To make matters worse there are reports circulating that the CIA front company Evergreen Air has not only been spraying the population by the cover of night; but rather they are spraying Corexit over workers during the day. Oil & Corexit has been filmed in the streets over several different states. Plants and crops are being damaged from the acidic toxic rainfall. A plume of gases is making it?s way over the coastal population in some areas. There are more and more reports of clinics in Louisiana and Florida filling up from chemical ?flu like? symptoms.
BP and its supplier Nalco, have even refused to reveal to scientists the chemical composition of Corexit, the dispersant that has been dumped by the hundreds of thousands of gallons into the Gulf to break up the oil, because, they say, it is a trade secret. BP simply defied an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) order issued one month ago, to cease use of Corexit pending further testing. Obama decided not to pursue the matter.
Keep in mind a majority of the workers on the Exxon Valdez are dead from exposure to toxins. The average life span of the Valdez workers was 53 years of age.
The weather is also an issue. Tropic storms and possible hurricanes linger on the horizon. At the same time beaches throughout the coast are being hammered and coated with black crude; including the world famous white sand beaches of Florida.
The Coastal area from Texas to Florida has the highest or most dense population of targets for elimination by the United States government and corporations. These are populations living on welfare. In this area dominated by African Americans and older populations living on social security. These people are going to start dropping like flies over the next few years, greatly reducing the burden of government coffers. In this respect, this is a doomsday event but this is not the end of the food chain. The Gulf is not an extinction level event, its only bad for the targeted population that lives there.
The Obama administration has intensified its protection of BP and the cover-up of the BP oil disaster. On July 1 it issued an order barring the public and the news media from coming within 65 feet of clean-up operations without permission from the Coast Guard. The transparent aim of the order, which purports to protect the safety of clean-up workers, is to prevent the population from viewing the devastation wrought by the BP oil blowout.
Journalists who ?willfully? defy the White House order could be prosecuted as Class D felons and face up to five years in prison and a $40,000 fine. Exceptions to the ban will be considered on a case-by-case basis by the Coast Guard captain of the Port of New Orleans.
For nearly two months, BP and government stonewalling made it impossible even to assess how big the blowout was. Insisting from the first that BP was ?in charge? of the clean-up, the administration colluded with the oil giant to block independent analysis of the gusher one mile beneath the surface of the Gulf. Only under steady criticism from scientists did the administration repeatedly revise upward the rate of the oil erupting from the sea floor. The spill is now, by all accounts, the largest in history.
All of this underscores the necessity to take the response to the oil disaster out of the hands of BP and the Obama administration.
The Gulf disaster requires a mass response. It is first of all necessary to bring together the best scientists and engineers in the world, give them full and unfettered access to all information related to the disaster, and place them in charge of hundreds of thousands of well-trained, well-equipped and well-paid workers.
The resources necessary for this undertaking can be realized by nationalizing BP and the entire oil industry and converting the industry into a public utility, democratically run by the working population in the interests of society as a whole.
This, in turn, requires the mass mobilization of the working class, independently of both parties of big business, based on a socialist program that rejects the ?right? of corporations and financiers to unfathomable wealth at the expense of the people and the environment of the planet.
BP and its supplier Nalco, have even refused to reveal to scientists the chemical composition of Corexit, the dispersant that has been dumped by the hundreds of thousands of gallons into the Gulf to break up the oil, because, they say, it is a trade secret. BP simply defied an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) order issued one month ago, to cease use of Corexit pending further testing. Obama decided not to pursue the matter.
Keep in mind a majority of the workers on the Exxon Valdez are dead from exposure to toxins. The average life span of the Valdez workers was 53 years of age.
The weather is also an issue. Tropic storms and possible hurricanes linger on the horizon. At the same time beaches throughout the coast are being hammered and coated with black crude; including the world famous white sand beaches of Florida.
The Coastal area from Texas to Florida has the highest or most dense population of targets for elimination by the United States government and corporations. These are populations living on welfare. In this area dominated by African Americans and older populations living on social security. These people are going to start dropping like flies over the next few years, greatly reducing the burden of government coffers. In this respect, this is a doomsday event but this is not the end of the food chain. The Gulf is not an extinction level event, its only bad for the targeted population that lives there.
The Obama administration has intensified its protection of BP and the cover-up of the BP oil disaster. On July 1 it issued an order barring the public and the news media from coming within 65 feet of clean-up operations without permission from the Coast Guard. The transparent aim of the order, which purports to protect the safety of clean-up workers, is to prevent the population from viewing the devastation wrought by the BP oil blowout.
Journalists who ?willfully? defy the White House order could be prosecuted as Class D felons and face up to five years in prison and a $40,000 fine. Exceptions to the ban will be considered on a case-by-case basis by the Coast Guard captain of the Port of New Orleans.
For nearly two months, BP and government stonewalling made it impossible even to assess how big the blowout was. Insisting from the first that BP was ?in charge? of the clean-up, the administration colluded with the oil giant to block independent analysis of the gusher one mile beneath the surface of the Gulf. Only under steady criticism from scientists did the administration repeatedly revise upward the rate of the oil erupting from the sea floor. The spill is now, by all accounts, the largest in history.
All of this underscores the necessity to take the response to the oil disaster out of the hands of BP and the Obama administration.
The Gulf disaster requires a mass response. It is first of all necessary to bring together the best scientists and engineers in the world, give them full and unfettered access to all information related to the disaster, and place them in charge of hundreds of thousands of well-trained, well-equipped and well-paid workers.
The resources necessary for this undertaking can be realized by nationalizing BP and the entire oil industry and converting the industry into a public utility, democratically run by the working population in the interests of society as a whole.
This, in turn, requires the mass mobilization of the working class, independently of both parties of big business, based on a socialist program that rejects the ?right? of corporations and financiers to unfathomable wealth at the expense of the people and the environment of the planet.
