Is the BP oil disaster really over?

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mchlwise
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Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by mchlwise »

No, it's not, if the information in this video is correct:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oaf998FwQVI

:shock:

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ready2prepare
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by ready2prepare »

Yes, there really are TWO BP oil wells within a few
hundred feet of each other in Mississippi Canyon
Block 252. And the one we saw "capped" on TV
was the first well drilled, not the blown out well.

It seems Matt Simmons was telling the truth after
all, and just paid the price with his life.

More here:
http://www.acgriffith.com/2010/08/bp-oil-wells-a-and-b/

Best Regards,
Sharon in Mississippi

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Jason
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Jason »

....media has done quite the smear job on it!

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Toto
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Toto »

I think I’m going to be sick!

While our attention is focused on one hand of the magician, we don’t notice what the other hand is doing, but I’ve been keeping my eyes open, and I am scared. I’ve never been scared of these punks, but I am now!

I have been watching the trees and vegetation here in Salt Lake City, and I never really thought the disaster in the gulf would hit here, but it has. The plant life is dying!!! There are spots on the leaves of trees and plant, holes in the leaves, and whole branches are dying off. Some of the leaves are changing color as if it was fall. A couple a weeks ago on the weather it was pointed out that the precipitation was coming from the gulf, and today I noticed that the damage is extensive and pervasive. Apparently this is worldwide.

There is little doubt in my mind the population reduction strategies have been unleashed. I think we will see massive crop failures, and I am concerned about the water supply now. Before I wasn’t so concerned about water storage, now I am! Famine would weaken immune systems making us vulnerable to the bio-weapons reportedly in the works.

I have not been feeling well for the last couple of weeks. Low energy, almost an ear ache, almost sore throat, almost a headache, poor attention span, lack of motivation, and I am hearing the same from others I have asked.

Go out and look around for yourselves, and let us know what you see in your area. Has anyone else been feeling a little off?

It isn’t over, it’s just beginning, and it’s not the oil we should be concerned about!

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shadow
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by shadow »

Interesting observation Toto.
About 3 hours ago we were on a walk and I noticed one of my neighbors yards is full of dropped leaves from about 5 Cotton-less Cottonwood trees. 3 out of my 4 kids are coughing and my wife's voice is hoarse and she has a sore throat. My eyes have been stinging today plus I feel a sore throat coming on too :( Of course we're leaving for Yellowstone in a day :| Nothing like being on vacation while sick!

As far as the water problem Toto, didn't you bless the rains down if Africa? :lol:

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loveoneanother
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by loveoneanother »

Yes, toto, I too have been feeling really tired!!! I have to force myself to get things done. I want to sleep, and I yawn all day, not normal for me....I wonder???

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Jason
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Jason »

shadow wrote:Interesting observation Toto.
About 3 hours ago we were on a walk and I noticed one of my neighbors yards is full of dropped leaves from about 5 Cotton-less Cottonwood trees. 3 out of my 4 kids are coughing and my wife's voice is hoarse and she has a sore throat. My eyes have been stinging today plus I feel a sore throat coming on too :( Of course we're leaving for Yellowstone in a day :| Nothing like being on vacation while sick!

As far as the water problem Toto, didn't you bless the rains down if Africa? :lol:
They caught one of the Arizona prison escapees up in Yellowstone this past week....bear attack too!

Noticing spots on my garden vegetable leaves - most pronounced in the squash. Leaves are dying fairly quickly. Was thinking the culprit was chlorine in the water.....

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shadow
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by shadow »

Jason wrote:They caught one of the Arizona prison escapees up in Yellowstone this past week....bear attack too!
Escapee caught, rogue bear shot 8)

I put some essential peppermint oil in my kids noses last night and that seemed to help clear things up. My wife still sounds like a man when she talks :shock:

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Jason
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Jason »

shadow wrote:
Jason wrote:They caught one of the Arizona prison escapees up in Yellowstone this past week....bear attack too!
Escapee caught, rogue bear shot 8)

I put some essential peppermint oil in my kids noses last night and that seemed to help clear things up. My wife still sounds like a man when she talks :shock:
LOL....well I was thinking of going there but I'm now planning on staying a little closer to home. Too many small children to be traipsing the hot pool boardwalks anyways....

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Col. Flagg
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Col. Flagg »

http://motherjones.com/environment/2010 ... n-cover-up
BP and the government say the spill is fast disappearing—but dramatic new science reveals that its worst effects may be yet to come.

Despite an ever-expanding estimate of the volume of the spill, relatively little oil washes ashore at first, and only a small portion ever will. Instead, trapped in the deep, the oil fouls the ocean's twilight and dark zones: the mesopelagic and the bathypelagic (bathos: deep). After April 20, the dumbwaiter rising through the waters of the Gulf of Mexico will be ascending an ocean fouled with a toxic broth of oil, methane, chemical dispersants, and drilling mud. The relatively small amounts of oil washing ashore, and the relief felt when the surface oil began to dissipate, hardly account for the devastation being wrought in the dark world beyond our sight.
The BP oil mess may just be getting started, sadly enough. :shock:

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mchlwise
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by mchlwise »

There is this out today:
Oil Industry Expert Bob Cavnar has posted a series of blog posts over the last few days that have escalated in charges that BP and the Federal Government BP and the Federal Government are deliberately providing the public with misinformation to cover up the fact that the static kill has backfired and made the BP Gulf Oil Spill well much harder to kill.

http://blog.alexanderhiggins.com/2010/0 ... rder-seal/

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Jason
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Jason »

mchlwise wrote:There is this out today:
Oil Industry Expert Bob Cavnar has posted a series of blog posts over the last few days that have escalated in charges that BP and the Federal Government BP and the Federal Government are deliberately providing the public with misinformation to cover up the fact that the static kill has backfired and made the BP Gulf Oil Spill well much harder to kill.

http://blog.alexanderhiggins.com/2010/0 ... rder-seal/
Here's his latest blog post on it -
http://dailyhurricane.com/2010/08/adm-a ... -else.html

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ready2prepare
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by ready2prepare »

As long as people continue to believe there's
just one well down there with a problem, they're
going to continue to be confused.

BP knows what they're doing, just like the
Russians did with Chernobyl, and their
disinformation campaign is working all too
"well." (Pun alert!)

With all due respect to those fine people
who are trying their best to make sense
of the information they're receiving, the sad
truth of the matter is, until they understand
one simple fact they are going to continue to
be confused.

And that fact is: All references to "BP's MC252
well" are false! There are TWO wells, and the
correct identification for each is MC252A and
MC252B. Why won't BP admit there are two wells?
Which well are we seeing in the videos? Which
well is actually the blown-out well?

And something even more disturbing: The two
wells are connected to the same reservoir, and
both are on record as having encountered drilling
problems, so what actually is going on down at
the bottom of the Gulf is anybody's guess, and
the ones who really know aren't telling: probably
for good reason.

Just like Chernobyl, only a different set of poisons.
The Russians have wildfires to stir up and spread
their poisons. We've got wild weather to do the
job for us. (Thou shalt NOT mention the dreaded
"H" word!)

Sending you warm greetings from sunny (and hot!)
East-Central Missississippi,

Sharon :)

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Col. Flagg
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Col. Flagg »

http://thinkprogress.org/2010/08/10/scientists-bp-gag

DOJ gags scientists studying BP disaster
In an explosive first-hand account, ecosystem biologist Linda Hooper-Bui describes how Obama administration and BP lawyers are making independent scientific analysis of the Gulf region an impossibility. Hooper-Bui has found that only scientists who are part of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) process to determine BP’s civil liability get full access to contaminated sites and research data. Pete Tuttle, USFWS environmental contaminant specialist and Department of Interior NRDA coordinator, admitted to The Scientist that “researchers wishing to formally participate in NRDA must sign a contract that includes a confidentiality agreement” that “prevents signees from releasing information from studies and findings until authorized by the Department of Justice at some later and unspecified date.” Hooper-Bui writes:

It’s not hazardous conditions associated with oil and dispersants that are hampering our scientific efforts. Rather, it’s the confidentiality agreements that come with signing up to work on large research projects shepherded by government entities and BP and the limited access to coastal areas if you’re not part of those projects that are stifling the public dissemination of data detailing the environmental impact of the catastrophe.

Hooper-Bui’s depictions of samples confiscated by US Fish and Wildlife officials and expeditions blocked by local law enforcement is consistent with the steady stream of reports about obstruction, censorship, and confusion under BP’s private army of contractors. A full and open scientific assessment of the effects of the BP disaster is crucial for the health of the ecosystem and the residents of this American jewel.

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Toto
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Toto »

Fortunately I’m not the only one concerned about the water supply. I was thinking anyone coming up with a way to filter Corexit from the water could save a lot of lives, so I started poking around on a search engine and found this post:
Ice Cold COREXIT!
by Last Supper » Mon Jun 14, 2010 12:07 pm

I had not worried much about water storage up until now. I knew I could get water from my well. I now have concerns that toxic rain from the Gulf area could be carried up the east coast contaminating any crops or wells in it's path.


"Due to toxic gases from the fractured oil well in the Gulf of Mexico, the possible off-gassing of the highly-toxic Corexit 9500 (the chemical dispersant used by BP in the oil spill clean-up), acid rain and various as-yet-unknown forms of environmental damage, we believe that the government will have no choice but to relocate millions of people away from the Gulf Coast. Those living in Florida are presently at the highest risk, but the danger also appears likely to spread to all Gulf Coast states east of Louisiana and possibly even to the entire Eastern half of the United States once hurricane season begins."

mmmm... how 'bout an ice cold glass of COREXIT
!
http://www.americanpreppersnetwork.net/ ... 607&t=3069

Just some food for thought.

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Toto
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Toto »

…he suggested that people in the area acquire gas masks to breathe and an ozone generator to purify the air, "otherwise, you gotta move, you gotta leave, you can't keep breathing this air."

The Pentagon is concerned about COREXIT degrading jet fuel in above ground storage tanks.

http://wtfsgoingon.typepad.com/what-the ... emain.html

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shadow
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by shadow »

ready2prepare wrote:Yes, there really are TWO BP oil wells within a few
hundred feet of each other in Mississippi Canyon
Block 252. And the one we saw "capped" on TV
was the first well drilled, not the blown out well.

It seems Matt Simmons was telling the truth after
all, and just paid the price with his life.

More here:
http://www.acgriffith.com/2010/08/bp-oil-wells-a-and-b/

Best Regards,
Sharon in Mississippi
I'm guessing there was only one oil leak and it's been fixed now??

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Original_Intent
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Original_Intent »

JulesGP wrote:Just found this and thought it was interesting:

http://www.theworldsprophecy.com/the-il ... pill-card/

http://seeker401.wordpress.com/2010/06/ ... s-planned/

Apparently the Illuminati have a card game that depicts many of our country's disasters - such as the BP Oil Spill, the distruction of the Twin Towers, and also the Pentagon. Interestingly enough, this game was created in 1995, LONG before these disasters occurred!
I would not say the Illuminati "have" a card game as such, there is a card game available to anyone that is called Illuminati and has cards that depict things like that - mind kontrolle, and so forth.

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Toto
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Toto »

Sep 20 11:28
Has COREXIT collapsed the North Atlantic current and triggered the next "Little Ice Age?"
http://europebusines.blogspot.com/2010/ ... -just.html

It is a university level physics experiment to use a tub of cool water and inject a colored stream of warm water into it. You can see the boundary layers of the warm water stream. If you add oil to the tub it breaks down the boundary layers of the warm water stream and effectively destroys the current vorticity . This is what is happening in the Gulf of Mexico and in the Atlantic Ocean.
The entire 'river of warm water' that flows from the Caribbean to the edges of Western Europe is dying due to the Corexit that the Obama Administration allowed BP to use to hide the scale of the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Disaster.


Dr. Bill Deagel interview with Kerry Cassidy

Winter early in the Swiss Alps, early winter in Norway. Long before a full blown ice age we’re probably going to be fighting for food in the streets. America has had a drop in food production. Russia is not shipping crops because of drought and fires. Coldest winter in a hundred years in Chile. Chaten (?.Chilean?) plenum volcano causing a lot of ash contributing to cooling. Cooling in Columbia causing deaths of millions of fish. The oceans determine the world climate and it is now disconnected. The pacemaker for the world climate no longer exists. Hot and cold fluctuations, failure of crops like in Pakistan and china, extreme cold and a fairly harsh winter. Winters in Europe are going to be more like northern Canada. We have had a collapse of the thermosphere.

Blue Flue caused by toxic chemicals from the Corexit (defoliant) – Immune dysfunction, respiratory problems, sinusitis, chronic fatigue, risk of neuropathy, brain damage, and other issues.

http://data.argusoog.org/radio/2010/Arg ... amelot.mp3



Blood Tests Show Elevated Level of Toxic Hydrocarbons in Gulf Residents

A number of different chemists are finding elevated levels of toxic hydrocarbons in the bloodstream of Gulf coast residents. What is most disturbing about these results is that people who simply live near the water are showing higher than normal levels of toxic chemicals. These are not fishermen, shrimpers, oil workers or others who work on the water. It is well known that oil fires can increase the levels of ethyl benzene and xylene in people's bloodstream. For example, in studying Gulf War illness, the National Defense Research Institute found that exposure to the Kuwaiti oil fires set by Saddam Hussein increased ethyl benzene levels in firefighters more than 10 times - from .052 to .53 micrograms per liter - and more than doubled xylene levels. There have been previous reports of spill-related toxins becoming airborne. In addition, as I noted last week, scientists have found that applying Corexit to Gulf crude oil releases 35 times more toxic chemicals into the water column than would be released with crude alone.Is it possible that the massive application of Corexit dispersant is creating a situation analogous to ongoing oil fires: ongoing release of large quantities of toxic components of crude oil?
-Washington's Blog
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2009/09/ ... el-of.html

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Col. Flagg
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Col. Flagg »

Then there's this:

http://www.helium.com/items/1882339-doo ... ling-event
Ominous reports are leaking past the BP Gulf salvage operation news blackout that the disaster unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico may be about to reach biblical proportions.

251 million years ago a mammoth undersea methane bubble caused massive explosions, poisoned the atmosphere and destroyed more than 96 percent of all life on Earth. [1] Experts agree that what is known as the Permian extinction event was the greatest mass extinction event in the history of the world. [2]

55 million years later another methane bubble ruptured causing more mass extinctions during the Late Paleocene Thermal Maximum (LPTM).

The LPTM lasted 100,000 years. [3]

Those subterranean seas of methane virtually reshaped the planet when they explosively blew from deep beneath the waters of what is today called the Gulf of Mexico.

Now, worried scientists are increasingly concerned the same series of catastrophic events that led to worldwide death back then may be happening again-and no known technology can stop it.

The bottom line: BP’s Deepwater Horizon drilling operation may have triggered an irreversible, cascading geological Apocalypse that will culminate with the first mass extinction of life on Earth in many millions of years.

The oil giant drilled down miles into a geologically unstable region and may have set the stage for the eventual premature release of a methane mega-bubble.

Ryskin’s methane extinction theory

Northwestern University's Gregory Ryskin, a bio-chemical engineer, has a theory: The oceans periodically produce massive eruptions of explosive methane gas. He has documented the scientific evidence that such an event was directly responsible for the mass extinctions that occurred 55 million years ago. [4]

Many geologists concur: "The consequences of a methane-driven oceanic eruption for marine and terrestrial life are likely to be catastrophic. Figuratively speaking, the erupting region "boils over," ejecting a large amount of methane and other gases (e.g., CO2, H2S) into the atmosphere, and flooding large areas of land. Whereas pure methane is lighter than air, methane loaded with water droplets is much heavier, and thus spreads over the land, mixing with air in the process (and losing water as rain). The air-methane mixture is explosive at methane concentrations between 5% and 15%; as such mixtures form in different locations near the ground and are ignited by lightning, explosions and conflagrations destroy most of the terrestrial life, and also produce great amounts of smoke and of carbon dioxide..." [5]

The warning signs of an impending planetary catastrophe—of such great magnitude that the human mind has difficulty grasping it-would be the appearance of large fissures or rifts splitting open the ocean floor, a rise in the elevation of the seabed, and the massive venting of methane and other gases into the surrounding water.

Such occurrences can lead to the rupture of the methane bubble containment—it can then permit the methane to breach the subterranean depths and undergo an explosive decompression as it catapults into the Gulf waters. [6]

All three warning signs are documented to be occurring in the Gulf.

pritchet1
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by pritchet1 »

Can the methane bubble explode in DC, please?

There seems to be an awful lot of gas being generated in that particular location.

"Well, that's a deep subject."

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Col. Flagg
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by Col. Flagg »

pritchet1 wrote:Can the methane bubble explode in DC, please?

There seems to be an awful lot of gas being generated in that particular location.

"Well, that's a deep subject."
:lol:

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kathyn
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by kathyn »

Isn't it prophesied that a third of sea life will die? And also a third part of men (and women)?

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ready2prepare
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Re: Is the BP oil disaster really over?

Post by ready2prepare »

Col. Flagg wrote:Then there's this:
http://www.helium.com/items/1882339-doo ... ling-event

That "methane bubble" story is old news (from
June) and turned out to be full of hot "helium,"
if 'ya catch my drift...

Perhaps a third of all sea life in the Gulf of Mexico
has already died. If it has, we won't be told about
it by the media anytime soon.

If winter hits the north countries (Canada and
Northern Europe) like a ton of bricks this year
with very little transition time between summer
and winter, then we'll know for sure that the
Gulf Stream / North Atlantic Drift current has
slowed to a crawl or stopped. Time will tell,
and soon!

Meanwhile, here in Mississippi we've got a few
more days of mid-90's temps left before cooler
weather moves in early next week. I am sure
looking forward to the change!

Best Regards,
Sharon in Mississippi

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