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Comment The only drawback of *not* using Corexit.. (Score 1) 61

..is to BP, which couldn't as easily hide the amount of oil spilled--the only thing by which it is liable. To anyone who actually lives around the area, the spraying of the neurotoxic carcinogen corexit is quite harmful. "Isn't it a good thing this study is done now?" You're waxing about how great it is we can assess what happened after the fact of a disaster, when BP couldn't even learn from the Ixtoc spill 30 years ago? That time, all the same techniques were employed with similar failures. When another spill happens, they'll flounder similarly because the point's to make money on the short term, not to worry about disasters when they arise--disasters only affect those poor nobodies on the cost and their rinky-dink fishing boats. Why should a multinational like BP care, when BP's iniquities are so sheltered by the government that the coast guard would keep away journalists from the spill, threatening several tens of thousand in fines and years in jail for any who'd come close to a cleanup site?

Comment "Dispersants are soap"---who's paying you? (Score 1) 61

Funny that BP's PR teams also tried to claim dispersant just soap--why is there incentive for you to repeat their nonsense? In reality Corexit and oil make a muck that falls to the ocean floor--a layer of toxic muck and dead marine life several feet thick in some places. There is NOTHING to indicate Corexit allows bacteria to "do their job properly". If you're not being paid to write this garbage, you should be, I'm sure some of that several hundred mil BP spent on PR cleanup rather than actual cleanup afterwards is still up for grabs!

Comment EPA told BP to stop spraying, BP bit its thumb. (Score 2) 61

The Obama administration's folly (other than being helpful to BP in almost every way, including having government officials spout their bogus numbers on a whim), disallowing regulations present in much of europe (see "dead man's switch") that were removed under the Bush administration, and not doing anything to punish BP after it disobeyed the EPA and continued to spray Corexit despite being told to stop. Easy for you to say using millions of gallons of a neurotoxic carcinogen was the "next-least-bad" choice when you don't live in the area. People in the area are getting sick; marine life is hatching deformed. The toxic sludge created by corexit+oil is deadlier than either of them on their own, so please spare me this "next-least-bad" nonsense. The "obvious problem" is that we're allowing deepwater drilling when energy companies don't have any reason to give a damn when things go wrong; the government will be glad to help in PR cleanup, and they're not even obligated to pay back any claimants. There was a laptop with 10,000+ claimants' info on it that was magically "lost". Where's the government lawsuit on behalf of the people, if the government's here to help? In actuality, it's here to stand and watch while you and I get fucked.

Comment "Didn't drilling regulations...?" No. (Score 1) 61

At the time of the spill, there were 3000+ rigs in the gulf. Only about 30 of those were deepwater. No, "natural seepage" will not cause millions of gallons of gas to drift out into the ocean every year, nor will "natural seeepage" destroy the oceanfloor habitat and leave a layer of toxic oil/dispersant sludge mixed with dead marine life several feet thick as this spill has done. Is someone paying you to post this?

Comment Re:Or, we could have just done nothing... (Score 1) 61

"A lot more careful" in the future? They certainly weren't much more careful than the Ixtoc spill 30 years ago, where a set of maneuvers eerily similar to those attempted to plug the BP spill were employed (and all failed similarly). If BP didn't want lawsuits, it shouldn't have dumped millions of gallons of a neurotoxic carcinogen to cover its own liability (amount of oil spilled). Or maybe it shouldn't have put 10,000+ claimants' data on a single laptop only to magically "lose" it. If corporations are people, BP is a fucking psychopath with dead girls in its basement.

Comment Re:I appreciate the moral implications for some (Score 1) 388

And you could really argue they "had a say" if they weren't educated (oftentimes thanks to conservative abstinence-only no-contraceptive education policies, like the federal policies Bush Jr. and co. backed) and thought simply pulling out was a proper contraceptive?

Yeah. Actually, you could. As long as you give kids accurate information about what causes pregnancy, you gave them the tools to not get pregnant...So yeah, if you were told, "Keep it in your pants, and you won't get pregnant", and you decided not to keep it in your pants, that's the choice you made, and you have to live with the consequences. So yeah, if you were told, "Keep it in your pants, and you won't get pregnant", and you decided not to keep it in your pants,

And that "keep it in your pants" philosophy of sex education is why abstinence-only education is a statistical failure; many states outright rejected it during Bush Jr.'s time despicte having to turn down federal funding in the process. "Accurate information" about what rcauses pregnancy entails exactly what one has to do to not get pregnant, and these education policies do not provide that information. HAll those kids who were told to "just keep it in their pants" are going to fuck anyway, especially in urban centers full of poor people, because the urges of puberty effortlessly surmounts abstinence education. Tell people not to fuck and they'll do it anyway. Pretending they'll keep to themselves when told is an absolute denial of human nature, and the statistics are there to prove it.

that's the choice you made, and you have to live with the consequences.

"live with the consequences"? According to who, God? Whose god? And what gives society the right to mandate this for any woman (especially when women are underrepresented in the political world)? Moralizing about punishment and proper consequences puts the cart before the horse.

And then, if the thing's not aborted, the kid's going to be born to parents that didn't want it. And that's fair to the kid? You could argue never having been born is more fair if the resultant person's completely unwanted.

You could argue that, but you probably shouldn't. Lots of people are raised (or not raised) by incompetent, unloving parents, and they do fine. If someone acts like a sociopathic asshole later in life, it's because of how they responded to the hand they were dealt.

"Doing fine" how so? Where abortion's arguably the most needed (poor inner-city people, oftentimes teenagers, who couldn't support a kid if they had one, and don't know much about what it takes to avoid conception because of bad education), those unwanted kids don't do just fine, at leasto insofar as they go on to make the same mistakes their parents did (having kids early and forgoing any chance at a career). The outlook is far from rosy for those unwated who enter into foster homes--"nearly half of foster children hae have a clinical level of [behavioral or emotional] problems: 47% of children ages 6 to 11, and 40% of children ages 12 to 14." If this is the case, how can you say their mental health later in life is entirely up to them, any more than you could say that of an abused child? On top of that, "almost one-third in foster homes live below the poverty line". http://www.childtrends.org/files/FosterHomesRB.pdf

Don't tell me about how huge the adoption backlogs are--if abortion was made illegal, that backlog (if there even is one) would be obliterated within a year or two.

And that's a bad thing, is it? I'm not doubting there would be more children waiting to be adopted than people willing to adopt. I don't know either way for a fact, but it doesn't really make a difference. Again, compare "hard life" with "dead".

....yes, because then the country would be flooded with kids absolutely no-one wants. What's sadder, a dumpster full of dead fetuses or a dumpster full of living babies that were abandoned?

Saying, "They're better off dead, anyway." is really an astounding rationalization, and that's all it is.

For themselves, or for society? We could debate the case for the individual's wellbeing, but the effect on society of being flooded with unwanted children, and they WILL be unwanted, would be undeniably deleterious.

"Going to such lengths"? And allowing an individual power over their own body is a great length to go to, instead of telling them they're just a baby generator and are locked into an undesirable life because of a previous bad decision? It's funny you'd mention this, because oftentimes opposition to abortion rights really comes down to opposing the capability of women to be promiscuous, with which there's nothing inherently wrong. Men have this right with no downside, but we have to prohibit women from having the same rights?

Women have the same rights men do to be promiscuous. If a man gets a woman pregnant, and she keeps it, he's liable for child support. The baby's his responsibility, too. Hence the phrase "deadbeat dad". And in many states, there are safe haven laws. Don't want your kid? Fine. These states designate areas where infants can be left and given immediate care, if you can't handle parenthood.

And what poor single-mother-to-be will be able to hold any number of equally poor ostensible baby-daddies accountable to the government? What deadbeat teen dad's going to be paying child support? Good luck on paying the lawyer fees. "Holding the father accountable" is oftentimes wishful thinking. It's his responsibility in social ideal only--in biiological actuality the woman is the one who has to bear the child. Along the same vein, many states try very dirty tactics to stop the mother-to-be in her tracks. Kentucky in particular forces the woman to hear an ultrasound of her child. (A previous slashdot had a large list of these examples.) And then there are fake abortion centers that seek to deceive women and talk them out of it. Invariably, the promiscuity of women is what anti-choice policies try to target.

Abortion is the republican party's ultimate golden carrot on a stick. Each year they'll talk of repealing Roe v. Wade, but it's never going to happen. Even opposition to abortion dies as old voters die off and the new generation takes over.

Show me one poll that supports the idea that most people support abortion.

That would matter if the decision were up to the majority, but it isn't (thank god--half the people voting shouldn't even have a say on the matter). It's up to the courts or congress, and neither are going to repeal Roe v. Wade. And why would the republican party want one of their most powerful talking points (other than abject fearmongering/racism) to slip away? Abortion gets votes. Socially conservative politicians don't give a damn about social issues beyond what will get them elected. I honestly doubt standards for abortion will budge in the least. If anything there will come a breaking point where obamacare funding can actually provide for abortions.

The Roe v. Wade decision even predates test tube babies. Sooner, rather than later, the day will come when a woman will know she's conceived early enough to be able to simply donate the embryo without destroying it, or have it frozen for use later in her life (as couples do now when they're using fertility treatments).

That is indeed a good idea, but still toying with life in the eyes of many who see it that way already.

Comment Re:I appreciate the moral implications for some (Score 1) 388

Anyone above the age of consent should know that one of the consequences of having sex could be pregnancy.... No one should be forced to carry a pregnancy to term when they didn't have a say in the sex act that led to the pregnancy.

And you could really argue they "had a say" if they weren't educated (oftentimes thanks to conservative abstinence-only no-contraceptive education policies, like the federal policies Bush Jr. and co. backed) and thought simply pulling out was a proper contraceptive? And then, if the thing's not aborted, the kid's going to be born to parents that didn't want it. And that's fair to the kid? You could argue never having been born is more fair if the resultant person's completely unwanted. Don't tell me about how huge the adoption backlogs are--if abortion was made illegal, that backlog (if there even is one) would be obliterated within a year or two. Check the numbers yourself if you don't believe me. Then all those surplus kids will just go to foster homes--and those have a great reputation, don't they?

How is going to such lengths to allow someone to avoid the natural consequences of their actions even remotely okay?

"Going to such lengths"? And allowing an individual power over their own body is a great length to go to, instead of telling them they're just a baby generator and are locked into an undesirable life because of a previous bad decision? It's funny you'd mention this, because oftentimes opposition to abortion rights really comes down to opposing the capability of women to be promiscuous, with which there's nothing inherently wrong. Men have this right with no downside, but we have to prohibit women from having the same rights?

The fact that the Supreme Court, nearly 40 years ago, chose to cloud the issue with the concept of viability is irrelevant to that.

Abortion is the republican party's ultimate golden carrot on a stick. Each year they'll talk of repealing Roe v. Wade, but it's never going to happen. Even opposition to abortion dies as old voters die off and the new generation takes over.

Comment Re:This is terrible news...but here's the doc (Score 1) 790

There is nothing terrible about this decision, because this decision has nothing to do with net neutrality. It was a decision about whether a government agency has carte blanche to do whatever the hell it wants without any congressional oversight, much less voter oversight.

And since when is an agency regulating what it was meant to--not what consumers are allowed, but the level of service offered to the the consumer--government by executive order? Broad strokes to say the FCC would have "carte blanche", and even if they did in this regard, so what? It's not as if this would give the FCC some outlandish power to "regulate the internet" and force ISPs to filter certain information or somesuch. How could any consumer be harmed by such regulation when the targeted entities are corporations, not consumers? In a market as consolidated as the US, it's quite the opposite--the consumer's vulnerable without such regulation. I'd listen to the man who created the world wide web, Tim Berners-Lee, on the matter: http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/144

We do NOT want government by executive order.

An executive order? I wish.. Obama spoke about net neutrality when he was running, but the issue was seemingly dropped from his roster of concerns.

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