Kenickie
Bluelight Crew
Ignoring how devastating I would imagine detonating a nuclear bomb in the Gulf would be to the ecosystem and the life there, it would also be pretty bad-ass
not any less devastating then what's happening now, i'm sure
Ignoring how devastating I would imagine detonating a nuclear bomb in the Gulf would be to the ecosystem and the life there, it would also be pretty bad-ass
not any less devastating then what's happening now, i'm sure
Why not regular explosives?
If they could, they would. They can't. This is more serious than anyone dares to admit (in public). How serious? It will slowly come to light in the coming months.
The smart ones know what is going on.... the slow ones.... FEMA camps or whatever...
I personally would not want be living anywhere around 100miles inland around that gulf spill....
people are getting sick and they live around 70miles inland.... so that just paints the picture for some of how bad it is....
People are also getting sick at sea and doing clean up.... they are blaming the OIL but not the cortex....Yah okay....
Either way.... People will get sick and more and more people will go to the emergency room.....with symptoms....
But i guess i am just crazy....
I believe I have a post earlier in this thread (or another doomsday one) recommending a 200-mile evacuation of the southern coast. I know this sounds crazy too, but if I lived within that perimeter I would be doing everything I could to find another place to live ASAP.
but if 9/11 is any guide, they [aka the "powers that be"] are too worried about "panic" and so instead are sacrificing not merely the livelihoods but very possibly the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans, rather than admit what is actually going on.
like where? where are you going to send these MILLIONS of people? i do not think you comprehend the massive mobilization that would require.
also, people are unaware of how important it is to keep New Orleans as a port city. really kind of sad that people have no idea what Louisiana does for the rest of the country.
have you talked to anyone in Louisiana lately? the panic is quite palpable.
sadly, I know exactly what it does, but my point is new orleans can't be "kept" as a port city. to put it as bluntly as possible: there is no more new orleans. "they" just haven't told us yet.
The Port of New Orleans is a port located in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the 5th largest port in the United States based on volume of cargo handled, second-largest in the state after the Port of South Louisiana, and 12th largest in the U.S. based on value of cargo. It also has the longest wharf in the world, which is 2.1 miles (3.4 km) long and can accommodate 15 vessels at one time.[1]
The Port of New Orleans handles about 84 million short tons of cargo a year. The Port of South Louisiana, based in the New Orleans suburb of LaPlace, handles 199 million short tons. The two combined form the largest port system in the world by bulk tonnage, and the world's fourth largest by annual volume handled.
The Port of New Orleans is a major transshipment point for steel, receives more coffee imports than any other U.S. port apart from New York/New Jersey, and is the largest port in the U.S. for rubber imports. Over 6000 vessels and 700,000 passengers pass through the Port of New Orleans annually.
The port's chief exports are grain and other agricultural produce from the Midwestern United States, and petroleum products. The leading imports include rubber, chemicals, cocoa beans, coffee, and petroleum. The port handles more trade with Latin America than does any other U.S. gateway, including Miami.
yes, and heard many more on radio and tv. i think we are in violent agreement. the "they" i meant BP execs and the Feds, who are trying to distract attention away from what they know is a world-changing disaster.
but i do think i see people on tv in southern LA "getting used to" the oil smell, which i suspect is very bad. i fear that once the oil smell begins, it is never going to end, and its toxicity is only going to increase.
i agree with the panic. if i lived there, i would be doing everything i could to get out now, and bring everything and everyone i care about with me. i have a close friend in NO & i've been urging her to get out for weeks, even though she is supposed to leave at the end of the summer.
i'm also thinking that if the leak is capped and a few major storms happen, the "oil smell" will end. i also think if you lived there, you wouldn't be doing everything you could to get out now.unless of course, you lived there for some superficial reason, then, it would be just as easy as leaving any other place. but not if you're a NOLAian born and bred. you can't just leave.