but
government officials and media reports won't explain
it.
For example, independent lab
tests confirmed that Gulf seafood contains high levels
toxic compounds, a combination of oil, dispersants,
and other substances. After conducting tests on Gulf
shrimp, Robert Naman, a chemist at Mobile, AL's ACT
Labs said:
"I wouldn't eat shrimp or crab
caught in the Gulf." His tests showed unusually high
levels of digestive tract oil and grease at 193
parts-per-million. According to Dr. William Sawyer, a
researcher at Florida's Sanibel Toxicology Consultants
& Assessment Specialists:
"Once oil enters (a living
organism), it can damage every organ, every system in
the body. There is no safe level of exposure to this
oil, because it contains carcinogens, mutagens that
can damage DNA and cause cancer and other chronic
health problems."
Oil/Dispersant
Contaminants Killing Coral Reefs
Scientists have confirmed that
Gulf coral reefs near the Macondo well site are dying,
clearly from toxic contaminants. On November 5,
writing for National Geographic News, Kathleen Jones
(a National Geographic TV producer) said:
"Large communities of several
types of bottom-dwelling coral were found covered with
a dark substance at depths of about 4,600 feet near
the damaged Deepwater Horizon wellhead, according to a
scientific team on the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ship Ronald H.
Brown."
Team member Timothy Shank of
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution said:
"The coral were either dead or
dying, and in some cases they were simply exposed
skeletons. I've never seen that before. And when we
tried to take samples of the coral, this black - I
don't know how to describe it - black, fluffylike
substance fell off of them."
According to onboard researchers,
about 90% of 40 large groups of severely damaged soft
coral were discolored, dead or dying. At another site,
about 1,300 feet away, a hard coral colony was also
partly covered with the same substance.
Penn State University's Dr.
Charles Fisher, the ship's lead scientist, said:
"Corals do die, but you don't see
them die all at once. This....indicates a recent
catastrophic event," clearly connected to the Macondo
disaster. "The proximity of the site to the disaster,
the depth of the site, the clear evidence of recent
impact, and the uniqueness of the observations all
suggest that the impact we have found is linked to the
exposure of this community to either oil, dispersant(s),
extremely depleted oxygen, or some combination of
these or other water-borne effects resulting from the
spill....We were looking for subtle changes....What we
saw was not subtle."
For months, scientists said oil
isn't degrading, its toxic ingredients to have
long-term dire effects on marine life, vegetation, and
humans. In August, University of South Florida (USF)
oceanographer David Hollander discovered "deep-sea
creatures....showing a strong toxic response to
hydrocarbons..."
Hollander's USF colleague, John
Paul, told National Geographic News that the coral
die-off is a "smoking cannon. It doesn't surprise me.
It could be the tip of the iceberg of all kinds of
weird things we're going to see in the Gulf of Mexico
in the next three to five years." Maybe much longer.
Dying Gulf Wildlife
For months throughout the Gulf
region, reports confirmed massive fish kills, a
September 14 one on a Louisiana waterway showing a
picture looking more like a gravel road. In fact, it
was a water surface covered with dead sea life, "a
mishmash of species of fish, crabs, stingray and eel."
Other accounts reported dead sea turtles, dolphins and
a whale along a stretch of coastal Louisiana. In
summer, fish kills are common, the result of dead
zones, but nothing comparable to what's been seen, all
species affected.
On November 6, the Detroit Free
Press said wildlife keeps dying in the Gulf. An
earlier September 14 Travel & Nature report said the
Mississippi River was "brimming with dead fish near
the Gulf of Mexico." Found were pogies, redfish, drum,
crabs, shrimp, freshwater eel, and other species.
Numerous other reports are just as disturbing, some
suggesting all Gulf wildlife is threatened, and that
virtually all of it is contaminated and unsafe.
Obama's Gulf
Disaster Whitewash Commission
On May 22, Obama established a
commission to investigate the disaster, the
seven-person team headed by former EPA administrator,
William Reilly and former Florida governor/senator Bob
Graham. At the time, Obama said:
"We need to take a comprehensive
look at how the oil and gas industry operates and how
regulate them. The purpose of this commission is to
consider both the root causes of the disaster and
offer options on what safety and environmental
precautions we need to take to prevent similar
disasters from happening again."
Newly released commission
findings confirm he lied. An earlier article foresaw
the whitewash, accessed through the following link:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/05/obamas-gulf-commission-distortion.html
On November 8, in the wake of the
greatest ever environmental crime, Fred Bartlit, the
National Commission's general counsel said:
"To date, we have not seen a
single instance where a human being made a conscious
decision to favor dollars over safety." This about a
company Public Citizen's Tyson Slocum said has "the
worst safety and environmental record of any oil
company operating in America." An earlier article
documented it, accessed through the following link:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/05/lessons-from-gulf.html
To settle federal, state, and
civil lawsuits, it's paid out hundreds of millions in
fines as well as penalties for manipulating energy
markets. BP is a criminal enterprise, profits its sole
concern, its rap sheet showing a disturbing pattern of
willful neglect, unfulfilled promises, and utter
disregard for personal or environmental safety.
Yet from day one, the Obama
administration covered for its crimes, complicit in
coverup, distortion, lies, and total disregard for the
environment, wildlife, personal safety, and way of
life for thousands, let alone permanent damage to a
vital ecosystem. It showed in his commission's
findings, a brazen whitewash of criminal negligence.
Daniel Becnel, a Louisiana lawyer
suing BP, called the findings "absolutely
absurd....pasting over (the truth) because they know
the government is going to be a defendant sooner or
later in this litigation."
Retired University of Alaska
scientist Rick Steiner is an outspoken critic of oil
industry practices. He's also a prominent member of
the Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social
Policy (CEESP), its agenda being:
"(a) world where equity is at the
root of a dynamic harmony between people and nature,
as well as among peoples, (promoting policies in
accord with) livelihoods, human rights and
responsibilities, human development, security, equity,
and the fair and effective governance of natural
resources."
Steiner was appalled at the
commission's findings, calling them "the most
colossally ignorant conclusion anyone could draw.
(They) destroyed any credibility the commission may
have had....The people and companies that run these
rigs (think only of) cut(ting) costs....enhanc(ing)
production and....generat(ing) more revenue in less
time. Every decision they make has to do with that.
The Deepwater Horizon rig was 43 days behind schedule,
at about a million dollars a day. Don't tell me that
this was not a persistent pressure on everybody on the
rig."
"BP has had an unwritten rule
here in Alaska called 'run-to-failure.' If your
equipment is starting to fail, you continue to run it
till it does fail, instead of stopping the operation,
upgrading it, maintaining it, putting in a new gas
compressor pump or piping section. There's a stigma
associated with safety consciousness, and there's
certainly a stigma associated with stopping work if
you detect a safety lapse or problem."
Steiner added that the Macondo
well was trouble-plagued from the start. Rig employees
called it "the well from hell" and "nightmare well,"
saying "this well didn't want to be drilled." They
should have plugged and abandoned it, he added.
Instead they cut corners, assuring trouble. For the
commission to deny this is "absurd" and criminally
negligent.
The only part of its report
Steiner agreed with was that a mere 3% of spilled oil
was recovered. Now the media spotlight is off.
Business as usual continues, "and the environment of
the Gulf of Mexico (was) sacrificed for nothing."
Shockingly, Bartlit, a BP stooge,
said the commission agreed with "90%" of its own
internal investigation, saying:
"We see no instance where a
decision-making person or group of people sat there
aware of safety risks, aware of costs and opted to
give up safety for costs. I've been on a lot of rigs,
and I don't believe people sit there and say, 'This is
really dangerous, but the guys in London will make
more money.' We do not say everything done was
perfectly safe. We're saying that people (didn't
trade) safety for dollars. We studied the hell out of
this. We welcome anybody who gives us something we
missed."
The commission, in fact, missed
everything, running cover for BP and the
administration, its report replete with willful lies.
BP is a serial scofflaw. Yet,
despite its criminal neglect history, it's allowed to
conduct business as usual because of government
complicity, regulatory laxity, and whitewashed
commission reports. Bartlit, in fact, has long served
industry interests, including the 1988 North Sea Piper
Alpha disaster, drafting a 1990 inquiry that assured
Occidental Petroleum faced no criminal charges. He
also represented George Bush in the stolen 2000
election.
Supporting high crime pays well.
Defending truth, environmental concerns, public safety
and welfare is scorned and ignored at a time profits
alone, not people, matter.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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