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Author Topic: Coast Guard STOPPED Barges clean-up of Oil spill  (Read 2403 times)
lee51
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« on: June 17, 2010, 06:19:34 PM »

http://abcnews.go.com/WN/bp-oil-spill-gov-bobby-jindals-wishes-crude/story?id=10946379&page=2

UNBELIEVABLE!! It's all planned!!

BP Oil Spill: Against Gov. Jindal's Wishes, Crude-Sucking Barges Stopped by Coast Guard
59 Days Into Oil Crisis, Gulf Coast Governors Say Feds Are Failing Them


By DAVID MUIR and BRADLEY BLACKBURN
June 17, 2010

Eight days ago, Louisiana  Gov. Bobby Jindal ordered barges to begin vacuuming crude oil out of his state's oil-soaked waters. Today, against the governor's wishes, those barges sat idle, even as more oil flowed toward the Louisiana shore.

It's the most frustrating thing," the Republican governor said today in Buras, La. "Literally, yesterday morning we found out that they were halting all of these barges."

Watch "World News" for David Muir's report from Louisiana tonight.

Sixteen barges sat stationary today, although they were sucking up thousands of gallons of BP's oil as recently as Tuesday. Workers in hazmat suits and gas masks pumped the oil out of the Louisiana waters and into steel tanks. It was a homegrown idea that seemed to be effective at collecting the thick gunk.

"These barges work. You've seen them work. You've seen them suck oil out of the water," said Jindal.

So why stop now?

"The Coast Guard came and shut them down," Jindal said. "You got men on the barges in the oil, and they have been told by the Coast Guard, 'Cease and desist. Stop sucking up that oil.'"

A Coast Guard representative told ABC News today that it shares the same goal as the governor.

"We are all in this together. The enemy is the oil," said Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Dan Lauer.

But the Coast Guard ordered the stoppage because of reasons that Jindal found frustrating. The Coast Guard needed to confirm that there were fire extinguishers and life vests on board, and then it had trouble contacting the people who built the barges.

 The governor said he didn't have the authority to overrule the Coast Guard's decision, though he said he tried to reach the White House to raise his concerns.

"They promised us they were going to get it done as quickly as possible," he said. But "every time you talk to someone different at the Coast Guard, you get a different answer."

After Jindal strenuously made his case, the barges finally got the go-ahead today to return to the Gulf and get back to work, after more than 24 hours of sitting idle.

Along Gulf Coast, Governors Ask, 'Who's In Charge?'
Fifty-nine days into the crisis, it still can be tough to figure out who is in charge in Louisiana, and the problem appears to be the same in other Gulf Coast states.

 In Alabama  today, Gov. Bob Riley said that he's had problems with the Coast Guard, too.

Riley, R-Ala., asked the Coast Guard to find ocean boom tall enough to handle strong waves and protect his shoreline.

The Coast Guard went all the way to Bahrain to find it, but when it came time to deploy it?

"It was picked up and moved to Louisiana," Riley said today.

 The governor said the problem is there's still no single person giving a "yes" or "no." While the Gulf Coast governors have developed plans with the Coast Guard's command center in the Gulf, things begin to shift when other agencies start weighing in, like the Environmental Protection Agency  and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

"It's like this huge committee down there," Riley said, "and every decision that we try to implement, any one person on that committee has absolute veto power."

 
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rawiron1
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« Reply #1 on: June 17, 2010, 07:40:05 PM »

What that school girl sissy governor needs to do is call out the state police and put them on the barges.  Then tell the Navy wanna-bes (Coast Guard) that if they try to stop the barges the state police have been ordered to use lethal force.  Where the hell is George Washington when you need him?!?  Are there any men in power in the country that still have a set of testicles?!?

Jason
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Jason the Fed
kushfiend
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« Reply #2 on: June 17, 2010, 07:45:12 PM »

What that school girl sissy governor needs to do is call out the state police and put them on the barges.  Then tell the Navy wanna-bes (Coast Guard) that if they try to stop the barges the state police have been ordered to use lethal force.  Where the hell is George Washington when you need him?!?  Are there any men in power in the country that still have a set of testicles?!?

Jason

we both know that Jindal is a complete nwo toolbag and is employing the classic "guliani" move of using a disaster to play cowboy and gather sympathy.  The entire Gulf Region is f**ked beyond repair, everyone I work with in Tampa is getting sick already.  I really think we are all going to die here pretty soon, water going to cut off any day now, almost all of tampa's drinking water comes from our desalination plant in apollo beach - i'm sure that's going to work perfectly with oil and toxins in it...
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Tomslik
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« Reply #3 on: June 17, 2010, 07:58:22 PM »

we both know that Jindal is a complete nwo toolbag and is employing the classic "guliani" move of using a disaster to play cowboy and gather sympathy.  The entire Gulf Region is f**ked beyond repair, everyone I work with in Tampa is getting sick already.  I really think we are all going to die here pretty soon, water going to cut off any day now, almost all of tampa's drinking water comes from our desalination plant in apollo beach - i'm sure that's going to work perfectly with oil and toxins in it...

water, desalination
water, desalination of, process of removing soluble salts from water to render it suitable for drinking, irrigation, or industrial uses. The principal methods used for desalination include distillation (or evaporation), electrodialysis, freezing, ion exchange, and reverse osmosis.

In distillation saltwater is heated in one container to make the water evaporate, leaving the salt behind. The desalinated vapor is then condensed to form water in a separate container. Although long known, distillation has found limited application in water supply because of the fuel costs involved in converting saltwater to vapor. Representative of the early attempts in this direction were the solar distillation methods employed (c.49 B.C.) by the legions of Julius Caesar for using water from the Mediterranean. Modern technological advances led to the development of more efficient distillation units using solar energy; however, since these units have small capacities, their utility is restricted.

Distillation plants having high capacities and using combustible fuels employ various devices to conserve heat. In the most common system a vacuum is applied to reduce the boiling point of the water, or a spray or thin film of water is exposed to high heat, causing flash evaporation; the water is flashed repeatedly, yielding fresh distilled water. This multistage flash distillation method is used in more than 2,000 desalination plants, including one in Saudi Arabia that produces 250 million gallons of freshwater per day.

Another method of desalination is by electrodialysis. When salt dissolves in water, it splits up into charged particles called ions. Placed in a container with a negative electrode at one end and a positive electrode at the other, the ions are filtered by the membranes as they are attracted toward the electrodes; they become trapped between semipermeable membranes, leaving outside the membranes a supply of desalinated water that can be tapped. The first large installation using this process began operating in South Africa in 1958, but its electrical demands make it impractical except where such energy is abundant.

By far the most promising approach is the reverse osmosis process, in which pressure is applied to saltwater to force it through a special membrane. Only pure water passes, leaving concentrated seawater behind. Where multistage flash distillation costs about $4 per 1,000 gallons, reverse osmosis costs about half that amount. This process is used by a plant in the Tampa Bay area, Florida, that produces 25 million gallons of drinking water a day. Another type uses an empty hollow sphere of semipermeable material that is lowered into the sea. The water flowing into the sphere is fresh, since the salt is excluded by the membrane that covers the entire sphere and is its guard.

One final approach is under development in Hawaii, where different layers of seawater display a large temperature differential. Here an Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion plant is being built which will use steam produced by the flash method to produce energy, then condense the steam into freshwater. Three such plants could produce a hundred megawatts of power, as well as supply 30% of Hawaii's water needs.

For emergency use, i.e., in lifeboats, various systems are available in addition to solar or fuel-heated distillation devices. One device made of flexible plastic is worn around the waist of the user to employ body heat for evaporation.




The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.


 The Saturated Hydrocarbons, or Alkanes


Name  Molecular
Formula  Melting
Point
(oC)  Boiling
Point
(oC)  State at
25oC
methane  CH4  -183  -164  gas
ethane  C2H6  -183  -89   
propane  C3H8  -190  -42   
butane  C4H10  -138  -0.5   
pentane  C5H12  -130  36   
hexane  C6H14  -95  69   
heptane  C7H16  -91  98   
octane  C8H18  -57  125   
nonane  C9H20  -51  151  liquid
decane  C10H22  -30  174   
undecane  C11H24  -25  196   
dodecane  C12H26  -10  216   
eicosane  C20H42  37  343   
triacontane  C30H62  66  450  solid


If that area uses reverse osmosis, then you are safe.
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WHAT HAPPENED
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G4M3 0V3R


« Reply #4 on: June 17, 2010, 08:13:44 PM »

we both know that Jindal is a complete nwo toolbag and is employing the classic "guliani" move of using a disaster to play cowboy and gather sympathy.  The entire Gulf Region is f**ked beyond repair, everyone I work with in Tampa is getting sick already.  I really think we are all going to die here pretty soon, water going to cut off any day now, almost all of tampa's drinking water comes from our desalination plant in apollo beach - i'm sure that's going to work perfectly with oil and toxins in it...

Not to thread jack but we need to find more info on Tampa also... (im in largo)
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rawiron1
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« Reply #5 on: June 18, 2010, 12:41:45 PM »

Grizzly,

If they can filter out the sludge and leave the poisons in this would be A-OK with the NWO.

Jason
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Jason the Fed
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« Reply #6 on: June 18, 2010, 01:31:38 PM »

According to a blog poster on a Middle Eastern website, ingredients in a dispersant chemical used to break up the BP oil gusher are allegedly causing massive outbreaks of diarrhea in a Florida.  The poster says that an outbreak of diarrhea is allegedly causing so many cases of diarrhea in Miami, entire neighborhoods smell like a giant outhouse.

Yesterday I was talking to my sister in Miami. She said that everybody is having lung problems and diarrhea so bad that the whole neighborhood reeks of it. She did not equate this to the use of Corexit or even the spill - but I do. She said it was quite breezy there yesterday - what I would call an "ill wind."

SOURCE: www.uruknet.info/?p=m67066&hd=&size=1&l=e
 

 

The residents are also experiencing major respiratory problems.  Given the fact that dispersants and oil are carcinogenic, and cause respiratory problems, these reports are not unexpected. Unfortunately for those in the path of the wind-driven dispersant and crude oil fumes, the laxative effect is the least of their worries.

Air reeking of petroleum and oil fumes, rain tainted by petrochemicals and carcinogenic volatile organic compounds, combined with a predicted intense hurricane season and the possibility of  a 20 milewide, 10 food high natural gas field in the Gulf exploding with catastrophic results,  has become the perfect storm of disasters.

It seems that the powers that be are afraid that if they let the dragon out of the bag, it might scare us into God knows what.  I am sure the vision of the looting and civil unrest behind Katrina are fueling a lot of this censorship and antagonism toward journalists.  However, all of this sitting around and waiting for Captain Ahab to shout, “That she blows”, is not helping the situation.

Mercenaries skulking on Grand Isle, barring reporters, enforcing news black outs.  As has been said time and again: this is America?  Miles and miles of oil clean up—with rolls of paper towels serving as the lead tool for remediation, is not something that inspires confidence.

People are scared.  The “boots on the ground” activists and reporters on the scene say the climate is fearful and paranoid.  And, now, not only is it fearful, it is also illness-driven.  The diarrhea and coughing, and  are merely symbols of deeper injuries.

As of June 9, 2010, CNN reported that

The Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals is aware of 71 cases of oil disaster-related illness as of Wednesday, said state health officer Dr. Jimmy Guidry. Of them, 50 involved workers on oil rigs or who participated in cleanup efforts, and 21 reports of illness came from the general public. Symptoms reported by workers included throat irritation, cough, chest pain, headaches, and shortness of breath, he said. Eight workers were hospitalized, for an average of one day each….

The Louisiana Department of health is tracking oil spill related injuries, but keep in mind those are reported injuries.  Many of those injuries, as in what is happening in Florida, can mimic everyday illnesses—coughing, diarrhea, etc.  People, including medical professionals often believe that the coughing and other symptoms are short lived and prove that there is no real danger to exposure to dispersants.

A representative from the Louisiana Department of Health said, exposure

"…might cause people to have the symptoms we're seeing, but they're not long-term, and they're short-lived if you remove yourself from the exposure," he said. (CNN)

However, this flies in the face of what people experienced in the Exxon Valdez and other spill disasters, particularly because exposure includes contact with airborne dispersants which were sprayed from airplanes. How does one remove oneself from exposure to airborne carcinogens that are invisible, wind driven and which coat neighborhoods, trees, and buildings with a poisonous mist that seeps into homes and apartments?

How do we define “short-lived” exposure, or “removing yourself from exposure”, when the environment is saturated with toxic dispersant?  How do we define

 

"Right after the spill occurred, there was a tremendous focus on the potential toxicity of the oil. There was a question that if the oil contained substances that could potentially harm workers on a long-term basis, or on a severe short-term basis, and induce sterility or cancer or birth defects, then it would be unethical to undertake cleanup at all," recalled Middaugh, the state epidemiologist. (LA Times, 2001

 

Exxon Valdez

“Lawyers believe the actual number of injuries may be far greater than what has been reported so far.  Many, they said, have never associated things like headaches, cancer, rashes, liver and kidney problems to a chemical exposure that happened more than a decade ago.

"Chemical poisoning can cause . . . health problems that manifest as many different symptoms," Los Angeleslegal investigator Erin Brockovich said in a letter sent last week to public interest groups in Alaska, urging potential victims to come forward.” SOURCE: LA Times, 2001

So much so that many claimants in the Exxon Valdez oil disaster were denied compensation or were stalled because  their symptoms were not considered part of  oil-related damage to their bodies. The crap has hit the fan.  This whole thing stinks—from the stench of the oil, to the fumes from the dispersants, and, now, the stench of dispersant-generated diarrhea.
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Nailer
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« Reply #7 on: July 02, 2010, 06:37:05 PM »

Coast guard now has stripped away first Amendment rights.

A CNN VIDEO Broadcast..

First Amendment Has been Suspended

http://video.godlikeproductions.com/video/First_Amendment_Has_been_Suspended

That it is now illegal to film or to come within 65 foot of boom, oil clean up workers, or effected wildlife. Its punishable with a heavy fine and a class d felony. All brought to you by the Coast Guard!
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I am a realist that is slightly conservative yet I have some republican demeanor that can turn democrat when I feel the urge to flip independant.
 
The truth shall set you free, if not a 45ACP round will do the trick.. HEHE
Georgiacopguy
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'Cause it's a revolution for your mind...K?!


« Reply #8 on: July 02, 2010, 08:09:50 PM »

Well, there is a determiend disinfo campaigne right now, because earlier it was all over the news that BP, after being embarrassed by their refusal to allow cleanup crews to talk to the media are passing out cards telling workers they can talk to the media, IF they want to. So they suspend the first amendment, and put out disinfo which suggests otherwise. How typical.


Coast guard now has stripped away first Amendment rights.

A CNN VIDEO Broadcast..

First Amendment Has been Suspended

http://video.godlikeproductions.com/video/First_Amendment_Has_been_Suspended

That it is now illegal to film or to come within 65 foot of boom, oil clean up workers, or effected wildlife. Its punishable with a heavy fine and a class d felony. All brought to you by the Coast Guard!

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The resistance starts here. Unfortunately, the entire thing is moving beyond the intellectual infowar. I vow I will not make an overt rush at violent authority, until authority makes it's violent rush at me and you. I will not falter, I will not die in this course. For that is how they win.
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