Tag Archives: gulf

Ron Paul Teams Up With Barney Frank To Reduce Military Spending

Great interview on “The Situation Room” with Wolf Blitzer with Rep. Barney Frank and Rep. Ron Paul regarding the need to reduce military spending. Although the two Congressmen disagree as to what can be done with the massive savings, they do agree that America will be better served by a government that no longer spends in excess of one trillion dollars per year in managing an unsustainable overseas empire. Perhaps this will be the first step. We can all agree that this country is in the midst of a massive economic downturn, and that money spent in managing an overseas empire is money that is being taken out of the hands of Americans who could really use it. Part one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pP8CpXd4i74&feature=player_embedded# ! Part two: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNozF5S9Ewo&feature=player_embedded added by: ScottyT

CONFIRMED – LAB TESTED Gulf Coast Water Samples are ‘VERY TOXIC’

Oil and water samples were taken from both the Shores of Grand Isle and from 20 miles out. The preliminary analysis was done at an academic analytical chemistry laboratory. Looking for the likely pollutants from the deep water Horizon Oil spill. It was focused on the detection of benzene and propylene glycol. Benzene and other highly toxic contaminants were very low however the concentration of propylene glycol was between 360 and 440 parts per million. Just 25 parts per million is known to kill most fish and propylene glycol is just one of many ingredients found in Corexit. In short, the Gulf is being poisoned by BP's usage of the dispersants even after the EPA asked them to stop back in May. We are willing to provide ANY respected/known laboratory these samples or provide them with more. This is very serious to all people and marine life in and around the Gulf. added by: TomTucker

Is BP’s Corexit (Dispersant) Destroying Our Food Supply?

First we lost the fish, shrimp and other marine life in the Gulf of Mexico, to the BP oil catastrophe and ensuing massive dump of the neuro-toxic dispersant Corexit. Now we appear to be losing crops from the Mississippi Gulf Coast to middle Georgia. Watch these two videos. Surely there are bugs and diseases that hit agricultural crops, but the crop damage in the two videos from hundreds of miles apart look similar, and both are claimed to have happened soon after recent heavy rainfall from the Gulf of Mexico. Do we have agriculture experts researching? Have any watched this that can offer a good explanation? Auburn University has a University Agricultural Experimentation Station in Fairhope, AL, one mile off Mobile Bay. If something were happening to crops in the area, I’d think someone there would know it and be studying/testing. It’s highly suspect, but I’m the first to admit that I am not a plant expert so can’t begin to make an assessment. Go here to see the other video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHtSXNmPq9o&feature=youtube_gdata added by: samantha420

Glenn Beck University: Fox News host starts own college

Just in time for summer school, Glenn Beck has announced that he is starting a university in his name. According to the announcement on his website: “Beck University is a unique academic experience bringing together experts in the fields of religion, American history and economics. Through captivating lectures and interactive online discussions, these experts will explore the concepts of Faith, Hope and Charity and show you how they influence America's past, her present and most importantly her future.” Professors will include pro-family advocate David Barton, business guru David L. Buckner and Lousiana State University political science professor James R. Stoner Jr., who told Inside Higher Ed he was “delighted” to accept Beck's offer. Beck University will be online-only and courses are not for credit. Mother Jones has a list of suggested courses for BU, including “Intro to Theology: Ayn Rand,” and “Studies in Moral Courage: Joe McCarthy.” What do you think? Would you take a class at Beck University? Join the discussion below. added by: Stoneyroad

All Media Have Been Banned From Gulf Of Mexico Oil Spill Cleanup Sites

In an amazing development, all media have been banned from Gulf of Mexico oil spill cleanup sites. Yes, you read that correctly. All media have been banned. In yet another sign of just how far free speech rights in the United States have fallen, “National Incident Commander” Thad Allen has banned all media access to oil clean up sites in or around the Gulf of Mexico. Instead of devoting all of their energy to trying to save the environment in the Gulf of Mexico, BP and the U.S. government seem absolutely obsessed from keeping people away from seeing what is really going on. It is now a class B felony that carries a fine of up to $40,000 for any media representative to come within the 65 foot “exclusion zone” that has been established. That means that all members of the media – print, television, radio and bloggers – are banned from coming within 65 feet of anything important down in the Gulf of Mexico. added by: Revelation1217

Senator Burr Pulled Out of Gulf Covered in Oil

Republican Sen. Richard Burr is the target of a new TV ad campaign that ties him to the oil industry and the Gulf of Mexico spill. A coalition of four environmental, labor and veterans groups began airing an ad today showing an oil-covered man – identified as Burr – being pulled out of the ocean like a sea bird. The man in the suit is shown being cleaned in a rescue operation, reports Rob Christensen. “We pulled one out of the water this morning completely covered in oil,” says a man. “The name is Senator Richard Burr.” added by: punman

Massive MZ-3A Blimp Expected to Arrive in the Gulf Coast to Help Track Oil Slick

Blimp expected to arrive to help track oil slick By the CNN Wire Staff July 6, 2010 3:44 a.m. EDT New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — A massive, silver-colored blimp is expected to arrive in the Gulf Coast on Tuesday to aid in oil disaster response efforts. The U.S. Navy airship will be used to detect oil, direct skimming ships and look for wildlife that may be threatened by oil, the Coast Guard said Monday. The 178-foot-long blimp, known as the MZ-3A, can carry a crew of up to 10. It will fly slowly over the region to track where the oil is flowing and how it is coming ashore. The Navy says the advantage of the blimp over current helicopter surveillance operations is that it can stay aloft longer, with lower fuel costs, and can survey a wider area. The Coast Guard has already been pinpointing traveling pools of oil from the sky. “The aircraft get on top of the oil. They can identify what type of oil it is and they can vector in the skimmer vessels right to the spot,” Coast Guard Capt. Brian Kelley said. But the problem since last Wednesday has been the ability to clean it up before it approaches land. Rough seas have hampered cleanup efforts and tests by the boat billed as the world's largest skimmer. Tests of A Whale's ability so far are “inconclusive,” meaning the massive converted oil tanker–which is 3.5 football fields long — has yet to prove its Taiwanese owner's claim that it can skim between 15,000 and 50,000 barrels of oil off the sea in a day. So far, crude oil floating in the sea has not been concentrated enough for A Whale to skim effectively, according to oil company BP, even though it appears the ship has been surrounded by pools of oil just a few miles from the gusher. “We've got oil coming up from over a mile below the surface. And it doesn't always come up in one spot. It's not always predictable. So, in fact, we need to locate the oil first, and then assign the ship to the areas of heaviest concentration,” BP spokesman Hank Garcia said. Bad weather has hindered cleanup efforts, he said. “When you've got 6-foot, 8-foot seas, it's not going to lend itself to good capture of the oil.” On Monday, authorities said tar balls linked to the crude gushing from BP's ruptured deepwater well had reached into Louisiana's Lake Pontchartrain and hit the beaches near Galveston, Texas. The Coast Guard reported over the weekend that a shift in weather patterns could send more oil toward sensitive shores in Mississippi and Louisiana, and bad weather over the past few days has significantly hampered cleanup efforts. Anne Rheams, executive director of the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation, said Monday that the pattern was expected to persist for at least three more days. The National Hurricane Center said early Tuesday morning that a low-pressure area located near the Louisiana coast was producing a few showers and thunderstorms, but was not likely to develop into a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours. Federal estimates say between 35,000 and 60,000 barrels (about 1.5 million to 2.5 million gallons) of oil have been gushing into the Gulf daily since April 22, when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig sank in the Gulf, two days after it exploded in flames. The accident left 11 workers dead and uncorked an undersea gusher that BP has been unable to cap for 11weeks. CNN's Allan Chernoff contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Gulf oil spill threatens world’s largest fish

Whale sharks, the biggest fish in the sea, may be the latest victims of the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Officials at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported this week that four of the polka-dotted creatures, stretching about 40 feet long, had been spotted swimming alongside oil in search of food. Since whale sharks are filter feeders — scooping up plankton and small fish with their gaping mouths as they swim just beneath the surface — scientists are concerned they will swallow large amounts of toxic oil and die. “The problem is that these are surface feeding animals and if they digest the oil they will sink and we will not know how many are dying,” said Dr. Eric Hoffmayer, who has studied whales in the northern Gulf for the University of Southern Mississippi. “I don't think there is any question we're going to lose whale sharks to this oil spill. That's why we need to tag these sharks so that we can determine how they are impacted by the oil,” Hoffmayer told Reuters. Hoffmayer spent three days on the Gulf where he and other researchers discovered an extraordinary gathering of more than 100 feeding whale sharks about 90 miles south of Grand Isle, La. The site where they were feeding was about 60 miles west of BP Plc's blown-out Macondo well off the Louisiana coast and the gathering of whale sharks was among the largest seen in the northern Gulf of Mexico, Hoffmayer said. In addition to the danger inherent in swallowing oil, it could cause untold harm to the giant but vulnerable fish when they force the water they feed on, after it is sucked into their mouths, to filter out through their gills. Hoffmayer and a team of marine scientists came up with a plan Thursday to tag the sharks so they can track their movements and hopefully find out if oil is being digested. One of the big problems, he said, is that there is no known way of steering the whale sharks away from oil contaminated areas of the Gulf. Marine scientists in Mississippi are hoping to save other species from the oil, which breached Mississippi's mainland this week for the first time. http://www.canada.com/technology/environment/Gulf spill threatens world largest fish/3236621/story.html http://www.canada.com/technology/environment/3236622.bin?size=620×400 added by: julesrs007

Billy Nungesser – There is a conspiracy between the Coast Guard and BP

This guy is one of the few truth tellers functioning on the Gulf right now. He is the president of Plaquemines in La. http://www.plaqueminesparish.com/ added by: samantha420

Gulf Oil Spill Update: Just the Facts

“How much oil is still gushing? No one knows exactly how much oil is escaping BP's oil collection system (series of pipes drawing oil from leak to surface ships) and entering Gulf waters. Government estimates peg the leak at 35,000 to 60,000 barrels per day, which translates to between 1.5 million and 2.5 million gallons. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s nearshore trajectory predictions for the spill show it hovering off the Gulf Coast as far west as the Rockefeller State Wildlife Preserve and Game Refuge in the western part of Louisiana. The oil slick stretches as far east as Port St. Joe in northwestern Florida. NOAA is no longer forecasting the movement of oil out at sea, but the slick is not currently expected to enter the Loop Current, which could draw it around the Florida Peninsula and into the greater Atlantic. However, giant plumes of oil and gas are still present thousands of feet below the surface of the Gulf. The plumes are made of a mixture of oil, gas and seawater. They've been spotted radiating out from the blown well in all directions, University of Georgia marine scientist Samantha Joye said at a June 22 media briefing. The southwest plume has been traced over 20 miles from the well, while another plume extends more than 30 miles (48 kilometers) to the Northeast. The plumes are rich in methane gas, which is an energy source for some undersea microbes. These microbes seem to be noshing on the methane and multiplying, depleting the oxygen in the water column. In the long run, Joye said, that oxygen deprivation could affect the Gulf ecosystem by harming populations of plankton, the base of the oceanic food chain. (READ THAT LAST SENTENCE AGAIN!) How many animals have been affected by the spill? Gulf wildlife is still facing fallout from the oil spill. According to NOAA, 583 sea turtles were stranded in the oil spill area between April 30 and June 28. Of those, 432 were found dead and four died after being rescued. A total of 136 turtles are currently in rehabilitation centers, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is coordinating an effort to remove up to 70,000 turtle eggs from at-risk beaches. [Animals affected by oil spill] In the same April-to-June time period, 55 dolphins were found stranded in the oil spill area. Only two survived. While cause of death has not been determined, dolphin strandings are up this year, according to NOAA. According to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA numbers, 1,185 visibly oiled birds had been pulled from Gulf waters and beaches as of June 29. More than 300 of those were found dead, as were another 829 without external evidence of oil. ” More at link! http://www.livescience.com/environment/gulf-oil-spill-update-100702.html added by: DeliaTheArtist