Friday, May 14, 2010

WORMWOOD - The BP Apocalypse

By Octopus

And the third angel sounded the trumpet, and a great star

fell from heaven, burning as it were a torch, and it fell 
on the third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of 
waters: And the name of the star is called Wormwood.

- The Apocalypse of St. John -

(Note: Chernobyl in Russian means 'Wormwood.)
Here is the latest update on the Gulf oil spill from American Progress:
Based on "sophisticated scientific analysis of seafloor video made available Wednesday," Steve Wereley, an associate professor at Purdue University, told NPR that the actual spill rate of the BP oil disaster is about 70,000 barrels -- or 3 million gallons -- a day, which is 15 times the official estimate of BP and the federal government.  Another scientific expert, Eugene Chiang, a professor of astrophysics at the University of California, Berkeley, calculated the rate of flow to be between 840,000 and four million gallons a day.  These estimates suggest that the Deepwater Horizon wreckage has already spilled about five times as much oil as the 12-million-gallon Exxon Valdez disaster.  The new figure exceeds the "worst-case scenario" offered by Transocean, BP, and Halliburton officials, who told Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA) last week that the maximum possible flow would be "60,000 barrels a day."  Markey said in a statement on Thursday that "an underestimation of the oil spill's flow may be impeding the ability to solve the leak and handle the management of the disaster," adding that, "If you don't understand the scope of the problem, the capacity to find the answer is severely compromised."  BP, meanwhile, has not endorsed the new estimate. It has also declined to take "off-the-shelf instruments routinely used" in deep sea research down to the gusher to measure the rate.  A BP spokesman said that the company "has decided to focus on stopping the leak rather than measuring it."  BP's CEO Tony Hayward sought to downplay the scope of the disaster, telling the Guardian that "the amount of volume of oil and dispersant we are putting into it is tiny in relation to the total water volume [of the Gulf of Mexico]." The edges of the massive oil slick are expected to begin hitting shore in Mississippi by Sunday, although bits of "tar balls" from the spill have already been found on the beaches of both the state's mainland and barrier islands.

The "Minerals Management Service gave permission to BP and dozens of other oil companies to drill in the Gulf of Mexico without first getting required permits from another agency that assesses threats to endangered species," including the Deepwater Horizon site that just exploded.  Under current law the agency is required to get these permits.
Bottom line: This is the worst environmental disaster in history. It is no longer regional or national but international in scope. The entire Atlantic basin will be effected, and ocean gyres will move this mess around the globe.  Meanwhile, BP executives equivocate while tempers burn.

This disaster is in my backyard. It will impact our food supply, our local businesses, the livelihoods of neighbors, our coastline, our environment, our quality of life ... and there will be no fix within my lifetime.

When I read about 29 miners killed in the worst coal mine disaster in 40 years, and how Massey Energy bought off politicians and ducked safety standards, I say: "How's that laissez faire bullshit working out for you."

When I read of defective consumer products imported from abroad, of adulterated pet food that killed the family dog and defective wallboard that caused health hazards, I say: "How's that laissez faire bullshit working out for you."

When I read about the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, and how corrupt Wall Street bankers paid themselves bonuses from taxpayer-funded TARP money, I say: "How's that laissez faire bullshit working out for you."

When I think of this GOP right wing crap, their raving insanity over free-market capitalism, and their steadfast refusal to support banking reform, environmental protection, consumer product safety, and healthcare (because reform is bad, big government is bad, and what’s good for business is good for America), I say: "How's that laissez faire bullshit working out for you."

Damn idiots!  These corrupt business interests and their crooked politicians have gridlocked our government and crippled our ability to respond to crises.  As far as I am concerned, bipartisanship is dead.  Civility is dead.   There is more than a culture war being waged in this country.  We are locked in a struggle for survival itself.

14 comments:

  1. How's that laissez faire shit working out for you.

    Yes, Octo, that's also my refrain when I listen to the news these days.

    The Gulf disaster reminds me of the Chernobyl's catastrophe in several ways, not in the least because it was a portent of the collapse of the political and economic system that created it. Let's hope, as dreadful as it may sound.

    BTW, I found out, from the ever-vigilant Anon on my own blog, that the comparisons with Chernobyl have been made by others and in much more interesting (and in-depth) ways. See Dmitry Orlov's take on it.

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  2. And then there is Haley Barbour, the governor of Mississippi:

    Mississippi's Haley Barbour, a well-connected former Washington lobbyist, has calmly said the oil slick looming offshore is just a sheen in most places and there's no reason for people to panic.

    (...)

    Barbour, 62, is a second-term governor who was in office during Katrina and was widely praised for his response to the storm. He's now chairman of the Republican Governors Association. Barbour has said the oil spill is "not Armageddon," but he believes news coverage has hurt tourism in his state.

    "Come on down here and play golf, enjoy the beach, catch a fish and pay a little sales tax while you're here," Barbour said Wednesday during a televised news conference in Biloxi, Miss.

    While Barbour downplays the possibility of a 2012 presidential run, he hasn't dismissed it.

    (...)

    In Mississippi, Barbour has been juggling oil-spill briefings with his response to two consecutive weekends of severe weather, starting with a deadly April 24 tornado that cut a 149-mile swath through his state.

    He told The Associated Press the oil spill could be disastrous for Mississippi's coastal economy. Then he added: "But it's just as possible that what happens here will be manageable and of moderate and even minimal impact."

    Oil has not started washing up on shore in any large quantities, and Barbour likened much of the spill to the gasoline sheen commonly found around ski boats.

    "We don't wash our face in it, but it doesn't stop us from jumping off the boat to ski," Barbour said.


    Now that's a level of denial we can all admire, in the "How the **** is it possible?!" manner.

    Barbour deserves The Papal Medal of Honor for handling scandals and disasters. Pretend nothing is happening, and, just in case, blame the media for anything that does not fold neatly under the blanket of denial. It's, like, awesome (in the puke-inducing way).

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  3. It is indeed an international disaster -- none of the three players involved (BP, Transocean, Halliburton) are headquartered in the US. Transocean and Halliburton both enjoy nice corporate tax dodged by moving from the U.S. to Switzerland and Dubai, respectively.

    As I posited over at my place today, since we taxpayers are going to have to pay to clean up the bulk of this mess anyway, thanks to Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski, we might as well nationalize the oil companies and at least make sure we get to reap the rewards.

    I hate to blogwhore myself over here but I since I just wrote about this today, what the hell. It's related.

    Amazing to me that the tea baggers don't get upset about a corporation behaving so unpatriotically. Guess they're too busy looking for Obama's birth certificate.

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  4. "Guess they're too busy looking for Obama's birth certificate."

    The few conservative bloggers I check in with are not covering the spill at all.

    It's a though they want to believe the disaster isn't happening in their universe--cognitive dissonance.

    Drill, Baby, Drill! Turned into Spill, Baby, Spill! and there's no reconciling that fact for them.

    I am just about ready to give up.

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  5. I think a big part of this which has been overlooked is that this is a disaster which is visiting the South ... where they live. Let's face it no one is going to give a crap what Bill Kristol or even Sarah Palin have to say when it's YOUR job that's been wiped out, and the party you're supposed to be supporting is making excuses for the corporation that made the mess to begin with.

    The Gulf Coast is where a whole bunch of us rednecks vacation -- we don't call it the Redneck Riviera for nothing. This is a game changer, much as Hurricane Katrina was. Make no mistake, when shrimpers and oystermen are out of work, and Joe Sixpack's vacation is ruined by that "gasoline sheen" washing ashore, all the while McCain and Palin and the rest are still singing "drill baby drill" there will be a few eyes opened.

    Call me an optimist, but this will reach people in a way that other disasters have not.

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  6. Hmm.

    Factor in a couple of wars. Environmental degradation even prior to the virtual destruction of the Gulf of Mexico and we'd likely be paying more than $3.50 per gallon at the pump.

    Thank god for constitution. The (Union) 76 (th) Amendment guarantees cheap gas & free parking.

    Mission Accomplished!

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  7. I watch the video footage and listen to the news each night and then I cry.
    I cannot even begin to get my head around what this spill is going to cost us environmentally over the coming decades.
    The loss of marine life, costal animal life and people's livelihoods.
    This is just devastating...

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  8. laissez faire is everywhere
    the roads that we drive
    the food that we eat
    the schools where we learn
    that serve tainted meat
    the swamps that we drain
    our health care debacle
    if you listen real hard
    you hear the thieves cackle
    I hear you Octi
    and hope we all do
    but damn I feel helpless
    with my rhyming shoe
    they got the lawyers
    lobbyists and spin
    the fucking judges
    there's no way we can win
    gonna take a revolution
    to burn this thing down
    everyone vote for Palin
    watch it crash all around
    and from the ashes
    something shiny and new
    just don't count on it
    I think we're through

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  9. RE: "As far as I am concerned, bipartisanship is dead. Civility is dead. There is more than a culture war being waged in this country. We are locked in a struggle for survival itself. "
    Well said. Hat tip.
    It is now or never.
    Obama's feet have to be held to the fire on this one.
    Our total oil production is 2% of the global market, yet we consume 25% of the global market.
    All off shore oil production must be stopped now.
    Permanently.
    Or is it too late?

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  10. Hello, I've created a video detailing the true scope of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3iSTpxkaGWM

    Please share it with as many people as you can.

    Thank you for blogging about this catastrophe.

    Revelation 8:8-9
    And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third part of the sea became blood;
    And the third part of the creatures which were in the sea, and had life, died;

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  11. Thanks, Ryan. Your video is a first rate effort, and I support it. Most tragic of all, this catastrophe worsens with each passing day ... and there is still no resolution in sight.

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  12. Sheesh.

    Look at all the platforms that HAVEN'T exploded and caused incalculable environmental damage.

    Most of them in point to fact.

    Most tankers. pipelines, drilling platforms, refineries, etc. seem to work pretty well. Sure we have the odd refinery explosion and resultant deaths and dispersal of toxins and we have the occasional (and very regrettable) tanker wreck but most ships make it to port and most refineries never explode. And of course the mechanism of the free market insures that will continue. Bearing in mind one of the more business mottos is 'good enough' I think that now and again we're going to have the occasional hiccup in the system.

    But don't worry. BP will learn it isn't solid good business practice to completely ruin their customers' livelihood and degrade their environment.

    Won't they?

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  13. Excellent post. I happened to think of the 'wormwood' idea myself today.

    ReplyDelete

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