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Jun 16

re-posted from L.A. Times

After the oil spill

Disturbing trends from the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska are being repeated in the Gulf of Mexico disaster.

Charles Wohlforth

June 16, 2010

After spending around half a billion dollars, scientists paid by the government to study the Exxon Valdez oil spill over the last two decades still cannot answer some of the most important questions about the damage it caused or about whether Prince William Sound will fully recover.

We’re in danger of ending up just as ignorant after the BP oil blowout in the Gulf of Mexico, as once again, our legal, political and economic systems hobble scientists and pervert the search for answers.

The mandate of Alaska’s government-sponsored oil spill research was to quantify the damage of the spill and guide decisions for restoring of the environment. After the initial chaos, lawyers for the state of Alaska and the federal government called the shots on a joint science program. Later, a state-federal interagency council was in charge, although still with a heavy hand from lawyers and politicians. Most of the money spent for thousands of individual studies ultimately came from a legal settlement with Exxon.

The failures were built in by those controlling the money. The best scientists in the field recognized early on that to tease out oil spill impacts from broader changes in the ecosystem, they would need well-coordinated studies looking at many species and many factors in the environment. But lawyers rejected those projects, instead focusing on studies looking at damage to the most popular individual species in isolation.

In the end, according to retired University of Alaska professor Rick Steiner, the studies were of little help in fixing Prince William Sound: No restoration decisions per se have been made based on the findings. And we didn’t even find out how much oil spilled from the Exxon Valdez. The oft-quoted figure of 11 million gallons is probably about a third of the total, but definitive follow-up studies were never completed.

Nor did we get answers for the greatest lingering mystery of the oil spill. Before the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef, Prince William Sound had huge spring herring runs — massive balls of spawning fish. Afterward, the fish developed lesions and other defects. Their numbers crashed in 1994 and have never recovered. Fishermen lost an important part of their livelihood, and the ecosystem is undersupplied with a forage fish critical to the food web, but because scientists didn’t study the ecosystem holistically after the spill, the tens of millions of dollars spent researching herring have yielded only guesses as to why. And Exxon gets away with claiming it wasn’t to blame.

A big part of the problem in the Alaska situation is that business and government have a desire not to know, and especially not to tell. Some of the same institutions responsible for the damage and the cleanup also fund the science that can expose their culpability and lack of effectiveness.

In Alaska, Exxon and government officials resisted efforts by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to set up studies to track how well the cleanup was working and whether it was doing more harm than good. The unfavorable results of the one, small study that was completed were initially kept confidential. I was able to see them only after filing an appeal of a denied Freedom of Information Act Request.

As I have documented in my book, “The Fate of Nature,” a scientist who revealed that rescued sea otters mostly died after they were released — and that their release may have sickened healthy otters in the wild — lost his research contracts and was blacklisted from future work with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which had approved the rescue operation.

With a similar affection for ignorance, BP, the Coast Guard and even the president for a time maintained that it didn’t matter how much oil was leaking in the gulf. BP initially blocked video of the gusher that outside experts could use to estimate the flow, and only after public pressure used equipment offered by a professor to measure it directly.

Another problem is mixing litigation with science. In Alaska, government lawyers muzzled scientists working for the public, labeling their work as evidence against Exxon. That secrecy was supposed to help build a case, but it mostly crippled scientists’ ability to coordinate their work and caused wasted efforts. Yet they ultimately made no significant use of the studies they ordered, instead agreeing to settle the cases with Exxon for an arbitrary negotiated figure that Alaska’s governor at the time, Walter Hickel, told me he pulled out of thin air.

In the Gulf of Mexico, scientists are already running into a legalistic wall of silence. The journal Nature reports in its May 27 issue that, in some cases, academic scientists can’t even find out what government research is happening. A communications director for NOAA cited the same reason we heard in Alaska — “the ongoing investigation”— as if someone were worried about tipping off the prime suspect that his oil spill had been discovered.

Another problem is the abuse of science in the service of public relations. In studying the Alaska disaster, the government and Exxon became locked in a war of research, producing dueling studies and accusations of misconduct. The Chronicle of Higher Education found that although all the researchers involved were from reputable institutions, their results correlated mainly with who was paying the bills.

In the gulf, BP has already established a beachhead in an alternate reality, avoiding questions, spinning terminology and blankly denying the existence of underwater plumes of oil discovered by independent, academic scientists. And BP has announced its own science project, noting that it will look at how natural oil seeps may have fouled the gulf, a bugaboo repeatedly raised by Exxon in Alaska to cast away blame. Grants BP made to academic researchers on Tuesday sound more promising.

The situation is discouraging, but the solutions aren’t complicated. Form an independent entity led by top independent scientists who can coordinate a research plan and allocate funding to individual researchers or organizations based on merit — just as big-ticket, big-effort science usually is managed in this country.

All scientific work should be public and delivered in peer-reviewed journals and open conferences. Any harm to lawsuits or criminal investigations caused by openness will be slight compared with the benefit to society of getting the answers we need to understand what has happened and prevent it from happening again. Besides, a publicly vetted science program will be far more difficult for industry-hired experts to assail. Their criticisms can be accounted for as the research unfolds, and therefore made irrelevant to the final result.

Catastrophe can be an excellent teacher, but only if we study it without fear or favor. BP and the federal government are to blame for the disaster. They shouldn’t get to decide what truths are learned from it.

Charles Wohlforth’s new book, “The Fate of Nature: Rediscovering Our Ability to Rescue the Earth,” explores the history and environment of his home state of Alaska for lessons about humanity’s relationship to Earth. http://www.fateofnature.com

Jun 04

Obama and Oil

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June 3, 2010

Yes, Obama is “Engaged” — in a Colossal Crime

By Glen Ford

Obama is a facilitator of the corporate enterprise that has spawned the Mother of all Pollutions.”

In a rational polity, the great abomination to Earth and Man in the Gulf would spell the end of the Obama presidency. We are witnessing cataclysm on a geological scale, an event with the potential to alter planetary destiny, precipitated not by the three hundred million year arc of wayward comets or the incremental slide of continent-molding tectonic plates, but by the routine exercise of corporate power in the United States.

The man in charge of the government that both permitted and abetted the heinous corporate crime (“Drill, baby, drill!”) should, by all rights, be in terminal disgrace. Instead, much of Obama’s “base” behaves as if the First Black President is an innocent party a victim of circumstances rather than a facilitator of the corporate enterprise that has spawned the Mother of all Pollutions. But then, Teflon is a petrochemical product.

Any meaningful discussion of the oceanic version of Chernobyl would challenge a political system in which huge corporations are empowered to seek profits with absolutely no regard for the consequences to Earth or Man. Viewed from that angle the only sane perspective questions of whether Obama is fully or only partially “engaged” are ludicrously ill-framed. Engaged in what, in subduing and caging the corporate animals that are defecating in humanity’s only nest? Clearly not: BP is the operative government in the Gulf, with the Coast Guard as its muscle. BP is also the surgeon in charge of mending the Earth’s wound and preventing the spread of septicemia in its life-sustaining fluids the equivalent of Jack The Ripper tending to his own victims. Under such circumstances, the more Obama assures us he is “engaged,” the greater his confessed complicity in the crime.

The president furthered the oil industry’s plans to drill at depths at which current technology makes mistakes irreparable.”

For purposes of assigning culpability, Obama was fully engaged in setting the stage for the atrocity from the moment of his campaign reversal on off-shore drilling in August, 2008 after he had the nomination locked up. “My interest is in making sure we’ve got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices,” said candidate Obama. “If, in order to get that passed, we have to compromise in terms of a careful, well-thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage — I don’t want to be so rigid that we can’t get something done.” So Obama bent over like a contortionist to pleasure the oil barons.

The full scope of Obama’s “compromise” was announced almost two years later, on March 31. The White House gave Big Oil virtually everything it wanted that was politically possible, with no protections for the public or Mother Earth in the form of a “well-thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage.”

“The federal government is fully engaged and I am fully engaged,” said Obama, last week. OK, we’ll accept that he has been engaged in furthering the oil industry’s plans to drill at depths at which current technology makes mistakes irreparable as the damage from the current ecological holocaust is already irreparable.

The more Obama assures us he is ‘engaged,’ the greater his confessed complicity in the crime.”

Obama has been engaged in killing the planet, in concert with his corporate co-conspirators. He did nothing more than cosmetic changes at the federal Minerals Management Service, which Obama finally admitted, at last week’s press conference, “had been plagued by corruption for years” and had a “scandalously close relationship” with Big Oil.

The unbroken chain of “corruption” at the agency in both Bush and Obama administrations is one small expression of the continuity of actual rule of the country by sometimes feuding cousins in Big Oil and Wall Street and the Military Industrial Complex the permanent government. Obama is “engaged” as their servant, like his predecessors in the Oval Office.

The corporate cousins have raised the stakes of the game. It’s either them or Earth itself. When history passes its verdict on the current era, she will not assign much import to the advent of the First Black President of the United States. Rather, history will mark 2010 as the year a servile political operative in the White House exposed the seabed to deep defilement by the oil colossus, from which the world never fully recovered.

Author’s Website: www.BlackAgendaReport.com

Author’s Bio: Glen Ford is a 37-year veteran of Black radio, television, print and Internet news and commentary. He is executive editor of BlackAgendaReport.com and was co-founder of BlackCommentator.com.

May 25


TED Talks In this poignant, funny follow-up to his fabled 2006 talk, Sir Ken Robinson makes the case for a radical shift from standardized schools to personalized learning — creating conditions where kids’ natural talents can flourish.

May 25

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Do we even have the technology to stop this leak

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Jan 08

Avatar Obama

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We live in the era of hype. The word, which bounces and bounds throughout the matrices of our information age, refers to a cultural product that has been so juiced up with marketing that its popularity takes off independently and regardless of its quality. It is the wrapping that matters: the advertisement is louder, more important and more real than what is advertised.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

In 1992, Neal Stephenson popularized the concept of a metaphorical avatar with his cyberpunk novel “Snow Crash.” In Stephenson’s world, an avatar is a digital image that stands in for a real person in virtual domains, such as the Internet, video games or role-playing games. To this list of irreal dimensions, we can add the world of American politics. During the first year of the Obama administration, it has become apparent that it wasn’t actually Barack Obama himself that participated in the elections: it was, rather, his avatar out there on the campaign trail.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Avatar Obama is an immense hype, the product of a tremendous marketing campaign that has turned a real person into a symbolic shell. Avatar Obama is billboard and wrapping: pure brand name.

Angel Luis Lara | La Jornada (Mexico) - Translation: Ryan Croken

READ THE WHOLE ARTICLE

Dec 24

Just Another Bailout for the Financial Sector?

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truthout

from truthout

Thursday 24 December 2009

by: Ellen Hodgson Brown J.D., t r u t h o u t

Dr. Benjamin Rush, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, is quoted as warning two centuries ago:

“Unless we put medical freedom into the Constitution, the time will come when medicine will organize into an underground dictatorship. . . . The Constitution of this republic should make special privilege for medical freedom as well as religious freedom.”

That time seems to have come, but the dictatorship we are facing is not the sort that Dr. Rush was apparently envisioning. It is not a dictatorship by medical doctors, many of whom are as distressed by the proposed legislation as the squeezed middle class is. The new dictatorship is not by doctors but by Wall Street – the FIRE (finance, insurance and real estate) sector that now claims 40 percent of corporate profits. Continue reading »

Feb 15

from Los Angeles Times
By Alana Semuels
February 14, 2009

Steve

Microsoft Corp. is looking for an answer to Apple Inc.’s genius.

The Redmond, Wash., software giant plans to open a series of retail stores to show off its goods. It’s taking a page from the playbook of its scrappy computer-industry rival, which has boosted sales by opening Apple stores across the globe and stocking its Genius Bar with tech experts.

Details about Microsoft’s plans for the stores were still scarce Friday. But the idea is to make it easier for customers to buy and check out Microsoft products, such as the XBox game console, Zune digital media player and Surface tabletop computer — as well as computer gear made by partners that run its software. Continue reading »

Feb 06

We all want to make the world better — but how? Jamais Cascio looks at some specific tools and techniques that can make a difference. It’s a fascinating talk that might just inspire you to act.

Jamais Cascio follows the threads of civilization’s intended (and unintended) consequences into an unpredictable future, bringing back glimpses of a green world wired beyond our wildest dreams.

Feb 04

from Gary Dunham:

 Know the Right Moment

          Diogenes  (300 AD)

Sorry in advance for the intrusion on your effort to protect the membership from the devastating effects of the provisions of the current contract proposal. However, I think I may have a bit to contribute to the dialogue… having resided in the belly of the Beast for a few years. As always, you may use it (all or in part), abuse it, toss it, or laugh at it.

The state of the IA…

Tom Short is out of the picture. His absence is significant in a number of ways. His absence has created a power vacuum within the IA Executive Board. Those of you who now the history, know TS had a debt to repay to the old IAEB because of their treatment of his father. TS gained power and systematically removed VP after VP. Eddie Powell was the last to go.

He replaced the ousted VP’s with “his guys”. I met most of them. TS created an EB that could not and would not speak up or challenge any pronouncement in the way of policy by TS, regardless of the consequences to their membership. Loyalty was rewarded.

I am sure the departure of TS took the entire EB by surprise…, as did the appointment of Matt Loeb as his successor. There are many long standing VP’s that have years of seniority over Loeb. Because dissent and disagreement were not tolerated, a successor, or heir apparent, never naturally surfaced… on the merits of leadership skills… (Short wouldn’t stand for it).  IMHO I do not think Matt has the chops to step into the IA Presidency unchallenged, there will surly be a blood letting (some of it may be Matt’s). The IAEB is in for a rocky ride until one of the VP’s consolidates enough power to gain real control. Again, my opinion based on my experience.

The statements made by Bruce Doering and Mike Miller, that the ratification ballot will be worded as ratify or strike (not a straight accept or reject as in past ballots) should be taken with utmost seriousness. In the above context, these statements become a bit clearer and a lot darker for the membership. Matt Loeb cannot afford to be sent back to the table by the membership. It will not only undermine his authority within the IAEB, it will send a clear signal to the AMPTP that he cannot deliver the membership as TS did. I think the ballots have not been sent out because of the political firestorm the contract has created. They are in damage control mode. Those of you working to inform the members of the dangers of this contract need to strategize the response to the ratify/strike language if it is indeed the language that the ballot contains. I know that there are a few real lawyers in L600; it would be nice if they could be tapped to look into the legality of the ratify/strike language. I am sure their lawyers are doing the same.

If the membership understands that strike/ratify is being used to frighten them into accepting the contract the battle is half won.

Furthermore, the AMPTP is not the formidable opponent that the IA makes them out to be… The IA and the BA locals only used that impression to “sell” previous contracts to the members as well as to lower future expectations. It’s bull.

The AMPTP is not a cohesive organization in lock step with one another… There are 160 member companies in the AMPTP and they are, unlike us, (the union) competitors. They have a host of competing interest, many of which, if not mitigated could be disastrous to the unit as a whole.

The glue of the AMPTP is Nicholas Counter. He is getting on in years and was rumored a few years ago to be considering retirement. I have a strong suspicion that he will retire after this round of negotiations. Another factor to the cohesiveness of the AMPTP is the consistency in which the IA has delivered the workforce without cost or incident throughout each contract cycle. If the members reject this contract it will effectively fracture that assumption of the AMPTP.

The cohesiveness of the AMPTP has also been stressed by the actions of SAG. It has been a long and drawn out battle. The major studios can handle a slowdown but the independents will not be able to endure much longer. The AMPTP counts on the independents to provide a cohesive front… but if the choice is cohesiveness or bankruptcy I think there will be further fracturing… Both sides are locked in a ferocious battle… SAG is showing the first signs of battle fatigue… However, if the groundswell of opposition by the BA membership persists and becomes more organized and focused it just might help the progressives at SAG.

Further on the political front… As much as the IA and the leadership of the BA locals want to sell this contract to the membership on behalf of the AMPTP, they will be forced to back the membership if they, the members, reject the contract. (Another partial reason why the ratify/strike language).  The assumption is of course, that there is an organized coherent front opposing the contract.

Which brings me to my last point. This group represents many long time progressives as well as a few newer ones.  The level of sheer talent that you represent is impressive. I know the players on the other side (both other sides) and they cannot out think or outperform this group. You are being presented with a perfect storm of opportunity. The issues are for the first time issues that resonate in ALL 18 BA Locals, in all classifications. IMHO this group is the only group with the experience to take advantage of this opportunity that is being presented (FTAC and CDU alumni). But you need to fix two things;

First, leadership… you need one. There is a likelihood that a leader will emerge during this fight especially if the contract is not ratified… you have to be open to accepting one. If a leader doesn’t emerge…. friggin appoint one and trust him/her enough to lead…. Do not second-guess…do not micro manage!

Secondly, you need to define where you are going. After some thought, I am now convinced that the anemic number of ballots that are returned (20-30%) reflect, not apathy…although there is a lot of that… but uncertainty and confusion. There needs to be a game plan. It doesn’t have to be perfect; it just has to be a plan… This is a defining moment… (Melodramatic but true) the membership knows this is a defining moment… The what and how needs to be defined if the moment is to be a good one for the membership.

Anyway just a few ramblings from a mad man. Please do not take my comments in any way as criticisms or any other ‘ism… they are just thoughts.

Gary Dunham

Feb 04

amptp-iatse
Important articles about the IATSE contract from the Nikki Finke website . Embedded in this article are at least 3 websites that have arisen urging a NO vote on this contract, and several links to more useful information.

Please read…