Tag Archives: mexico

The Real News Claims That 70% Of The People Living In Juarez,Mexico Are Murdered Everyday.

The Mexican army is a drug cartel. In part two of our interview with investigative journalist Bruce Livesey, we discuss the violence in Ciudad Juarez. Livesey, recently returned from Mexico's murder capital, says that the Mexican military is showing evidence that it is supporting the Sinaloa Cartel in it's bid to take out the local Juarez Cartel for this key transportation corridor. In addition to this corrupt government army that supports their handpicked cartel, the Mexican Zeta Cartel were U.S. trained at Fort Benning Ga AKA School of the Americas. We're forgetting that most of the Zeta Cartel Were Mexican army commandos that went rogue after being sent to the USA. They came back with all US/CIA training and developed a technically and efficient killing mercenary army and were hired by other cartels to kill and protect.They moved on and formed their own cartels. Once again here is another monster killing machine formed by the United States CIA. It really makes you wonder. added by: keithponder

Investigative Report: How the BP Oil Rig Blowout Happened

Investigative Report: How the BP Oil Rig Blowout Happened Three Mile Island, Challenger, Chernobyl—and now, Deepwater Horizon. Like those earlier disasters, the destruction of the drilling rig was an accident waiting to happen. Here, engineers in the growing science of failure analysis identify seven fatal flaws that led to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and draw lessons on how to prevent future catastrophes. By: Carl Hoffman PART ONE… April 20 was a triumphant evening for British Petroleum and the crew of Transocean's Deepwater Horizon. Floating 52 miles off the coast of Louisiana in 5000 feet of water, the oil rig was close to completing a well 13,000 feet beneath the ocean floor—an operation so complex it's often compared to flying to the moon. Now, after 74 days of drilling, BP was preparing to cap the Macondo Prospect well until a production rig was brought in to start harvesting oil and gas. Around 10:30 in the morning, a helicopter flew in four senior executives—two from BP and two from Transocean, to celebrate the well's completion and the rig's seven years without a serious accident. What unfolded over the next few hours could almost have been written as a treatise in the science of industrial accidents. As with the Three Mile Island nuclear plant partial core meltdown in 1979, the chemical leak in Bhopal, India, in 1984, the space shuttle Challenger disintegration in 1986 and the Chernobyl nuclear plant explosions and fi re that same year, there is never one mistake or one malfunctioning piece of hardware to blame. Instead, the Horizon disaster resulted from many human and technical failings in a risk-taking corporation that operated in an industry with ineffective regulatory oversight. By the time the blowout came, it was almost inevitable. “It's clear that the problem is not technology, but people,” says Robert Bea, an engineering professor at the university of California–Berkeley. “It was a chain of important errors made by people in critical situations involving complex technological and organization systems.” Bea and other engineers subject catastrophes like Deepwater Horizon to the science of failure analysis for good reason: Studying industrial disasters can lead to understanding the root causes behind every accident, which is the critical first step toward improving safety and preventing future big bangs. If we learn from mistakes, failure can drive innovation, both technical and organizational. “A lot of intelligence came out of Three Mile Island,” says Larry Foulke, former president of the American Nuclear Society and an adjunct professor at the university of Pittsburgh, knowledge that led to improvements like better control-room ergonomics and the standardization and accreditation of industry-wide training programs.Since Three Mile Island, there has not been another major accident in the U.S. nuclear industry. The following lessons drawn from forensic engineering should spur changes in the oil industry and government agencies that will lead to better risk assessment, more useful regulatory oversight, safer operating procedures and rapid crisis response. The blowout was a punishing lesson: 11 workers were killed and 17 injured in the accident itself. The resulting oil spill damaged the economy and environment of the entire Gulf Coast. But out of this calamity can come changes that will reduce the chances of such a tragedy occurring again, not just in deepwater drilling but in other high tech, high-risk industries as well. Success Breeds Complacency A simple but counterintuitive fact led to the Horizon disaster: wells, even ones drilled in deep water, had worked most of the time, just as the space shuttle and chemical and nuclear plants had functioned successfully, in some cases for decades. Although underwater drilling is complex and challenging, there are 3423 active wells in the Gulf of Mexico, 25 in water deeper than 1000 feet. Seven months before the blowout and about 250 miles southeast of Houston, the Horizon had drilled the world's deepest well—an astounding 35,055 feet. What was impossible just a few years earlier had become seemingly routine as BP and Transocean banged out record firsts on the farthest frontiers of technology and geography. The same offshore techniques and equipment that worked in shallow hydrocarbon formations seemed to function fine at ever greater depths and higher pressures. The offshore rush was on, and nothing was going to stop it. “when you think you've got a robust system,” says Henry Petroski, a professor of civil engineering at Duke university, “you tend to relax.” Other industries have lapsed into the same sense of false security. “By the time of Three Mile Island,” Foulke says, “the nuclear industry had not had a major mishap in 25 years. when you get an attitude that nothing bad happens, it leads you to believe that nothing ever will. ” It's called hubris, and it set the stage for the Deepwater disaster. “In the event of an unanticipated blowout resulting in an oil spill,” read the exploration plan that BP submitted on March 10, 2009, to the u.S. Department of the Interior's Minerals Management Service (MMS), which then managed and regulated offshore drilling, “it is unlikely to have an impact based on the industry-wide standards for using proven equipment and technology for such responses . . . ” That was nonsense. Although offshore blowouts occur frequently—there were 173 in the Gulf of Mexico alone from 1980 to 2008—there had never been one in deep water. In fact, neither BP nor any of its competitors had “proven equipment or technology” or any backup plan for a catastrophic failure at great depth. “The industry has not developed an oil spill plan for the low probability, high- consequence event when everything fails,” says Greg McCormack, director of the Petroleum Extension Service at the university of Texas. CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan

13 Workers Have Been Rescued After Today’s Oil Platform Fire in Gulf of Mexico

Workers rescued after oil platform fire in Gulf of Mexico http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/09/02/louisiana.oil.platform.explosion/index.html?hpt… Oil platform fire reported in Gulf of Mexico By the CNN Wire Staff September 2, 2010 4:58 p.m. EDT 13 survivors of the oil and gas production platform fire await rescue on Thursday. STORY HIGHLIGHTS * Louisiana governor says one worker is injured * Coast Guard reports a “sheen” from platform that produced oil and gas * The incident did not cause a spill, says company that owns rig * Thirteen people are accounted for after the fire, the Coast Guard says (CNN) — A well connected to an oil and gas production platform caught on fire in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday, engulfing the vessel in flames about 100 miles off the central coast of Louisiana and forcing 13 people overboard, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said. All 13 people have been accounted for, said Petty Officer Bill Colclough of the Coast Guard. They were found floating in the Gulf, officials said. Mariner Energy, which owns the Vermilion Oil Rig 380, said none of the crew members was hurt in the incident, despite earlier reports of a single injured worker. But Jindal said one worker was injured. Jindal said the 13 were transported to Terrebonne General Hospital for evaluation. Also, Mariner indicated that the fire — which was first reported to the Coast Guard by workers on a nearby rig around 9:20 a.m. (10:20 a.m. ET) — was not sparked by an explosion. It started at one of the platform's seven active wells, the company said, though its cause is under investigation. The cause is not yet known, Jindal said Thursday afternoon. The company said an initial flyover of the site indicated “no hydrocarbon spill.” However, Coast Guard Petty Officer Elizabeth Bordelon said there is a sheen on the water at the site of the platform, measuring about 100 feet wide and stretching for one mile. Jindal said the sheen can't be confirmed. The fire at the platform is not out yet, but it has been contained, Bordelon said. “Mariner Energy recently told us that they shut in the production platform, I want to stress that neither the state nor the U.S. Coast Guard have verified that information at this time,” said Jindal. “We are working with the Coast Guard to ensure that the platform is indeed shut in and not leaking anything into the water.” Jindal said that Mariner has told him that all seven wells have been closed off and that what is burning now is from fuel in storage, and not from an active leak. During the last week of August, production from the platform averaged approximately 9.2 million cubic feet of natural gas a day and 1,400 barrels (58,800 gallons) of oil, the company said. David Reed, a paramedic on board a nearby oil rig, said he suddenly saw “a bunch of smoke” from the direction of the Vermilion platform, and radios in his rig's control room started “lighting up like a Christmas tree” soon after. The first report of the fire came from Rotorcraft Leasing, a company that provides helicopter services for the industry, the Coast Guard said. The incident comes nearly five months after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded April 20, killing 11 people and causing a massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico — one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history. That oil rig, contracted by BP, had 126 workers. It burned for three days before finally sinking. Thursday's incident took place aboard a production platform, which is built after a well is drilled and remains in place for years. Oil rigs drill the wells. The platforms pump pressure down the hole to keep the well flowing, and sometimes collect the oil or gas, or both. U.S. agencies and BP capped the ruptured Deepwater Horizon well July 15, stopping the flow of oil into the Gulf. The effects of the huge spill could hurt the region for years. The failure of the well's blowout preventer triggered the April 20 explosion, and crews are expected to remove the equipment from the well since it may hold valuable forensic evidence as to why it failed. The Obama administration tried to impose a six-month moratorium on deepwater drilling in the wake of the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon in April, but the ban is in legal limbo. A group of companies that provide boats and equipment to the deepwater drilling industry sued to overturn the ban and won in June. The government tried again in July, imposing a new moratorium and asking for the suit to be thrown out. A federal judge refused this week to dismiss it. The Vermilion platform did not violate the moratorium, said Melissa Schwartz, spokeswoman for the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, which replaced the Minerals Management Service. “This was an oil and gas production platform in approximately 340 feet of water, 102 miles offshore Louisiana (80 nautical miles),” she said. “This platform was authorized to produce oil and gas at this water depth. The current suspension involves drilling rigs in water depths greater than 500 feet,” she said. White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Thursday that the federal government has “assets ready” to respond to any environmental problems resulting from the fire on the Vermilion structure. Mariner Energy describes itself as one of the leading independent oil and gas exploration and production companies in the Gulf of Mexico. The company said it had interests in about 350 federal offshore leases last year, with more than 110 of the 350 in development. The company has about 300 employees. Its most recent quarterly net income was $1.7 million. Shares of Mariner Energy fell 60 cents to $22.75 on Thursday. The company is in the process of a planned merger with a larger company, Apache Corp. The merger is about four to six weeks away from completion, an Apache spokesman said. CNN's Vivian Kuo, Sarah Edwards, Mike Ahlers and Steve Hargreaves contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Oil Sheen Spreading from Today’s Gulf of Mexico Oil Rig Fire

Oil sheen spreading from Gulf platform explosion In this Aug. 3, 2010 photo, a boat motors near oil sheen in the Gulf of Mexico, between the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill site and the Louisiana coast. Watch video from the Associated Press. Click here: http://video.ap.org/?f=GASTA&pid=BTiSyFq45YGehjSjPnZTjNg7Vp54ptzR By ALAN SAYRE The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS, La. – Another oil rig exploded and caught fire Thursday off the Louisiana coast, spreading a mile-long oil sheen in the Gulf of Mexico west of the site of BP's massive spill. All 13 crew members were rescued. Coast Guard Petty Officer Bill Coklough said the sheen, about 100 feet wide, was spotted near the platform. Firefighting vessels were battling the flames. The company that owns the rig, Houston-based Mariner Energy, did not know what caused the blast, which was reported by a helicopter flying over the area. Crew members were found floating in the water, huddled together in survival outfits called “gumby suits.” “These guys had the presence of mind, used their training to get into those gumby suits before they entered the water. It speaks volumes to safety training and the importance of it because, beyond getting off the rig, there's all the hazards of the water such as hypothermia,” Coast Guard spokesman Chief Petty Officer John Edwards said. The crew was being flown to a hospital in Houma. Coast Guard Cmdr. Cheri Ben-Iesau said one person was injured, but the company said there were no injuries. Seven Coast Guard helicopters, two airplanes and three cutters were dispatched to the scene. The platform is in about 340 feet of water and about 100 miles south of Louisiana's Vermilion Bay. It's location is considered shallow water, much less than the approximately 5,000 feet where BP's well spewed oil and gas for three months after the April rig explosion. Responding to any oil spill in shallow water would be much easier than in deep water, where crews depend on remote-operated vehicles access equipment on the sea floor. The rig is a fixed platform that was in production at the time of the fire, according to a homeland security operational update obtained by The Associated Press. The update said the platform was producing 58,800 gallons of oil and 900,000 cubic feet of gas per day. The platform can store 4,200 gallons of oil. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said Mariner Energy officials told him there were seven active production wells on the platform, and they were shut down shortly after the fire broke out. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said President Barack Obama was in a national security meeting at the time of the accident. “We obviously have response assets ready for deployment should we receive reports of pollution in the water,” Gibbs said. The platform is about 200 miles west of BP's blown-out well. A company report said the well was drilled in the third quarter of 2008. Federal authorities have cited Mariner Energy and related entities for 10 accidents in the Gulf of Mexico over the last four years, according to safety records from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement. The accidents range from platform fires to pollution spills and a blowout, according to accident-investigation reports from the agency formerly known as the Minerals Management Service. In 2007, welding sparks falling onto an oil storage tank caused a flash fire that slightly burned a contract worker. The Minerals Management Service issued a $35,000 fine. Mariner Energy Inc. focuses on oil and gas exploration and production in the Gulf. In April, Apache Corp., another independent oil company, announced plans to buy Mariner in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $3.9 billion, including the assumption of about $1.2 billion of Mariner's debt. That deal is pending. On Friday, BP was expected to begin the process of removing the cap and failed blowout preventer, another step toward completion of a relief well that would put a final seal on the well. The Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20, killing 11 people and setting off a three-month leak that totaled 206 million gallons of oil. added by: EthicalVegan

BP Crews Have Removed the Blowout Preventer on BP’s Ruptured Oil Well in the Gulf of Mexico

Crews have removed the blowout preventer on BP's ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico, a company spokeswoman says. http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/09/02/gulf.oil.disaster/index.html?hpt=C1 Cap off BP's ruptured well By the CNN Wire Staff September 2, 2010 5:50 p.m. EDT Crews have begun removing the blowout preventer on BP's ruptured well in the Gulf. STORY HIGHLIGHTS * NEW: Cap removal is first step in removing, replacing blowout preventer * The well has been capped since July 15 * Installing a new blowout preventer is a crucial step toward killing the well LIVE: Click here for an underwater view of BP's work. New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — Crews removed the cap from BP's ruptured Gulf of Mexico oil well late Thursday afternoon, a company spokeswoman said. The operation was the first step in removing the blowout preventer — which failed spectacularly in April, triggering a deadly explosion and oil spill — said BP spokeswoman Jessie Baker. Officials plan to replace the blowout preventer with a new one, a major step toward a final fix. But the effort to permanently seal the ruptured oil well has stalled because of turbulent seas. “We've run into a weather window that's got us in a hold,” said retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the government's point man on the oil disaster. “If we can get to the blowout preventer sooner rather than later, we will do that.” BP announced the postponement of the procedure on its Twitter page Monday. The operation was delayed last week as engineers tried to fish out pieces of drill pipe stuck inside the blowout preventer. Removal of the device needs to be done carefully, officials have said, because the blowout preventer may hold valuable forensic evidence as to why it failed April 20, triggering the explosion that killed 11 rig workers and caused the massive oil disaster. Allen said teams are working closely with joint investigation groups, engineers, scientists and the Department of Justice to ensure the machinery is handled correctly. The well has been capped since July 15, stopping the flow of oil. added by: EthicalVegan

— Congressman on VIDEO STATEMENT: "Extraterrestrials are here, Everyone must know, I saw the proof and documents" — | Before It’s News

And we are worried about illegal aliens from Mexico? added by: kennymotown

Mexican Papers Are Starting to Notice Wikieaks? Wikileaks Mexicans share documents … and the government is silent on Living Mexico (Featured)

– use Google translate Although to a lesser extent as the U.S. documents, Wikileaks has also leaked some Mexican documents , among which are: Records and agreements of the secret negotiations between Mexico and the United States on the adoption of the Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA, which seeks to regulate the kind of data that are shared via the internet to prevent piracy and bank fraud, among other things. Research of the U.S. Congress on the 2006 presidential election. A series of documents indicating that U.S. Special Forces have conducted missions throughout Latin America (including Mexico). A map of its operations only in 2009 and included 19 countries of the continent. Emails leaked by a former employee at a contractor Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex), which indicated failure of a document management system in the parastatal. These errors could have cost millions of dollars. added by: toyotabedzrock

Gary Johnson: Legalize Marijuana to Stop the Drug Cartels

By Gary Johnson, Former Governor of New Mexico–The Huffington Post There were 72 bodies found on a ranch ninety miles south of the Texas border — obvious victims of a drug cartel massacre. Bullets have been hitting public buildings in El Paso, and the Washington Post is reporting that at least $20 billion a year in cash is being smuggled across the U. S. border each year. What is it going to take to convince the federal government that current drug policies are not working? The fact is that the current drug laws are contributing to an all-out war on our southern border — all in the name of a modern-day prohibition that is no more logical or realistic than the one we abandoned 75 years ago. Mexican drug cartels make at least 60 percent of their revenue from selling marijuana in the United States, according to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. The FBI estimates that the cartels now control distribution in more than 230 American cities, from the Southwest to New England. How are they able to do this? Because America's policy for nearly 70 years has been to keep marijuana — arguably no more harmful than alcohol and used by 15 million Americans every month — confined to the illicit market, meaning we've given criminals a virtual monopoly on something that U.S. researcher Jon Gettman estimates is a $36 billion a year industry, greater than corn and wheat combined. We have implemented laws that are not enforceable, which has thereby created a thriving black market. By denying reality and not regulating and taxing marijuana, we are fueling not only this massive illicit economy, but a war that we are clearly losing. In 2006, Mexican President Felipe Calderon announced a new military offensive against his country's drug cartels. Since then, more than 28,000 people have been killed in prohibition-fueled violence, and the cartels are more powerful than ever, financed primarily by marijuana sales. Realizing that his hard-line approach has not worked, earlier this month Calderon said the time has come for Mexico to have an open debate about regulating drugs as a way to combat the cartels. Ignoring this problem, Mr. Calderon said, “is an unacceptable option.” Calderon's predecessor, Vicente Fox, went even further, writing on his blog that “we should consider legalizing the production, sale and distribution of drugs” as a way to “weaken and break the economic system that allows cartels to earn huge profits… Radical prohibition strategies have never worked.” Fox is not alone. His predecessor, as well as former presidents of Brazil and Colombia, has also spoken out for the need to end prohibition. And they're right. Crime was rampant during alcohol prohibition as well. Back then it was led by gangsters like Al Capone. Now it's lead by cartels. The violence in Mexico is out of control and is destroying the country. Journalists fear reporting the daily shootouts because of threats from the cartels. Some schools are even teaching their students to duck and cover in order to avoid the crossfire. Politicians are being targeted for assassination. The havoc has spread into the United States. In March, hit men executed three people linked to the U.S. Consulate in Juarez, an act that President Obama condemned. And the same cartels that are selling marijuana in the United States are destroying treasured environmental resources by growing marijuana illegally in protected park lands. By regulating marijuana, such illegal grows would cease to exist. The problem has been out of hand for quite some time, and a new approach is desperately needed. Sadly, U.S. officials refuse to even acknowledge that such a debate is taking place. Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske has said repeatedly that the Obama administration is not open to a debate on ending marijuana prohibition. Even worse, we've continued to fund Mexico's horribly failed drug war (to the tune of $1.4 billion through the Merida Initiative), while refusing to be honest with our neighbors who are urgently seeking a new direction. This November, Californians will decide whether to legalize marijuana for adults 21 and older. U.S. officials need to welcome the debate on marijuana regulation. It's probably the only practical way to weaken the drug cartels — something both the U.S. and Mexico would benefit from immeasurably. We need a new solution to stop this violence. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gary-johnson/legalize-marijuana-to-sto_b_696430.ht… added by: ScottyT

Power Ranger David Yost: I Quit ‘Because I Was Called Faggot’ One Too Many Times’ / Queerty

In an announcement that will shock many of you — TO YOUR CORE — 41-year-old actor David Yost, who played the Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers' Billy Cranston (aka Blue Ranger), has come out. But that's not where the story ends. Yost says he quit the show because he was harassed over his sexuality. “Creators, producers, writers, directors” all threw the F-word around at him. Yost, whose character was written out in subsequent franchise incarnations, reveals in a lengthy interview that he “walked off set one day in the middle of lunch,” a move he had been thinking about for about a week. “Continuing to work in an environment like that is really difficult. I myself was struggling with who I was, or what I was, and to be made fun of on some level, or to be stereotyped, or put into a category … I was continually being told I'm not worthy of where I am because I'm quote-unquote a gay person and I'm not supposed to be an actor and can't be a superhero.” His co-stars, Yost says, were beckoned into producers' offices on multiple occasions to be quizzed about his sexuality. And after leaving the show, everything was swell? No. He spent two years trying to “pray the gay away,” had a nervous break down, checked himself into a mental hospital for five weeks, and upon his release he moved to Mexico for a year. “It frustrated me that I hated myself on such a level that I couldn't accept myself.” added by: toyotabedzrock

Miss Universe Jimena Navarrete See Thru Shirt of the Day

I had no idea who this was when I saw the pics of her in a see thru, but realized she’s Miss Mexico trying to get extra attention after winning Miss Universe, since no one gives a fuck about Miss Universe and to make her Mexicon corrupt cop and drug dealing boyfriend who tries to extort tourists proud of the pussy he’s fucking when he’s not too busy fucking other pussy….Let’s face it, she’s not all that hot…but then again she did win a Miss Universe concert and she didn’t sign a modeling contract, she didn’t sign record deal, she didn’t get signed onto a new hot show or even porn contract….which is what all the actual hot girls are fighting over….but here is her see thru anyway….let’s hope this is the gateway to better things from her…

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Miss Universe Jimena Navarrete See Thru Shirt of the Day