The Prez Hits $20 Billion Homerun

Tuesday night there was much grumbling and grousing about President Obama. His usual critics on the right were critical of everything he said or did. He didn’t show enough emotion, he didn’t talk tough enough, he inhaled wrong, he exhaled wrong. He was also criticized for discussing alternative energy at a time of crisis. He should have called this person and that person.

Those on the left weren’t too pleased either. They felt he didn’t go far enough. He didn’t show emotion, he didn’t hold BP accountable enough, blah blah blah. He didn’t wash enough pelicans.

Then Wednesday something short of a miracle happened. President Obama went into a meeting with the BP folks and members of his administration. He came out with $20 billion dollars allocated in escrow for damages to the environment, the economy and people’s livelihoods and an apology to the American people. Dividends won’t be paid out and BP remains intact.

 

Not too bad for a guy who couldn’t shoot straight on Tuesday.

[Sorry, wrong video posted]

Alaska Congressman Reassures us Gulf Oil Leak Not a Disaster

Alaska Congressman Don Young has told Congress that the Deepwater Horizon oil spill is not an environmental disaster:

Young said: “This is not an environmental disaster, and I will say that again and again because it is a national phenomena. Oil has seeped into this ocean for centuries, will continue to do it. During World War II there was over 10 million barrels of oil spilt from ships, and no natural catastrophe. … We will lose some birds, we will lose some fixed sea life, but overall it will recover.”

Huh? And Sarah Palin recommended that Alaska mght help with this disaster? Are these people nuts? It seems that Congress has had more reaction to dealing with ACORN than it has in dealing with BP Oil as various members of congress scramble to protect BP and other oil companies for from fiscal responsibility.  Each day,   the Foxies are falling all over themselves trying to blame President Obama for the entire mess.  Granted, he hasn’t been perfect but he is not alone and he isn’t throwing out a shroud of protection over the oil company. 

According the the website USAspending.gov, billions of dollars in government contracts are currently held with BP Oil. 61 alone are with DOD. Where is the outrage in congress? Where is the sense of urgency? 

Meanwhile, there is all sorts of moaning and groaning over the 50 deep water oil rigs that have been shut down temporarily. Doesn’t it make sense to suspend this type of work? If something goes wrong, shouldn’t we know how to fix it? Obviously no one knows how to shut these wells down if for whatever reason, the umbilical cord detaches from the mother-ship. Let’s get a solution before we allow more rigs to operate. The first sign of mental illness is to repeat behavior and expect a different outcome.

The ocean truly is the last frontier. Man’s capacity for making stupid statements seems truly infinite.

Rachel Maddow has been all over this disaster.  Speaking of lack of local response, her guest gives us a close up look.

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Sarah Palin Blames Environmentalists for the Oil Spill

Every time one thinks things just can’t get more outrageous, Sarah Palin opens her mouth.  She now blames environmentalists for the BP oil spill.  According to her own facebook comments:

With [environmentalists’] nonsensical efforts to lock up safer drilling areas, all you’re doing is outsourcing energy development, which makes us more controlled by foreign countries, less safe, and less prosperous on a dirtier planet. Your hypocrisy is showing. You’re not preventing environmental hazards; you’re outsourcing them and making drilling more dangerous.

Extreme deep water drilling is not the preferred choice to meet our country’s energy needs, but your protests and lawsuits and lies about onshore and shallow water drilling have locked up safer areas. It’s catching up with you. The tragic, unprecedented deep water Gulf oil spill proves.

We don’t need the blame game.  We need to get that gusher stopped and start the clean up.   Does Sarah Palin thrive on discord and animosity?  Does she want Americans to hate each other?  Her behavior indicates that the answer to that question is yes.  Shame on Sarah Palin, again.

Christine Todd Whitman on the Oil Leak, Moderating the Tea Party and Listening

Christine Todd Whitman has always been one of my favorites since she was governor of New Jersey. Whitman knows what it is like to be shot at from all sides, being a moderate herself. She says she will be moderate on some times and more liberal on others. So how to label her? Tell her the issue, she will tell you where she stands and you can decide.

Democrat Pitbull Snarls over BP

Elena and I have talked extensively over this oil gusher.  The impact on the environment is almost too horrifying to fathom.  It still is happening.  It hasn’t been contained.  Perhaps we are numb.  We have avoided publishing a thread about it.  It’s horrible.  It’s horrible in an environmental Armageddon sort of way that leaves one speechless. 

James Carville, the Democratic pitbull has some words to say on the subject–some words we might not expect. He is a Louisianan.  He is a Democrat, first and foremost.  This issue should transcend all politics. It is an American horror story. I feel he needs to be heard:

Big Government and Eating Your Words

Its all rhetoric and political swashbuckling until real world problems become your own. 

 

Today’s Washington Post has an excellent opinion piece written by Dana Millbank entitled, Through Oil-fouled Water, Big Government Looks Better and Better.  The entire article has been posted below because every word needs to be taken to heart and read carefully.  There was simply no part that could be considered for truncating purposes. 

Through Oil-fouled Water, Big Government Looks Better and Better

Dana Millbank, Washington Post

There is something exquisite about the moment when a conservative decides he needs more government in his life.

About 10:30 Monday morning, Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), an ardent foe of big government, posted a blog item on his campaign Web site about the huge oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. “I strongly believe BP is spread too thin,” he wrote.

The poor dears. He thinks it would be a better arrangement if “federal and state officials” would do the dirty work of “protecting and cleaning up the coast” instead of BP.

About an hour later came word from the Pentagon that Alabama, Florida and Mississippi — all three governed by men who once considered themselves limited-government conservatives — want the federal government to mobilize (at taxpayer expense, of course) more National Guard troops to aid in the cleanup.

That followed an earlier request by the small-government governor of Louisiana, Bobby Jindal (R), who issued a statement saying he had called the Obama administration “to outline the state’s needs” and to ask “for additional resources.” Said Jindal: “These resources are critical.”

About the time that Alabama, Florida and Mississippi were asking for more federal help, three small-government Republican senators, Richard Shelby and Jeff Sessions of Alabama and George LeMieux of Florida, were flying over the gulf on a U.S. government aircraft with small-government Republican Rep. Jeff Miller (Fla.).

“We’re here to send the message that we’re going to do everything we can from a federal level to mitigate this,” Sessions said after the flight, “to protect the people and make sure when people are damaged that they’re made whole.”

Sessions, probably the Senate’s most ardent supporter of tort reform, found himself extolling the virtues of litigation — against BP. “They’re not limited in liability on damage, so if you’ve suffered a damage, they are the responsible party,” said Sessions, sounding very much like the trial lawyers he usually maligns.

All these limited-government guys expressed their belief that the British oil company would ultimately cover all the costs of the cleanup. “They’re not too big to fail,” Sessions said. “If they can’t pay and they’ve given it everything they’ve got, then they should cease to exist.” But if you believe that the federal government won’t be on the hook for a major part of the costs, perhaps you’d like to buy a leaky oil well in the Gulf of Mexico.

It may have taken an ecological disaster, but the gulf-state conservatives’ newfound respect for the powers and purse of the federal government is a timely reminder for them. As conservatives in Washington complain about excessive federal spending, the ones who would suffer the most from spending cuts are their own constituents.

An analysis of data from the nonpartisan Tax Foundation by Washington Post database specialist Dan Keating found that people in states that voted Republican were by far the biggest beneficiaries of federal spending. In states that voted strongly Republican, people received an average of $1.50 back from the federal government for every dollar they paid in federal taxes. In moderately Republican states, the amount was $1.19. In moderately Democratic states, people received on average of 99 cents in federal funds for each dollar they paid in taxes. In strongly Democratic states, people got back just 86 cents on the tax dollar.

If Sessions and Shelby succeed in shrinking government, their constituents in Alabama will be some of the biggest losers: They get $1.66 in federal benefits for every $1 they pay in taxes. If Louisiana’s Vitter succeeds in shrinking government, his constituents will lose some of the $1.78 in federal benefits they receive for every dollar in taxes they pay. In Mississippi, it’s $2.02.

That may explain why, as the oil slick hits the Gulf Coast, lawmakers from the region are willing to swallow their limited-government principles as they dangle federal aid before their constituents. Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) said he would “make sure the federal government is poised to assist in every way necessary.” His colleague Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) said he is making sure “the federal government is doing all it can” — even as he added his hope that “industry” would pay.

President Obama tried to remind the government-is-the-enemy crowd of this situation in a speech on Saturday. “Government is the police officers who are protecting our communities, and the servicemen and -women who are defending us abroad,” he said. “Government is the roads you drove in on and the speed limits that kept you safe. Government is what ensures that mines adhere to safety standards and that oil spills are cleaned up by the companies that caused them.”

For the moment, some of the conservatives have new appreciation for governmental powers. “We’re going to have the oil industry folks, the BP folks, in front of us on the Commerce Committee,” Florida’s LeMieux vowed in the news conference Monday. “We’re going to talk about these drilling issues.”

But not before the taxpayer sends some more big-government money down to the small-government politicians of the gulf.

 

At what point do we stop thinking that the other person’s needs are frivolous and our own important? Are the politicians in the gulf states who are banging the drum about smaller government opportunists? Hypocrites? Or could it be that all those elected officials just needed a reality check about what we do when disaster hits us?

Drill Baby Drill?

 

 

How is that off shore drilly thing working out for everyone? 

Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has called out the National Guard and declared a state of emergency a few hours ago to protect the State of Louisiana’s natural resources.  Yesterday the wind blew the oil away from shore.  Today, just the opposite was happening.

Last month, President Obama discussed the possibility of off shore drilling.  Will people be so willing to go along with this plan after BP’s oil rig explosion?  4 gulf states stand in harm’s way as 5000 gallons of oil leak daily.

Are the environmental hazards just too great? How far off our coastlines are other countries drilling? If other countries are reaping the benefits, shouldn’t we? Who knows what causes these kinds of disasters. Can they even be avoided? Meanwhile, 11 people are missing, presumed dead. There is also the human element, which has not gotten the amount of attention that the environmental elements have gotten. This much oil can ruin the fishing economy. Will BP be under the same oil albatross as Exxon was?

Virginia Tech Massacre: 3 Years ago April 16, 2007

3 short years ago.  Who will forget watching the events unfold on TV that left 32 people dead and 17 wounded at Virginia Tech?  The killings at VT became the worst massacre ever in the United States.  And that day we were all Hokies. 

There has been plenty of criticism to go around.  Tech was criticized for failure to notify students of the dangers of a marauding student killer on campus.  The cops have been criticized for tracking down the wrong person while the real killer went on a rampage.  Fairfax County Schools were criticized for not notifying Tech of Cho’s (the killer) anti-social  behavior.  Laws have been criticized, with everyone declaring ‘NEVER AGAIN.’

What has changed?  Does Tech have a better notification system?  Have the police come up with a better way of tracking crime on campus?  Is it more difficult to obtain guns or is it easier?  Are there better checks and balances in place so that people with mental illness are prevented from purchasing guns?  Is student information more readily available?  Do schools have to notify receiving schools of student mental illness?

Other than a better danger  notification system, I am not sure that one thing has changed. The legislature spent the winter trying to relax hand gun laws.  Student privacy laws still seem to be in place.  I just don’t know how NEVER AGAIN is working out for us.  Any ideas?

Meanwhile, a moment of silence for the fallen and a hopeful NEVER AGAIN.

Update:

April 16th is turning in to a real bad day for me. (See first thread)
I am not sure Virginians are ready to move on. I am not sure the mourning process is over. Maybe it won’t be for a long time. The last class to experience the massacre will graduate this spring. Maybe then. Maybe. University Distinguished Professor Nikki Giovanni speaks at the convocation on 4/17/07:

Mine Safety Issues

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UPDATE:  4/10/10 The 4 remaining miners at Montcoal have been found dead.

 

One has to ask, why doesn’t MSHA (Federal Mine Safety and Health Agency) do more to insist on safer mines? It makes no sense that the feds govern mine safety and the state can also. Yet a company has over 600 violations from one mine? How about the feds going in, shutting down the mines when they have glaring violations like ventilation systems not working and forcing the mines to pay the miners for time spent off the job until the mine is in compliance?

A current theme of mine is “this is 2010.” Coal mining has been unsafe since men first went into the bowels of the earth. Companies have gotten rich off the backs of miners. Part of our language comes from the dangers of mining (Canary in a coal mine). There are so many songs and films about the dangers of mining. Still we  have companies that have zero regard for the ultimate safety of their workers.

Should we insist that the federal government protect miners by holding the companies’ respective feet to the fire about violations? Should mining safety be turned over to the state? Probably those who would battle any attempt to  reform coal mining standards enforcement  would be the coal miners and their families. They are a hard, tenacious group held together by the danger of the job. The key word here is J-O-B. A coal mine brings jobs to an undeveloped, economically depressed area. Mining is hard dangerous work but it pays well, especially when the unions are involved. Where are the unions during all this talk of violations?

Mining is good money if you live to spend it. Massey Energy and its CEO Don Blankenship might have a great deal to answer for once the dust has settled, the dead buried, and the lost found. We simply cannot have mining accidents like this in 2010. These miners aren’t our canaries!

25 Killed, 4 Missing in WV Mining Blast

 

Around 3 pm today, residents of Montcoal, West Virginia heard an all too familiar sound of multiple sirens tearing through their small, close-knit mining town.  7 miners have been reported killed and 19 more are still missing.

The cause of the blast is unknown.  However, that mine has had a series of safety violations, many resulting from not properly ventilating methane gas.  According the the Washington Post:

Nine miners were leaving on a vehicle that takes them in and out of the long shaft, when a crew ahead of the them felt a blast of air and went back to investigate, said Kevin Stricklin, an administrator for the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration.

They found nine workers, seven of whom were dead. Two others were injured. Two other nine-person crews and a safety inspector who had been working alone were believed trapped, perhaps about a mile and a half underground, said Stricklin, an administrator for Coal Mine Safety and Health. Officials do not believe that the roof collapsed.

Dozens of rescuers were at the scene about 30 miles south of Charleston, but it was unclear whether the mine was safe enough for them to enter and look for the trapped men.

Mining disasters are not uncommon to that area.  The last West Virginia accident was at the Sago mine in 2006.  A list of mining disasters in that area can be found at WVminesafety.org

I feel certain everyone’s thoughts and prayers will be for the victims, the missing, their families, and the town of Montcoal.

More information:  Beckley Register-Herald

UPDATE:  During the night the nmber of dead increased significantly.  🙁      (6:30 am 4/6/10)

Some Fall 2008 Financial Post Mortum

Let’s re-examine what the experts say. 

Paulson on AIG and Lehman

Buffett a Year After the Crash

It makes more sense to hear what the experts say than it does for non experts to fight about the economy on the blogs. And if I am not mistaken, Paulson and Buffett are both Republicans. Both have forgotten more about money than I have ever learned. Paulson is also out of Goldman Sachs.  He is well respected and worth a fortune.  He stepped up to the plate to serve his country.  He had nothing to lose and everything to gain. 

Article on Why Lehman Brothers Failed

Small Plane Plows into Office Building in Austin, TX

A single engine plane has crashed into a 7 story office building in Austin, Tx.  Authories do not think it is terrorism but full details are not available.  There are people trapped in the building still.  Many people were able to get out, thank goodness. 

Structurally the building appears to be intact.  The windows are all out.  The impact was on the north side of the building.  Fire seemed to cover 2 floors.  The FBI building is right next door to this office complex, however they are saying this is not a terror attack.  The crash is about 15 miles from the airport.

photo compliments of myFox

UPDATE:  It is now thought that the crash was intentional.

2 Former Presidents Lead Private Fund Raising Relief Effort

Former Presidents Clinton and Bush have been asked by President Obama to head up private fund raising for Haiti relief, very similar to what President Bush the elder and President Clinton were asked to do. 

The 2 issued the following joint statement:

We are deeply saddened by the devastation and suffering caused by the recent earthquake in Haiti. The people of Haiti are in our thoughts and prayers.

We are pleased to accept President Obama’s request to lead private sector fundraising efforts. In the days and weeks ahead, we will draw attention to the many ways American citizens and businesses can help meet the urgent needs of the Haitian people.

Americans have a long history of showing compassion and generosity in the wake of tragedy. We thank the American people for rallying to help our neighbors in the Caribbean in their hour of suffering – and throughout the journey of rebuilding their nation.

For information on how you can contribute, please visit www.georgewbushcenter.com/haiti and www.clintonfoundation.org/haitiearthquake.

Both men plan to go to Haiti in the near future.  Right now, they would both be in the way because of security.  Both men look down-right distinguished in the above picture. 

USNS Hope Heads to Haiti

Originally an oil tanker, the hospital ship, Hope, is the third ship to bear the name Hope.  She docks in Baltimore and can be readied for service in 5 days.   USNS Hope now heads out to Haiti to bring much needed medical help to the earthquake victims. 

USNS Hope is owned by the Navy and is considered a state of the art floating hospital, with operating rooms, state of the art diagnostics, and now a staff that is dedicated and impressive.  It can treat a thousand people at a time. 

With docks in shambles, the game plan for getting those in need aboard the Hope is unclear.  Americans should be proud of this floating hospital.  Wikipedia boasts:

Operated by the Military Sealift Command, Comfort provides rapid, flexible, and mobile medical and surgical services to support Marine Corps Air/Ground Task Forces deployed ashore, Army and Air Force units deployed ashore, and naval amphibious task forces and battle forces afloat. Secondarily, she provides mobile surgical hospital service for use by appropriate US Government agencies in disaster or humanitarian relief or limited humanitarian care incident to these missions or peacetime military operations.

 

There are other hospital ships currently in operation.

A Brutally Ugly Scene

The following video is a hideously ugly scene of death and destruction and desperation.  Don’t watch if you are too sensitive.  As we talk of the previous troubles of Haiti and the corrupt government, the thuggery, the poverty, we also need to remind ourselves of the human struggle and the humanitarian aid that is needed. 

The Port-au-Prince area does indeed look like a war zone.  Perhaps in the wake of this disaster, a ‘Marshall Plan’ can happen.  There is no government left.  There is just human misery.  Maybe there is silver lining somewhere, if we dig deep enough. 

Right now is not the time to talk politics.  In a few weeks however, serious discussions have to take place.  But right now, all efforts need to be towards rescue. Rebuild comes later and that is the time for toughness and accountability.