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30 October 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
On October 22, AP reported that
over 7,000 square miles of Gulf waters off Florida's
Panhandle were declared oil-free and reopened to
fishing. According the the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 96% of Gulf waters
are now safe and reopened, spokeswoman Jane Lubchenco
saying, "Our tests continue to reveal seafood from the
reopened areas is safe to eat." Others disagree. More
on that below.
The newly opened area is about 60
miles east of the Macondo wellhead. About 9,400 square
miles of fishing waters remain closed, 4% of federal
waters, down from 37% earlier.
From the start, The New Times
provided cover for BP and the administration, at first
denying the existence of a spill, then minimizing the
disaster. On May 3, writers John Broder and Tom Zeller
Jr. headlined, "Gulf Oil Spill Is Bad, but How Bad?
saying "news analysis" indicates it's really not
serious after all, when evidence showed the potential
for disaster.
On August 4, writer Justin Gillis
headlined, "US Finds Most Oil From Spill Poses Little
Additional Risk," saying:
"The government is expected to
announce....that three-quarters of the oil from the
Deepwater Horizon leak has already evaporated,
dispersed, been captured or otherwise eliminated - and
that much of the rest is so diluted that it does not
seem to pose much additional risk of harm."
This at a time, and later on,
when independent research showed most oil remained.
Corexit dispersants increased toxicity manyfold.
Seafood was contaminated and unsafe. Vast areas of the
Gulf and shorelines were (and continue to be)
hazardous, and the risk to wildlife and human health
was extreme. In other words, by downplaying the
disaster, The Times defended government and BP lies,
fearing the April 20 explosion provided "new fodder"
for opponents.
Other Times reports highlighted
the vanishing oil, low concentrations of deep sea
toxic compounds, and conditions slowly returning to
normal. In an October 12 update, The Times said:
"....evidence is increasing that
through a combination of luck (a fortunate shift in
ocean currents that kept much of the oil away from
shore) and ecological circumstance (the relatively
warm waters that increased the breakdown rate of the
oil), the gulf region appears to have escaped the
direst predictions of the spring."
"And preliminary reports
(suggest) the damage already done (may) be
significantly less than was feared - less, in fact,
than the destruction from the much smaller Exxon
Valdez spill in Alaska in 1989."
In fact, the truth is mirror
opposite. BP and administration officials are
responsible for the greatest environmental crime in
history, an ongoing disaster, affecting vast parts of
the Gulf, coastal waters from Texas to Florida, most
or perhaps all wildlife, and the health of millions of
residents, no longer safe since April.
Drill Baby
Drill
On October 12, the May imposed
moratorium was lifted, six weeks ahead of its
scheduled November 30 date, Interior Secretary Ken
Salazar declaring:
"We are open for business....We
have made and continue to make significant progress in
reducing the risks associated with deepwater
drilling." (Therefore), I have decided that it is now
appropriate to lift the suspension on deepwater
drilling for those operators that are able to clear
the higher bar that we have set."
In fact, so-called "new rules"
mimic old ones. Drilling remains unregulated and
unsafe, so it's just a matter of time before the next
disaster strikes, besides natural seepage and annual
hundreds of smaller, unreported spills. Cumulatively
over time, their toxicity destroys global water and
human health. Moreover, according to former NOAA
supervisory researcher Jeff Short:
"Once you have a spill, you are
pretty much screwed. That's because oil spreads on
water at a rate of one-half football field per second.
Recovery can take decades," so calling the coast clear
and water safe is willfully deceptive, echoed by the
dominant media, The New York Times in the lead.
Lies, Damn
Lies, and Coverup
The level is staggering, numerous
reports countering BP and administration claims. On
September 3, Boston Chemical Data Corp. laboratory
findings, commissioned by the United Commercial
Fishermen's Association, revealed toxic Corexit levels
in test samples, meaning, besides oil contamination,
Gulf seafood is extremely hazardous and unsafe.
Moreover, though BP denies it,
Corexit spraying continues, mostly at night but some
during day time. Fishermen report seeing it, in some
cases hit by its mist. Reports say BP hired
out-of-state contractors using unregistered boats,
besides nightly aerial spraying. The administration's
response to the entire disaster remains firm - coverup
and denial, helped by a major media blackout after BP
reported sealing the Macondo well on September 19.
In early October, however, four
working reports issued by investigators from the
National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil
Spill and Offshore Drilling revealed systemic coverup
and censorship to suppress the disaster's magnitude,
one very much ongoing.
They explained that stonewalling
began in April and continued, one report concluding:
"By initially underestimating the
amount of oil flow and then, at the end of the summer,
appearing to underestimate the amount of oil remaining
in the gulf, the federal government created the
impression that it was either not fully competent to
handle the spill or not fully candid with the American
people about the scope of the problem."
In fact, willful misinformation
was released. In contrast, independent researchers
produced accurate findings. BP, the administration,
and major media accounts suppressed them, including
evidence of criminal negligence.
Local Reports
Exposing the Big Lie
On October 23, New Orleans
Times-Picayune writer Bob Marshall headlined "Massive
stretches of weathered oil spotted in Gulf of Mexico,"
saying:
"Just three days after (Coast
Guard admiral Thad Allen, BP's front man) declared
little recoverable surface oil remained in the Gulf of
Mexico....Boat captains working the BP clean-up
effort" reported seeing it, confirmed by
Times-Picayune photojournalist Matt Hinton in a
fly-over. In addition, "fishermen's groups....insist
their members have" spotted it all along, refuting
official claims that don't explain large fish kills,
big enough to suggest widespread toxicity, affecting
humans as well as wildlife.
On the six month anniversary of
the disaster, marine biologist Riki Ott reported
"people (are) now dropping dead," adding:
"I am dealing with about 3 - 4
autopsies right now....I know of people who's
esophagus' are de-solving, disintegrating....I know of
people with 4.75% of their lung capacity, with
enlarged hearts....All of these people have oil (and
dispersants) in their bodies."
She added that "4 to 5 million
people in the Gulf were exposed to oil (and
dispersants) at dangerous levels that is going to have
incredible public health ramifications...and possibly
force the President out of office for lies." In fact,
he should be impeached and prosecuted for war crimes
abroad and ones against humanity at home.
Deaths continue to be reported as
well as people finding volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
and other toxins in their blood. According to one
observer, corruption, coverup and poisoning are
occurring in plain sight. The entire region is
affected and will be for decades, the dirty secret BP,
government officials, and major media won't explain.
Local accounts, however, are
disturbing. On October 21, New Orleans WWL-TV
reported:
"The oil is not evaporating. It's
not dissipating. It's sitting there," according to PJ
Hahn, Plaquemines Parish Coastal Zone Management
Department head.
On October 20, AP reported Byron
Encalade, president of the Louisiana Oystermen
Association, saying "oyster beds are all dead or
dying....I'm very pessimistic about it."
In early September, Mississippi
Department of Marine Resources officials found 80 -
90% of oysters dead, citing no cause. Clearly oil and
Corexit are responsible.
On October 21, Cynthia Sarthou,
Gulf Restoration Network executive director, said:
"There is still so much oil and
dispersant in the environment, and the Gulf has not
yet begun to heal because we have yet to determine
what the injury is that it has suffered," and its
extent. For sure it's massive and destructive.
On October 16, the Louisiana
Shrimp Association's Clint Guidry called using Corexit
a "horrific mistake," adding:
"Potential ecosystem collapse
caused by toxic dispersant use during this disaster
will have immediate and long term effects on the
Gulf's fishing communities' ability to sustain our
culture and heritage."
On October 22, a pilot said he
"was surprised (and saddened) to witness a seemingly
unrelenting tide of oil hammering our beaches, bays,
and estuaries."
Other recent reports included:
-- fishermen sprayed while
sleeping in groups of boats tied together;
-- a boat captain, Lori DeAngelis,
said her vagina and anus are bleeding, adding: "This
thing is killing me;"
-- Lorrie Williams in Ocean
Springs, MS said the oil sheen is "a lot worse" now
than earlier, calling it an "absolute mess;"
-- tides keep washing up tar
balls and sheen on coastal beaches and other areas;
-- large deposits are found
buried in sand;
-- researchers found "vast
volumes" of oil on the seafloor, including "thick raw
crude;"
-- a massive shelf of exposed tar
was found on Pensacola beaches;
-- fishermen said "we're
starving; there are no fish in the waters" or not
enough; and "any fish we would see, we would not eat;"
and
-- various other reports were
just as disturbing - clear evidence of an ongoing
disaster because of the worst ever environmental
crime.
A Final
Comment
On June 14, as conditions
worsened, AP reported that Obama "pronounce(d) Gulf
seafood safe to eat....things are going to return to
normal....I am confident that we're going to be able
to leave the Gulf Coast in better shape than it was
before."
In fact, then, now, and for
decades, contamination will remain, hazardous to
wildlife and human health, what he knew yet lied and
said otherwise, fronting for BP and other industry
giants.
Oil and dispersants contaminate
much, perhaps the entire Gulf. It's now poisoned and
will remain potentially lethal for decades, maybe
generations. Nothing in it should be ingested.
Millions in the region are at risk. Families with
small children should leave. No one should swim in
coastal waters or eat any Gulf seafood, perhaps ever
again. Responsible officials should ban it.
Instead, Obama, the Interior
Department, NOAA, the Coast Guard, state governors,
coastal mayors, regional health officials, BP, and
major media reports gave the all-clear, saying
conditions are nearly again normal, claiming the worst
of the crisis was avoided.
In fact, a silent epidemic of
cancers and other diseases will ravage coastal and
inland areas for decades. The livelihoods of many
residents are lost, and southern Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida may never be the
same again, at least not for those now living there.
Moreover, 4,000 Gulf oil
platforms now operate, the deepest and most hazardous
by a consortium of companies, including BP. In
addition, about 50,000 old wells pockmark the seabed,
thousands with temporary or failing plugs believed to
be leaking oil, gas and other toxins.
Yet deepwater drilling continues.
Oil and gas pipelines keep compromising Gulf marshes,
causing 15,000 acres to be lost annually, eroding
wetlands and other areas. According to experts, unless
restorative changes are made, the entire ecosystem
will be lost in a generation.
On November 2, consider that
before voting. Remember Obama's complicity in the
greatest ever environmental crime, but don't imagine
Republicans or Tea Party extremists will fix things.
They're all beholden to power, not popular interests
at a time they're being systematically eroded to
divert money for militarism, imperial wars, bankers,
BP, and other corporate favorites, ordinary people and
ecological considerations be damned.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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