newsrackblog.com

a citizen’s journal by Thomas Nephew

  • Recent Comments

    • Thomas Nephew on We live the future of our past
    • Thomas Nephew on “If you don’t live here, it’s none of your business”
    • Appalachia Rising on “If you don’t live here, it’s none of your business”
    • Thomas Nephew on Lost no more: the story of the first Memorial Day
    • Thomas Nephew on Lost no more: the story of the first Memorial Day
    • Nell on Lost no more: the story of the first Memorial Day
    • Nell on Actively embedded, passively acquiescing
    • Thomas Nephew on Actively embedded, passively acquiescing
    • Nell on Actively embedded, passively acquiescing
    • Nell on Actively embedded, passively acquiescing
    • Nell on Actively embedded, passively acquiescing
    • Nell on Actively embedded, passively acquiescing
  • Recent Trackbacks

  • Real News

  • RSS my delicious

    • Stimulus Is for Suckers (Galbraith, Mother Jones, Dec. 2008)
      Via Robin Stelly, who calls it 'painfully optimistic': "The historical role of a stimulus is to kick things off, to grease the wheels of credit, to get things "moving again." But the effect ends when the stimulus does, when the sugar shock wears off. Compulsive budget balancers who prescribe a "targeted and temporary" policy followed by long-term cuts to entitlements don't understand the patient. This is a chronic illness. Swift action is definitely needed. But we also need recovery policies that will continue for years."
    • Can the Humanities Survive the 21st Century? (Donoghue, The Chronicle of Higher Education)
      An English professor writes: "What has happened is that the center of gravity at almost all universities has shifted so far away from the humanities that the most pertinent answer to the question "Will the humanities survive in the 21st century?" is not "yes" or "no," but "Who cares?""
    • The GOP's new fake racial history (Kornacki, Salon.com)
      "...Barbour has invented his own sanitized, suburb-friendly version of history -- an account that paints the South's shift to the GOP as the product of young, racially inclusive conservatives who had reasons completely separate and apart from racial politics for abandoning their forebears' partisan allegiances. "
    • More taunts to the Democratic base (Walsh, Salon.com)
      "...three of the groups with whom the president's ratings have dropped most precipitously are Latinos, young(18-t0-29) voters and white union members. Those groups gave Obama two-thirds of their votes in 2008, and they’ve all registered sizeable dips in their approval of Obama since then, as well as in their stated intention to vote. I hadn't realized this: In 2008, 57 percent of white men favored McCain, but 57 percent of white male union members favored Obama. Even after all that talk about "racist" white working class voters only going for Hillary Clinton, the union vote came through for Obama, but its support is waning as the president appears paralyzed on a plan to attack unemployment."
    • Are Muslim immigrants making Europe "poorer and stupider"? (Alan Nothnagle, Open Salon)
      On Thilo Sarrazin: "Back in the restless 1990s, when the German far right was undergoing yet another short-lived rebirth into the political mainstream, the racist Republican Party under the leadership of ex-Nazi and SS man Franz Schönhuber used to put up what I still regard as the most remarkable political poster ever. Printed in the nationalist colors black, white, and red, it simply displayed the words: “We say what you think.” Today, another German politician has been making headlines in recent weeks for also saying aloud what millions of Europeans fervently believe but rarely dare to put into words. His explosive new book Germany is Abolishing Itself appeared on store shelves this morning, and the future of European politics may depend on what happens next."
    • Historians rethink key Soviet role in Japan defeat (Lekic, AP)
      "The Soviet entry into the war played a much greater role than the atomic bombs in inducing Japan to surrender because it dashed any hope that Japan could terminate the war through Moscow's mediation," said Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, whose recently published "Racing the Enemy" examines the conclusion of the Pacific war and is based on recently declassified Soviet archives as well as U.S. and Japanese documents.."
    • Fretting, asking, and begging isn’t a plan: a response to TechCrunch on women in technology (Pincus, "Liminal States")
      Interesting example of social network gadflying going on here. "The lastest firestorm about women and entrepeneurship got kicked off by Shira Ovide’s excellent Wall Street Journal article Addressing the Lack of Women Running Tech Startups. With some fine quotes from Rachel Sklar, Dina Kaplan, Yuli Ziv, and Fred Wilson, as well as solid discussion in the comments, I thought it was a great read. But not everybody agreed."
    • Berghuis v. Thompkins (Seilie, ScotusWiki, July '10i)
      "By a 5-4 vote, the Court for the first time made two things clear about Miranda rights: first, if a suspect does not want to talk to police — that is, to invoke a right to silence — he must say so, with a clear statement because it is not enough to sit silently or to remain uncooperative, even through a long session; and, second, if the suspect finally answers a suggestive question with a one-word response that amounts to a confession, that, by itself, will be understood as a waiver of the right to silence and the statement can be used as evidence. Police need not obtain an explicit waiver of that right. The net practical effect is likely to be that police, in the face of a suspect’s continued silence after being given Miranda warnings, can continue to question him, even for a couple of hours, in hopes eventually of getting him to confess. " Good on Sotomayor for a strong dissent.
    • Straight Talk; Videotaping Police (Balko, FOXNews.com, June '07)
      This goes back further than I thought; Balko cites "rash" of arrests for videotaping police back in 2007. "It's critical that we retain the right to record, videotape or photograph the police while they're on duty. Not only for symbolic reasons (when agents of the state can confiscate evidence of their own wrongdoing, you're treading on seriously perilous ground), but as an important check on police excesses. In the age of YouTube, video of police misconduct captured by private citizens can have an enormous impact.."
    • I Think I See What Glenn Beck is Doing (Lexington Green, "ChicagoBoyz")
      Notable mainly for an "you got it" from Beck, and for the 'military' etc shared assumptions. "Beck is building solidarity and cultural confidence in America, its Constitution, its military heritage, its freedom. This is a vision that is despised by the people who have long held the commanding heights of the culture. But is obviously alive and kicking. Beck is creating positive themes of unity and patriotism and freedom and independence which are above mere political or policy choices, but not irrelevant to them. Political and policy choices rest on a foundation of philosophy, culture, self-image, ideals, religion. Change the foundation, and the rest will flow from that. Defeat the enemy on that plane, and any merely tactical defeat will always be reversible."
    • The Ultimate Escape: The Bizarre Libertarian Plan of Uploading Brains into Robots to Escape Society (Reed, AlterNet)
      "No one wants to die, but the thought of living forever among narcissistic libertarian cyborgs makes death’s cold embrace seem more like a squishy hug from the Easter Bunny."
    • A Transpartisan Uprising Against the Individual Insurance Mandate (Sirota, OpenLeft)
      "Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), is accelerating the process of exempting his state from some of the national reforms passed under President Barack Obama. The Oregon Democrat is seeking to take advantage of a provision he helped write into the legislation that allows states to set up their own health care systems as long as they meet minimal requirements established by the Department of Health and Human Services."
    • Does Your Language Shape How You Think? (Deutscher, NYTimes)
      "When your language routinely obliges you to specify certain types of information, it forces you to be attentive to certain details in the world and to certain aspects of experience that speakers of other languages may not be required to think about all the time. And since such habits of speech are cultivated from the earliest age, it is only natural that they can settle into habits of mind that go beyond language itself, affecting your experiences, perceptions, associations, feelings, memories and orientation in the world. "
    • The Tragic Death of Practically Everything (McCracken, "Technologizer")
      "After the jump, a moving recap of some of the stuff that predeceased the Web–you may want to bring a handkerchief."
    • Bush Campaign Chief and Former RNC Chair Ken Mehlman: I'm Gay (Ambinder, Atlantic)
      "Mehlman said at the time that he could not, as an individual Republican, go against the party consensus. He was aware that Karl Rove, President Bush's chief strategic adviser, had been working with Republicans to make sure that anti-gay initiatives and referenda would appear on November ballots in 2004 and 2006 to help Republicans."
  • Subscribe

  • Meta

Blogged.com

27 federal waivers for Gulf drilling *since* Deepwater Horizon disaster

Posted by Thomas Nephew on May 10th, 2010

You would think that after an environmental catastrophe on the scale of the Deepwater Horizon blowout, the federal agency in charge of reviewing plans for new wells would put everything on hold while it figured out what happened, how to better prevent it, and what to do if another “oil volcano” disaster occurred.

You would be wrong.

From a Friday, May 7 press release from the Center for Biological Diversity:

Even as the BP drilling explosion which killed eleven people continues to gush hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil per day into the Gulf of Mexico, the U.S. Department of Interior’s Minerals Management Service (MMS) has continued to exempt dangerous new drilling operations from environmental review. Twenty-seven new offshore drilling projects have been approved since April 20, 2010; twenty-six under the same environmental review exemption used to approve the disastrous BP drilling that is fouling the Gulf and its wildlife.  [...]

“Salazar is playing a cynical shell game, making the public think he stopped issuing the faulty approvals that allowed the disastrous BP drilling to occur, when in fact he has given MMS the green light to keep issuing those very same approvals,” said  [CBD executive director Kieran Suckling]. “The only thing Salazar has stopped is the final, technical check off which comes long after the environmental review. His media sleight of hand does nothing to fix the broken system that allowed what may be the greatest environmental catastrophe of our generation to occur.”

“For Secretary Salazar to allow MMS to exempt 26 new oil wells from environmental review in the midst of the ongoing Gulf crisis shows an extraordinary lapse of judgment. It is inconceivable that his attention is apparently on providing BP with new environmentally exempted offshore oil wells instead of shutting down the corrupt process which put billion of dollars into BP’s pocket and millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.”

(Via Mick Arran, “Fact-esque.”) The press release provides side-by-side comparisons of the doomed Deepwater Horizon Mississippi Canyon exploration plan and a Green Canyon plan approved on May 6.  Unbelievably, some MMS functionary actually signed off on that plan with the following: “II.J. Blowout Scenario - Information not required for activities proposed in this Initial Exploration Plan.”

It occurred to me that maybe an “Initial Exploration Plan” is just about underwater geological surveying — I don’t know, a little robot sub or probe gives the seabed a whack with a piledriver and records the seismic echoes or something.  But no, the MMS-approved Green Canyon plan (.PDF, 80 p.) has sections like “Drilling Fluids” and “Oil Spill Response Discussion” — and for the latter, laconically notes “Information not required for activities proposed in this Initial Exploration Plan.” Just before that (p. 7), the exploration plan (again, this was approved late last week) asserts:

Since BP has the capability to respond to the worst-case spill scenario included in its regional Oil Spill Response Plan approved on July 21, 2009, and since the worst-case scenario determined for their EP does not replace the worst-case scenario in their regional OSRP, BP Exploration & Production Inc. hereby certifies that they have the capability to respond, to the maximum extent practicable, to a worst-case discharge, or a substantial threat of such a discharge, resulting from the activities proposed in their EP.

McClatchy Newspapers’ Marisa Taylor got the MMS side of the story, such as it is:

The exemptions, known as “categorical exclusions,” were granted by the Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service (MMS) and included waiving detailed environmental studies for a BP exploration plan to be conducted at a depth of more than 4,000 feet and an Anadarko Petroleum Corp. exploration plan at more 9,000 feet.

“Is there a moratorium on off shore drilling or not?” asked Peter Galvin, conservation director with the Center for Biological Diversity, the environmental group that discovered the administration’s continued approval of the exemptions. “Possibly the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history has occurred and nothing appears to have changed.”

MMS officials said the exemptions are continuing to be issued because they do not represent final drilling approval.

They do appear to represent business as usual.  In an article for The New Republic (”The Crisis Comes Ashore“), Al Gore echoes Galvin:

Even as the oil spill continues to grow—even as BP warns that the flow could increase multi-fold, to 60,000 barrels per day, and that it may continue for months—the head of the American Petroleum Institute, Jack Gerard, says, “Nothing has changed. When we get back to the politics of energy, oil and natural gas are essential to the economy and our way of life.” His reaction reminds me of the day Elvis Presley died. Upon hearing the tragic news, Presley’s manager, Colonel Tom Parker, said, “This changes nothing.”

It certainly doesn’t seem to have changed anything for the MMS, Ken Salazar, or — assuming the buck actually stops with him — Barack Obama.

[crossposted to Planet Forward, Daily Kos]

=====
EDIT, 5/10: link to Green Canyon plan added.

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>