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justdrew wrote:stick a fork in it, this country is as good as dead. anyone doubt it?
all their cash will soon be worthless too, think they care? Of course not, because they know what real wealth is and "the few" are likely well ready for the transition to post 20th century normalcy.
chiggerbit wrote:all their cash will soon be worthless too, think they care? Of course not, because they know what real wealth is and "the few" are likely well ready for the transition to post 20th century normalcy.
Tell that to Fergie.
geogeo wrote:\<] the end of America--seems a bit hysterical. we are in much better shape than, say, Haiti... What scares me more is the yearning Americans have for Armageddon. They should all the watch/read The Road. Cannibalism--YEAH, BABY!
Simulist wrote:(That's not "yearning for Armageddon." That's listening to the mainstream news.)
Simulist wrote:I agree. Several of the things many people consider to be integral parts of "America" are most definitely over already. Expecting the thud of the next falling shoe not only isn't "hysterical," the dreadful sound might not even be particularly surprising anymore.
(That's not "yearning for Armageddon." That's listening to the mainstream news.)
geogeo wrote:\<] the end of America--seems a bit hysterical. we are in much better shape than, say, Haiti... What scares me more is the yearning Americans have for Armageddon. They should all the watch/read The Road. Cannibalism--YEAH, BABY!
2012 Countdown wrote:I'm in the MIHOP camp, and borderline CD, but as far as this goes, I just see corporate criminality. it's "clear"?
Call me a skeptic so far.
Now the feds seeming to defer to BP and not give a shit is quite a shock, but i'm still not seeing this as part of a plan. I will grant you that if they were going for mass murder and environmental catastrophe, they're off to a good start.
At a Coast Guard hearing that started earlier this month and continued in New Orleans on Wednesday, Doug Brown, chief rig mechanic aboard the platform, testified that the trouble began at a meeting hours before the blowout, with a "skirmish" between a BP official and rig workers who did not want to replace heavy drilling fluid in the well with saltwater.
The switch presumably would have allowed the company to remove the fluid and use it for another project, but the seawater would have provided less weight to counteract the surging pressure from the ocean depths.
Brown said the BP official, whom he identified only as the "company man," overruled the drillers, declaring, "This is how it's going to be." Brown said the top Transocean official on the rig grumbled, "Well, I guess that's what we have those pinchers for," which he took to be a reference to devices on the blowout preventer, the five-story piece of equipment that can slam a well shut in an emergency.
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