I halted eating fish maybe 15 years ago, because I was being made to
realize what the industrial fishing methods are doing to us. It's just
a silly reminder that I've kept with me ever since.

On 4 Mai, 16:03, ornamentalmind <[email protected]> wrote:
> Oh, and fishing/shrimping (and claming...I assume) are all halted. Of
> course, even 25 years ago the gulf around Florida's panhandle was so
> polluted that the shellfish were toxic to humans. They were still
> gathered and sold of course.
>
> On May 4, 6:39 am, Don Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Things look bad for BP.  No question.  If I gave the impression I thought
> > The Market was fail proof I apologize.  Shit happens.  Before we go off half
> > cocked persecuting folks lets see the extent of the damage.  I'm ready to
> > volunteer if I can help.  The Gulf is my playground and I love shrimp.
>
> > I'm just sick about this.
>
> > dj
>
> > On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 8:13 PM, ornamentalmind
> > <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> > > President Barack Obama pretty much stated the obvious when he called
> > > the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico “a massive and potentially
> > > unprecedented environmental disaster.”
>
> > > The oil well pouring a river of crude into the Gulf of Mexico didn't
> > > have the normal type of remote-control shut-off switch used in Norway
> > > and the UK as last-resort protection against underwater spills,
> > > largely because the oil companies themselves are responsible for
> > > "voluntary" compliance with safety and environmental standards.
>
> > > It was in 1994, two years into the Clinton administration, when this
> > > practice of putting the fox in charge of the henhouse was legalized,
> > > about the same time George W. Bush was doing the same thing in Texas,
> > > a program pushed hard in the previous administration by Dan Quayle's
> > > so-called "competitiveness council" charged with deregulating
> > > industry.
>
> > > The accident has led to one of the largest ever oil spills in U.S.
> > > water and the loss of 11 lives. Voluntary safety for oil wells, but
> > > you and I can get stopped by the police if we don't fasten our safety
> > > belts? Eleven people have died because Halliburton and BP wanted to
> > > save money. In the first hundred years of this republic it was
> > > commonplace for rogue corporations to get the corporate death penalty
> > > - being shut down, dissolved, and having their assets sold off.
> > > Through the 19th century, it averaged around 2000 companies a year
> > > that got the axe.
>
> > > If the Supreme Court now says that corporations are people - and they
> > > did - then these corporations should be eligible for the corporate
> > > death penalty.
>
> > > Time to break up and sell off the pieces of Halliburton and British
> > > Petroleum.
>
> > >http://www.thomhartmann.com/blog/2010/05/halliburton-bp-it-time-corpo...

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