NEW PROOF THE GULF OF MEXICO REMAINS AN OILY DISASTER ZONE! BIRDS CONTINUE TO DIE!

Joseph Raglione
Gentle readers of this American Chronicle, I could start by saying the Gulf Of Mexico continues to be a disaster zone, but I'm a solutions oriented person and therefore I suggest we all do like the French in France and, if we live within a few miles of work, ride Bicycles to work! The French have millions of City owned Bicycles located everywhere, and they are free to use for the first thirty minutes! We certainly can do the same in our North American Cities, but for you die-hard and to hell-with-the-environment Car loving people, I suggest you combine an Electric Car with a Hydrogen powered generator, to create the most powerful and the fastest vehicle on Earth. Who in hell needs Gas or Oil?

Dear Joseph,

Video of Kierán Suckling surveying oiled beaches on Grand Isle. Cut and paste:

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/programs/public_lands/energy/dirty_energy_development/oil_and_gas/gulf_oil_spill/videos_four_months_later.html

Video of Assistant Director Sarah Bergman discussing wildlife impacts from BP oil spill. Http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/programs/public_lands/energy/dirty_energy_development/oil_and_gas/gulf_oil_spill/videos_four_months_later.html#sarah

Today marks four months since BP's negligence and lack of government oversight caused the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig to explode, sending over 200 million gallons of oil in to the Gulf of Mexico.

To assess how much damage was done, we just spent this week walking the Gulf's beaches, boating through its marshes, and flying over its open water.

What we saw firsthand was horrific.

Beaches are covered in oil; pools of liquid oil ooze on the surface and oil mixed with sand is hardened into mats along the water's edge. On Grand Isle, just south of New Orleans, some beaches look fine from a distance but are actually sitting atop massive amounts of oil which bubbled to the surface as we walked across the sand. Digging into the sand with rubber gloves, we struck oil just six inches below the clean looking surface.

Crabs and birds continue to be covered in oil as they cross the beaches or land in the marshes. Fish and sea turtles are forced to swim through oil on the surface and below the surface as they look for food. The marshes in Grand Isle smell of oil and an oily sheen covers the earth.

In short, a full four months post-BP explosion, the Gulf of Mexico is still an oily mess despite Rosy assertions by oil companies and the Obama administration that most of the oil is gone. Our survey this week supports the conclusion of independent scientists, who announced findings on Monday that 80% of the oil is still present and continues to foul the beaches, waters, marshes and wildlife of the Gulf of Mexico.

But we also saw something else when we were in the Gulf.

People are stepping up to do their part, and more.

On Grande Isle, we met a young scientist (and Center supporter) who has collected nearly 5,000 oil-covered hermit crabs, cleaning them off one by one in a make-shift lab and releasing them 15 miles away where the oil hasn't reached yet. (Support her efforts by joining "Hermit Crab Survival Project" on Facebook.)

In New Orleans, we met a professional photographer visually capturing the oil's effect on the food chain, and a documentary film crew explaining how big oil money has captured local communities, Congress, and even the White House

On the docks, we met shrimp fishermen getting ready to testify before Congress about how the dispersants sprayed on the BP oil killed off millions of shrimp.

It was humbling to see the impact of the oil spill firsthand, and inspiring to see many people taking action. And, to know that the many late nights our staff has, and will put in are absolutely necessary to protect and recover our Gulf -- and to make sure this never happens again, anywhere.

The Center for Biological Diversity will continue our major response effort by pushing forward with seven lawsuits against BP and the corrupt government regulators who allowed BP and dozens of other oil companies to dangerously drill for oil with no environmental review, lax safety measures and useless clean-up plans.


Your help has been tremendous so far and we hope that you won't let the lessons we need to learn from this oil disaster fade away. Stay motivated: check out the slideshow we put together from the trip, and share this email with your friends.

It's been a long four months, but we're not done yet. The oil's still in our environment and the causes of the explosion still need to be addressed.

Thanks to all of you who have written letters, signed petitions, donated money and gone to the Gulf to help with the clean up. Without you we wouldn't be able to be so effective, and wildlife would be dying in even larger numbers. We'll keep the updates coming.

With thanks and resolve,

Kierán Suckling

Executive Director

Sarah Bergman

Assistant Executive Director

P.S. You can read an account of our trip by one of the people we traveled with in today's article on SolveClimate:

After Filing $19 Billion of Lawsuits, Activist Leaders Take a Whirlwind Tour of the Gulf

by Jacoba Charles - Aug 19th, 2010 // SolveClimate

NEW ORLEANS, LA. -- Executive Director of the Center for Biological Diversity, Kieran Suckling, is on his cell phone as he steers a rental car through downtown New Orleans. Beside him, the Center's assistant director Sarah Bergman gives directions while working on a laptop and sending email from her cell.

Since the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded on April 20, …the environmental organization has filed seven lawsuits worth $19 billion against BP and Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar. Yet this is the first trip its busy directors have made to the place that they have been fighting to protect.

On the second day of Suckling and Bergman's whirlwind tour of Louisiana, the White House Council on Environmental Quality released a long-awaited report which recommended ending the use of "categorical exclusions" to approve oil drilling in the gulf. Between that news, and an unrelated controversy involving off-road vehicle use in California, Suckling's phone is even busier than usual as reporters call him for his reliably colorful quotes, and staff call to craft press releases. . .

A Whirlwind Tour

Even while Suckling and Bergman multitask, they are working to absorb as much of the environmental situation in Louisiana as they can. In keeping with the Center's mission, their three-day trip is designed to assess not only the oil damage but also the overall diversity of the bayou ecosystem.

"We have a direct relationship with a lot of the issues we work on," Suckling says. "But here I think we were missing that experience and connection. We've put our heart and soul into the work, but we hadn't seen the place for ourselves. . ."

The last stop of the day is the Grand Island State Park, where remnants of the oil that poured into the gulf for 88 days still linger on the shores. Suckling and Bergman put on blue rubber gloves to touch the tarry globs that ooze up from beneath the sand.

"It's been almost 5 months this week and we're getting all these reports that the oil is gone," Bergman says. "Being down here, you can see it's not gone. You touch the beach and it starts bubbling up."

"I'm going to remember this pile of oil soaked mud in my hand, and it is what is will keep us going," Suckling adds. "The $19 billion we are seeking is to clean this up."

Read more here.

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Joseph Raglione

About Joseph Raglione
Hi! I am the executive director of the World Humanitarian Peace and Ecology Movement. I began as an environmental activist in 1969 and basically, never stopped! I Graduated College in Social Science and registered as a non-profit corporation in 1988 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. I am one of a very few non-profit and generic freedom loving journalists left on Earth, and I continue today to study and to understand the problems connected with human activity on this Planet. My affiliates include: GreenPeace, the Nature Conservancy, the Bio-diversity organization, the Sierra Club, the David Suzuky foundation, the WWF, Amnesty International, World Vision, the IUF organization; as well as the wonderful and independant N.A.S.A. scientists studying our Planet's weather systems. Of course NASA also studies the mysteries of the Eternal Universe with satelite generated images and, over the years, have generously allowed me and thousands of our world scientists to study over their shoulder's via the Internet.
In spite of some past U.S. government repression, NASA continues to provide solid evidence of global warming.
NASA has provided me with pictorial evidence of Rainforest deforestation within: Jakarta, Peru, Africa, Brazil and even in Western Canada!
The motivation for such destruction continues to be (often illegally) for: lumber, for bio-fuels, and for Cattle ranching. Today, the perceived future profits for Palm Oil and for Bio-Fuels are prime motivators for environmental destruction. Small crop farming also contributes but that may be changing as farmers learn to protect the Rain-Forest.
With NASA imaging, there is proof that large city heat traps are helping global warming, and with (infrared images)there is proof that several hundred million gas burning vehicles (including ship and airplanes) presently create a hugh quantity of pollution tracks across both Oceans and Sky.
With oil, gas, Coal and Bio-Fuel heated buildings around the world creating C02 emissions, and with Methane release from all animal species...giant Ozone holes have been created and continue to exist above the North and South Poles. Ozone holes allow the Sun to radiate the Ice Caps and to accelerate the Ice melt, which releases more Methane into the atmosphere, which continues to thin out the Ozone. A vicious circle created by human need and also, unhappily, by human greed!
I have been asked to write to the Prime Minister of Japan to ask him to stop the murderous assault on endangered Whales. Every year, thousands of Whales are killed in the Antarctic with GreenPeace volunteers placing themselves between the Whales and the grenade tipped harpoons, and peope like myself, (I did not forget this is my "Bio," putting my old neck on the line attempting to change the situation by writing thousands if not millions of words!
Are words dangerous?
Over three hundred journalists were killed within the last ten years. You tell me if words are dangerous!
As I write these words, the desperate and starving in Darfur are waiting for rescue. I motivated a few kind hearted California Actors to visit the region and to report back. They did! They then created the Darfur coalition and they continue to fight to save the innocent victims trapped in tents in the desert of the Sudan. Darfuri's were attacked and moved from their homes because somebody believes there is Oil under the Sudan desert.
As I write this, a few sick and desperate people in Iraq are wrapping bombs around themselves in order to die in the name of God, and the list of humanitarian disasters continues. I also contribute information to the Reuter's news service. It is time for a change. Please help make it happen!

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