We care about the small people.
–BP Board Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg, demonstrating the tone-deaf speaking style so characteristic of BP officials.
We care about the small people.
–BP Board Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg, demonstrating the tone-deaf speaking style so characteristic of BP officials.
Yes, Fishgrease is back at Daily Kos. This drilling industry insider knows whereof he speaks. And he speaks directly.
His latest missive focuses on the executive team at BP, making them pay, and the rank-and-file BP employees.
Excerpt:
These assholes [BP execs] have destroyed the Gulf of Mexico and are in the process of destroying hundreds of communities, large and small along the Gulf Shore. You want to tell me we can’t make them pay for it? I won’t listen. The citizens of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida won’t listen. Republicans, Democrats and Independents won’t listen. This is by far, the largest human and ecological disaster brought upon the United States of America by a single corporation and it is a corporation that just happens to have obscene quarterly profits. God Damn It they can pay! We can MAKE them pay!
What about BP employees? No. I dissagree, Bill Maher. Right now, we need the natural gas and oil these fine men and women produce. We need it badly. BP emloyees’ jobs and wages should be protected in all of this. Whatever that takes, do it. I personally know some BP employees and they’re fine folks. You want to know who is pissed off at BP executives right now? I mean really pissed off at BP executives? BP hands are! Most deep offshore work is done by contractors. Very few BP people are involved and almost no non-executives are. You have a few Deep Offshore Glory Boys risking the livelihoods and reputations of the vast majority of BP employees and let me tell you… these folks know this. They may not feel free to talk about it but they know it. In BP facilities there is zero tolerance for spills. A spill is defined as ANY non-dirt substance being spilled upon the dirt. If a BP employee drips a single drop of oil, glycol, lubricant, inhibitor or any other substance on the ground, they have to report it and they have to do whatever it takes, immediately, to clean it up. There’s paperwork involved and they fill it out, that day. That shift. Failure to do any of this is cause for termination. This is a no-shit policy and it is enforced rigorously. I’ve SEEN it enforced rigorously! Imagine what these good men and women think of what is being done in the Gulf of Mexico by a few greedy, self-important exploration executives.
How many birds, sea turtles and marine mammals have been found dead as a result of the BP spill? Now there is a scoreboard, updated daily and based on information taken directly from US Fish and Wildlife Reports.
Also, you can get more official data at the Deepwater Horizon Response website operated by the Unified Command.
I don’t think we can call it the Gulf of Mexico any more. We broke it; we bought it.
– Stephen Colbert, after referring to the “Gulf of America”, on the Comedy Central television program The Colbert Report, 2010-06-07 (via Quotation of the Day Mailing List).
More disturbing images via Big Picture showing the wave of destruction in the Gulf of Mexico caused by our friends at BP and Haliburton.
It appears that the amount of oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico may be twice earlier predictions.
The unbeatable Mark Morford weighs in on the Gulf oil spill. Read the whole piece, but here is a taste:
… what phrases and ticks from this particular epic meltdown do you think will stick to the roof of the cultural maw? What BP-themed verbiage will permanently penetrate the vocabulary, the American identity forevermore? Top kill? Tar balls? Deepwater Horizon? How has this event reshaped the American lexicon, and, by extension, our wonky understanding of just who the hell we think we are?
Maybe it’s “BP” itself. Really, is it not quaint to recall how, not a mere few weeks ago, those two benign initials used to represent so many harmless and sweet ideas?
Aside from British Petrol, there was “beer pong” and “buddy profile,” “blood pressure” and “bill pay” and even “bowl pack,” as in a nice fat, bowl of marijuana to be smoked so as to enable the imbiber to recline and chillax so as to not to buzzkill the vibe and concern oneself with the utter and ongoing devastation of the planet. Ah, simpler times.
Oh, this looks pretty minor. (via Andrew Sullivan)
Check out the devastation caused by the BP spill, via a stunning set of photos from The Big Picture. The suffering of the birds is truly horrific.

A Brown Pelican is seen on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast on Thursday, June 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
Dimtry Orlov, one of my favorite writers about the possible collapse of world economies (and especially the US economy) offers an interesting take on BP spill. Using his vantage point as a former citizen of the USSR, he notes the similarities between Chernobyl and the Deepwater Horizon.
Working with an outdated mental map is a big problem for anyone; for a leader, it may very well spell the end of the position of leadership. After the catastrophe at Chernobyl, the Soviet leaders attempted to operate, for as long as possible, with a mental map that included a relatively intact and generally serviceable nuclear reactor called “Chernobyl Energy Block No. 4″. “The reactor has been shut down and is being cooled,” went the official pronouncements from the Kremlin, “we are pumping in water to cool it.” After a while it became known that there is no reactor—just a smoldering, molten hole spewing radioactive smoke—and the coolant water, prodigious quantities of which were indeed pumped in and spilled in its general vicinity. It instantly boiled away into radioactive steam (which drifted downwind and eventually rained out, poisoning even more of the land). The rest of it leaked out, forming radioactive settling ponds and threatening to further leak into and poison the river that flows through Kiev. As you might imagine, that little episode turned out to be just a little bit embarrassing. Anyone who could think started to think: “Following these leaders is not conducive to survival. Let’s make our own plans.” Gorbachev went on with his usual long-winded blah-blahs, but the milk-milk-lemonade routine would have served him just as well.
More recently, we have been exposed to the spectacle of corporate leaders and public officials attempting to operate, for as long as possible, with a mental map that includes a blown-out but otherwise serviceable deep-water oil well in the Gulf of Mexico variously called “Deepwater Horizon” or “Macondo” or “MC252″. A number of unsuccessful attempts have been made to capture the oil and gas that have been escaping from it using at least three different techniques. BP—the well’s owner—is an oil company, and so their first reaction was to get and sell that oil no matter what. They tried to fit the well with a “top hat” to get all of the oil, but when their contraption didn’t work because it got clogged by methane hydrate crystals they stuck a smaller pipe into the leak, just to get and sell some of the oil, and when that worked it made them happy. But, coming under pressure to do something about all the oil leaking out and poisoning the environment, they finally decided to try shutting down the well by squiring various substances into it. The procedures they’ve tried, going by idiotic Top Gun names like “junk shot” and “top kill”—have all been to no avail. At some point it becomes clear that there is no oil well—just a large, untidy hole in the sea bottom with hydrocarbons spewing out of it, forming huge surface slicks and underwater plumes of oil that kill all they encounter and eventually wash up on land to continue the damage there, turning the Gulf Coast into a disaster area.
“We’re sorry for the massive disruption it’s caused their lives. There’s no one who wants this over more than I do. I would like my life back.”
– BP CEO Tony Hayward, who is clearly most sorry about the impact of the spill on his own life.