Save yourself an hour and a half watching this bullshit “Green Planet” production. That intro to the film should set off alarm bells right there.
Just like the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska and every other oil spill you can cite, the Earth will, in George Carlin’s words, “Shake this off like a bad case of the fleas.”
Anonymous
Really a ludicrous assertion that the earth just shakes
it off. Have a nice tar ball shrimp scampi, sounds good.
Quite the dilemma isn’t it, we created the corporate oil monster
and feed it proper nourishment to grow. After this winter I much rather have my gas
powered dual stage snow thrower. Damn it I want my cake…
“Really a ludicrous assertion that the earth just shakes it (the BP oil spill) off.”
—-Anon
Name me a situation when it hasn’t.
Anonymous
Well ssss you are right the old rock that is the earth is
relatively eternal. The question is how fast can humanity turn the
whole place into a toxic waste dump that can’t support life
as we know it. I acknowledge being a participant in creating
this lousy future, what a legacy…..but I try to remain conscious
of my energy use and think of my children
“Well sss you are right the old rock that is the earth is relatively eternal. The question is how fast can humanity turn the whole place into a toxic waste dump that can’t support life as we know it.”
—-Anon
Wrong. You are assuming that WE, the so-called all powerful organisms known as humanity, can turn the Earth into a toxic waste dump.
We can’t. Name me a situation where that’s probable, much less possible.
The monkee man speaks
I live on the gulf of mexico. I walk the beaches and eat the fish. Zero evidence of oil pollution.
time to move on….
I live on the gulf of mexico. I walk the beaches and eat the fish. Zero evidence of oil pollution.
time to move on….”
The defense rests. Move for dismissal.
boondoggle
SSS
my wifes sister sent us a picture of a fish she caught in florida…you could see the black oil in the thing
as for naming places we have as a species turned in to a waste dump, how many examples would you like?
start by googling poisoned places
then toxic places, then radioactive places
there are just far to many to attempt to list, but at least you have an idea where to start educating yourself
I cant even believe you are unaware of things like fukushima and Chernobyl
must be mighty comfortable under that rock, as I get the impression you don’t come out from under it to often
to all it may concern, i am prepared to be attacked in advance for my views, since my opionin was previously most unwelcome . i see the headline reference, my first thought when it occured, with zero knowledge it was most odd since POTUS had made an offshore statement. why would any company rush a mega jackpot hit, all the expenses for development would quickly be repaid. reminded me of brown crashing into a mountain in yugoslavia, i am not a wall mart poster child, i read the sight because impossible not to be a gainful experience. yet when timing is out of sync i wonder. i watched the maritime hearings hardly the first time deckhands are expendable. think stalin said one death a tragedy a million a statistic. lenin and stalin knew very well what the masses wanted to hear. same old same old. if everyone wishes to get their rocks off blasting me, this time i will be prepared and stay dormant, yet this is a great site if you wish to learn. i have not read article regarding BP, i do know middle class britians took a hit and shortly there after bp found a home russia, subject to challenge, no footnotes of support. thanks, bring on the wolves.
“I’ve never seen such a high prevalence” of ailments, says U.S. government researcher.
By Ker Than
For National Geographic
Published December 20, 2013
Dolphins living in an area heavily impacted by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill show higher incidences of lung disease, hormonal abnormalities, and other health effects, a new study finds.
The research, led by U.S. government scientists and funded by BP, the oil company that operated the ill-fated Macondo well, provides the clearest evidence to date linking the oil disaster with potentially deadly health effects in bottlenose dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico. (See related quiz: “How Much Do You Know About the Gulf Oil Spill?”)
The dolphin study was done as part of a process led by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) called a Natural Resource Damage Assessment that investigates whether the spill was responsible for any damage to wildlife or natural resources.
“I’ve never seen such a high prevalence of very sick animals—and with unusual conditions such as the adrenal hormone abnormalities,” study leader Lori Schwake, a NOAA scientist, said in a statement. (See related, “Gulf Oil Spill Pictures: Ten New Studies Show Impact on Coast.”)
Mobi Solangi, who directs the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies (IMMS) in Gulfport, Mississippi and was not involved in the study, called the study a “good first step [that] shows the possibility of a link,” he said. (See related, “Dolphin Baby Die-Off in Gulf Puzzles Scientists.”)
Toxic Oil Effects
For the study, the scientists compared the health of dolphins in Louisiana’s Barataria Bay, which was heavily oiled during the April 2010 spill that spewed an estimated 5 billion of barrels of crude oil into the Gulf, with another dolphin population living farther away, in Sarasota Bay, Florida, one year after the spill, in 2011. (Related: “The Next Oil Spill: Five Needed Mandates to Head it Off” and “Gulf Spill Dispersants Surprisingly Long-lasting”)
About 30 dolphins in Barataria Bay were caught, examined and released. The checkups included an ultrasound examination to assess the animals’ lung conditions. The researchers concluded that many of the dolphins suffered from moderate to severe lung disease associated with oil contamination. Almost half had “a guarded or worse prognosis, and 17 percent were considered poor or grave, indicating they weren’t expected to live,” according to the study, which was published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
The researchers also found that the Barataria Bay population overall had very low levels of adrenal hormones, which are critical for responding to stress, and that 25 percent of the dolphins were significantly underweight.
The team also noticed other disturbing signs. “We had one animal that was actually pregnant, but the fetus was nonviable,” Schwacke told National Geographic.
“There was no heartbeat or movement and it looked like it may have been dead a week or so … The interesting thing was the stage of pregnancy was the second trimester. A lot of the things that you think of that causes abortions in dolphins hits in the third trimester. So seeing something like that in the second trimester is unusual, and it’s certainly consistent with a toxic effect.” (See related story: “BP Oil Spill’s Sticky Remains Wash Up Sporadically on Gulf Beaches”)
In contrast, the control group of 15 dolphins in Sarasota Bay which was not affected by the oil spill did not show elevated levels of lung disease or other health effects.
Apples and Oranges
BP spokesperson Jason Ryan disputed the study’s findings, saying that the symptoms the scientists observed in their study has been seen in other dolphin mortality events that have been linked to contaminants and conditions found in the northern Gulf, including “PCBs, DDT and pesticides, unusual cold stun events, and toxins from harmful algal blooms.”
“The symptoms are also consistent with natural diseases such as Morbillivirus and Brucellosis,” Ryan said in an email.
Moreover, he added, dolphin mortality events occur with some regularity in the Gulf of Mexico and around the world and have for years.
But NOAA’s Schwacke said her team did take steps to rule out the possibility of other factors being responsible for the dolphin’s poor health.
“We looked at a broad suite of contaminants, including PCBs and DDT…and the levels in Barataria were actually lower than in Sarasota Bay,” she said.
An online statement by BP also criticized the scientists’ decision to compare dolphins in Barataria Bay with those living Sarasota Bay. “The two populations are genetically different and the environments are different,” the statement reads.
“Barataria Bay is much more industrialized and has experienced numerous oil and fuel spills over the years, as well as the release of other contaminants. Sarasota Bay dolphins had been captured and sampled for health assessments and other measurements for many years. They were much more used to being around people and to being captured-released than were the Barataria Bay dolphins, and this may have resulted in more stress to the Barataria Bay animals.”
‘No Doubt’
Solangi of IMMS said that BP’s criticisms of the study were valid, especially the point about the two dolphins group not living in comparable habitats.
“It would be like comparing a population [of people] living in the [United States] with a population in Africa or South America. You can’t do that,” Solangi said.
Nevertheless, Solangi said he has no doubt that the 2010 oil disaster played a role in the dolphins’ health declines.
“There’s no question in my mind that the oil is a contributing factor. It’s the elephant in the room,” he said.
Schwacke said her team is already seeking funding for a followup study in Barataria Bay next summer that will look at the same dolphin population, and perhaps even the same individuals if any of them are alive. (Related Photos: “Gulf Oil Spill: Oiled Beaches Timeline”)
The new findings come in a week when BP announced its first significant oil discovery in the Gulf of Mexico since the Deepwater Horizon spill. The discovery, at its Gila prospect, which it co-owns with ConocoPhillips, is about 300 miles (482 kilometers) southwest of New Orleans, and in a lease block called Keathley Canyon, roughly 200 miles southwest of the Mississippi Canyon lease block that held the Macondo well. BP has previously announced two other discoveries in the same geological formation as Gila, the Paleogene trend, Kaskida in 2006 and Tiber in 2009. BP’s plans for development in the Tiber in 2010 were derailed by the Macondo spill. (Related Photos: “Four New Offshore Drilling Frontiers”)
BP said that the Gila discovery “is a further sign that momentum is returning to BP’s drilling operations and well execution in the Gulf of Mexico,” said Richard Morrison, regional president of BP’s Gulf of Mexico business.
George Carlin (1988) on the Reagan administration….Since fucktard SSS uses a George Carlin quote to support his idiotic stance…
You really think that Chernobyl and Fukishima, or even the BP oil disaster, while not killing the earth, does not affect us or what we eat, breath or drink? Frikin moron…
Of course some believe we are not large enough to affect our home planet….Of course some of us are willfully blind…But, while the earth might be able to shake everything off we do it, it would likely only be able to do that when it finally shakes of humanity….
The stupidity here started when a black man was elected…Romney, Obama….It didn’t matter…
The monkee man speaks
“SSS hangs his hat the wisdom of napari/monkee dick, who in a previous comment said the Chinese pollution is no big deal.
Now that’s funny.
Monkee dick also said he lived in Boston on the Charles River. ”
Admin losing argument on BP reverts to blathering about problems in China, the Charles river, insults, and anything else to divert attention away from the facts. lol
Anonymous
The monkee man speaks says:
I live on the gulf of mexico. I walk the beaches and eat the fish. Zero evidence of oil pollution.
time to move on….
Thats bs and you know it, walk the beach and you will see tarballs and all other bits of flotsam from the offshore wells.
But will you eat the fish off the shore near Fukushima, Monkee Fuck?
The coverup was that the BP spill was preventable, should never had happened. Thats where the cover-up is not that the Earth wont eventually recover from it.
“Maintaining silence about a dirty truth is another way of lying, a common practice in high places.”
Michael Parenti
Billy
Bunch of “Save Gaia” bullshit…
The Earth doesn’t need “saving” and I find all these tree-hugging fucks to be a pile of hypocritical, self-righteous retards… 99.9% of everything that has ever lived, is now DEAD. Extinct. Gone.
As for humanity – that curious species of hairless ape whose main occupations seem to be killing each other and accumulating little bits of paper… well, we can set off every nuke we got. Blow the fuck out of the whole planet…
Life will return. It might take a few million years, but life WILL return in all it’s diversity… it might not look a bit like what we have today, but it WILL return…
What the tree-hugging Gaia zealots actually mean is “Save US”.
And as far as the efforts of the hairless apes having an effect on the climate of the planet?
Highly doubtful…
ONE active volcano, of which there are 600 active volcanoes on Earth, spews out more CFC’s in ONE DAY than all the internal combustion engines ever made in the history of mankind, combined.
Listening to the Climate Change zealots, humans will be the end of Earth… what a load of shit. The climate of the Earth has ALWAYS been changing… in fact, there was only one period en-which the climate of the Earth was stable and unchanging… and that was “snowball earth” where all life on Earth truly was driven to the brink of extinction…
And petroleum has been burbling to the surface of the earth for thousands of years. Under the oceans, too…
This too, shall pass…
Anonymous
THE DUDE ABIDES, THE EARTH ABIDES. I’d rather hug a tree than a politician or banker.
The monkee man speaks
This is good for a laugh.
I grew up by the river Charles in Boston got sick of the cold winters and migrated south. Now Im comfortable year round with no complaints except for collectivists who want to legally take my money to live.
On the other side of the river we have admin who’s a stick in the mud and whines all season about the cold winter but never does anything about it.
Admin posts an article and jumps in on this thread and DOESN’T get his usual shit-ton of yellow screens. Main supporter? Bat-shit crazy Anon.
I win.
Time to go beddy-bye. I’m gonna sleep like a baby.
Bayou Bitch
SSS
You, sir, are an idiot. Did you work on the boats and come home every night puking and gasping for air, did you walk our once preistine beaches and find decaying corpses of dolphins or turtles>?
Did you see your home drop 40% in value?
No I didn’t think so….so til you live with us, shut the hell up?
When the massive earthquake erupfs under sea, I hope the 90 foot tsunami gets you first
Save yourself an hour and a half watching this bullshit “Green Planet” production. That intro to the film should set off alarm bells right there.
Just like the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska and every other oil spill you can cite, the Earth will, in George Carlin’s words, “Shake this off like a bad case of the fleas.”
Really a ludicrous assertion that the earth just shakes
it off. Have a nice tar ball shrimp scampi, sounds good.
Quite the dilemma isn’t it, we created the corporate oil monster
and feed it proper nourishment to grow. After this winter I much rather have my gas
powered dual stage snow thrower. Damn it I want my cake…
“Really a ludicrous assertion that the earth just shakes it (the BP oil spill) off.”
—-Anon
Name me a situation when it hasn’t.
Well ssss you are right the old rock that is the earth is
relatively eternal. The question is how fast can humanity turn the
whole place into a toxic waste dump that can’t support life
as we know it. I acknowledge being a participant in creating
this lousy future, what a legacy…..but I try to remain conscious
of my energy use and think of my children
“Well sss you are right the old rock that is the earth is relatively eternal. The question is how fast can humanity turn the whole place into a toxic waste dump that can’t support life as we know it.”
—-Anon
Wrong. You are assuming that WE, the so-called all powerful organisms known as humanity, can turn the Earth into a toxic waste dump.
We can’t. Name me a situation where that’s probable, much less possible.
I live on the gulf of mexico. I walk the beaches and eat the fish. Zero evidence of oil pollution.
time to move on….
SSS hangs his hat the wisdom of napari/monkee dick, who in a previous comment said the Chinese pollution is no big deal.
Now that’s funny.
Monkee dick also said he lived in Boston on the Charles River.
“The monkee man speaks says:
I live on the gulf of mexico. I walk the beaches and eat the fish. Zero evidence of oil pollution.
time to move on….”
The defense rests. Move for dismissal.
SSS
my wifes sister sent us a picture of a fish she caught in florida…you could see the black oil in the thing
as for naming places we have as a species turned in to a waste dump, how many examples would you like?
start by googling poisoned places
then toxic places, then radioactive places
there are just far to many to attempt to list, but at least you have an idea where to start educating yourself
I cant even believe you are unaware of things like fukushima and Chernobyl
must be mighty comfortable under that rock, as I get the impression you don’t come out from under it to often
to all it may concern, i am prepared to be attacked in advance for my views, since my opionin was previously most unwelcome . i see the headline reference, my first thought when it occured, with zero knowledge it was most odd since POTUS had made an offshore statement. why would any company rush a mega jackpot hit, all the expenses for development would quickly be repaid. reminded me of brown crashing into a mountain in yugoslavia, i am not a wall mart poster child, i read the sight because impossible not to be a gainful experience. yet when timing is out of sync i wonder. i watched the maritime hearings hardly the first time deckhands are expendable. think stalin said one death a tragedy a million a statistic. lenin and stalin knew very well what the masses wanted to hear. same old same old. if everyone wishes to get their rocks off blasting me, this time i will be prepared and stay dormant, yet this is a great site if you wish to learn. i have not read article regarding BP, i do know middle class britians took a hit and shortly there after bp found a home russia, subject to challenge, no footnotes of support. thanks, bring on the wolves.
Dolphin Illnesses Linked to Gulf Oil Spill
“I’ve never seen such a high prevalence” of ailments, says U.S. government researcher.
By Ker Than
For National Geographic
Published December 20, 2013
Dolphins living in an area heavily impacted by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill show higher incidences of lung disease, hormonal abnormalities, and other health effects, a new study finds.
The research, led by U.S. government scientists and funded by BP, the oil company that operated the ill-fated Macondo well, provides the clearest evidence to date linking the oil disaster with potentially deadly health effects in bottlenose dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico. (See related quiz: “How Much Do You Know About the Gulf Oil Spill?”)
The dolphin study was done as part of a process led by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) called a Natural Resource Damage Assessment that investigates whether the spill was responsible for any damage to wildlife or natural resources.
“I’ve never seen such a high prevalence of very sick animals—and with unusual conditions such as the adrenal hormone abnormalities,” study leader Lori Schwake, a NOAA scientist, said in a statement. (See related, “Gulf Oil Spill Pictures: Ten New Studies Show Impact on Coast.”)
Mobi Solangi, who directs the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies (IMMS) in Gulfport, Mississippi and was not involved in the study, called the study a “good first step [that] shows the possibility of a link,” he said. (See related, “Dolphin Baby Die-Off in Gulf Puzzles Scientists.”)
Toxic Oil Effects
For the study, the scientists compared the health of dolphins in Louisiana’s Barataria Bay, which was heavily oiled during the April 2010 spill that spewed an estimated 5 billion of barrels of crude oil into the Gulf, with another dolphin population living farther away, in Sarasota Bay, Florida, one year after the spill, in 2011. (Related: “The Next Oil Spill: Five Needed Mandates to Head it Off” and “Gulf Spill Dispersants Surprisingly Long-lasting”)
About 30 dolphins in Barataria Bay were caught, examined and released. The checkups included an ultrasound examination to assess the animals’ lung conditions. The researchers concluded that many of the dolphins suffered from moderate to severe lung disease associated with oil contamination. Almost half had “a guarded or worse prognosis, and 17 percent were considered poor or grave, indicating they weren’t expected to live,” according to the study, which was published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
The researchers also found that the Barataria Bay population overall had very low levels of adrenal hormones, which are critical for responding to stress, and that 25 percent of the dolphins were significantly underweight.
The team also noticed other disturbing signs. “We had one animal that was actually pregnant, but the fetus was nonviable,” Schwacke told National Geographic.
“There was no heartbeat or movement and it looked like it may have been dead a week or so … The interesting thing was the stage of pregnancy was the second trimester. A lot of the things that you think of that causes abortions in dolphins hits in the third trimester. So seeing something like that in the second trimester is unusual, and it’s certainly consistent with a toxic effect.” (See related story: “BP Oil Spill’s Sticky Remains Wash Up Sporadically on Gulf Beaches”)
In contrast, the control group of 15 dolphins in Sarasota Bay which was not affected by the oil spill did not show elevated levels of lung disease or other health effects.
Apples and Oranges
BP spokesperson Jason Ryan disputed the study’s findings, saying that the symptoms the scientists observed in their study has been seen in other dolphin mortality events that have been linked to contaminants and conditions found in the northern Gulf, including “PCBs, DDT and pesticides, unusual cold stun events, and toxins from harmful algal blooms.”
“The symptoms are also consistent with natural diseases such as Morbillivirus and Brucellosis,” Ryan said in an email.
Moreover, he added, dolphin mortality events occur with some regularity in the Gulf of Mexico and around the world and have for years.
But NOAA’s Schwacke said her team did take steps to rule out the possibility of other factors being responsible for the dolphin’s poor health.
“We looked at a broad suite of contaminants, including PCBs and DDT…and the levels in Barataria were actually lower than in Sarasota Bay,” she said.
An online statement by BP also criticized the scientists’ decision to compare dolphins in Barataria Bay with those living Sarasota Bay. “The two populations are genetically different and the environments are different,” the statement reads.
“Barataria Bay is much more industrialized and has experienced numerous oil and fuel spills over the years, as well as the release of other contaminants. Sarasota Bay dolphins had been captured and sampled for health assessments and other measurements for many years. They were much more used to being around people and to being captured-released than were the Barataria Bay dolphins, and this may have resulted in more stress to the Barataria Bay animals.”
‘No Doubt’
Solangi of IMMS said that BP’s criticisms of the study were valid, especially the point about the two dolphins group not living in comparable habitats.
“It would be like comparing a population [of people] living in the [United States] with a population in Africa or South America. You can’t do that,” Solangi said.
Nevertheless, Solangi said he has no doubt that the 2010 oil disaster played a role in the dolphins’ health declines.
“There’s no question in my mind that the oil is a contributing factor. It’s the elephant in the room,” he said.
Schwacke said her team is already seeking funding for a followup study in Barataria Bay next summer that will look at the same dolphin population, and perhaps even the same individuals if any of them are alive. (Related Photos: “Gulf Oil Spill: Oiled Beaches Timeline”)
The new findings come in a week when BP announced its first significant oil discovery in the Gulf of Mexico since the Deepwater Horizon spill. The discovery, at its Gila prospect, which it co-owns with ConocoPhillips, is about 300 miles (482 kilometers) southwest of New Orleans, and in a lease block called Keathley Canyon, roughly 200 miles southwest of the Mississippi Canyon lease block that held the Macondo well. BP has previously announced two other discoveries in the same geological formation as Gila, the Paleogene trend, Kaskida in 2006 and Tiber in 2009. BP’s plans for development in the Tiber in 2010 were derailed by the Macondo spill. (Related Photos: “Four New Offshore Drilling Frontiers”)
BP said that the Gila discovery “is a further sign that momentum is returning to BP’s drilling operations and well execution in the Gulf of Mexico,” said Richard Morrison, regional president of BP’s Gulf of Mexico business.
SSS thinks edible air can solve worldwide starvation. There is nothing corporations can possibly do that will not fix itself.
Shit happens.
George Carlin (1988) on the Reagan administration….Since fucktard SSS uses a George Carlin quote to support his idiotic stance…
You really think that Chernobyl and Fukishima, or even the BP oil disaster, while not killing the earth, does not affect us or what we eat, breath or drink? Frikin moron…
Of course some believe we are not large enough to affect our home planet….Of course some of us are willfully blind…But, while the earth might be able to shake everything off we do it, it would likely only be able to do that when it finally shakes of humanity….
The stupidity here started when a black man was elected…Romney, Obama….It didn’t matter…
“SSS hangs his hat the wisdom of napari/monkee dick, who in a previous comment said the Chinese pollution is no big deal.
Now that’s funny.
Monkee dick also said he lived in Boston on the Charles River. ”
Admin losing argument on BP reverts to blathering about problems in China, the Charles river, insults, and anything else to divert attention away from the facts. lol
The monkee man speaks says:
I live on the gulf of mexico. I walk the beaches and eat the fish. Zero evidence of oil pollution.
time to move on….
Thats bs and you know it, walk the beach and you will see tarballs and all other bits of flotsam from the offshore wells.
But will you eat the fish off the shore near Fukushima, Monkee Fuck?
The coverup was that the BP spill was preventable, should never had happened. Thats where the cover-up is not that the Earth wont eventually recover from it.
“Maintaining silence about a dirty truth is another way of lying, a common practice in high places.”
Michael Parenti
Bunch of “Save Gaia” bullshit…
The Earth doesn’t need “saving” and I find all these tree-hugging fucks to be a pile of hypocritical, self-righteous retards… 99.9% of everything that has ever lived, is now DEAD. Extinct. Gone.
As for humanity – that curious species of hairless ape whose main occupations seem to be killing each other and accumulating little bits of paper… well, we can set off every nuke we got. Blow the fuck out of the whole planet…
Life will return. It might take a few million years, but life WILL return in all it’s diversity… it might not look a bit like what we have today, but it WILL return…
What the tree-hugging Gaia zealots actually mean is “Save US”.
And as far as the efforts of the hairless apes having an effect on the climate of the planet?
Highly doubtful…
ONE active volcano, of which there are 600 active volcanoes on Earth, spews out more CFC’s in ONE DAY than all the internal combustion engines ever made in the history of mankind, combined.
Listening to the Climate Change zealots, humans will be the end of Earth… what a load of shit. The climate of the Earth has ALWAYS been changing… in fact, there was only one period en-which the climate of the Earth was stable and unchanging… and that was “snowball earth” where all life on Earth truly was driven to the brink of extinction…
And petroleum has been burbling to the surface of the earth for thousands of years. Under the oceans, too…
This too, shall pass…
THE DUDE ABIDES, THE EARTH ABIDES. I’d rather hug a tree than a politician or banker.
This is good for a laugh.
I grew up by the river Charles in Boston got sick of the cold winters and migrated south. Now Im comfortable year round with no complaints except for collectivists who want to legally take my money to live.
On the other side of the river we have admin who’s a stick in the mud and whines all season about the cold winter but never does anything about it.
At least we both made our own choice. lol
Admin posts an article and jumps in on this thread and DOESN’T get his usual shit-ton of yellow screens. Main supporter? Bat-shit crazy Anon.
I win.
Time to go beddy-bye. I’m gonna sleep like a baby.
SSS
You, sir, are an idiot. Did you work on the boats and come home every night puking and gasping for air, did you walk our once preistine beaches and find decaying corpses of dolphins or turtles>?
Did you see your home drop 40% in value?
No I didn’t think so….so til you live with us, shut the hell up?
When the massive earthquake erupfs under sea, I hope the 90 foot tsunami gets you first
Bayou Bitch serves SSS a dose of reality. Very nice.