Aug 082010
 

As it appears that the oil flowing from the GOP gusher has finally been stopped, we need to take a long look below the surface… literally.

8oil As BP works to finally kill its runaway well and anxious coastal residents breathe a sigh of relief, experts warn it could take years — or even decades — for the Gulf of Mexico to recover.

Three weeks after the flow was fully stemmed with a temporary cap, the massive slick which once spread for hundreds of miles has been mostly dissolved or dispersed.

Nightmare scenarios in which tens of thousands of birds were smothered to death by blankets of oil proved unfounded after the bulk of the slick stayed offshore. Fishermen who feared their way of life was destroyed are being allowed back into most waters.

"There’s essentially no skimmable oil left on the surface," Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer, told reporters Friday.

"Things have improved quite dramatically and that’s a combination of the work we’ve done and Mother Nature."

But while Suttles appeared relieved that the well was finally plugged and should be officially "killed" in a matter of days, he cautioned that "we’re far from finished."

Hundreds of miles of Louisiana’s fragile coastal wetlands remain coated with sticky sludge and each tide carries fresh tar balls onto once-pristine beaches as far away as Florida.

Vast quantities of oil remain hidden below the waves, suspended in the water column in droplets which remain toxic to the fish and other marine life which once supported a multibillion dollar commercial and recreational fishing industry.

The good news is that the oil appears to be biodegrading rapidly.

The problem is that there is simply so very much out there.

It took 87 days to fully cap the well in the wake of a devastating explosion on April 20 that killed 11 workers and sank the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig, unleashing a torrent of oil into the Gulf.

In that time, 4.1 million barrels of oil escaped into the sea: enough to fill 260 Olympic-sized pools and make this one of the world’s worst spills on record.

Just eight percent of the oil was removed from the sea by skimmers and controlled burns.

A government report issued last week estimates that another 42 percent is essentially "gone" thanks the heavy use of chemical dispersants and natural processes like evaporation and the microbes which feed on hydrocarbons.

"This whole notion that that stuff is weathering away is really questionable," said Jim Cowan, a professor in Louisiana State University’s department of oceanography and coastal sciences.

"What dispersed oil does is eventually dissolves [sic] into sea water and the ultimate fate of that is ultimately undetermined."

Tarballs from the 1979 Ixtoc blowout are still washing up on Texas beaches. While the oil may float initially, it will sink once mixed with sand or sediment and then get kicked back up again during storms, he explained.

"What this has turned into now is the potential for a long term chronic problem," he said in a telephone interview.

"Chronic impacts are always more difficult to deal with from an ecosystem standpoint."

The toxic mix of oil and chemical dispersants could decimate fish populations by killing off vulnerable larvae and reducing the reproductively of those which survive.

"It’s a race between the microbes eating it and everything else being exposed to it," said Larry McKinney, executive director of the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies.

"Microbial action comes at a cost. They’re organisms. They use oxygen."

The Gulf was already under stress from coastal erosion and a massive "dead zone" created when agricultural runoff from the Mississippi River feeds algae, which sucks the oxygen out of the water.

"We will likely have a pretty severe impact," McKinney told AFP, adding that the real concern is that the oil spill could be the final tipping point for an already stressed ecosystem.

"You can only be knocked down so many times before you can’t get back up again."… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <AFP>

The bottom line is this.  We still do not know how long it will take for the Gulf to completely recover, or even if it ever will.  In the face of all this, BP has the bold-faced audacity to suggest that they grill a new well in the same spot.

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Aug 082010
 

Chris Dudley and Former Governor John Kitzhaber are in a virtual dead heat in the race to be Oregon’s next governor, with Kitzhaber only three points ahead.  How could this be?

DudleyWrong Why does Republican nominee Chris Dudley want to be Oregon’s governor? He’d never shown much interest in politics, before he began positioning himself to run for office. He has little understanding even of his own race. He skipped out on a traditional newspaper-sponsored debate, and his excuse was then revealed to have been dishonest. And his proposed agenda of cutting taxes, government, trees, and land use laws would mostly benefit the wealthy and powerful, while hurting most Oregonians.

Dudley is wealthy and a son of privilege. Now, he wants to be powerful. Perhaps that’s the real rationale for his campaign. That and a fondness for the limelight. He wasn’t very talented as a sort of athlete, but he was tall enough to make a lot of money as a career backup center in the limelight of the NBA. And that seems to be all there is to it. Dudley has shown no interest in Oregon or the well-being of Oregonians. He has shown no interest in policy. But he does want to protect his money from taxes, and he does want more of the fame of which he once had but a taste.

Late last year, Willamette Week had this little tidbit:

Unlike most Blazers, however, Dudley lived across the river in Clark County. Property records show he owned a house in Camas, Wash., from 1994 though 1998, which sheltered at least part of his paycheck from Oregon’s 9 percent personal income tax (Washington does not charge personal income tax). In his speech last week, Dudley said, “I was wasn’t born here [in Oregon], but I feel I was born to live here.” Records show Dudley—who opposes the tax increases on corporations and wealthy Oregonians in Measures 66 and 67—bought an 8,536-square-foot, $2.9 million home on nearly two acres at a Lake Oswego golf course in August 2004. He became a registered Oregon voter that same month.

Got that? While making a lot of money as a Portland Trailblazer in the NBA, Dudley lived across the river, in Washington, to avoid paying Oregon taxes. With Oregon facing a budget crisis, he avoided contributing his ample share, while showing so little interest in politics that he often didn’t even bother to vote. But now that he lives in Oregon, he wants to hold the highest political office in the state, while cutting his own taxes. A state in which he’s been registered to vote now for all of six years. And he also avoids the political basic of letting the voters learn about who he is, and what he knows about and intends to do about the issues. He also opposed ballot measures increasing taxes on corporations and the wealthy, both of which Oregon voters approved.

The question is why any Oregonians would even consider electing someone who shows so little interest in the state or in them… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Daily Kos>

The only reason Dudley is staying so close is that he has raised over three times as much money as Kitzhaber has.  Dudley gets his money from huge corporations, many of them out of state including banksters such as Bank of America.  This incompetent candidate must not be allowed to buy this election.

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Aug 082010
 

It’s a holy day in the Church of the Ellipsoid Orb, the Blessed Beginnings of expectation. The Dallas Diocese and the Cincinnati Diocese will meet in Hall of Fame worship at 5 PM (Pacific) on NBC.  I plan to try to catch a few Zs earlier in the day to observe the festivities.  I’m up to date with replying to comments, and returning visits, and I should stay that way.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 5:30.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Fantasy Football:

If you would like to play in the Lefty Bloggers Plus league, sign into Fox Fantasy Football with any MSN ID.  The League ID is 1023560.  The Password is nogop

There are five spots left.

Short Takes:

From McClatchy DC: In a surprising court filing, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger asked Friday that gay marriages be allowed to resume immediately in California after a federal ruling that the state’s voter-approved ban on gay marriage is unconstitutional.

Dang! I agree with a Republican!! 😯

From News Hounds: Fox Nation posted about an amusement company pulling a shooting game because of complaints that the target looked like President Barack Obama and a slew of readers openly expressed desire for the real thing. Well, that and killing illegal immigrants.

As much as Bush might have deserved it, only once during his Regime did a PP reader ever seriously suggest killing him.  I did not delete the post, but in my reply, I chewed him a new asshole.  Where are the moderators there?  Evidently Fox News approves of this treason.

From Alternet: A group of influential conservative members of the behemoth social media site Digg.com have just been caught red-handed in a widespread campaign of censorship, having multiple accounts, upvote padding, and deliberately trying to ban progressives. An undercover investigation has exposed this effort, which has been in action for more than one year.

I stopped posting at Digg long ago, because my articles never moved as they do on other sites.  Now I know why.  Despicable!

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

8bagley

May the orb bless you. 😉

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Aug 072010
 

I trust you know that I am a long term advocate of Net Neutrality.  At present, it is under severe threat from corporate telecommunications giants, who may have been joined by Google, a former ally in the battle to keep the Internet open.  Here is an explanation of the issue, followed by a petition I urge you to sign.

netneutrality That’s what The New York Times recently suggested when it reported that Google and Verizon are nearing an agreement where Google would not oppose the broadband provider if it wants to charge Website owners a fee for the privilege of delivering content more quickly to end users. If true, the Google-Verizon pact has the potential of doing an end run around the Federal Communication Commission’s recent attempts to preserve an open Internet.

Google and Verizon have denied the Times’ report. Verizon posted a public comment on its blog saying the Times report "fundamentally misunderstands our purpose …our goal is an Internet policy framework that ensures openness and accountability, and incorporates specific FCC authority, while maintaining investment and innovation. To suggest this is a business arrangement between our companies is entirely incorrect." Verizon’s statement did not explicitly deny it was negotiating with Google.

Meanwhile, a Google spokesperson recently told UK newspaper The Independent that Google has "not had any conversations with Verizon about paying for carriage of Google traffic." The search giant says it remains committed to an open Internet.

What is Net Neutrality?

At its core, net neutrality means that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) would be prohibited from slowing down Internet access speeds based on what you were doing online.

Activities like video streaming or peer-to-peer file sharing would have to be delivered to you at the same speed as less data-intensive functions like e-mail and basic Web browsing.

Implications for You

If the Times’ report is true, this would mean that you would get fast access over a broadband connection only to Websites and online services that are willing to pay ISPs for speedy delivery. Websites that didn’t pay would be slower to load and less usable.

The fear is that without net neutrality, new and innovative online businesses would not be able to pay the delivery costs to compete against larger Internet companies with deeper pockets like Amazon, Google, or Microsoft.

Schmidt Sings A Different Tune

While Google’s assertion that it is committed to an open Internet may sound reassuring, recent statements by company CEO Eric Schmidt suggest otherwise. In fact, Schmidt appears to confirm the worst fears of open Internet advocates by redefining what net neutrality means.

London’s Telegraph reportes Schmidt confirmed that Google had been trying for some time to come to an agreement with Verizon over the definition of net neutrality. Then Google’s CEO said, "people get confused [about net neutrality]. What we mean is that if you have one data type, like video, you don’t discriminate against one person’s video in favor of another. It’s OK to discriminate across different types [of data]," according to the Telegraph… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <PC World>

The free market is already at work on the Internet.  The service you purchase from your ISP (Internet Service Provider) guarantees a certain bandwidth (speed of data transfer).  If you want more speed available to you, you have to pay for it.  That is fair.  The service I purchase from my HSP (Hosting Service Provider) that delivers Politics Plus to you also guarantees a certain bandwidth.  If I want more, I have to pay for it.  That is fair.  That is the free market.  Net Neutrality would guarantee that the only thing that effects the speed of data transfer between Politics Plus and you is the bandwidth you and I have chosen to buy.  Does that make sense?

Now, giant telecoms don’t want us to have that freedom.  They want to control the speed of data transfer based on what we are doing.  Right now the argument is economic.  They claim they want to cut transfer rates for data intensive applications like file sharing.  But once they get that power, how long will it be before they start cutting transfer rated based on political content?  Considering that greedy corporations want to control what we see, hear and read, how much will they be willinbg to pay to stifle content in opposition to their agenda?  Measure the time in heartbeats.

Credo Action has a petition to Google to stop dealing with Verizon under the table.

7googleAA Google’s motto is "Don’t be evil," but Google is about to cut a deal with Verizon that would end the Internet as we know it.

According to a front-page New York Times story, the deal would allow "Verizon to speed some online content to Internet users more quickly if the content’s creators are willing to pay for the privilege."1

It would create fast Internet lanes for the largest corporations and slow lanes for the rest of us.

That is why CREDO is joining MoveOn, Free Press, and Color of Change in rallying Google users to tell Google, "Don’t be evil."

Speak up for a free and open Internet by signing this petition. With massive amounts of public pressure, we can stop this deal.

From the beginning, the Internet has been a level playing field that allows everyone to connect to one another and to the world of content available online — whether it’s Daily Kos or FOX News.

This deal would change all of that by allowing Google and Verizon to pick what websites you can see over others. It would undermine the open Internet upon which hundreds of millions of people rely.

Our Internet connection should be free of corporate gatekeepers — there’s only one Internet, and it shouldn’t matter who your provider is or whether you’re logging on from home or your cell phone.

Sign this petition to tell Google, "Don’t be evil."

Founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin created Google to make information freely available to everyone online.

But this deal is a complete reversal that abandons their core principles. It’s evil and Google must walk away from it.

Sign this letter and tell Google’s founders: "Your Verizon deal IS evil, and it must be stopped."

1 "Google and Verizon Near Deal on Web Pay Tiers," New York Times, August 4, 2010

To sign the petition, click here.  I did.

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A Case for Greene

 Posted by at 2:18 am  Politics
Aug 072010
 

You must think I’ve been guzzling the Republicans’ Kool-Aid, but before you dismiss me as absolutely crazy, consider this:

During a lengthy speech on the Senate floor yesterday about his opposition to the confirmation of Elana Kagan to the Supreme Court, Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) went on a tangent, claiming the ongoing economic downturn “was not Bush’s recession” but was a “result of Democrat economic polices”:

DEMINT: The decision that have been made about our economy over the last couple of years have brought our economy to its knees. This is no longer something we can blame on President Bush. In fact, the Democrats have been in control of policy making, economic policy spending, for four years now. This is not Bush’s recession. This is the result of Democrat economic polices. This nomination will continue our move in the wrong direction.

Watch it:

 

Even the staunchly conservative Wall Street Journal editorial board understood it was Bush’s recession, writing in early 2009 that Bush’s comment that “Wall Street got drunk and we got a hangover,” “reveals how little the President comprehends about the source of his Administration’s economic undoing. To extend his metaphor, Who does Mr. Bush think was serving the liquor?” Even if one ignores everything after 2006, Bush still had the worst record of job creation in 40 years.

Moreover, the economy only began to recover after President Obama and the Democratic Congress passed the stimulus package in early 2009. Since then, the GDP has grown, the financial sector has recovered, and — while the overall employment situation is still bleak — private sector job growth has rebounded:

In a recent report, two leading economists “empirically proved” that the Obama’s stimulus package and other interventionist measures “helped avert a second Depression.” Without the stimulus package, GDP would have been 2 percent lower and an additional 2.7 million jobs would have been lost, they found. Meanwhile, “On every major measurement” of economic growth, “the country lost ground during Bush’s two terms,” the National Journal’s Ron Brownstein observed, citing Census data… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Think Progress>

Do I think Greene is qualified to be a US Senator?  Certainly not.  Am I endorsing him?  Only indirectly.  Why?  We could not do worse than Jim DeMint.  If I were faced with a choice between DeMint and a retarded chimp with mange, body odor, and halitosis, who throws feces at anyone within range, and who masturbates in public, I’d vote for that monkey in a hot minute.  Greene is a far better choice than the chimp, so he must be better that DeMint too.

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Aug 072010
 

In our recent Constitution series we covered many of the differences between the Constitution, which Republicans claim to honor, even waving little paper copies to prove how patriotic they are, and actual Republican policies.  I have to wonder if they actually hate the Constitution, if they have even read it.

6burning-constitution Think Progress’s Ian Millhiser details the astounding number of issues the Republican party has with the constitution, and the various

REPEALING CITIZENSHIP: Numerous GOP lawmakers, including their Senate leader and the most-recent Republican candidate for president, are lining up behind a “review” of the 14th Amendment’s grant of citizenship to virtually all persons born within the United States….

REPEALING CONGRESS’ POWER TO REGULATE THE ECONOMY: The Constitution’s “Commerce Clause” gives national leaders broad authority to regulate the national economy, but much of the GOP has embraced “tentherism,” the belief that this power is small enough to be drowned in a bathtub….

REPEALING CONGRESS’ POWER TO SPEND MONEY: The Constitution also gives Congress power to “provide for the common defense and general welfare,” a broad grant of authority to create federal spending programs such as Social Security. Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK), however, recently called upon the Supreme Court to rewrite the Constitution’s clear language and repeal parts of the budget he doesn’t like….

REPEALING CONGRESS’ POWER TO RAISE MONEY: The Constitution also gives Congress broad authority to decide how to distribute the tax burden. Thus, for example, Congress is allowed to create a tax incentive for people to buy houses by giving a tax break to people with mortgages, and it is allowed to create a similar incentive for people to buy health insurance by taxing people who have health insurance slightly less than people who do not. Nevertheless, the frivolous assaults on health reform would eliminate this Constitutional power….

REPEALING EQUALITY: The Constitution entitles all persons to “equal protection of the laws,” a provision that formed the basis of Judge Vaughn Walker’s decision yesterday that California cannot treat gay couples as if they are somehow inferior. Immediately after this decision was announced, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) called upon Congress to “act immediately” to overturn it — something that it could only do through a constitutional amendment….

REPEALING FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: As Judge Walker also held, marriage is a fundamental right protected by the Constitution’s Due Process Clause. The GOP’s anti-gay amendment would repeal this constitutional protection as well.

REPEALING ELECTION OF SENATORS: Finally, a number of GOP candidates have come out in favor of repealing the 17th Amendment, the provision of the Constitution which requires direct election of senators, although many of these candidates also backed off their “Seventeenther” stand after it proved embarrassing. It is simply baffling how anyone could take one look at the U.S. Senate, and decide that what it really needs is even less democracy.

There’s one amendment to the constitution that they worship, however… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Daily Kos>

Do you care to guess which amendment that is?  The second, of course.  Dangerous as it is to keeping our Republic, the Second Amendment is the Republican solution for everything.

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Aug 072010
 

Yesterday I caught up on comments and returned visits.  I’m mostly up to date and should stay that way for a few days.  I also started working on converting the entire Constitution series into a single PDF file, which will be available here when done.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 3:16.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Fantasy Football:

Because it was clear that we will not get enough players, and CBS will not let us publish the league to get players from the general pool, I moved the league to Fox Sports, because they will let us go public.  I have sent an email initiation to everyone who was in and two have responded, so far.  If you would like to play, sign into Fox Fantasy Football with any MSN ID.  The League ID is 1023560.  The Password is nogop

We had nine players.  Only six transferred over.  Gwen, Lisa and Otis, did you get your email and will you be joining?  Later today I’ll be opening the league to the public, because the draft is in one week,l and we need to get it filled.

Short Takes:

From Alternet: Christina Romer, a key economic advisor to President Barack Obama who championed the use of stimulus programs to pull the US economy out of recession, will step down next month, the White House said Thursday.

I’m soprry to see her go.  She was the only member of Obama’s economic team, whom I approved.

From Washington Post: The losses [131,000 jobs] came from the public sector. And they were foreseeable. And they were foreseen by the President of the United States and the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Majority Leader of the United States Senate and the majority of House members and a majority of Senators. And the President of the United States and the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Majority Leader of the United States Senate and the majority of House members and a majority of Senators voted for bills that would have prevented that. But because in the Senate a minority of members can get their way, action wasn’t taken. Consequently, we have a horrible jobs number. [emphasis added]

Republicans keep blocking jobs legislation while blaming Obama for the jobs situation.

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

7wolverton

Good weekend?

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Aug 062010
 

constitution

We have been covering the US Constitution line by line.  When Republicans wave their paper props and parrot their vile machinations, we will be prepared to expose the lies.  We have finished the main body of the Constitution.  Now we finish with the Amendments.  You can find the last article on the main body of the Constitution here. It has links to all the others.  The text comes from The US Constitution.  Previous articles in the Amendment series:

Article I
Articles II and III
Article IV
Article V
Article VI
Article VII
Article VIII
Articles IX and X
Articles XI and XII
Article XIII
Article XIV
Article XV
Article XVI
Article XVII
Article XVIII
Article IX
Article XX
Articles XXI and XXII
Articles XXIII and XXIV
Article XXV

 

Amendment XXVI

1:  The right of citizens of the United States, who are 18 years of age or older, to vote, shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any state on account of age.

2:  The Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

The Twenty sixth Amendment, ratified in 1971, lowers the voting age to 18 from 21.  It is not controversial, but I remember feeling somewhat miffed at the time, because I turned 21 the year it passed.

Amendment XXVII

No law varying the compensation for the services of the Senators and Representatives shall take effect until an election of Representatives shall have intervened.

The Twenty seventh Amendment, ratified in 1992, prevents legislators from voting themselves an immediate pay raise.  It is not controversial.  However, I have heard several Republicans claim that they were responsible for this Amendment, instituted because of “Democrat Party corruption”.  This is a lie.  The Amendment was proposed voted on by the House and Senate in 1789.  No, that is not a typo.  At the time, only eight states moved to ratify it, and it languished in limbo for 203 years before it was fully ratified by the states.  Republicans could hardly have been behind it, because the party did not yet exist.

This concludes the Constitution Series, here at Politics Plus.  I hope you have enjoyed it, and even more, that you have learned from it.  We have seen, time and time again, issue by issue, that Republican claims to honor our nation’s founding document are as bogus as the statements they make about it.

While Republicans claim to honor the Bible, they ignore everything Jesus taught about caring for the poor and outcast.  While Republicans claim to honor our flag, they drag it through the filth of inequality, bigotry, and repression of our most basic rights.  While Republicans claim to honor our Constitution above all, they would undo much of what it guarantees.  It they are allowed to take power again, the future of our Constitution is certain.

6burning-constitution

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