Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

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  • chunky
    Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
    • Jan 2006
    • 10564

    #16
    Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

    I see BP are suing for 40 Billion. I guess they want their shake down money
    Originally posted by res0nat0r
    OK Lets All Stroke Ron Pauls Cock On 3!

    Comment

    • floridaorange
      I'm merely a humble butler
      • Dec 2005
      • 29116

      #17
      Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

      Originally posted by Garrick
      i don't see him pointing a finger at anyone..
      Semantics, I guess I should have said "giving the finger."

      Originally posted by runningman

      It was fun while it lasted...

      Comment

      • runningman
        Playa I'm a Sooth Saya
        • Jun 2004
        • 5995

        #18
        Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

        I'm giving the middle finger to the current status quo. Where rich people can do whatever they want and get away with it and regular people who smoke a joint go to jail for 10 years.

        I'm sick of the fact that not one person has gone to jail for the BP oil volcano.
        I'm sick of the fact that not one person from Wall street has gone to jail for robbing the American people.
        I'm sick of the fact that wars are started for absolutely no reason other than greed and profit. For oil and money.

        That is who I am giving the middle finger to.

        Comment

        • 88Mariner
          My dick is smaller
          • Nov 2006
          • 7128

          #19
          Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

          Originally posted by runningman
          I'm giving the middle finger to the current status quo. Where rich people can do whatever they want and get away with it and regular people who smoke a joint go to jail for 10 years.

          I'm sick of the fact that not one person has gone to jail for the BP oil volcano.
          I'm sick of the fact that not one person from Wall street has gone to jail for robbing the American people.
          I'm sick of the fact that wars are started for absolutely no reason other than greed and profit. For oil and money.

          That is who I am giving the middle finger to.
          you could put an Emfire release on for 2 minutes and you would be a sleep before it finishes - Chunky

          it's RA. they'd blow their load all over some stupid 20 minute loop of a snare if it had a quirky flange setting. - Tiddles

          Am I somewhere....in the corners of your mind....

          ----PEACE-----

          Comment

          • Shpira
            Angry Boy Child
            • Oct 2006
            • 4969

            #20
            Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

            Originally posted by 88Mariner
            i'm sorry, but those accents are too fucking funny for what is an attempt at serious journalism.
            you speak a foreign language fluently? Hows your Russian these days? Wifey teach you much?
            The Idiots ARE Winning.


            "Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect."
            Mark Twain

            SOBRIETY MIX

            Comment

            • Shpira
              Angry Boy Child
              • Oct 2006
              • 4969

              #21
              Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

              Originally posted by chunky
              I see BP are suing for 40 Billion. I guess they want their shake down money
              Mate they are suing both Haliburton and the company that was maintaining the rig....they are going to end up making money on this fucking thing. Good for the British tax payer lol!
              The Idiots ARE Winning.


              "Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect."
              Mark Twain

              SOBRIETY MIX

              Comment

              • bobjuice
                Banned
                • May 2008
                • 4894

                #22
                Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                Originally posted by Shpira
                you speak a foreign language fluently? Hows your Russian these days? Wifey teach you much?
                This ^

                An amazing show of ignorance whilst accusing another of ignorance there. Good one Mariner.

                Comment

                • Shpira
                  Angry Boy Child
                  • Oct 2006
                  • 4969

                  #23
                  Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill



                  BP PLC has agreed to provide $1 billion to help restore wildlife and habitats in the Gulf of Mexico as part of an agreement with the U.S. and Gulf Coast state governments, the Justice Department said Thursday.
                  The Idiots ARE Winning.


                  "Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect."
                  Mark Twain

                  SOBRIETY MIX

                  Comment

                  • DIDI
                    Aussie Pest
                    • Nov 2004
                    • 16845

                    #24
                    Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                    ^^^ I read that article as lots and lots of very rich lawyers Although I really hope someone takes Haliburton down And they are releasing 1 billion from the 20 billion fund announced last year.
                    Originally posted by TheVrk
                    it IS incredible isn't it??
                    STILL pumpin out great set after great set...never cheesed out, never sold out, never lost his touch..
                    Simply does not get any better than Hernan
                    The 'club spirit' is in the soul. It Never Dies

                    Comment

                    • Illuminate
                      DUDERZ get a life!!!
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 5152

                      #25
                      Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                      Originally posted by runningman
                      I'm sick of the fact that not one person has gone to jail for the BP oil volcano.
                      I'm sick of the fact that not one person from Wall street has gone to jail for robbing the American people.
                      I'm sick of the fact that wars are started for absolutely no reason other than greed and profit. For oil and money.

                      That is who I am giving the middle finger to.
                      I hear you.

                      The One contains the Many, and the Many contains the One:
                      Sbando
                      - You Will Be Missed.

                      "Mankind has the propensity to fuck itself up on anything it lays its hands on."
                      Feather

                      "Who moderates this forum and makes these decisions? Stevie Wonder?"
                      Bob
                      "i'd give her a muscle she doesn't have "
                      the banned1

                      "I love you Illuminate... that's divine/creator/God in me loving the origin of you."
                      KiwiTollway



                      Comment

                      • chunky
                        Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
                        • Jan 2006
                        • 10564

                        #26
                        Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                        Originally posted by Shpira
                        Good for the British tax payer lol!
                        And the private British pension funds
                        Originally posted by res0nat0r
                        OK Lets All Stroke Ron Pauls Cock On 3!

                        Comment

                        • floridaorange
                          I'm merely a humble butler
                          • Dec 2005
                          • 29116

                          #27
                          Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                          The images are overwhelmingly sad:

                          Gulf oil spill one year later

                          What is the cost of spilling almost five million barrels of oil into the ocean? How do you measure that cost? In GDP reduction? In lives affected? In environmental impact? And how do you measure the cost when long-term effects are impossible to calculate yet, and when a significant portion of the spilled oil is still unaccounted for? One year since the Deepwater Horizon platform exploded, killing 11 workers, there are measurable effects, and many more unknowns. Collected here are pictures of the disaster, recent images of people affected by the spill, and views of the cleanup. Pictures #4 through #10 show areas of shoreline both immediately after the spill and the same area a year later. Click on the picture to see it change from the 2010 view to the present. [See also: The Big Picture: Oil reaches Louisiana shores, May 24, 2010] This effect requires javascript to be enabled. -- Lane Turner (36 photos total)

                          An oil tar ball washes up on Fourchon Beach in Port Fourchon, La. April 13. Tar balls and oil are still in abundance on the Louisiana coast a year after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. (Dave Martin/AP)


                          2
                          Fire boat response crews spray water on the blazing remnants of BP's Deepwater Horizon offshore oil rig on April 21, 2010. (US Coast Guard/AP) #


                          3
                          An exhausted oil-covered brown pelican sits in a pool of oil along Queen Bess Island Pelican Rookery, three miles northeast of Grand Isle, La. on June 5, 2010. (Sean Gardner/Reuters) #



                          4
                          Dead sea turtles wash up on the same Waveland, Miss. beach on May 5, 2010 and April 14, 2011. Endangered sea turtles and dolphins are still dying in high numbers in Mississippi, which continues to be impacted by tar balls and weathered oil. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Joe Raedle/Getty Images) (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #



                          5
                          Oil-smeared pelican eggs are seen in a nest on Cat Island, La. on May 22, 2010, and on the same spot on April 8, 2011. The view shows the island significantly eroded and the marsh grass and mangrove trees that pelicans nest on decimated. The island was covered by oil and poorly maintained booms impacted it as well. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Gerald Herbert/AP) #



                          6
                          The same spot in Barataria Bay, La. on May 22, 2010, and April 8, 2011. In the first photograph, nesting pelicans land as oil washes ashore, and the second photograph shows the shoreline heavily eroded, with the lush marsh grass and mangrove trees mostly dead or dying. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Gerald Herbert/AP) #



                          7
                          Oil impacts pelicans and mangrove in these photographs, made on the same spot on Cat Island, La. on May 23, 2010, and April 8, 2011. The island is home to brown pelicans, terns, gulls, and roseate spoonbills. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Gerald Herbert/AP) #



                          8
                          A pelican and an egret, respectively, land on the same spot on Cat Island, La. on May 22, 2010, and April 13, 2011. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Gerald Herbert/AP) #



                          9
                          Normal and eroded shoreline with healthy and dead mangrove, respectively, are shown on the same spot on Cat Island, La. on May 22, 2010, and April 8, 2011. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Gerald Herbert/AP) #



                          10
                          Pelicans nest, and float offshore, respectively, in the same spot in photographs made on May 22, 2010, and April 8, 2011, on Cat Island, La. [click image to see it fade - javascript required] (Gerald Herbert/AP) #


                          11
                          Courtney Kemp, widow of Roy Wyatt Kemp, 27, who died in the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion, holds her daughters Kaylee, 3, and Madisson, 9 months, in Jonesville, La. November 11, 2010. Roy Wyatt Kemp was one of 11 workers killed in the disaster. (Gerald Herbert/AP) #


                          12
                          Shrimper Sanh Dixie Le waits another day without shrimping, spending time on his boat "Quoc Viet", docked in Grand Isle, La., March 9. Le says after an average of eight hours of shrimping in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico he yields only three or four baskets of shrimp. He says BP offered him only $32,000, while other shrimpers have received $100,000. With gas prices high, he has to be selective about when he goes out. (Rod Lamkey, Jr./AFP/Getty Images) #


                          13
                          Crab fisherman Thomas Barrios and his wife Alicia pose in the back of the family restaurant Alicia runs, Barrios Seafood Restaurant, in Golden Meadow, La. The family's income is completely dependent on the bounty of the seafood industry. They had to lay off workers and are struggling to stay afloat, as his crabbing enterprise has been halted, and the restaurant sales have been less than half since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. (Gerald Herbert/AP) #


                          14
                          Melvin Barnes, owner of Cuz's Seafood Restaurant and Market in Bay St. Louis, Miss., sits inside his empty restaurant on March 29. The oil spill closed waters that supplied much of the catch sold in the market. Customers stayed away from the restaurant, too, repulsed by the idea of eating Gulf seafood. Barnes sold off trucks to raise cash and is waiting for an interim compensation offer to arrive. (Gerald Herbert/AP) #


                          15
                          Mayor Stan Wright pauses in Bayou La Batre, Ala. The small fishing town is struggling to survive following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. (Dave Martin/AP) #


                          16
                          Brad Mizell points to sores on his arm before attending a meeting for Gulf Coast residents who have health problems possibly related to the oil spill on April 18 in Bay St. Louis, Miss. Mizell worked on BP's Vessels of Opportunity program which hired local fishermen to help clean up the oil spill. He believes he was exposed to toxic dispersants and says he has since lost 50 pounds and developed a form of Rheumatoid arthritis and is now on 17 medications including steroids. More than 2 million gallons of the toxic dispersant Corexit were poured into the Gulf of Mexico following the spill. Corexit is banned in all of Europe because of its toxicity. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #


                          17
                          Lorrie Williams is hugged by oil pollution activist Riki Ott as Bud Waltman (left) pauses at a meeting for Gulf Coast residents who have health problems possibly related to the BP oil spill April 18 in Bay St. Louis, Miss. Williams has developed a litany of illnesses since the spill including lung polyps along with liver, thyroid and blood problems. Ott is a marine biologist and former commercial fisherwoman who was affected by the Alaska Exxon Valdez spill and is now advising Gulf Coast residents. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #


                          18
                          Fishermen and members of the community listen to Ken Feinberg, administrator of the BP claims fund, on March 28 at a public meeting in Mathews, La. (Julia Rendleman/The Houma Courier/AP) #


                          19
                          Brenda Guidry of Larose, La. holds her head in frustration during a public meeting with BP claims fund administrator Ken Feinberg on March 28 in Mathews, La. (Julia Rendleman/The Houma Courier/AP) #


                          20
                          Church members participate in an early morning prayer vigil to mark the one-year anniversary of the BP oil spill on April 20 in Orange Beach, Ala. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #


                          21
                          Institute for Marine Mammal Studies veterinary technician Wendy Hatchett prepares to take a skin sample from a dead bottlenose dolphin that was found decomposing on Ono Island, Ala. and brought for examination to Gulfport, Miss. Since January, 155 young or even fetal dolphins and small whales have washed up dead on Gulf beaches - more than four times the normal amount - according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. A NOAA official called the oil spill "a possible cause" in the uptick in deaths. (Patrick Semansky/AP) #


                          22
                          Tulane University population ecologist Jessica Henkel takes a blood sample from a Dunlin sandpiper on Fourchon Beach in Port Fourchon, La., as part of a research project that is looking for long-term, lethal effects from the oil spill on birds that stop along the Gulf Coast during their migration. “It's much easier to see a dead pelican on the beach” than it is to see more chronic population-wide effects, Henkel said. (Patrick Semansky/AP) #


                          23
                          A dead endangered sea turtle is seen after it washed ashore and was flipped over by an activist April 16 in Pass Christian, Miss. The National Wildlife Federation reports that sea turtle strandings on the Gulf Coast were seven times the normal level in March. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #


                          24
                          A commercial fishing boat sits anchored before sunrise in Grand Isle, La. April 20. Grand Isle is a coastal community centered around fishing and tourism that was heavily impacted by the oil spill. (Patrick Semansky/AP) #


                          25
                          A Louisiana National Guard helicopter flies over marshland on April 19 in route to Middle Ground in southern Louisiana. A year after the oil spill coated Gulf Coast marshes and beaches, BP claims that most of the oil has been removed. Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries says, however, that much of the cleaning has been superficial, as the oil has seeped into the soil, killing marshes and further eroding the state's damaged delta ecosystem. (John Moore/Getty Images) #


                          26
                          Sunbathers stroll the beach as oil spill cleanup workers search for tar balls in Gulf Shores, Ala. April 20. Tar balls continue to wash ashore a year after the oil spill. (Dave Martin/AP) #


                          27
                          Robert Barham of the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries office digs up oiled sand on a beach on April 19 at South Pass in southern Louisiana. BP claims that most of the oil has been removed. Barham says, however, that much of the coastal cleaning has been superficial, as the oil has seeped into the soil, killing marshes and further eroding the state's damaged Mississippi Delta ecosystem. (John Moore/Getty Images) #


                          28
                          A Louisiana wildlife official displays oil from a marsh on April 19, 2011 in Middle Ground, La. (John Moore/Getty Images) #


                          29
                          Workers clean a section of shoreline heavily damaged by the oil spill at the mouth of the Mississippi River where it meets the Gulf of Mexico. (Gerald Herbert/AP) #


                          30
                          A crew checks on propane-powered sound cannons used to keep birds from nesting in oil-soaked marsh grasses in Bay Jimmy, one of the hardest hit areas of coastal Louisiana on April 7. (Mira Oberman/AFP/Getty Images) #


                          31
                          Workers use a crane to remove clumps of shoreline heavily damaged by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in Bay Jimmy in Plaquemines Parish, La. on April 8. (Gerald Herbert/AP) #


                          32
                          An oil cleanup site operates on a small island April 13 in Barataria Bay, La. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #


                          33
                          A woman walks along the beach as waves wash up from the Gulf of Mexico April 13 in Grand Isle, La. Residents report that oil still washes up onto the beach after storms. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #


                          34
                          A group of scientists from the Manomet (Mass.) Center for Conservation Sciences spent months trying to catch, radio tag, and track the tiny oystercatcher, a rare shore bird, in order to help calculate the costs of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Shiloh Shulte, coordinator of the American Oystercatcher Campaign, used an antenna to listen for a signal indicating life or death for a banded bird, while field technician Laura Koloski and Stephen Brown, director of Shore Bird Science, worked nearby in Grand Isle, La. on November 8, 2010. (Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff) #


                          35
                          On East Grand Terre Island, La., a pair of Oystercatchers walk on the beach in front of clean-up crews November 8, 2010. (Suzanne Kreiter/Globe staff) #


                          36
                          A crane stands on a beach chair at dawn on the one-year anniversary of the oil spill on April 20 in Orange Beach, Ala. (Mario Tama/Getty Images) #

                          It was fun while it lasted...

                          Comment

                          • floridaorange
                            I'm merely a humble butler
                            • Dec 2005
                            • 29116

                            #28
                            Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                            ...

                            It was fun while it lasted...

                            Comment

                            • Shpira
                              Angry Boy Child
                              • Oct 2006
                              • 4969

                              #29
                              Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill


                              The Idiots ARE Winning.


                              "Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect."
                              Mark Twain

                              SOBRIETY MIX

                              Comment

                              • bobjuice
                                Banned
                                • May 2008
                                • 4894

                                #30
                                Re: Happy 1 Year Anniversary BP Oil Spill

                                Comment

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