American Crusade
One can be sitting all day long at meetings trying to solve the problems of the world, i.e. poverty, hunger, racism, sexism, homelessness, homophobia, police brutality, the medical and educational crisis…, thinking he or she is reshaping the cultural politics as usual by managing the commons differently from those “other” representational powers that have kept it the same.
Another can be protesting, marching and screaming at the top of their lungs, blocking streets and entranceways, taking over buildings, fighting against NAFTA, GATT, Campbell, Gallo, Mattel, police abuse of power, environmental degradation, multi-corporate nationalism…, thinking they too are also doing something for the people and the common “Good.”
Or you can be at home, silently pushing buttons and watching it on TV, as it unfolds before your very eyes. Quickly picking up the phone to answer the poll as to which side you’re on.
Or you can be ignorant, apathetic and oblivious about the whole damn thing, only caring about your own self and making sure you don’t go through life without them bananas, gasoline, T-shirts, cars, more homes and shopping malls. Cause you got to have your fix, and make sure the U.S. of A. continues to provide you with 85% of the world’s resources.
Ah, civilization! Is it really as advanced as they say it is? Or is it just that unknown factor of humans acting like bacteria on a piece of bread? We may never know! But one thing is for sure, to visualize it you must go beyond preconceived notions, ways and/or formulas of being, and see what the Great Incomprehensible really has in store for you.
And you must remember, time is a man-made thing. The ideal that you occupy space within some temporal juncture of reality, is an absurd notion of your own creation. Cause what does a couple of billion-million years of going from ape to walking stranger than any other creation on this planet really mean? Especially, when you know that you will die and turn into the same combustible for whatever’s around in another couple million-billion years from now?
Is this a dismal view? NO WAY!!! I look forward to seeing civilization’s radioactive goo passing through them fuel lines them cockroaches invent. Vroom, Vroom, as your mixture pours through them lines becoming the puff of smoke that will degrade their environmental planet of whatever is alive then. That is, if them cockroaches think of the planet in the same way as we do, and feed these disgusting habits to their young too.
It reminds me of a story. There was an island once called Xican, that had never been “discovered” by “civilization” before. One day, the island is finally localized by these “Civilizers.” But the people of the island carried three traits that were incompatible to these civilized ones. One, they ate their war dead, they were cannibals. Two, they could marry as many they could afford, they were polygamists. Three, they believed in many gods, they were pagans. There is a fourth, but that’s more a factor than a condition of their existence, and that is, they have lived this way for thousands upon thousands of years.
Then came the Big Bwana of Thinking, who said to his darling wife, “should we teach them savages how to live?” Sure, said the Bwana’s Womyn, how else are we going to visit the island. So the Tourist mentality won out, and now we find civilized savages starving, Christianized and totally screwed up sexually. Oh yes, and totally removed from their lands too. How nice!
This is the reality for indigenous native nations of Aztlan today. Just look at the damn concrete wall the Bwanas are planning to build in the Brazilian rainforest. It will block the main Aorta of the world, the Amazon River. All for what? The Bwanas demand for more gold, energy, air, water, food, trees, pelts… for maintaining their wealthy lifestyle?
These vicious people are locked into the now, with no care for the future. And if you challenge this cultural normative of class intrusion into your way of life, that doesn’t matter to these “kindly” Folk.
Remember, Scientists have taught them the equation to circumvent you “Primitives” in the courts. It goes something like this: “You are un-civilized savages in the cusp of extinction with no way of knowing nor understanding what is best for you and your kind. Intruding on modernization’s consumptive power of existing in the now is evidence of your ignorance. SO MOVE ASIDE YOU BARBAROUS HEATHENS! DO NOT STAND IN THE WAY OF PROGRESS AND ANTHROPOLOGY’S TRUE DEFINITION OF A CIVILIZATION.” Oh yeah, And the modern rationalization for this class intrusion, “NATIONAL SECURITY!” And they will tell you forthright, “WE KNOW WHAT’S BEST FOR YOU AND US!”
And they WILL take your children and make sure they repeat this same mantra over-and-over till they get it right and are ready to force-feed it onto another too. And if you don’t get it, Capitalism wages a mean war to bang this ideology into your head. You’ll get it then. But then again, I guess “civilization” is not for everyone–unless it’s force-fed into you.
Oh yes, and remember the Custard!
Locomon
OUT
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That’s what this is all about, isn’t it? That one has more than the other? That the rights of Americans are being trampled on by powerless immigrants, while corporate greed ruins our coastlines. How easy we forget NEPA, the National Environmental Policy Act, passed in 1969, signed into Law by Nixon in 1970. That we are to pass this great nation of ours onto future generations in the same way we got it. And now we’re reminded what instigated that Law, the oil spill of California where Oil did the same thing there.
From oil spill to environmental law
An oil spill off of the coast of Santa Barbara in 1969 decimated marine life.Image courtesy of USGS.
Have you ever heard of the Santa Barbara oil spill?
In January of 1969, an oil drilling platform six miles off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, suffered a blowout that resulted in a major ecological disaster as 3 million gallons of crude oil gushed into the Pacific Ocean and decimated marine life. The public outcry resulted in passage of numerous environmental laws, including the National Environmental Policy Act of 1970, which applies to everything that we do here at Fermilab. NEPA established a framework to insure that environmental factors receive the same consideration as others in decision making for activities involving federal funding, land or permits.
NEPA requires that a review of potential environmental consequences be conducted for proposed projects that fall under its guidelines, often referred to as a NEPA Review. Project managers at Fermilab and DOE are keenly aware that NEPA documentation must be finalized before a project can reach Critical Decision-2, one of five steps in the DOE project approval process.
Because of the extensive preparation time and resources involved, NEPA reviews should begin as soon as a project’s impact on the environment can be evaluated. Project managers and other laboratory staff can get guidance on how to conduct a NEPA review of a proposed action from procedures developed by DOE, NEPA Implementing Procedures (10 CFR Part 1021). For more information, please read NEPA NOTES, FESHM 8060, D/S/C procedures, or contact your D/S/C Environmental Officer or the author.
NEPA was the result of a very unfortunate event and of growing concerns about detrimental impacts on ecology, wildlife, and human health. Since then, it has helped us to protect the environment, strengthening Fermilab’s role as responsible steward of its site.
– Teri Dykhius, ES&H
1969 Oil Spill
source: http://www.silcom.com/~sbwcn/spill.shtml (current as of 5/03)
On the afternoon of January 29, 1969, an environmental nightmare began in Santa Barbara, California. A Union Oil Co. platform stationed six miles off the coast of Summerland suffered a blowout. Oil workers had drilled a well down 3500 feet below the ocean floor. Riggers began to retrieve the pipe in order to replace a drill bit when the “mud” used to maintain pressure became dangerously low. A natural gas blowout occurred. An initial attempt to cap the hole was successful but led to a tremendous buildup of pressure. The expanding mass created five breaks in an east-west fault on the ocean floor, releasing oil and gas from deep beneath the earth.
For eleven days, oil workers struggled to cap the rupture. During that time, 200,000 gallons of crude oil bubbled to the surface and was spread into a 800 square mile slick by winds and swells. Incoming tides brought the thick tar to beaches from Rincon Point to Goleta, marring 35 miles of coastline. Beaches with off-shore kelp forests were spared the worst as kelp fronds kept most of the tar from coming ashore. The slick also moved south, tarring Anacapa Island’s Frenchy’s Cove and beaches on Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa and San Miguel Islands.
Ecological Impact
Animals that depended on the sea were hard hit. Incoming tides brought the corpses of dead seals and dolphins. Oil had clogged the blowholes of the dolphins, causing massive lung hemorrhages. Animals that ingested the oil were poisoned. In the months that followed, gray whales migrating to their calving and breeding grounds in Baja California avoided the channel —their main route south.
The oil took its toll on the seabird population. Shorebirds like plovers, godwits and willets which feed on sand creatures fled the area. But diving birds which must get their nourishment from the waters themselves became soaked with tar.
The Santa Barbara Zoo was among three emergency bird treatment centers established during the disaster. Volunteers were recruited to pluck oiled birds from local beaches. Grebes, cormorants and other seabirds were so sick, their feathers so soaked in oil that they were not difficult to catch. Birds were bathed in Polycomplex A-11, medicated, and placed under heat lamps to stave off pneumonia. The survival rate was less than 30 percent for birds that were treated. Many more died on the beaches where they had formerly sought their livelihoods. Those who had managed to avoid the oil were threatened by the detergents used to disperse the oil slick. The chemicals robbed feathers of the natural waterproofing used to keep seabirds afloat.
In all 3686 birds were estimated to have died because of contact with oil. Aerial surveys a year later found only 200 grebes in an area that had
previously drawn 4000 to 7000.
Cleanup Efforts
It took oil workers 11 1/2; days to control the leaking oil well. Workers pumped chemical mud down the 3500 foot shaft at a rate of 1500 barrels an hour. It was then topped by a cement plug. Residual amounts of gas continued to escape and another leak sprung up weeks later, releasing oil for months to follow.
Skimmers scooped up oil from the surface of the ocean. In the air, planes dumped detergents on the tar covered ocean in an attempt to break up the slick. On the beaches and harbors, straw was spread on oily patches of water and sand. The straw soaked up the black mess and was then raked up. Rocks were steamed cleaned, cooking marine life like limpets and mussels that attach themselves to coastal rocks.
What Went Wrong?
Union Oil’s Platform A ruptured because of inadequate protective casing. The oil company had been given permission by the U.S. Geological Survey to cut corners and operate the platform with casings below federal and California standards. Investigators would later determine that more steel pipe sheating inside the drilling hole would have prevented the rupture.
Because the oil rig was beyond California’s three-mile coastal zone, the rig did not have to comply with state standards. At the time, California drilling regulations were far more rigid those implied by the federal government.
Aftermath
In the spring following the oil spill, Earth Day was born nationwide. Many consider the publicity surrounding the oil spill a major impetus to the environmental movement.
Only days after the spill began, Get Oil Out (GOO) was founded in Santa Barbara. Founder Bud Bottoms urged the public to cut down on driving, burn oil company credit cards and boycott gas stations associated with offshore drilling companies. Volunteers helped the organization gather 100,000 signatures on a petition banning offshore oil drilling. While drilling was only halted temporarily, laws were passed to strengthen offshore drilling regulations. Union Oil suffered millions in losses from the clean-up efforts, payments to fishermen and local businesses, and lawsuit settlements. But maybe worse, the reputation of the oil industry was forever tarnished.
In Their Own Words . . .
Nature writer John McKinney:
“I had been impressed by the way energetic college students, shopkeepers, surfers, parents with their kids, all joined the beach clean-up. I saw a Montecito society matron transporting oily birds in her Mercedes.” McKinney witnessed the event firsthand as a volunteer who rescued oiled birds. A chapter of his book A Walk Along Land’s End describes his experience.
Fred L. Hartley, president of Union Oil Co.:
“I don’t like to call it a disaster,” because there has been no loss of human life.
“I am amazed at the publicity for the loss of a few birds.”
Santa Barbara NewsPress Editor Thomas Storke:
“Never in my long lifetime have I ever seen such an aroused populace at the grassroots level. This oil pollution has done something I have never seen before in Santa Barbara – it has united citizens of all political persuasions in a truly nonpartisan cause.”
U.S. President Richard Nixon:
“It is sad that it was necessary that Santa Barbara should be the example that had to bring it to the attention of the American people. What is involved is the use of our resources of the sea and of the land in a more effective way and with more concern for preserving the beauty and the natural resources that are so important to any kind of society that we want for the future. The Santa Barbara incident has frankly touched the conscience of the American people.”
Many credit the 1969 oil spill with igniting the environmental movement. For eleven days, 200,000 gallons of crude oil spilled into the channel from a disabled oil rig. In the aftermath, 3600 birds were dead along with ten seals and dolphins and countless fish and marine invertebrates.
In 1994, 37 marine oil spills were reported in the county. In addition, natural oil seepages in the ocean ensnare many migratory birds. Last year, the network treated 47 oiled birds.
GOO! (Get Oil Out)
started in 69 (SB grassroots environ. group)