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Pandora’s Box in the Gulf: Does Hope Remain?
"From the moment this disaster began, the federal government has been in charge of the response effort," Obama said. "BP is operating at our direction." (White House press conference, May 26, 2010)
Americans, especially those unfortunate enough to reside along the Gulf coast, are beginning to get a glimpse of what life is like in an occupied country. The occupying power, in this case, is British Petroleum, a foreign corporation that has committed grievous crimes yet is allowed to continue to lord over us, despoiling our land and sea, poisoning our people even while denying their constitutional rights.
We're now three months into the BP blowout and while our president has managed to extract a relatively paltry concession from the oil giant, the physical and economic damage, and the violations of US law and the US Constitution mount by the day.
A leader with backbone would have asserted immediate control over the disaster inflicted on the Gulf region and dictated terms to BP. He would have reminded BP and the nation that this was just the latest in a series of major accidents in this company's American operations. He would have placed the company in receivership and under public authority. BP's efforts would have been supervised by appropriate departments of the US government along with the immediate opening of an investigation by the Justice Department and the FBI.
Despite claiming that he is "in charge", Obama dithers, leaving BP to call the shots in the Gulf, even hiring private security to deny citizens access to public land and open seas.
Why has BP been allowed to direct this effort, even while their incompetence and illegal behavior become more evident by the day? It is because they are actually more powerful that the US government. As Jeffrey St. Clair of Counterpunch put it this week in an interview on Pacifica, the oil companies "run the show", regardless of which party is theoretically in power.
We know, for example, that during the Clinton administration, deepwater drilling was encouraged by giving oil companies a huge break on payment of royalties to the government. Under the leadership of MMS Regional Director in the Gulf region, Chris C. Oynes, and the strong urging of former Colorado senator and current Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, deepwater drilling boomed.
And so did the Deepwater Horizon. It boomed and with it went the lives of eleven men and more than 200 million gallons of crude so far. (By comparison, the Exxon Valdez disgorged 11 million gallons.) The disgorgement of all this oil has only been made worse by the application of the dispersant Corexit 9500, a chemical reported to be four times more toxic than oil but that has never been tested by the EPA and is illegal in most countries. The EPA instructed BP to stop using Corexit when they had only discharged 250,000 gallons; by now BP has used nearly two million gallons, probably in an effort to minimize fines that will be levied per gallon of oil lost in the Gulf. So who's really in charge?
There are many more crucial questions regarding this worst environmental catastrophe in the history of the United States:
1. Why was BP allowed to drill in this location? Both the MMS and BP geologists cautioned against drilling in the location of the Deepwater Horizon due to evidence of a highly volatile methane bubble beneath the seabed. They warned that if this bubble was disturbed and exploded, it could cause a 200 foot tsunami that would virtually wipe out six Gulf states! In spite of all this, MMS waived environmental impact studies for the rig and well.
2. Why aren't all oil companies exploiting the land and seas of the United States, required to drill relief wells and to have equipment at the ready to deal with accidents?
3. Why aren't the perpetrators of this disaster being charged for negligence, manslaughter, or worse? Whistleblowers pointed out before the explosion that the last several hundred feet of the well borehole lacked protective cement casing, a dangerous situation that increased the chances for an explosive event to occur. Just five hours before the rig went up in flames, an expert who'd worked with the US Army extinguishing oil fires in Iraq was flown to the rig for consultation. He informed BP that if they continued to pump saltwater into the hole it would blow. He then demanded immediate evacuation for himself and his men. The Transocean Corporation, whose blowout preventer failed to operate on April 20, advised BP to stop drilling after receiving negative pressure test results. Despite these warnings BP did nothing, allowing eleven men to die, and inflicting incalculable damage on the lives of Gulf coast residents, the environment and economy that will take decades, if not centuries to recover.
4. Is it just coincidence that BP CEO Tony Hayward unloaded a third of his personal holdings in BP just a month before the blowout? Did Hayward know that the Deepwater Horizon well was a disaster waiting to happen and figure he would at least save a few million pounds if the worst happened?
5. Did someone tip off Goldman Sachs? The brokerage firm that's faced scrutiny from regulators in the past year over the shorting of mortgage related securities seems to have had very good timing when it came to dumping BP stock. According to regulatory filings, Goldman sold 4,680, 822 shares of BP, 44% of its holdings, in the first quarter of 2010. Goldman's sales were the largest of any firm during that time and saved the company approximately $96 million.
6. Why did Halliburton Corporation buy the world's largest oil disaster service company, Boots & Coots, just two weeks before the Deepwater Horizon exploded?
7. Who advised Vanguard Corporation, the investment firm in which Michelle and Barack Obama's personal wealth is held, sell off 1.5 million shares of BP stock in the weeks before the disaster? Another coincidence?
8. Why was the Coast Guard allowed to create a 65 foot "safety zone" around spill sites, denying media access? While the Coast Guard says that this rule was urged upon them by local government officials, none have come forth to corroborate this claim. To this day, the public is being denied full disclosure of the enormity of the losses while rumors of toxic rain, methane explosions, a "bleeding" seabed, and the possibility of mass evacuations ricochet around the net.
9. Cleanup crews have been denied the right to wear protective gear! This is incredible! Under what authority does BP tell people that if they try to protect themselves from the toxic oil, gases, and dispersants, they will be fired? Already, thousands have been made ill just so that BP can minimize potential liability. Thousands of workers who cleaned up after the Exxon Valdez have either died or become chronically ill from exposure to chemicals and dispersants that are absorbed through the skin and cause blood and kidney damage resulting in headaches, respiratory problems and even death. These same chemicals are being used at the BP spill sites.
As we write this, BP has placed a "stacking cap" atop the well in a procedure that professor and marine conservationist Rick Steiner called "either a smart idea or a spectacular mistake." (The "spectacular mistake" would be a blowout between the fractured seabed and the oil reservoir.) Based on BP's performance so far, and in many previous events in which public safety has been subordinated to profit, we are cautious. Even if BP does manage to close down the enormous faucet a mile beneath the ocean's surface, there will remain massive damage with dire consequences extending far into the future.
According to Greek mythology, when Pandora defied Zeus and opened that box, all manner of evil escaped. By the time she had closed it, all that was left was Hope.
Bill Clinton was "the man from Hope". The poster of Barack Obama with the single word "Hope" beneath his face became the iconic image of the 2008 presidential campaign. But does hope remain for the people, the economy and the environment of the Gulf coast? Does hope remain for the United States in the face of this epic catastrophe that has become a metaphor for the self-destructive hubris of industrial society?
Obama came to office with a window of opportunity. Americans were justifiably alarmed by the crash of the financial sector and the loss of their homes and jobs. Had he addressed these issues, rather than getting into a year long struggle that resulted in a "health reform" package that no one much liked, perhaps his job approval ratings wouldn't be sliding toward 40%. The BP disaster has again spotlighted the president's tendency to follow the dictates of big business.
Obama's margin of error is now razor thin. Unless we can see some change, time will soon run out on hope.



86 Comments so far
Show AllIf read correctly, Pandora's box held nothing but curses. Hope was one of them. We'd be much better off if 'HOPE' had escaped as well.
Exactly, Amurkan: without hope we off ourselves and the agony of life is over. With hope, we stay alive through advancing debilitation, and the gods get to laugh some more at our miseries.
Krishnamurti said despair is the other side of hope. If you live in the present there is only the reality of the moment; therein, and ONLY therein lies the possibility for change. Hope is based purely in desire--the desire for something to happen, or not to happen. When that desire is thwarted and hope is lost, despair follows. They are two sides of the same coin, according to Krishnamurti. With hope comes worry, worry that what is hoped for will not come to pass. Try to keep your attention in the present, and you will find there is no need for either hope or despair.
Your definition of hope is identical to Schopenhauer's.
You give very good advice, and, as usual easier said than done.
I haven't read anything by Schopenhauer, I'll have to check it out. True, it is much easier said than done! Thanks :)
This an excellent compilation of the wrongs that have been done by BP and the federal gov't.
For months I've known about Tony Hayward unloading a third of his stock holdings just a month before the blowout - but to learn that the Obamas did essentially the same thing is a real ass-kicker.
It boggles the mind to realize what these people can get away with. These are just children at play.
I agree that these are important questions. However, looking at BP stock activity, perhaps outside of Hayward, others may have just cashing in stock a relatively high price without suspicious foreknowledge of disaster ahead. Such trading happens all the time, and there was no suspicious increase in volume before the explosion. So this may be a bit of a red herring compared to the other outrages in this catastrophe.
Assuming Lewis Seiler & Dan Hamburg are correct, the Hayward, Goldman and Obama stock sales prior to the event makes you wonder if the transactions were not postdated. You can short change a lot of pension funds before you make your quarterly filing or send out quarterly statements. Reminds me of the seven years Bush/Cheney were pumping oil out of Iraq AND keeping the records of how much oil was leaving the country.
All manner of stock sell-off shenanigans are just par for the course. If people only knew the amount of insider trading, stock manipulation going on they wouldn't invest a wooden nickel in the markets. As for the rest of this mess it all remains to be seen. BP and our gov't are doing their best to cover all this up and minimize the liabilities both face. The future for the gulf states remains as submerged as those giant plumes. No one knows the full extent of the damage yet to come from the natural gas and dispersents embedded in this entire region. What is very clear and has been for a long time is that energy companies call the shots on our economy and regulatory agencies. There are no honest brokers in our system of gov't. It is a corrupted institution. It cannot be changed by electing the same watchmen who've failed so many times in the past. Sadly, I'll never go to that stinking place to fish or visit ever. It is a toxic dump now.
"Obama's margin of error is now razor thin."
This is one of the most laughable and stupid things I"ve read recently.
Razor thin?! It is pretty much Guaranteed that Obama will continue to do the erroneous!
After partially outlining the enormity of reasons to NOT trust him (or the vast majority of our corporatist government), the authors think we can still "hope" some intelligent and responsible behavior may be right around the corner.
Blame BP, Tony Hayward, MMS, Obama, Clinton, etc, etc. Now look around you, in your driveway, the clothes on your back, the food you eat, your plastic Dick Tracy communicators, the plastic clamshell that protects your organic salad. We are all complicit, we are all to blame, we have all drank the kool aid and are staggering around the jungle of our lives awaiting the final conclusion. We examine with great care the crimes of others, but fail to see the criminal staring back from the mirror.
I think you overestimate the power of the small man/woman when every part of society and the economy is directed at controlling your thoughts and warping your opinions. Most people never even get the chance to think differently, they are indoctrinated from birth. It is reinforced over and over again. Breaking out of these "shackles of the mind" is a huge success in itself. Blaming yourself for going along with the flow is just a way for the real culprits to spread the blame away from them.
If it really is all of our fault, then every person should have the responsibility to become a genius to change the world. But it doesn't work that way.
A few of us become highly influential and successful. These, our leaders, hold the positions and benefits they do because they have the responsibility to stand in for their errors, their mistakes and wrong doings.
Once your realise where you are wrong, in driving that SUV, buying the McMansion, it is your responsibility to correct your mistakes. I believe most people here do this. But BP, Tony Hayward, Obama and all the others do not. They keep on doing what they do. So if you clean up your own mistakes you have every right to blame others for theirs, especially if they mess up your life.
All I am saying is that cleaning up your own act is simply not enough. We need to go after those with more responsibility who do not.
Unshakeable peace
[The strength of the humand mind lies in the ability to think of OUR future]
http://principlesofbeing.blogspot.com/
Seinbeetre:
Good point, go after those who are the problem.
I would like to see some artistic work done on Mr. Hayward's yacht. Some artists in England were protesting the money BP gave to the art museum. They poured ( pretend oil...not permanent) around a statue from Easter Island, to remind THEM where earth is headed and their responsibility to earth..
I would like to see flames painted on his yacht, with screaming turtles . That way, people could keep far away from him on the water, and it would take a bit of work to correct it. It would also be a fitting tribute to what he has done. The better idea is to get a really famous artist to paint it , so Christies could auction it off if Hayward wouldn't sail it, and it would float around the world FOREVER reminding people of the hubris and consequences of BP.
I woulld rather someone just launch a torpedo at the fucking yacht while the greedpig was aboard relaxing on profits derived from the life blood of the "the little people."
Why paint flames when they can be real?
This is my first reply on CD to a known criminal.
This meme, that we are all complicit in helping cause this disaster is not original, nor is it logical, and is simplistic to the nth degree.
It is a great assist however to those actually complicit in the crimes of Big Oil, and corrupted Government. Have you thought of packaging this meme, putting on a business suit, and selling your services to BP's public relations department?
Following your logic, no one gets held accountable for anything, because we are all to blame.
Someone robs a bank. You are to blame too, because you use a bank, and if we didn't have banks, then no one could rob a bank.
A person stabs another with a knife. Now before you blame that person, look in the kitchen mirror, and hold up the knives that you use. Now what do you see?
A drunk driver runs over a dog, and now the dog is dead. It doesn't matter that the person driving is drunk, but rather the domestication of animals in the first place. No dogs in cities, or towns, or villages, no dogs to run over while drunk. Now think of that dead dog, and now pick up your miniature dachshund and apologize for putting it in such danger, and hold it up to the mirror while looking at yourself. You really should be ashamed at the animal abuser staring back at you from the mirror.
I'm being only slightly more ludicrous than you.
Particularly annoying, is your meme within the meme. "the plastic clamshell that protects your organic salad." You are implying that a person who eats organic yet uses plastic, is what, a hypocrite? I mean, that meme is straight from the microphone of Rush Limbaugh, and echoes the ridiculous meme that for anyone to work toward a greener planet, they must first divest themselves from a car, house, roads to travel on, phone, washing machine, dryer, musical instruments, museums, city parks, otherwise you're a darn hypocrite.
Lets look at the pyramid of blame so to speak, which starts with the companies who wantonly put profits above their responsibility to protect the environment and public.
Next, the blame should lie with the succession of governmental officials, Republican and Democratic, who have turned our regulatory agencies into each Industry's board room annex.
Next blame the nexus of huge multinational corporations whose network of greed and power are largely unassailable, given that they own the media and make environmental movements that would force positive change almost impossible. Such environmental movements would be completely impossible if those in the movement denied for themselves phones, existing modes of transportation, pens paper or pencils, for the sake of non-criminal acts of purity. (I suppose, a bicycle hand made from scraps, with handmade tires derived from home grown hemp would be okay)
We are all here. The history of petroleum products is a long one. Imagining that we all have access to the off switch of world wide petroleum use so intertwined with modern society is a fallacy. That immediate off switch doesn't exist, nor would it be desirable unless you want to today start living in a grass hut with a mud floor and grow your own food, no refrigeration, and dig your own well, etc etc etc.
The technologies exist today, such as hemp oil production, solar, wind,etc, that can move us to a more sustainable and green future.
However, spreading the blame too thin does not in anyway service that end.
Now, take that mirror from the wall, and look on the back to see who manufactured it, and then reflect on (pardon the pun) your decision to buy that mirror, how you came into possession of it, and how that all relates to the environmental catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico.
hue_sir_name,
Well said. I particularly appreciated your pyramid of blame. And, you're right when you say, "no one gets held accountable, because everyone is to blame." There are too many "get out of jail free" cards going around. Why should Tony Hayward be allowed to keep one penny of "his" money? No, the change ain't coming from above. It seems Nigeria has evolved a rather effective way of stopping the polluters. We should be paying attention.
Well said and put. Should have just waited for your reply instead of posting my own...
Unshakeable peace
____________________________________________________________________________
[The strength of the humand mind lies in the ability to think of OUR future]
http://principlesofbeing.blogspot.com/
Wrong Seinbeetre. Your comment was valuable, insightful, and certainly contributed to the thread. Thanks for posting it. We need the collective voice.
Thanks to you and Seinbeetre for taking this fool to task. I used to play the self blame game as well, until i woke up and realized the lengths the elite are going to to prevent us from making the changes we need to as a society. If you aren't born into the inner circle of power, you spend at least the first 20 years of your life, and more likely 30 or 40 years, trying to figure out how to play the game. You start getting a grasp on the extent that these criminals have stifled alternatives along the way, start to realize how they attempt to brainwash us and market their bs to us and pacify us, while making it increasingly difficult to meet the basic of a healthy life. I see trolley rails popping up through potholes from time to time here in Denver, a reminder of a public transport system the existed in every major city before the auto/oil big boys destroyed them (see Who Killed the Electric Car), and I'm supposed to look in the mirror because i need a car? We can't even get up off the mat to look in the mirror with their G.D.'ed jackboots on our throats.
Good answer !
Oh shit ! LoL
HUE: Great post!
Good answer Hue !
Now lets look at the other side. If billions did strive to limit their use of petro-products (where it is an option, of course), it would lead to significant contraction of profits for these beasts of industry. Nevertheless, we do have to live, which means driving and using plastic products. I do agree, though, that we are in no way responsible for BP's negligence, and criminality. Perhaps the biggest way to bring these monsters to their knees is to refuse to give them our children for cannon fodder in the military which, you guessed it, uses a huge amount of oil, and which is probably BP's Biggest single customer.
You have a point there, Shadow.
Brilliant!
You are right to a point, most lay people depend on the people in charge to make sure we are doing things right. Now everybody knows that is not the case for some time now, the fact that oil companies paid everyone off over the years not to engage in new green technology we are decades behind where we could be. Now we all need to demand it. I do not think the average person willing set out to hurt the planet. Evertime the greenys shouted about the damage being done the oil companies and plastic companies put out reports deneying those facts. Our leaders deney the facts. We nolonger can hide behind that, but people do not even believe in global warming because their leaders tell them it's not true.
It's interesting that the idiots on the right, Limbaugh, Hannity, Palin etc. get paid millions to make up and repeat lies, while the two guys who obviously spent long hours researching this article, which in a sane world would blow the lid off any remnants of our illusions of a democratic government, got no money for their work.
Americans love the rich and hate the poor.
In their brilliant article, both Mr. Seiler and Hamburg pose very pertininet questions, which I’m afraid are going to be left unanswered. The people and the sea and wildlife all along the Gulf of Mexico will continue to suffer, while the rapacious bastrads causing the hurt and pain line their pockters with glee. “NO ONE!” is at the helm of the ship that is slowly sinking into the abyss.
It’ll be more of the same old mendacity. One abhorrent corporate charade, a skit, a joke, which by the way is on us “We the [little] People.”
Perhaps this might cheer up you day a bit?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teMlv3ripSM
There never has been any hope. When the first hominid evolved, the first one capable of having the motto "If you can't eat, drink, or fuck it, you can shit on it".
That was the moment when any seer could have told you that sooner or later the human animal would destroy himself and thousands of species besides himself.
You stupid talking ape. If only you had not believed you were a god.
Nicely stated Freddy.
The $250 million BP stock sale by Goldman is not material. GAAP defines material as 5%. BP had lost about $100 billion in value and is now rebounding. It is not known if Obama benefited. When Goldman sells people listen. Hayward sold some stock - so what? He probably buys and sells BP all the time.
This article is alarmist. Lewis Seiler & Dan Hamburg wrote another sensational story about Halliburton building secret prisons in the US at unknown locations. Are they part of the "black helicopter crowd?" Know your source.
SJRyan,
If you're not alarmed by what has happened in the Gulf of Mexico, what's your source? Is it Halliburton? Anyone with a basic understanding of biology should be alarmed. And you?
Good we need to be alarmed ! To sit around and keep letting these terrible things happen in our Country and I do include 9/11, and gas fracking, and the war profits for Haliburton, and the banks crashing and no healthcare for 1/4 of our citisens ! To not be alarmed would make you a fool............
Ya ya good for you........the only thing worse than bad men doing bad things is good men doing nothing !
No not a montra, and no one sticks things in my head. It is the truth. You keep saying the same thing about how you don't care to do anything except take care of your own needs, and talking about 1000 years ago, well we are here today, with todays issues, and to hide in a shell is like not voting ,it's like running out of the burning building and not telling anyone else about the danger. It doen't make sence for you to keep saying that on a site like this. Full of people that do care ,and want to help.
Good reply razormirror, but I'd say just let the attention seeker be and invest your efforts in discussion that are worthwhile.
Unshakeable Peace
____________________________________________________________________________
[The strength of the humand mind lies in the ability to think of OUR future]
http://principlesofbeing.blogspot.com/
Ahhh, ShadowDancer, thank you for giving me something new and worth replying to.
I know its subjective. Anything I post is subjective.
I have my nation's problems solved, thanks. In any case you do not even know what my nation is.
I have the Earth saved as well. Had a good day today.
Reality, now here you have an interesting thought. I faced reality a long time ago, for a while now its been reality facing me.
In all honesty I never expected the people who run this world to care. Neither do I care whether they do or not.
Thanks for explaining the functioning of the world to me. That is explaining it from your subjective point of view. A circle indeed we have here. You may call it a vicious circle. I just call it a circle. You say life is good. I say life is.
Unshakeable Peace
____________________________________________________________________________
[The strength of the humand mind lies in the ability to think of OUR future]
http://principlesofbeing.blogspot.com/
Yaeh, you are right, Shadow just wants to say over, and over, how she can, but won't think or do. As she writes on the computor that is made of oil and plastics. It's okay Shadow I will stop trying to make you think.
I knew they would not get healthcare, I know a Democrat or Rebublican will win, It didn't take long to see that Obama is just another corporate greed machine. The oil will kill, and the men will drill, things are getting worse, but it is my time, in my life to try to make a differnce, even just one person at a time. I run a non-profit org. that helps people during and after disasters, and it is difficult, and people lie, and cheat, but should I stop helping because of them. There are many who are greatful and pass on the good to others, many see things in a better, clearer light, and reach out to help another. Should we stop helping the people because of the few bad eggs ? I say no, I keep going, I won't settle for the status quo.
Life is good...What a great experience ! I forgive when things are forgivable, I fight back when they are not !
Maybe we should all turn the TV off for awhile and go out into the woods and quiet our minds, Shadow. A great man once said that we are involved with the world in the wrong way because we are involved with ourselves in the wrong way. Makes sense to me.
It has been said that time is irrelevant in the timeless eternal. How can any consciousness within it be disturbed at all?
Shadow, you and yours want us to fail, because of what we did, and I don't blame you. I see the horrors, and lies, and damage we are doing now, but I can't think like you. I am not from your point of veiw, I see the past as something we must learn from, and morn, but not live by it, or we are doomed to repeat it, as we are doing. So I must try and show, and live a new way, a new light .
I think Shadow is rather indifferent. He has seen the 'beast' of modern society suck many of his fellow tribe members into the cash register circle chase.
Good post, I might substitute devils for pharaohs though. It's true, everything is designed to herd us or put us into a mold. Hell, they even drug the children unless the behave a certain way.
"Until your world just becomes the same cookie cutter town, city, or burg as anywhere else and everywhere is the same nowhere because no matter where you live your fairly close to a Walmart in your Mickey Mouse World."
Made me think: If you asked the average child in America where he'd rather go to beautiful Yellow Stone, Grand Canyon, or Disneyland, how would he answer?
Programming from the Pyramid devils is almost complete.
"So I am only passing through their world. Their isn't any reason for me to fight over their world at all."
I understand. We must be responsible for ourselves first and foremost. Perhaps the best we can do is not do, meaning not to contribute to the insanity. A quote I heard somewhere comes to mind:
"It's lunacy to try to lower the lunacy level of a lunatic (or lunatics)."
I'll be visiting the Niger Delta in Sept, and so have been reading up on it. By the time Nigeria got its independence from Britain in 1960 it already belonged to Shell Oil. 90% of Nigeria's revenue comes from oil, almost all of it from the Delta. With Texaco, Exxon and the rest now leaking their nasty product into once-productive fisheries and once viable societies, the Delta is now a wasteland. No schools to speak of, no clinics, just dead, oily swamps and dangerous gangs of forgotten young people. This is what oil companies do. They kill the environment and pay off politicians. They own places like Nigeria lock stock and barrel, and they are setting about their tried and true standard routine here. The Deepwater Horizon gusher was a bit of a snafu on their part, so they are getting some bad press. But Governors Barber and Jindall are squarely in their pocket, and nobody is seriously considering impeding the messy future of offshore drilling or the oil economy in general. Assurances about safety and accountability and shared profitability are verbatim identical to those given to the Ogoni and the Ijaws twenty years ago. I wish there was more focus on this bit of history, since it is also our future.
"A leader with backbone would have asserted immediate control over the disaster inflicted on the Gulf region and dictated terms to BP. "
Better still, a leader with backbone wouldn't have kept most of G. W. Bush's BP Officials on, nor would he have authorized BP to go ahead with this extremely dangerous, risky deep-water offshore oil-drilling job in the first place.
The last leader with backbone was JFK, and look what happened to him.