Author: Mary

  • Obama’s legacy, and ours

    Joe Romm of Climate Progress has an important piece today about Obama’s challenge and what his legacy will be based on the ecological disasters that face him (namely, the BP Gulf oil-gusher and catastrophic climate change). And Romm notes that the gusher is the lessor of the two in overall impact to humanity.

    First, he asks what can the government do once the damage is done?

    But even more unfortunate for Obama is that in spite of BP’s incompetence, nobody really knows how to stop the mile-deep undersea volcano (other than drilling a relief well, which takes many weeks). And nobody knows how to clean it up. Independent experts calculate that BP may be spewing the equivalent of the Exxon Valdez disaster ever few days. As Robert Brulle, a professor of Public Health at Drexel University and 20-year Coast Guard veteran, has noted, “With a spill of this magnitude and complexity, there is no such thing as an effective response.”

    And the problem humanity faces is even worse than what is happening in the Gulf if we do not do something about cutting the use of carbon-based energy.

    Scientists have been saying the consequences of significantly more volatile weather will create havoc for our would. And as Romm says, the torrential rains in Tennessee in the beginning of May (worse than the hurricane deluge that hit New Orleans during Katrina) are absolutely signs of what is coming.

    Our world is already changing. Our choice now is on how much we can keep the changes less catastrophic by doing something about our misuse of carbon-based energy. There really is no more time to waste.

  • Mt St Helens

    Where were you on May 18, 1980? If you were living in the Pacific Northwest, you might remember the dramatic eruption of the Mt St Helens volcano. Portland Blogger, Ron Beasley provided his memories and pictures of this time in a moving piece.

    One of the memories I have is of my friend Bob Kaseweter who had a cabin at Spirit Lake. He went up to the lake on May 18, 1980 to clean out his cabin. That was the last day of the life of a person who was full of life and loved to live it on the edge. He died on the edge and I am sure that he was thrilled the last few seconds of his life. His body was never found.

    Check out his photos and his story.

  • BP and Oil Spills

    As we watch the slow but inevitable environmental calamity moving toward the Gulf states, I couldn’t help but remember another massive oil spill in Alaska in which BP was involved.

    In 2006, I wrote about that incident (story below the fold). Clearly off-shore oil drilling isn’t as environmentally friendly as the petroleum industry would have you believe.

    Timeline: August 2006

    BP Chairman speaking at StanfordBP, formerly known as British Petroleum, has marketed itself heavily as the greenest oil company, even going so far as to say that they believe BP stands for “Beyond Petroleum.” They’ve been quite successful at working the environmental organizations in their campaign to separate themselves from the dinosaurs like Exxon Mobil. But, with the disclosure this week that their Prudoe Bay pipeline must be shutdown in order to take care of years of neglected repairs, that reputation has suffered a big blow.

    But that carefully-crafted “Beyond Petroleum” image led by its green-friendly chief executive John Browne may be in jeopardy as BP deals with the latest blow to its U.S. operations — the shutdown of its massive Prudhoe Bay, Alaska oil field after a spill from a corroded pipeline.

    Now it looks like much of their story was just a Potemkin sham and the drive for profits has overcome their responsibility for taking care of their own equipment. And in this they were aided and abetted by our government who has decided that industry is overregulated.

    March spill

    The annoucement about the Prudoe bay pipeline reminded me of another story I read back in March. Back then, a very large spill was found on the pipeline that indicated not all was well.

    The spill was discovered early Thursday morning by BP operators visually inspecting lines, Beaudo said. He was not sure how long it took to respond but said the line was quickly blocked and depressurized.

    BP workers also shut down Gathering Center 2 in response. Gathering centers separate oil from water and other materials that come out of the ground during drilling.

    The spill was about a mile from the gathering center, which processes about 100,000 barrels of Prudhoe Bay’s daily production of 470,000 barrels. That oil is fed into the 800-mile trans-Alaska pipeline, which provides nearly 17 percent of domestic oil production and carries about 850,000 barrels per day from all sources.

    The spill was not detected by automated leak detection systems, which are geared to automatically shut down pipelines during catastrophic failures.

    “They are not necessarily as sensitive to very small leaks at any one time,” Beaudo said.

    Air monitors measuring high levels of hydrocarbons kept crews away Thursday morning. Beaudo said there could have been an explosion risk as well as a breathing risk for workers.

    Even then back in March, Chuck Hamel, a oil industry critic, indicated that the leak was much bigger than BP had admitted and the problem was poor maintenance.

    The amount spilled is far greater than BP and government officials are saying, according to oil industry critic Chuck Hamel. Hamel, of Alexandria, Va., said he learned from onsite personnel that the spill volume is closer to 798,000 gallons, which would make it the second largest oil spill in Alaska, second only to the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill of 11 million gallons in Prince William Sound.

    Hamel said meters record the volume flowing into the pipe as well as the amount leaving it.

    “There’s a 798,000 gallon discrepancy,” he said in a phone interview.

    Tuesday, in an interview with NBC News, a federal official in charge of pipeline safety charged that BP has been doing inadequate maintenance for 15 years.

    It is clear that the shutdown of the pipeline should not have been unexpected as the problems along the pipeline have been known for quite a while. While BP was polishing its green sheen, it was also directing its workers to neglect performing the basic maintenance on the pipeline.

    “I think this was predictable and preventable,” says Phil Flynn, an energy analyst with Alaron Trading Corp.

    In fact, allegations about BP’s maintenance practices have been so persistent that a criminal investigation now is under way into whether BP has for years deliberately shortchanged maintenance and falsified records to cover it up.

    The criminal probe was triggered by Chuck Hamel, a longtime nemesis of the oil companies and advocate for oil workers.

    “They’re playing the Russian roulette up there,” he says.

    Hamel says a dozen past and current BP employees came to him claiming they’d been told to cut back on a chemical put into the system to retard rust and corrosion, and to falsify records. A federal official confirms that many of these workers have also talked to the FBI.

    “They were telling me that they were not properly injecting the corrosion inhibitors into the system,” says Hamel.

    Does he think it was deliberate?

    “Absolutely,” he says, “to save money.”

    This week, in announcing the shutdown, BP acknowledged that a key maintenance procedure to check for sludge — known as “pigging” — had not been performed in more than a decade.

    It looks like BP’s greenwash has been just as manufactured as Chevron’s “People Do” campaign where more money was put into the ads than put into programs that the ads talked about.

    The solution is to stop killing the Electric Car and seriously start kicking our oil habit. We can’t afford the neverending oil wars nor the destructive damages that come from large petroleum companies proclaiming their environmental credentials while neglecting their responsibilities to the people and our environment.

  • War Lust

    On Tuesday’s Morning Edition, Evan Thomas, discussed his new book, The War Lovers. During the last few years he realized that the reason America invaded Iraq war was because of the lust for war on the part of the Bush administration and a bunch of reporters (including himself) who thought it would be really exciting to have a war. When he realized that, he decided to look at another American War of choice: his book covers the Spanish-American war in which the US decided to grab an empire.

    Thomas didn’t spend much time on the modern war but did acknowledge it was a lust for war that drove our country into this war. But, what really got me about this story was although he realized there was no good reason to invade Iraq (except people wanted to “kick some ass”), he doesn’t think things turned out too bad.

    “We got sucked into something that actually has turned out OK. We did achieve some war aims, but we did it at great cost, and clearly we didn’t know what we were getting into.”

    Nice that he thinks that, but it might be good to ask the Iraqi people how about America’s war of choice has been for them. Perhaps someone can send Mr. Thomas a copy of Amnesty International’s latest report describing how it is to live in Iraq these days where the government of Saddam was better at providing the basics (electricity, law enforcement, schools) than the current government. I’m sure the Iraqis are more than happy that people like Evan Thomas got their chance to kick butt on the Iraqis backs.

  • USA Loses Out to China on Green Investments

    Last year when I attended the RMI 2009 conference in San Francisco, one of things I learned was that Amory Lovin’s message about energy efficiency and the need for aggressive development of sustainable energy solutions was picked up by the very top leaders within China as a national imperative. Today, it is clear that China has embraced this message and is rapidly becoming the world’s leader in green investment.

    Meanwhile in the US, we have a fruitless argument with the denialists that nothing should be done because an international cabal of climate scientists are trying to destroy “our freedoms.” No wonder the Chinese are racing ahead. For everyone of those Tea Partiers that are so worried about government debt, ignoring our global competitiveness on energy is guaranteeing our descendants a significantly bleaker future than any deficit spending we do to restore our economy. In fact, spending on developing cleaner, more efficient energy today would really help future Americans, and far outweighs the cost of investing in this area today.

    Perhaps if we frame the problem as we’re losing out to the Chinese, we’ll actually do something? After all, it worked to revitalize our investment in science (both research and for public education) when we thought the Russians were racing ahead of us in the 60s.

  • Who Is Goldman-Sachs Working For?

    Turns out that Goldman Sachs’ CEO Lloyd Blankfein is upset with the SEC because the Suit will “Hurt America”.

    Lloyd Blankfein on Wednesday attacked the Securities & Exchange Commission’s fraud charges in telephone calls to clients as Goldman escalated its campaign to stem the damage to the bank’s reputation.

    One person who received a call from the Goldman chief said he was told the regulator’s case against the bank was politically motivated and would ultimately “hurt America”….

    “He was very aggressive,” said one person called by Mr Blankfein on Wednesday. “He feels that the government is out to kill them, that they are under attack and the whole thing is totally political.”

    And yes, he believes what he is saying because from his perspective, serving the shareholders and the “purposes of society” is the supreme purpose of Goldman Sachs.

    “Is it possible to have too much ambition? Is it possible to be too successful?” Blankfein shoots back. “I don’t want people in this firm to think that they have accomplished as much for themselves as they can and go on vacation. As the guardian of the interests of the shareholders and, by the way, for the purposes of society, I’d like them to continue to do what they are doing. I don’t want to put a cap on their ambition. It’s hard for me to argue for a cap on their compensation.”

    So, it’s business as usual, then, regardless of whether it makes most people howl at the moon with rage? Goldman Sachs, this pillar of the free market, breeder of super-citizens, object of envy and awe will go on raking it in, getting richer than God? An impish grin spreads across Blankfein’s face. Call him a fat cat who mocks the public. Call him wicked. Call him what you will. He is, he says, just a banker “doing God’s work”.

    Making it harder for Goldman Sachs to pillage and loot their customers and the American public will make it harder for them to do “God’s work” in the future. After all, they are the masters of the Universe and owed their rightful due. And the rest of us that object to paying off their gignormous bets just have to shut-up and stuff it according to Blankfein.

  • What economy?

    What does the financial industry contribute to our country’s economic well-being? Answer: not much. And what can we do to bring it back in line? I think this commentary in the Economist talking about using public shame to change the culture of Wall Street is right on.

    Third, I’m increasingly of the belief that the best thing that might come out of the crisis would be the use of public anger to change the culture of Wall Street. It’s hard to see how the world would be a worse place if outlandish bonuses were met with vocal public scorn, or if the brazen pursuit of financial wealth were looked down upon, or if regulatory weakness in the face of Wall Street pressure were greeted with hooting derision. Greed can be good. Markets thrive on it. It has driven people to build better technologies and devise better supply chains and make better movies. On Wall Street, greed has driven firms to move their offices a few miles closer to an exchange so that their online trades can be executed nano-seconds faster than their competitors’. It has generated innovations in the contruction of personal financial products so that fees can be better hidden. Markets work when the pursuit of self-interest generates societal benefits, which is why we generally praise the self-made man or woman. They’ve done well for themselves while doing well for the rest of the country. Wall Street should be held to the same standard. If financial executives are going to behave as parasites, they should be shamed as parasites. Maybe nothing will change as a result, and they’ll comfort themselves by drying their tears with gold leaf. But maybe it will have an effect.

  • Open Letter to NPR’s Morning Edition

    Yesterday, I was shocked to hear Morning Editions’ reporter talking about the current military situation in Afghanistan using the phrase “an area infested with the Taliban”. The use of the word “infested” is extremely problematic because no matter what you think about the Taliban, they are human beings and the people who live in that area are human beings. When an area is “infested” with rats, it is okay to annihilate them. But when you use the language on humans, you are using words that are unacceptable and dangerous.

    When the incredible movie, Hotel Rwanda came out, one of the major points it made was how the language used on the hate radio created an atmosphere where it was acceptable to murder the Tutsis.

    When I saw this movie I was moved to write:

    Underlying the tension and drama of the film was the omnipresent talk radio, which effectively used demagoguery to incite the Hutus into believing that the Tutsis and moderate Hutus were the enemy. And once the slaughter began, the broadcasters coordinated the hunt for people that had escaped the initial rout. Using terminology that dehumanized their victims (“you can smell the cockroaches”) and building a case that the Tutsis deserved their fate, hate radio created an environment that inflamed the anger of the Hutus who had long felt oppressed under the colonial era.

    Dehumanizing other people is wrong even when they are our enemies and even when they do horrific acts. They are still human beings and thus part of our human family and when we forget this, it reflects badly on the state of our society and the state of our individual souls.

    I expect better of NPR.

  • Remember when Conservatives Demanded People Be Accountable for their Actions?

    Hearing Alan Greenspan’s excuses that he couldn’t have done anything to stop the Wall Street marauders from overrunning main street because Congress(!) would have stopped him sure does make me angry.

    Evidently the masters of the universe are all powerful until they have to admit they screwed up.

    And to cap it off, Greenspan whined he was only wrong 30% of the time. So when should anyone be held accountable for their bad decisions?

    It’s like General Custer saying, “Give me a break. I only made one mistake. All the rest of the time I was doing just great.” So what?

    All the people whose lives were ruined by Uncle Alan’s tiny misjudgment and failure to do something about the rampant fraud might not think it was such a little deal after all.

  • Closing of the Conservative Mind

    Paul Krugman bemoans the closing the Conservative Mind. But is he right? It seems like it. Especially since Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) is telling his constituents to listen to the other side and don’t believe everything they hear on Fox News.

  • The Acceleration Trap

    Tina Brown dropped by Morning Edition this morning and provided her recommendation for some interesting reads. One of the articles was definitely worth reading as it talked about what is happening to more of us who are working these days.

    Recently, the Harvard Business Review published The Acceleration Trap, a report about how too many companies have gone overboard in trying to get more with less.

    Faced with intense market pressures, corporations often take on more than they can handle: They increase the number and speed of their activities, raise performance goals, shorten innovation cycles, and introduce new management technologies or organizational systems. For a while, they succeed brilliantly, but too often the CEO tries to make this furious pace the new normal. What began as an exceptional burst of achievement becomes chronic overloading, with dire consequences. Not only does the frenetic pace sap employee motivation, but the company’s focus is scattered in various directions, which can confuse customers and threaten the brand.

    Realizing something is amiss, leaders frequently try to fight the symptoms instead of the cause. Interpreting employees’ lack of motivation as laziness or unjustified protest, for example, they increase the pressure, only making matters worse. Exhaustion and resignation begin to blanket the company, and the best employees defect.

    We call this phenomenon the acceleration trap. It harms the company on many levels—over-accelerated firms fare worse than their peers on performance, efficiency, employee productivity, and retention, among other measures, our research shows. The problem is pervasive, especially in the current environment of 24/7 accessibility and cost cutting. Half of 92 companies we investigated in 2009 were affected by the trap in one way or another—and most were unaware of the fact.

    Reading this piece, I saw many of the issues that seem to be endemic in my company. One of my particular gripes is this:

    Most companies do not celebrate ends. They think the completion of a project is a reward in itself. It isn’t. Achievements and outstanding effort deserve acknowledgment. Take a moment to reflect and feel proud of accomplishments. These moments are rare, and too often leaders fail to savor them but rather rush full-speed ahead into the next tunnel.

    Today, it seems like that the only thanks for major releases is an email from the senior management saying nice job. And then its on to the next project and the next and the next. Forget the parties. There isn’t even a break. No chance to change anything. Just do more.

    So now I’m trying to figure out whether if I gave this article to my boss it would make a difference. It definitely describes life at work these days. And the major reason my blogging has become almost non-existent. It’s hard to find time to sleep, much less time to think.

    Read it and see if you recognize this pattern yourself.

  • Changes This Year from Health Care Reform

    What everyone needs to read and share with your family and friends:

    Ten Immediate Benefits of HRC

    This definitely is a start.

    Also, read Rep Alan Grayson’s reaction. Time to get moving on the next reforms.

  • The Final Hours

    Today is the day that many of us have hoped for and many others have dreaded. As you can tell, I think this bill has to pass even though it is not as good as we would have wanted. But I also think it is not as bad as some have feared and it is much, MUCH better than the status quo. The compromise bill to be voted upon by the Senate soon makes the earlier Senate health insurance bill better.

    And once this bill is passed there are a number of other things that can be done to improve it. Including Alan Grayson’s proposal to allow people to buy-in to the Medicare system. Getting a vote on Grayson’s proposal will be much easier once the basis of reform (universal coverage is a right, insurance companies can’t cherry pick, they can’t drop your coverage when you get sick, people will no longer be bankrupt for health issues) are in place. The bill on the floor today changes the base assumptions for the debate. We can, and will raise the bar higher going forward.

    Our country has not seen a progressive victory (read: a significant initiative to promote the public welfare using our system of government) in decades and for many it is hard to imagine that our government might actually try to do the right thing for the American people and not just give in to the powerful. There are definitely flaws in the bill, but nevertheless, from what I’ve seen it is a tremendous step forward. It will shape the conversation about health coverage going forward. After this bill gets signed, no one will be able to say with any credibility that health care coverage isn’t a basic human right.

    Today, when our Congress votes, they will be voting with courage and with a sense of destiny. Those of us on the left need to honor their courage and recognize their real attempt to make the lives of Americans better. No matter how cynical you’ve become, it is hard to say that every one of the Congress (including the Alan Graysons, the Anthony Weiners, the Pete DeFazios, and the Dennis Kucinchs) has sold out. We have seen them stand up before, it seems wrong to doubt them now just as we have a chance of winning a major victory today. And once people see that it isn’t the biggest betrayal of their interests ever, and that there are many pieces that truly work for us – and not just corporations, the rest of America (even some of the most ardent teabaggers) will come along. It’s time to make history.

  • Health Insurance Reform

    Today, there is a lot of anger, fear and confusion in the air around the reform bill in Congress. The Republican Party and the right are fighting this bill with everything they have. And they threaten to run on repealing it in November. Some of the more crazy are declaring that if it passes, they will be forced to start a civil war.

    Yet, when the rhetoric becomes so intense, it is good to realize that this type of frenzied opposition has been seen before. Once the system is actually working, even the most ardent of the opposition are inclined to stop fearing the change and even embrace it for the value it brings to their lives.

    Frontline had a program a few years ago about how universal health care coverage worked in other countries. Of particular interest today is what happened in Switzerland when they voted to extend coverage to all in a system with an extremely narrow majority. The opposition was virulent as is ours today. Yet ten years later, the Conservative who led the charge against the change admits that he is proud of the change now and believes that universal coverage is something that any truly civilized society must have.

    Here’s the segment where he makes that point:

    This is our chance to make the first real steps to reform that will make the lives of millions better and move us off of relying on a broken system that is failing us in every way. We must not let this opportunity pass us by.

  • Relations with Israel

    A few things to read regarding the Israeli/US dispute, because there seem to be a lot of hidden forces which drove the incident and the response creating the current rift. The following pieces help put this incident in context and perhaps answer some of the questions about what the heck happened?

    Question 1: How likely was this incident just an innocent mistake like Netanyahu said?

    As Biden Visits, Israel Unveils Plan for New Settlements

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was clearly embarrassed at the move by his interior minister, Eli Yishai, leader of the right-wing Shas Party, who has made Jewish settlement in East Jerusalem one of his central causes.

    A statement issued in the name of the Interior Ministry but distributed by the prime minister’s office said that the housing plan was three years in the making and that its announcement was procedural and unrelated to Mr. Biden’s visit. It added that Mr. Netanyahu had just been informed of it himself.

    Question 2: What led to the Israeli government’s decision and what caused the Israelis to be so aggressive and bold in their announcement precisely when it would cause the greatest harm?

    New Evidence Netanyahu is Consciously Sabotaging Peace Effort

    Shortly after Vice President Joe Biden’s arrival in Israel, Netanyahu and Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat were the headliners at Pastor John Hagee’s two-hour Christians United for Israel (CUFI) extravaganza at the Jerusalem Convention Center. Ambassador Michael Oren and Deputy Foreign Minister Daniel Ayalon were also in attendance. There was no ambiguity. It was a blatant and unabashed rejection of “dividing the land,” filled with repeated references to Jerusalem as the undivided capital of the Jewish people.

    So the Christian Zionist, John Hagee, who believes it is foretold that a major war in the Middle East is the sign of the start of the Apocalypse and believes he has been given the role to help create the conditions for this end was in Israel and tossed out the match.

    Question 3: Why was the US response so forceful?
    The Petraeus briefing: Biden’s embarrassment is not the whole story

    The [Pentagon] briefers [briefing Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Michael Mullen] reported that there was a growing perception among Arab leaders that the U.S. was incapable of standing up to Israel, that CENTCOM’s mostly Arab constituency was losing faith in American promises, that Israeli intransigence on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was jeopardizing U.S. standing in the region, and that Mitchell himself was (as a senior Pentagon officer later bluntly described it) “too old, too slow … and too late.”

    So it seems that just when the Pentagon was becoming increasingly unhappy with the lack of progress on the Israeli-Palestinian dispute, the Christian Zionists decided to throw another match on the smoldering Middle-Eastern fire. It’s increasingly clear that some people really want war. We certainly live in dangerous times.

  • Waterboarding: Yes, it really is torture

    Waterboarding Too Dangerous, Internal DoD Memo Reveals, by Jeffrey Kaye

    Jeffrey has a very important piece this week in Truthout which shows that the use of waterboarding is dangerous to military personnel subjected to it. Indeed, the excuse that since waterboarding is used on American soldiers means it can’t be torture is just bunk.

    According to the documents that Jeffrey examined, military reports showed that waterboarding is damaging to those who are subjected to it, even when they are being subjected to it as a training exercise. In fact, the reports said that subjects waterboarded to help them learn to resist torture by the hands of an enemy, found that rather than learning how to resist torture, the lesson taught subjects that they too could be broken.

    The water board has always been the most extreme pressure that required intense supervision and oversight because of the inherent risks associated with its employment…. Forcing answers under the extreme duress of the water board does not teach resistance or resilience, but teaches that you can be beaten. When a student’s ability to develop psychological resiliency is compromised… it may create unintended consequences regarding their perception of survivability during a real world SERE event. Based on these concerns and the risks associated with using the water board, we strongly recommend that you discontinue using it [underlined in the original].

    Jeffrey notes in the piece (emphasis mine):

    The paper indicated that waterboarding continues at the California SERE School because it is “an emotional issue with former Navy POWs.”

    So what emotional issue would arise in the matter of waterboarding that keeps the military from stopping the practice? From my perspective, it is for the same reason that hazing persists from one class to the next and why sexual abuse is passed from one generation to the next. Because when someone is ashamed of their own weakness they can become obsessed with a need to make sure that they are not alone in their victimization. The pathology induced by being horribly abused (especially by those you trust) is that someone else must pay. And what better way to make someone else pay than by showing them that they too can be abused?

    In the case of the Navy POWs, they endured being waterboarded, so others must too. Yet because this practice doesn’t teach resistance (which is what soldiers are told beforehand), but instead shows how easily one is broken and can be subjected to some else’s will, they believed it was their own personal weakness at fault when they were broken. And their response to their recognition that they were weak is to bury this shame by shaming others in the same way. This is why the sins of the father are passed down to the sons: because shame begets shame and bequeaths shame unless and until there is an intervention.

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