The Real Terrorists are the Corporate Execs Who’ve Bought the Regulators
Two Acts of Terror, Only One Investigation
by DAVE LINDORFF
The way I see it, we had two acts of terrorism in the US this 
week. The first took place at the end of the historic Boston Marathon, 
when two bombs went off near the finish line, killing three and 
seriously injuring dozens of runners and spectators. The second happened a 
couple days later in the town of West, Texas, where a fertilizer 
plant blew up, incinerating or otherwise killing at least 15, and 
injuring at least 150 people, and probably more as the search for the 
dead and the injured continues.
It’s pretty clear that the Boston Marathon bombing was an act of 
terrorism, with police making arrests and having killed one of the two 
suspects who had earlier been captured on film and video at the scene of the 
bombings.
The villains in the West Fertilizer Co. explosion are can be much more easily 
identified: the managers and owners of the plant.
West Fertilizer was built in the middle of the small town of West, 
TX, a community founded in the 19th century and named after the first 
local postmaster, T.M. West. It makes no sense, of course, to put a 
facility that uses highly toxic anhydrous ammonia as a primary feed 
stock — a compound that burns the lungs and kills on contact, and that, 
because it must be stored under pressure, is highly prone to leaks and 
explosive releases — and that makes as its main product ammonium nitrate 
fertilizer. Ammonium nitrate is the highly explosive compound favored 
by truck bombers like the Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. It was 
the fertilizer, vast quantities of which were stored at the West 
Fertilizer plant site, which caused the colossal explosion that leveled 
much of the town of West.
Building such a dangerous facility in the midst of a residential and 
business area, and allowing homes, nursing homes, hospitals, schools and 
playgrounds to be built alongside it, is the result of a corrupt 
process that is common in towns and cities across America, where 
business leaders routinely have their way with local planning and zoning 
commissions, safety inspectors and city councils. Businesses small and 
large also have their way with state and federal safety and health 
inspectors.
We know that the EPA, back in 2006, cited West Fertilizer for not 
having an emergency risk management plan. That is, a dangerous and 
explosion-prone plant that was using a hazardous chemical in large 
quantities, and that was storing highly explosive material also in large 
quantities, had made little or no effort to assess the risks of what it was 
doing. Indeed, it has been reported that the company had assured 
the EPA, in response to the complaint, that there was “no risk” of an 
explosion at the plant! An AP article reports that the company, five years 
after being cited for lacking a risk plan, did file one with the EPA, but that 
the report claimed the company 
“…was not handling flammable materials and did not have sprinklers, 
water-deluge systems, blast walls, fire walls or other safety mechanisms in 
place at the plant.”
Yet the AP article goes on to say that “State officials require all 
facilities that handle anhydrous ammonia to have sprinklers and other 
safety measures because it is a flammable substance, according to Mike 
Wilson, head of air permitting for the Texas Commission on Environmental 
Quality.”
The article says:
“Records reviewed by The Associated Press show the U.S. 
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration fined West 
Fertilizer $10,000 last summer for safety violations that included 
planning to transport anhydrous ammonia without a security plan. An 
inspector also found the plant’s ammonia tanks weren’t properly 
labeled.”
Then the article gets to the crux of the problem, saying:
“The government accepted $5,250 after the company took 
what it described as corrective actions, the records show. It is not 
unusual for companies to negotiate lower fines with regulators.”
Aside from the ridiculousness of West Fertilizer management’s 
reported assertion that the plant wasn’t handling flammable materials (a claim 
that the current deadly catastrophe has demonstrably proved was 
false), consider the incredible response of the EPA to this incredible 
assertion: The agency, emasculated by the Bush administration, and still a joke 
under the Obama administration, levied a pathetically small 
fine, but did nothing to shut the operation down until it put in place 
critical safety measures.
The other agency that could have acted, the Occupational Safety and 
Health Administration (OSHA), is even more of a paper tiger than the 
EPA. Despite their inherent risks and hazards, it is reported that OSHA 
has made only six investigations of fertilizer plant operators in Texas 
in the last six years. West Fertilizer was not one of them. In six 
years, it has not been visited by OSHA inspectors!
How can this be so? Because the entire health and safety regulatory 
apparatus of the US, from the federal level to the states and right down to 
local government, has been effectively neutered by corporate 
interests, who have used everything from threats of relocating to 
campaign contributions and outright bribes of officials and elected 
representatives to buy or win the right to basically operate as unsafely as 
they like, free of supervision.
As a result, regulation of dangerous plants and factories in the US these days 
is essentially nonexistent.
That, to me, is a kind of terrorism, and it is far more dangerous to 
the health and safety of the American people than any foreign or 
domestic terrorist or terrorist organization.
Yet the bulk of the American people are focusing their fears on 
terrorists from abroad, or in some cases here at home, not on the 
corporate suites where the real evil and the real danger lies.
Until we Americans wake up and insist that our elected officials and 
the regulatory bureaucrats they appoint, actually act in the public 
interest and not in the interest of the moneyed corporate elite (booting out 
those that betray us), we will increasingly all pay the price as 
plants blow up or leak toxic gas, as oil and gas companies wantonly 
pollute our water tables with carcinogenic toxins, and as nuclear power 
plants dump isotopes into our environment, all in the interest of 
profits.
The real terrorists in our midst are not men with knapsacks and white baseball 
caps who plant homemade bombs. They are not swarthy terrorists from the Middle 
East. Rather, they are the mostly white men (and women) in business suits on 
Wall Street and Main Street who callously use 
their wealth to subvert the political system to their short-term 
advantage, causing common-sense safety and health precautions to be 
ignored, or getting those laws watered down or outright cancelled.
Of course, a classic terrorist is trying to kill while the 
corporate executive is often “just” putting concerns about profits ahead of 
concerns about the safety or workers and people who live nearby, but in the 
final analysis, the victim of a terrorist’s bomb. The difference is that we 
won’t see the FBI or the local police tracking down and 
arresting the killers and maimers in the case of a fertilizer plant 
explosion. The people responsible for that type of outrage typically 
just collect their insurance payments (maybe paying some token fine), 
rebuild, and go on making their dangerous product as before — usually in the 
same location.
Dave Lindorff is a  founder of This Can’t Be Happening and a contributor to 
Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion, published by AK Press. 
Hopeless is also available in a Kindle edition. Lindorff’s article on drones in 
Philadelphia appears in the March issue of CounterPunch magazine. He lives in 
Philadelphia.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/04/19/two-acts-of-terror-only-one-investigation/


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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