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EE_
2nd December 2010, 05:07 AM
A Special Report on the BP Gulf Oil Spill
Read: http://phoenixrisingfromthegulf.wordpress.com/2010/12/01/the-gulf-of-mexico-is-dying/

The pictorial evidence tells the whole story.

Especially that the BP narrative is nothing but a corporate-created illusion – a web of fabrication spun in collaboration with the US Federal Government and Mainstream Media. Big Oil, as well as the Military-Industrial Complex, have aided and abetted this whole scheme and info blackout because the very future of the Oil & Gas Industry is at stake, as is the future of the US Empire which sprawls around the world and requires vast amounts of hydrocarbon fuel.
Should the truth seep out and into the mass consciousness – that the GOM is slowly but surely filling up with oil and gas – certainly many would rightly question the integrity, and sanity, of the whole venture, as well as the entire industry itself. And then perhaps the process would begin of transitioning the planet away from the hydrocarbon fuel paradigm altogether, if it’s not already too late.

General of Darkness
2nd December 2010, 07:05 AM
Thanks for the update, while it's very sad.

Ponce
2nd December 2010, 10:13 AM
When everything is said and done the only ones that will really suffer will be the sea life.....I really don't care about the people because they will always be A-holes.

madfranks
2nd December 2010, 11:24 AM
Having recently left the gulf coast, I can testify that the majority of people (at least in my area) buy the "corporate-created illusion" hook line and sinker. If nothing else, I am sure that cancer rates are going to really rise in that area as people continue to live and work in that toxic environment.

keehah
2nd December 2010, 11:28 AM
From the report:

http://www.newsvine.com/_vine/images/users/660/bklim/4788499.jpg

Eighty-seven straight days of gushing hydrocarbon effluent under great pressure only served to further undermine the entire well system. Finally, when it was capped, putting the system back under pressure forced the upsurging hydrocarbons to find weaknesses throughout the greater system, which revealed all sorts of compromised, fractured and unsettled geology through which the hydrocarbons could travel all the way to the seafloor and into the GOM...

Just how bad is this situation? There are actually three different ongoing disasters – each more grave and challenging than the previous one – which must be considered when assessing the awesome destruction to the GOM by the Oil & Gas Industry.

I. A single gushing well at 100,000 barrels per day of hydrocarbon effluent for 87 days into the GOM at the Macondo Prospect

II. Numerous leaks and seeps within five to ten square miles of the Macondo well with an aggregate outflow of an unknown amount of hydrocarbon effluent per day into the GOM

III. Countless gushers and spills, leaks and seeps, throughout the Gulf of Mexico, where drilling has been conducted for many decades, with an aggregate outflow that can not even be estimated, but is well in excess of any guesstimate which would ensure the slow and steady demise of the GOM.

Spectrism
2nd December 2010, 11:56 AM
When everything is said and done the only ones that will really suffer will be the sea life.....I really don't care about the people because they will always be A-holes.


Spoken like a true people.

PatColo
2nd December 2010, 12:24 PM
Here's a listing of 100s of stories @ floridaoilspilllaw.com which are tagged with the subject "human health",
http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/category/human-health

similar listing for "seafood",
http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/category/seafood-2

see the tag cloud near the top for the rest

PatColo
2nd December 2010, 12:45 PM
Having recently left the gulf coast, I can testify that the majority of people (at least in my area) buy the "corporate-created illusion" hook line and sinker. If nothing else, I am sure that cancer rates are going to really rise in that area as people continue to live and work in that toxic environment.


all hope is not lost madfranks! (though granted, the bottom-9 might cause us to lose hope again)


BP Oil Disaster “more popular” than World Cup, American Idol, Justin Bieber (CHART) (http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/bp-oil-disaster-popular-world-cup-american-idol-justin-bieber-chart)

It’s more popular than Miley Cyrus, Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber. People were more curious about it than the iPad or American Idol. There was more worldwide interest in it than in the World Cup or the Super Bowl.

So what is IT?

It — the most popular web search of the year on the search engine Yahoo! — is the BP oil spill.

Yes, the environmental and economic disaster in the Gulf of Mexico piqued the interest of more Internet users than any other story of the year, any celebrity or any event…

“In 2010 consumers watched the BP disaster unfold like a slow-motion horror film,” said Vera Chan, senior editor and Web trend analyst for Yahoo!

Top Searches on Yahoo! in 2010

1. BP oil spill
2. World Cup
3. Miley Cyrus
4. Kim Kardashian
5. Lady Gaga
6. iPhone
7. Megan Fox
8. Justin Bieber
9. American Idol
10. Britney Spears 

Ponce
2nd December 2010, 01:03 PM
Pat Colo? that's a very good indication as to where we stand as a nation.

Spec? you are right and I admitted......I never cry for the death of my sister, mother or father but after a week and half I still cry for my cat........with that little cat I was living alone but was never lonely, but now I am........in one is to come it will be better to be alone and that way you will be able to concentrate with the problems at hand.

PatColo
2nd December 2010, 01:40 PM
Ponce, if you told the story of your cat dying I missed it. But if that's true, go "rescue" one or two cats from the pound! 2 will keep each other company. I'm more of a dog guy, cat's are first concerned about their territory, dogs are first concerned with pleasing their owner! But I've had cats around, they're okay, depends on the cat.

Okay back to the topic, massive death & ecological devastation in the Gulf bio/chem-warfare op (http://www.examiner.com/gulf-operation-in-national).

Deborah Dupre has released this new article discussing the article in the OP,

Explosive Gulf Oil Special Report: PSYOP global impact (Slide-show) (http://www.examiner.com/human-rights-in-national/explosive-gulf-oil-special-report-psyop-global-impact-slide-show)