May 152010
 

Yesterday  I went to the Sprint Store.  It turned out that the trouble I had activating the replacement phone occurred, because the salesmen who sold me the original phone six months ago had made a few mistakes.  He entered my middle name instead of my last name, entered my pin number wrong (I have what I told him to enter written down.), and entered the first street on which I had lived as the answer to the secret question, “What was the make and model of your first car.  It took quite some doing by the staff at the store yesterday, who were most helpful and apologetic, to convince them that I am I.  Walking home, I instructed the phone to sync with a Google account, which I maintain for that purpose only, to recover my contacts and calendar.  When I was halfway home, the phone notified me that it could not do so and advised me to call CS.  So I turned around and walked back to the store.  Grrr!  When they reactivated my account they transferred the ‘lost or stolen’ hold to the new phone by mistake.  So what should have taken an hour, took four.  Then I had to download apps and make half a dozen overdue calls.  So I managed to keep up with comments, but did no return visits.  I plan to visit my whole blogroll this weekend.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 4:00.  To do it, click here. How did you do?

Short Takes:

From Raw Story: "If Kagan is confirmed, Jews, who represent less than 2 percent of the US population, will have 33 percent of the Supreme Court seats," Buchanan wrote in a column for WorldNetDaily on Friday. "Is this the Democrats’ idea of diversity?"

If it mattered, which it does not, why wasn’t that GOP bigot complaining that the other six are all Catholic?

From Crooks and Liars: A group of 27 major donors is vowing to withhold campaign cash from lawmakers who stand in the way of legislation that would allow for public funding of congressional campaigns. Over their careers, the donors have contributed millions to Democratic candidates — and, on limited occasions, Republicans or independents — but they say they’ve had it. And they don’t mind if it means a lack of access.

This reminds me that not all rich people are greedy GOPers.

From Common Dreams: The Center for Biological Diversity today filed a formal notice of intent to sue Interior Secretary Ken Salazar for ignoring marine-mammal protection laws when approving offshore drilling operations in the Gulf of Mexico. Since Salazar took office, the Department of the Interior has approved three lease sales, more than 100 seismic surveys, and more than 300 drilling operations without permits required by the Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Endangered Species Act that are designed to protect endangered whales and other marine mammals from harmful offshore oil activities.

If Salazar was the responsible party for violating the law requiring a NOAA permit, he should be fired.

Cartoon:

How’s your weekend? 

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GOP Sides with Big Oil

 Posted by at 2:36 am  Politics
May 142010
 

Thanks, Diane, for sending me this.  By the time I saw it, it was all over the news.

Ugly, isn’t it?

BP probably held it back, because analysis of the video reveals that the leak is over 70,000 barrels a day.  The original estimate from the Coast Guard, based on BP data was 5,000 barrels per day.  So what we have is one Exxon Valdez disaster every four days.

Democrats in the Senate are trying to raise the liability cap from $75 million to $10 billion.  That’s still too low.  BP annual profit is double that.  The only cap for a disaster of this magnitude is $infinity.  But even the overly lax cap of $10 billion is too much for the GOP.

Murkowski-Palin Alaska’s senior senator blocked legislation Thursday that would have dramatically increased liability caps on oil companies, in the wake of one of the industry’s biggest disasters.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) objected to a voice vote request by Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) on the bill, which would have spiked the maximum liability for oil companies after an oil spill from $75 million to $10 billion. The legislation has significant support from Democrats, and the White House has indicated it backs an increase in liability caps.

But Murkowski said the legislation is “not where we need to be right now” and would unfairly advantage large oil companies by pricing the small companies out of the market. Murkowski did signal that she would be open to "look at the liability cap and consider raising it.” Just not at this moment.

Menendez, speaking to reporters after the bill was halted on the Senate floor, said the opposition indicates that Republicans are on the side of the oil companies, not the American people. There had been no formal floor debate or roll call vote requested on the legislation.

“It’s straightforward, it’s common sense,” Menendez said. “Either you want to fully protect the small businesses, individuals and communities devastated by a man-made disaster — this is not a natural disaster; this is a man-made disaster — or you want to protect multibillion-dollar oil companies from being held fully accountable. Apparently there are some in the Senate who prefer to protect the oil companies.”… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Politico>

Murkowski offered two main arguments.  First is that Big Oil has unlimited liability already, because anyone can sue them.  Tell that to the victims of Exxon Valdez spill.  After twenty years, many have died of old age waiting to see the first penny.  The people whose livelihoods are gone need justice now, not 20-30 years from now… if the live that long.

Second, Murkowski argued that it would put “mom and pop” operators out of business by making the cost of their liability insurance so high that they could not afford to operate.  Earth to Murkowski!  Is anyone home?  There are no mom and pop companies in deep offshore drilling.  If there were, any company that cannot afford liability for the damage they cause has no business being in business.  If I can’t afford auto liability insurance, I have no business driving a car.

Many in the GOP are shaking their heads in mock shock that one lone Senator could do such a thing.  Don’t you dare believe that!  Theses greedy Republicans goose step in lock step.  Murkowski was assigned this role, because she does not face reelection until 2014.  The GOP is seeking to help Big Oil avoid responsibility without appearing to do so.

Corporations are NOT people!  Money is NOT speech!

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An Oregonian Leads the Way

 Posted by at 2:34 am  Politics
May 142010
 

Corporations are NOT people!  Money is NOT speech!

KurtSchraeder

Oregon Representative Kurt Schraeder has introduced a Constitutional Amendment to Counter the criminal Citizens United decision by the Extreme Court.  It addresses the second half of my mantra.

Article

Section 1. The Congress shall have power to prohibit, limit, and otherwise regulate the contribution of funds or donation of in-kind equivalents to candidates standing for election to a federal office in the United States and to prohibit, limit, and otherwise regulate the expenditure of funds or donation of in-kind equivalents used to support or purchase media advertisements intended to influence the outcome of an election for federal office in the United States.

Whenever Congress should exercise such power, it must apply equally and uniformly to all individual persons recognized as citizens of the United States.

Whenever Congress should exercise such power on associations of citizens of the United States, it must apply equally and uniformly to all associations of citizens of the United States.

Section 2. Each of the several States shall have power to prohibit, limit, and otherwise regulate the contribution of funds or donation of in-kind equivalents to candidates standing for election to public office in the State and to prohibit, limit, and otherwise regulate expenditure of funds or donation of in-kind equivalents used to support or purchase media advertisements intended to influence the outcome of an election for public office or plebiscite in the State.

Whenever a State should exercise such power, it must apply equally and uniformly to all individual persons recognized as citizens of the State.

Whenever a State should exercise such power on associations of citizens of the State, it must apply equally and uniformly to all associations of citizens of the State.

Section 3. No person who is not a citizen of the United States, association of persons not citizens of the United States, foreign governments, or persons acting as agents thereof may contribute funds or donate in-kind equivalents to candidates standing for election to public office in the United States or otherwise expend funds or donate in-kind equivalents in a manner intended to influence the outcome an election for public office or plebiscite in the United States.

The Congress shall have exclusive power to enforce this section by appropriate legislation.

Section 4. Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Blue Oregon>

I do not expect this to be ratified, but it does define the issue and serves to help separate progressives from pigs.  Bravo!

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May 142010
 

Yesterday I felt pretty exhausted, but I did manage to catch up on replying to comments.  The new cell phone came.  Since the store assembled the original, I had not done it before.  There were no instructions either in the original documentation or in the activation instructions that came with the phone.  I searched the Sprint website for over an hour and could not find them.  I Googled it and found them on another website in less than five minutes.  After charging the phone, I went back to the Sprint website, according to the instructions, filled out the activation form, and was directed to a page that said they hope that feature will be back online soon.  Dating the page revealed that it was over two months old.  Grrr!!  So, I’ll have to go all the way back to the store to activate it this morning.  I may or may not be able to keep up today.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 4:42.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Short Takes:

From Think Progress: In an interview with American Family Association (AFA) radio yesterday, Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) argued against repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT), arguing that basically, members of the U.S. military are too bigoted to be willing to fight and die for the “guy in the next foxhole” if that guy happens to be gay.

Bullshit!

From McClatchy DC: The Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service, which regulates oilrigs, came under more scrutiny as congressional investigators scheduled hearings to find out why the federal agency never completed rules that would have required additional controls on blowout preventers — the safety equipment that failed to stop the spill.

Here’s a hint for Congress.  The reason has 5 deferments, likes to shoot friends, has a daughter named Lizard, and is an asshole.

Cartoon:

TGIF

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May 132010
 

That link from Diane is a gift that keeps giving.  Here’s an analysis of what went wrong.

Gulf_Oil_Spill Bad wiring and a leak in what’s supposed to be a "blowout preventer." Sealing problems that may have allowed a methane eruption. Even a dead battery, of all things.

New disclosures Wednesday revealed a complex cascade of deep-sea equipment failures and procedural problems in the oil rig explosion and massive spill that is still fouling the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and threatening industries and wildlife near the coast and on shore.

The public also got its first look on Wednesday of oil gushing from the broken pipe that rests nearly a mile under water as BP PLC, the well’s operator, released a video taken by a remotely controlled camera. Oil flowing from a break in the yellowish pipe becomes lighter in color as it mixes with natural gas. Over the past 21 days more than 4 million gallons of oil have been released.

A litany of worrisome events and findings that were at play on the night of the well explosion and pipe rupture was described in internal corporate documents, marked confidential but provided to a House committee by BP and by the manufacturer of the safety device. Lawmakers released them at a House hearing.

A senior BP executive, Lamar McKay, cautioned, "It’s inappropriate to draw any conclusions before all the facts are known." But the documents established the firmest evidence to date of the sequence of catastrophic events that led to the explosion and worsening spill, a series of failures more reminiscent of the loss of the space shuttle Challenger than the wreck of the Exxon Valdez.

Like the 1986 Challenger disaster, the investigation into the Gulf spill may well show that complex and seemingly failproof technical systems went wrong because of overlooked problems that interacted with each other in unexpected ways. In the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster, a captain simply ran his ship onto a reef in Alaska’s Prince William Sound, spilling nearly 11 million gallons of oil.

The April 20 BP rig explosion 40 miles off the Louisiana coast killed 11 people. Oil continuing to flow into Gulf waters threatens sensitive ecological marshes and wetlands and the region’s fishing industry.

Congressional investigators revealed Wednesday that a key safety system, known as the blowout preventer, used in BP’s oil-drilling rig in the Gulf had a hydraulic leak and a failed battery that probably prevented it from working as designed.

They said that BP documents and others also indicated conflicting pipe pressure tests should have warned those on the rig that poor pipe integrity may have been allowing explosive methane gas to leak into the well.

"Significant pressure discrepancies were observed in at least two of these tests, which were conducted just hours before the explosion," said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., at a House hearing on the rig fire and oil leak, citing documents his committee had received from BP.

Asked about the tests, Steven Newman, president of Transocean, which owned the drilling rig, and Lamar McKay, president of BP America told the committee the pressure readings were worrisome.

They indicated "that there was something happening in the well bore that shouldn’t be happening," said Newman. McKay said the issue "is critical in the investigation" into the cause of the accident.

The well explosion unleashed a massive oil spill that after three weeks remains uncontained.

But Waxman said important elements of what went wrong were beginning to surface.

While "we have far more questions than answers," it appears clear that there were problems with the blowout preventers before the accident and confusion almost right up to the time of the explosion over the success of a process in which cement is injected into the well to temporarily close it in anticipation of future production… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <The Bay Ledger>

To clarify, the purpose of the pressure testing was to affirm the integrity of the cementing operation Halliburton had just performed.  Here’s Keith Olbermann with more:

 

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

I won’t comment on the Lieberman-Kerry Bill here, because two I posted an Action Alert to oppose it two pieces down.

Keith reported that the rig workers did not know a blowout preventer had been modified and because the modification did not show in their engineering documents, but did not say why.  I revealed  that BP was falsifying their engineering reports on May 4, nine days ago.  Two days ago, I posted that all the companies are pointing fingers at each other.  All the finger pointers are right.

One more thing.  The chemicals that BP is pumping into the gulf to disperse the spill are lethal to coral.  The loss of Florida’s reef system, one of the most diverse habitats in the world.  Its loss would be an unprecedented ecological disaster, not to mention that many of our most advanced medicines are harvested there and available nowhere else.

Corporations are NOT people!  Money is NOT speech!

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May 132010
 

Just when I thought that the GOP might get just a little cautious over their ongoing multiple sex scandals, Michael Steele, the gift that keeps giving, has done it again.

steele-tampa Man, the comedy keeps writing itself:

Breaking news on Twitter from Politico’s Mike Allen — the 2012 Republican National Convention will be held in Tampa.

Florida has been a fiercely contested “swing state” in recent presidential campaigns, and Barack Obama’s victory there in 20[08] was the Democratic Party’s first since 1996.

The Politico is right–Florida is a critical “swing” state. There are some high visibility and politically strained battles going on there (I’m looking at you two, Crist and Rubio). But somehow I suspect that there was another element factored in to the choice of Tampa:

A reputation can sometimes be hard to shake and the city of Tampa has a reputation it would probably like to eliminate. For the past decade some have called Tampa the lap dance capital of the world.

Paul Allen, the founder and publisher of NightMoves magazine, says he hears about the city’s reputation all the time. He believes the shear number of strip clubs in the Bay area has undoubtedly contributed to the city’s rep.

“In greater Tampa Bay, I think the last count is around 56 different clubs that are adult-oriented,” he said.

Another reason for the reputation is the city’s role in the adult industry. “If you own a club in Oshkosh, Wisconsin and you want to book a feature (dancer) to come to your club, there’s basically four people you can call. Three of those four companies are based right here in Tampa,” Allen said

… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Crooks and Liars>

When I lived in Phoenix, I had a good friend who worked as a high-end call girl.  I knew her platonically only.  😥

Once she explained to me that, whenever a Republican or a religious right convention was in town, the local girls imported more girls from Las Vegas, because the demand exceeded the local girls’ ability to meet it.

We can be sure that there are going to be a bunch of exhausted lap dancers in Tampa.

I think local bloggers would be well served to position themselves outside Tampa’s kinkiest strip clubs, with cameras, during the convention.

GOP family values only apply when they are telling everyone else what to do.

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May 132010
 

I would expect this from Traitor Joe, but Kerry should hang his head in shame!

earthegg In the midst of what appears to be the worst offshore oil disaster in American history, U.S. Senators John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.) will today put forth a draft climate bill that will not solve the problems of global warming and continues pandering to the fossil fuel industry — including expanded offshore oil drilling — that created the problems in the first place.

The proposal, leaked one day before its official release, reflects months of back-room negotiations between the senators, major polluters, and other Washington insiders, and would:

  • provide only a fraction of the greenhouse gas pollution reductions scientists have said are necessary to avoid catastrophic climate disruption;
  • ban successful Clean Air Act programs from reducing greenhouse pollution;
  • ban existing state and local efforts to tackle climate change;
  • catalyze increased oil and gas drilling — including offshore drilling; and
  • subsidize dangerous and costly nuclear energy.

In response, Center for Biological Diversity Executive Director Kierán Suckling urged rejection of the proposal unless these problems are addressed. He issued the following statement:

"The climate proposal put forth today by Senators Kerry and Lieberman represents a disaster for our climate and planet. This proposal moves us one baby step forward and at least three giant steps back in any rational effort to address the climate crisis.

"The senators’ proposal would entrench our addiction to fossil fuels by offering incentives for increased oil and gas drilling just days after what appears to be the worst offshore oil disaster in American history. Large domes, small domes, golf balls, garbage, chemical dispersants, fire — none have succeeded in stopping the enormous flow of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Clearly, there are no ‘safeguards’ Senators Lieberman and Kerry could put into this bill to make offshore oil safe… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Common Dreams>

If you’ve been reading awhile, you know that I am not an absolute thinker.  I see shades of gray and am often willing to accept a ‘the best we can get’ compromise over nothing at all, often to the chagrin of some of my more purist friends.  This is not one of those times.  There is no gray here.  There is black and deeper black.  This bill, unless drastically modified through the amendment process, leaves us worse off that the already unacceptable status quo.  I urge it’s defeat

You can contact your Senators here.

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May 132010
 

Yesterday was a rough day.  I lost my cell phone and had to report it “lost or stolen”.  On the way home from my volunteer work, I had to stop at the Sprint Store.  All the details of the report took about 90 minutes, and my walking for the day was 2 1/2 miles, well above average.  By the time I returned home, I was too tired to reply to comments.  My legs cramped up and I had trouble sleeping.  I hope to catch up on comments and returning visits today, but will have to see how I feel.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 4:07.  To do it, click here. How did you do?

Short Takes:

From Raw Story: More than a year and a half after Iceland’s major banks failed, all but sinking the country’s economy, police have begun rounding up a number of top bankers while other former executives and owners face a two-billion-dollar lawsuit.

Monkey see, monkey do.  Come on, DOJ!!  Make like a monkey!!!

From Daily Kos:

I sure hope that guy got away.  For Latinos, jaywalking is a death-penalty offense in Arizona.

Cartoon:

How’s your week?

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