Caught in the oil - The Big Picture
source: http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/06/caught_in_the_oil.html
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- julesrs007
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As BP engineers continue their efforts to cap the underwater flow of oil, landfall is becoming more frequent, and the effects more evident. (8 photos total)
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/06/caught_in_the_oil.html
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- Community, News and Politics, Green, Current Tonight, 23 more
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- Oil, Wildlife, Animal Rights, BP, 29 more
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- recommended by:
- julesrs007,
- JanforGore
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csmonut
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Angry...sad....no other words to describe the feelings.....sometimes I hate being human.
- 1 year ago
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csmonut
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Wetdog
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csmonut:
Don't hate being human---just be a human that is part of the solution and not part of th problem.
Help get rid of petroleum use and replaced with biofuels.
Ethanol causes no damage if it is spilled. Biodiesel is natural plant oil----it does not contain the toxins that petroleum does. If it is spilled, bacteria quickly digest it and it naturally biodegrades. Pour corn oil in a patch of grass in your yard---little or nothing will happen. Pour petroleum diesel oil on a patch of your yard---you will have a large dead spot for a long long time to come. Methane can't even be spilled at all, it is lighter than air, it just blows away.
You decide what kind of human you want to be.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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csmonut
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Wetdog:
"Sometimes I hate being human" refers to the mess in the Gulf, among other things, that humans have done to this wonderful planet. Many times I hate being a part of the death and destruction, though indirectly.
Yes, I try to do what I can to minimize that destruction. I try not to drive any more than necessary, I recycle, I never use herbicides or pesticides around my house or in my yard, I try to buy organic foods.
Unfortunately, bio-fuels come with their own bad deeds. Thousands of acres of farmland that could feed millions of people, turned into fuel for cars, etc.
But I get your point.
Become part of the solution, not part of the problem.
Good advice to live by. - 1 year ago
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csmonut
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Wetdog
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csmonut:
If you don't want to use ethanol---then support methane. Methane is a biofuel. We can make it out of anything. We can make it out of sewage. No one is going to starve because we made methane out of sewage.
We can drive our cars on sewage. What is left over is compost, fertilizer. Compost does not run off into rivers and the ocean.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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LozRiva
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wow, some of those pictures are heartbreaking to see...
- 1 year ago
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LozRiva
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EthicalVegan
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It's the photo that's got me crying up a storm...
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-oil-spill-20100606,0,103831...
BP captures 6,000 barrels of oil from leaking well
As engineers monitor the oil flow through a containment cap, wildlife rescue efforts are stepped up in Louisiana.
______________________________Photo: A pelican is found drenched in oil on Grand Terre Island, La. Concerns are mounting that the population of Louisiana brown pelicans, which were at one time near extinction, could once again be destabilized. (Carolyn Cole, Los Angeles Times / June 4, 2010)
_______________________________By Tina Susman and Margot Roosevelt, Los Angeles Times
June 5, 2010 | 7:40 p.m.
Reporting from New Orleans and Los Angeles —
Efforts to contain the flood of oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico showed signs of progress as a cap placed atop BP's blown-out well managed to capture 6,000 barrels of oil in its first 24 hours, officials announced Saturday.
No one knows exactly how much is still spewing from the well, although estimates by a government task force before the well was capped ranged between 12,000 and 25,000 barrels of oil daily.
The containment cap, the latest in a string of efforts to cope with the massive spill, is funneling oil and gas to a surface ship about a mile above the wellhead.
» Don't miss a thing. Get breaking news alerts delivered to your inbox.
But engineers are allowing most of the oil to continue escaping through four vents in the cap because the force of the flow could burst the rubber gasket that holds the cap in place.
"They're making sure they don't increase the production rate until it is safe to do so," Coast Guard incident commander Adm. Thad Allen told reporters Saturday. "They're easing the pressure up to the vessel…so they can maintain control of the oil."
On Saturday afternoon, a BP spokesman said the company had no estimate as to when the vents would be closed. "Over the next few days we will be adjusting the cap to work as best as we can," Toby Odone said.
The amount of oil pumped to the surface could be constrained, given that the surface ship can receive only 15,000 barrels daily, Odone acknowledged.
The company's website, BP.com, continued to stream live video of the effort, prompting a cottage industry of engineers, drilling experts and amateur second-guessers to flood the Internet with critiques and analyses of why the procedure was not moving faster.
Allen emphasized that the containment cap is only a partial solution, never intended to permanently plug the leak. That can only happen once a relief well intercepts the original well, allowing it to be cemented. Two relief wells are being drilled but will not be finished before August. That operation could be delayed into the fall if it's interrupted by hurricanes.
The April 20 blowout, which occurred 50 miles off Louisiana, has led to the worst oil spill in U.S. history. It is expected to contaminate shores from Louisiana to Florida, damage undersea life with plumes of oil, and could eventually pollute parts of the Atlantic Coast, traveling on ocean currents.
In Louisiana on Saturday, specialists stepped up efforts to rescue oil-contaminated wildlife as concerns mounted that the population of Louisiana brown pelicans, which only recently bounced back from near extinction, could once again be destabilized.
On the southeast shore of Grand Terre Island, Marc Dantzker, a biologist and documentary filmmaker with Cornell University's Lab of Ornithology, called a rescue hotline after finding two pelicans coated with oil and near death.
"Saving individual birds is great, but it's not the answer to the larger ecological problem," he said.
The number of birds collected by wildlife teams has doubled in the last two days, to 724. Most were dead.
In his weekly address Saturday, President Obama focused on his administration's response to the spill, ticking off government efforts, including the deployment of National Guard troops and the mobilization of scientists and engineers.
The president, who on Friday wrapped up his third trip to the gulf in the last six weeks, also pledged again to take a tough line with BP and push necessary legislative changes to prevent future catastrophes.
"If laws are inadequate, laws will be changed," Obama said. "If oversight was lacking, it will be strengthened. And if laws were broken, those responsible will be brought to justice."
Obama promised to hold BP accountable for the costs of the damage. "We will make sure they pay every single dime owed to the people along the Gulf Coast," he said.
Responding to Obama's earlier warning to BP against "nickel-and-diming" gulf residents who have lost money as a result of the oil spill, BP's vice president of resources, Darryl Willis, told reporters that the company had not denied any claims.
In a news conference in Orange Beach, Ala., Willis said 35,000 claims have been filed by fishermen, hotel owners, seafood sellers and other affected residents. Of those, 17,500 have been approved, and the remainder is being processed, he said.
The company has paid out $42 million so far, Willis said, adding, "Anyone who has experienced a loss will be made whole.... We are trying to make this process as simple as possible."
On Saturday, a dozen slabs of thick crude oil, some more than 30 feet long, washed up on the sugar-white beaches of the Florida Panhandle. On Pensacola Beach, sunbathers picked their way through slimy hamburger-sized tar balls. In their midst, workers with protective suits and heavy rubber gloves roamed the beach.
With workers collecting tar balls in the background, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and musician Jimmy Buffett used the Pensacola fishing pier as a stage to tout the state's resilience.
"This is an environmental disaster nobody asked for, but Floridians are a tough people," said Buffett, wearing his Margaritaville-brand flip-flops and standing on concrete decking that was blotched with oil residue. "I think the biggest thing is to not get a sky-is-falling attitude."
For Buffett, oil slicks could threaten crucial summer revenues as he opens his $50-million Margaritaville Beach Hotel in Pensacola Beach.
Florida officials fear that a sharp decline in visitors, scared off by dirty beaches, could drive up coastal unemployment. The state draws about 80 million visitors a year, and tourism, the state's No. 1 industry, accounts for a quarter of its sales-tax revenue.
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
Everyone needs to see this shocking, horrifying photos.
A bird is mired in oil on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast on Thursday, June 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan:
http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
A Brown Pelican sits in heavy oil on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast Thursday, June 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan:
http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
A pair of Brown Pelicans, covered in oil, sit on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast, Thursday, June 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan:
http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
A sea bird soaked in oil sits in the surf at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast Thursday, June 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan:
http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
A bird covered in oil flails in the surf at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast
Thursday, June 3, 2010.(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel) #
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan:
http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
A Brown Pelican is mired in heavy oil on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast on Thursday, June 3, 2010.
(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel) #
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan
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EthicalVegan:
http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/oil_06_03/o...
A Brown Pelican covered in oil sits on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast on Thursday, June 3, 2010.
(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel) #
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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Kurta
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EthicalVegan:
When I saw these photos, I had to wonder how we could sentence someone who is responsible for the destruction of an entire region of Earth. Is there any punishment out there that fits this crime?
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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Kurta
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EthicalVegan:
This is unreal. How could this happen? I'm really losing hope and I'm having a hard time just sitting here watching the news. I should really try to get down there, but I don't have the proper training to help. Thanks for posting all of the photos, everyone needs to see them
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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Wetdog
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Kurta:
Would you help me try to get this country to use biofuels and natural gas so we have no need of petroleum?
You can do that no matter where you are or what kind of training you may lack.
Just let people know that we can do without petroleum----we have other ways to do what we need done. And we can do it without the environmental, economic, political and social damage that petroleum causes.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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Kurta
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Wetdog:
Amen to that. It's a tough sell though. I hope this tragedy gets someone motivated to start working on creating alternative energy infrastructures on a much larger scale.
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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Omnomynous
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It's hard to look at those pictures....
- 1 year ago
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Omnomynous
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EthicalVegan
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Omnomynous:
And yet I feel these photos should be shared with everyone possible, because then -- maybe THEN -- reactions will start turning into activism.
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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Juas
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I hope americans use this catastrophe to bring real change into their lives. Oil can be replaced easily. If you do it, the world will follow.
- 1 year ago
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Juas
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Wetdog
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Juas:
Brazil is already doing it.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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EthicalVegan
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Wetdog:
Yes, indeed they are! It CAN be done. It SHOULD be done.
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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LozRiva
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Wetdog:
true, i seen a docu showing Brazil spearheading a change using sugarcane i think? they should be proud of themselves on this front. I agree oil can be replaced but no one can think it will be 'easy' it won't be. But it is doable, although unfortunately i very much doubt it will be anytime soon...
- 1 year ago
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LozRiva
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JanforGore
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This is the part they want us to forget. I couldn't even look at some of these, too emotional. They must NOT get away with this. Jules, is there any organization you know of that is taking donations to help clean any animals that can be saved?
- 1 year ago
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JanforGore
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Kurta
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JanforGore:
Here you go, Jan. This is the the link to the International Bird Rescue and Research Center. They seem to be one of the bigger relief contributors for oiled bird cleanup.
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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JanforGore
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Kurta:
Thank you very much.
- 1 year ago
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JanforGore
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samantha420 [removed]
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Kurta: This comment was removed by its owner.
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samantha420 [removed]
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Kurta
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samantha420:
I have to wonder why that is. I would think there would be hundreds of rehab groups down there. Maybe the others just aren't getting as much coverage.
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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EmperorThan
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Yakety Sax might as well be BP's cleanup theme song ffs.
- 1 year ago
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EmperorThan
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Cuddlebones
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poor baby. I wanna save dem!
- 1 year ago
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Cuddlebones
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Wetdog
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Cuddlebones:
They can't be saved. A few can be rounded up and cleaned up----and many of those will die anyway. And for every that is saved, an unknown number will die---maybe 10,000 or even more.
I'm not saying this to belittle the care and efforts of the rescuers----that is great. But humans can't be everywhere and do everything.
The only really effective way to save wildlife is to not cause this type of catastrophe.
The way to not cause this type of catastrophe, is not to use oil.
We have the technology to use biofuels that can do everything that petroleum does.
What we need is laws to make biofuels equally available and usable to consumers so that consumers can chose not to use petroleum.
And we need for consumers to chose NOT to use petroleum.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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lvk104
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Wetdog:
...and growing those biofuels brings on pesticide, herbicide, and fertilizer use that's been killing the gulf long before this oil spill. If you want a real answer, look at hydrogen - biofuels are a fool's gold of energy answers, with as many problems as drilling for oil...just, relocated a bit.
- 1 year ago
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lvk104
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controlusplease
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I personally cant believe the methods theyre using to try and fix this. Shooting golf balls and trash into the well to plug it up...WTF. Fucking top hat method... Shooting Heavy liquids into the pipe (as though crude oil isnt heavy as it is)... Some crazy fucking vacuum device... Wtf kind of scientists do they have working on this thing, and ho hard is it to seal a metal fucking pipe, seriously nobody is that fucking incompetent.
- 1 year ago
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controlusplease
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mario_a
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Ugh, disgusting. Absolutely horrifying.
- 1 year ago
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mario_a
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UrbanGypsy
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BP is a disgrace. Their assets should be frozen until they get this oil leak plugged. Fucking disgrace. They have destroyed the entire Gulf ecosystem. All the birds, marine life, gators, shellfish and the entire livelihood of the many of the people on the Coast.
The Bayous must be destroyed beyond recovery. Wanted to see the beauty of the wetlands near New Orleans? Too fucking late.
Let's hope this doesn't get to the Everglades. BP should pay dearly for this. I will never pump gas in a BP station again.
- 1 year ago
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UrbanGypsy
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Wetdog
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UrbanGypsy:
---------" . BP should pay dearly for this. I will never pump gas in a BP station again."-------
Oil is a commodity. BP will continue to sell oil on the world market no matter what you do. If you stop buying gasoline from the BP station, the only business you hurt is the private franchise owner----you won't touch BP at all. They will just sell their gasoline to the 7-11 down the street that you are going to now instead.
To boycott BP----you have to boycott ALL oil companies. In order to do that, you have to not use oil. We need a law that all vehicles sold in the US be multi-fuel and biofuel capable. Multi-fuel vehicles can run on gasoline-gasoline and ethanol mixtures-hydrous ethanol-or natural gas. They can run on all gasoline, some gasoline, or no gasoline at all.
The technology to build multi-fuel capable vehicles is here now. The Fiat Siena Tetrafuel can run indefinitely and never use a single drop of petroleum. No batteries required.
New Fiat Siena Tetrafuel Runs on Everything
http://www.goodcleantech.com/2007/08/new_fiat_siena_ttrafuel_runs_o.php
Get a law passed that says all vehicles sold in the US must have this capability.
Then, drive your car on biofuels, and make a difference. Get a flex fuel car and drive your car on E85 and make a difference. Or get a car that can run on natural gas as well as gasoline and make a difference. Or get a diesel and use biodiesel. Diesels require no modifications to run biodiesel, and they can be converted to run on natural gas or liquid fuel at the flip of a switch.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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samantha420 [removed]
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UrbanGypsy: This comment was removed by its owner.
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samantha420 [removed]
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lvk104
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Wetdog:
Ethanol is horrible for the environment - the monsanto corn used (in conjunction with billions of gallons of Round-Up pesticide and herbicide) is as destructive as the oil industry.
I can't STAND when people think biofuels and ethanol are the answer - they're so inherently problematic that it's ridiculous to even consider them. Hydrogen is where it's at - comes from water, produces water.
- 1 year ago
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lvk104
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Wetdog
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samantha420:
Excellent post Samantha. Thanks.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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Wetdog
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lvk104:
Then make ethanol from wood. We've been able to do it for over 120 years.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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EmperorThan
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Jesus fucking Christ. BP it's BAD ENOUGH that you can't (and never will) retrieve the bodies of the missing people from your sunken oil rig. But the fact that you can't seal a single fucking well is just pathetic!!! What if it happened again tomorrow to another rig? Would you just run around screaming "WHAT DO WE DO!?!?!?" throwing your feces like you're doing now???
And another question even though I already know the answer, are you going to pay for the lost profits of small businesses (or even big ones) that have lost profits because of the spills killing of the marine animals they sell at market?
- 1 year ago
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EmperorThan
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Wetdog
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EmperorThan:
Their lawyers will argue that hardly any dead animals have been seen(that would be because they died in the ocean and sank to the bottom--of coarse nobody will see them), and nobody can prove that any were killed by oil. So it isn't their fault.
Isn't logic wonderful?
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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EthicalVegan
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EmperorThan:
And, BP, are you going to build wildlife sanctuaries?
- 1 year ago
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EthicalVegan
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Wetdog
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EthicalVegan:
NO.......what good would that do? You don't "build" wildlife sanctuaries, only nature can do that. You protect habitat, not "build" it. It is too late now. No one can turn back time. Even if they COULD recover all the oil and put it back in the ground where it came from----the plant and animal life that makes up the bioshpere is dead.
Remember, we still have oil companies doing exacly the same thing in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. This kind of spill there would go completely unchecked.
- 1 year ago
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Wetdog
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Kurta
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I was just getting ready to post this story. I'm glad you got it out there first. It's absolutely fucking DISGUSTING. Beyond that, I am without words...
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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Einsam_Data_Old [removed]
- This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Einsam_Data_Old [removed]
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Kurta
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Einsam_Data_Old:
If you're a donation type of guy, the IBRRC could use all the funding they can get. They are probably one of the most important forces in bird recovery and rehabilitation. Here's a link if you or anyone else is interested:
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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samantha420 [removed]
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samantha420 [removed]
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Kurta
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samantha420:
I really hope you're right... These images and the entire situation should never fade from the public's memory.
- 1 year ago
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Kurta
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cclark_productions
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so sad :(
- 1 year ago
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cclark_productions
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hunzedog
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and that asshole from bp wants "HIS" life back
- 1 year ago
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hunzedog
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cynic126
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hunzedog:
I almost chocked when I heard him say he wanted "his" life back. My hubby and I just looked at each other speechless.
- 1 year ago
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cynic126
