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OBAMA QUOTE GENERATOR July 18, 2008

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EDITOR’S NOTES:  Hattip to Pat at BornAgainRedneck

 

Generate a Barack Obama Quote!


“I think it’s time we had a national conversation about immigrants. We need to get past all the assholes and recognize that we are our own best hope for overcoming focksticks. We need conservatives, not moronic buttswabs. Conservatives are our security. And we need to have change in immigrants.”
Generate your Barack Obama quote at Buttafly.com

WINSTON CHURCHILL ON ISLAM July 17, 2008

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“How dreadful are the curses which Mohammedanism lays on its votaries! Besides the fanatical frenzy, which is as dangerous in a man as hydrophobia in a dog, there is this fearful fatalistic apathy.

The effects are apparent in many countries. Improvident habits, slovenly systems of agriculture, sluggish methods of commerce, and insecurity of property exist wherever the followers of the Prophet rule or live.

A degraded sensualism deprives this life of its grace and refinement; the next of its dignity and sanctity. The fact that in Mohammedan law every woman must belong to some man as his absolute property - either as a child, a wife, or a concubine - must delay the final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men.”

“Individual Muslims may show splendid qualities. Thousands become the brave and loyal soldiers of the Queen; all know how to die; but the influence of the religion paralyzes the social development of those who follow it.

No stronger retrograde force exists in the world. Far from being moribund, Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith. It has already spread throughout Central Africa, raising fearless warriors at every step; and were it not that Christianity is sheltered in the strong arms of science - the science against which it had vainly struggled - the civilisation of modern Europe might fall, as fell the civilisation of ancient Rome.”

(The River War, first edition, Vol. II, pages 248-50) London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1899

BOMBSHELL: NYT-KRISTOF: TAPE OF OBAMA CHANTING MUSLIM CALL TO PRAYER July 16, 2008

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http://oldatlanticlighthouse.wordpress.com/2008/07/15/kristof-new-york-times-has-tape-obama-muslim-prayer-arabic/

URGENT RED ROCKET — FLASH!!

http://oldatlanticlighthouse.wordpress.com/2008/07/15/kristof-new-york-times-has-tape-obama-muslim-prayer-arabic/

EDITOR’S NOTE:  When (not if) this tape pans out, it is the end of Mr. Barry Hussein Obama’s campaign.  What’s bad is — Hillary will take his place. Al Czervic

DICK GROPES BOOBS July 16, 2008

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-Comedian Andy Dick was arrested this morning by California cops on drug and sexual battery charges.

Dick, 42, was nabbed around 2 AM in a Riverside County parking lot after he allegedly groped the breasts of a 17-year-old girl and then pulled the teen’s tank top and bra down, exposing her breasts (the incident occurred outside the Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant).

 During a search of Dick, police discovered a small amount of marijuana in his pants pocket and a single Xanax pill for which he did not have a prescription. An “extremely intoxicated” Dick was booked into the Southwest Detention Center, where bail was set at $5,000.

 In May 2004, Dick was arrested on a pot possession charge while attending the Coachella music festival, also in Riverside County. LINK

EDITOR’S NOTES: Sometimes a guy’s name says it all. Sometimes the headlines just write themselves.

CONVICT GETS 23 YEARS FOR EYE STABBING July 16, 2008

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An inmate convicted of stabbing another inmate in the eye, blinding him, was sentenced  to 23 years in state prison, the Broome County District Attorney’s Office announced.

Eddie M. Robinson, 40, was sentenced today in Broome County Court by Judge Patrick H. Mathews.

A jury in March said Robinson stabbed Eddie Brabham in the eye with a pen on April 21, 2006. STORY LINK

Technorati tags: GUNS, RBKA, POLITICS, POLICE, SECOND AMENDMENT, HILLARY CLINTON, CIVIL RIGHTS

ED NOTES: Haven’t I been harping on the dangers to society that pens cause? Think of it — thousands of pens in public schools alone! Not to mention pens in cars, on the streets, carried around loaded in purses, and the fact that the pen is mightier than the sword! FerGawdSake let’s get this pen epidemic under control by passing strict pen control laws NOW!

LEFTIE MEDIA BEDMATES July 16, 2008

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EDITOR’S NOTES: We’re putting up three of our favorite cartoons gleaned of the course of a couple of years today just as a break from the tedium of text. Enjoy. Al Czervic

MILITARY SUPPORT July 16, 2008

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YOUR CONGRESSMAN SENDS HIS NONBINDING SUPPORT

YOUR CONGRESSMAN SENDS HIS NONBINDING SUPPORT

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TERRORISTS AND THE PRESS July 16, 2008

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THE SURGE IS WORKING July 15, 2008

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THE REAL OBAMA BIRTH CERTIFICATE July 15, 2008

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EDITOR’S NOTES:  Thanks to the wonderful software of GIMP (Photoshop is so blasé), we’ve uncovered the real  Obama birth certificate. Let the whining commence. CLICK THE PIC TO ENLARGE.  Al Czervic.

THE REAL OBAMA BIRTH CERTIFICATE

ABORTION: THE LIBERAL OPTION July 15, 2008

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CANADA TO DEPORT HIPPY DESERTER July 15, 2008

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U.S. army deserter Robin Long is slated to be deported back to his army base in Fort Knox, Ky., Tuesday, which would make him the first resister to the U.S. war effort in Iraq to be sent out of Canada.

Madam Justice Anne Mactavish of the Federal Court of Canada cleared the way for the deportation late Monday, dismissing a last-ditch attempt to delay the process while the 25-year-old pursued further appeals. [...]

 Mr. Long intended to train as a tank commander. “He wanted to go to defend his country,” his lawyer said.

His perspective changed while in training at the army base at Fort Knox. After hearing that weapons of mass destruction had not been found in Iraq, Mr. Long thought the U.S. had no reason for being at war. Also, he was troubled by evidence of abuse of Iraqi detainees that came out in May of 2004.LINK

EDITOR’S NOTES:  Take a look at this disgusting shred of human debris. He’s not exactly the kind of guy you’d spend a week in a hunting camp with.  But I’ll betcha a dollar to a hole in a rubber donut he’s an Obama voter.  Alas, the Army will probably give him a bad conduct discharge instead of the 30 years at hard labor in Leavenworth that he deserves.

 

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THOSE EAST COAST COWS ARE HIP July 14, 2008

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The east coast cows are hip, I really dig those bells they wear, and the southern cows with the way they moo, knock me out when I’m down there, but I wish they all could be California cows

A group of animal rescuers are helping a young cow through her identity crisis. Milkshake the cow spent the first two years of her life confined to a small, filthy pen before being rescued by the Grace Foundation in El Dorado Hills, California. During the two years spent in confinement, Milkshake never learned to become a cow. “She doesn’t know she’s a cow. She doesn’t know where she fits,” caretaker Beth DeCaprio explained. Milkshake got her name from a young boy who thought she looked like a milkshake before the blending.

Since arriving at the Grace Foundation Milkshake has spent most of her time inside and around people. The bovine even attends classes with children. DeCaprio said that the reason Milkshake became attached to people was because she was taken from her mother at only two weeks of age. During her two years cooped up in a small pen, Milkshake never even learned to graze.

The 1,200-pound Hereford is trying to make up for lost time of socializing by playing with a rescued puppy named Riley at the foundation. “I have been teaching Riley to ride on her back, and they both seem to like it,” DeCaprio said. LINK

PERIODIC TABLE AND ELEMENTS ON YOUTUBE July 14, 2008

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Here’s a new YouTube channel from Nottingham University in the UK — here, scientist-vloggers are in the process of posting a video for each element of the periodic table. Sort of “Mythbusters” meets chemistry, with real live awesome mad scientist hair. This is one of the neatest, most clever, and most enduringly valuable things I’ve seen on YT in a while.

Periodic Table of Videos channel, and The “sodium” video, above, is a good place to start.

TORONTO PAPER: OBAMA’S BIRTH CERT FAKE July 13, 2008

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BOMBSHELL!

According to Israelinsider, “It is now a certainty that the “birth certificate” claimed by the Barack Obama campaign as authentic is a photoshopped fake.”

“The image, purporting to come from the Hawaii Department of Health, has been the subject of intense skepticism in the blogosphere in the past few weeks.  But now the senior spokesman of that Department has confirmed to Israel Insider what are the required features of a certified birth document—features that Obama’s purported “birth certificate” clearly lack.

“That strongly suggests that Daily Kos obtained the image from Photobucket, not the State of Hawaii, the Obama family, or the Obama campaign. Photobucket is not generally known as a credible supplier of official vital records for any of the fifty states, and the liberties that other Photoshoppers took with the certificates confirms this.

“Some of these oddities surfaced in Israel Insider’s previous article on the subject, but new comparative documentary evidence presented below, and official verification obtained by Israel Insider from a senior Hawaiian official, provides the strongest confirmation yet.

“An authentic Hawaiian birth certificate for another Hawaiian individual has since surfaced which, using the same official form as the presumptive Obama certificate, includes an embossed official seal and an authoritative signature, coming through from the back. Obama’s alleged certificate lacks those features, and the certificate number referencing the birth year has been blacked out, making it untraceable. [...]

“Until now, it has been thought that there might be some embarrassing information on the real certificate: was the candidate’s name something other than Barack Hussein Obama II, as it is claimed? Was no father listed because of the uncertainty over Obama’s paternity? Was his father’s race listed as Arab, or Muslim, rather than African? These revelations might be embarrassing, and further undermine his credibility, but he could disavow and downplay their significance. Would revealing such embarrassment outweigh the far greater risks involved in perpetuating a palpable forgery, or passing off an uncertified official document as being certified?

“There is one possibility, however, which alone might justify the risk that Obama and his campaign seems to be taking in putting forward the uncertified document image: Obama was not in fact born in Hawaii and may not be an American citizen at all, or at least not a “natural born citizen” as the Constitution defines the requirement for the nation’s chief executive. Real original birth certificates, circa 1961, have all kinds of verifiable information that would confirm Obama’s origins, or throw them into doubt should they be lacking.

“Research has since uncovered the law, in force at the time of Obama’s birth, that were he to have been born in another country, his young American mother’s youth extended time abroad would not suffice to make him a “natural born citizen.” Even if he were naturalized later—and there is no evidence that he was—he would not be eligible to run for the office of president and—if forgery or misrepresentation were involved—he and his staffers might find themselves facing stiff federal and state charges.  READ MORE HERE

 


Click for higher resolution image
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Click for higher resolution image.

EDITOR’S NOTES:  Of course it’s a fake. What would you expect from the mob connected Rezko group?  The downside is: Hillary can use this as a reason why the DNC Convention should ditch Barry and support her.   Al “I got a valid Birth Certificate” Czervic

 

ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF GAS WELLS — MINIMAL July 12, 2008

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SEE A TOTAL OF NAT GAS INFO IN THE ARCHIVES BY CLICKING HERE

HERE ARE THE FACTS ABOUT GAS DRILLING THAT THE GREEN WHEENIE TREE HUGGING RADICALS DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW:

The Friendsville Group. See their site for valuable photos and other gas information.

A Broad Look At The Environmental Issues

Of Natural Gas Drilling

by Kevin Lewis of The Friendsville Group

INTRO

There is a lot of concern about the environmental issues related to drilling natural gas wells. There is a lot of confusion about those issues as well. The industry prefers to withhold information and wants you to believe that everything is just fine. On the other hand, many of the environmental groups would have you believe that each new well is the start of another Love Canal episode. I’m convinced that the truth is somewhere in the middle. But it’s hard to find a web site or news article related to gas well drilling that is complete and unbiased. I should mention though, one very good source of fact based information is the Oil & Gas Accountability Project’s, “Oil & Gas At Your Door?” (see sources at end). What I’ve tried to do in this report is separate the truth from the nonsense and put this information into perspective. The opinions expressed in this report are my own opinions and should not be considered the opinions of the streering committee or the group as a whole.

THE DEC

One of the best reasons for writing our own lease is to have some control over environmental issues. Although our NY DEC claims to be our ‘protector’, many question whether they will be able to handle any increase in gas drilling in our area. New York has only 4 site inspectors compared to Pennsylvania’s 32. You have to wonder how they’ll be able to cover the territory and be at the drill sites during critical stages. At a recent local meeting, I felt that they provided vague, incomplete answers to serious questions. When pressed further, it became apparent that they ‘regulate’ the drilling companies more through the ‘permitting process’ rather than on-site monitoring. I think that there are some real weak spots in the DEC policies which are mentioned further in this report.

RESEARCH

One of the main things that struck me while doing my research was ‘the numbers’. There aren’t a large number of publicized accidents, spills, etc.. Why is that? Normally, whenever there’s an incident involving water, soil or air pollution, the media is all over it. When visiting environmental sites to find examples of ‘gas wells gone wrong’, it’s mostly the same few incidents and locations that keep showing up. Considering the number of wells drilled all over the US in the past 10 to 20 years, you’d think that there would be many more well publicized incidents if well drilling is as hazardous as some claim.

Critics say there isn’t enough information about the effects of drilling. I say, if you want to study the effects of drilling, just look to Texas, the most-drilled state in the nation. The state of Texas alone had over 1.5 million wells drilled in the last century, yet they still have ample supplies of drinkable water and usable land. It has 266,820 active oil wells and 88,048 active gas wells … that’s a total of 354,868 active over 75,000 wells drilled in New York State in the last century. Over 100 of them are in Broome and Tioga counties. I was unable to find reports of any gas well related catastrophes here in NY or in Texas.

But, there have been problems elsewhere. Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming are clear examples of mismanagement and lack of monitoring by ‘the authorities’ (Bureau of Land Management, EPA, and State Agencies). But in each case, the scope of the drilling had a lot to do with the problems. The drilling in those areas has been so heavy and so concentrated that the terrain resembles an ant farm. The agencies failed to stay ahead of the situation and in some cases common sense was ignored.

If the Marcellus ever truly becomes ‘the next Barnett’ we may need to adapt. But, for the near future, we will not see the extreme level of drilling that caused all the air pollution in Wyoming. And if common sense is used, we won’t see soil pollution like New Mexico or water pollution like Colorado (reasons explained later). I believe the pace of drilling here will proceed slowly when you consider that 1) many gas companies are still focusing on the Barnett Shale in Texas 2) there are several other new and emerging gas fields in the nation 3) there are a limited number of drill rigs in the US 4) the Marcellus Shale covers a huge area, including PA and West Virginia.

ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS

I’ve separated the environmental concerns into two categories: MINOR and MAJOR:

Minor Concerns:

Noise, Lights, Dust, Truck Traffic, Road Deterioration, Loss of ‘Green Space’, Loss of Hunting Area, Habitat Fragmentation

I just don’t get excited about the above mentioned issues. There will be noise, odor, dust, dirt, and mud. Roads will be torn up by heavy truck traffic and some trees will be cut down. But all of these issues are temporary. Roads can be repaved, grass and trees grow back, and life will return to normal when the drilling is finished. I remember during my childhood, having our neighborhood torn up for new gutters, sewers, and pavement … a project that took many months. It was loud, dusty, smelly, and inconvenient, but we survived and everyone was happy with the results. Imagine if a large corporation bought a chunk of wooded land locally to build a new factory. Most would see it as a ‘great thing’ for our area in terms of the jobs and economic boost it would provide. Yet, we’d experience many of the same inconveniences. Gas leasing and production can provide jobs and a serious economic boost as well. You don’t get something for nothing.

* It’s important to note that, although a typical vertical well may take 4 to 6 weeks to complete, some of the newer horizontal drilling plans may take 2 to 3 times longer. This is due to the fact that they can drill several ‘offshoot’ wells from the same horizontal drill pad. Although this is more of a nuisance in the early going, it greatly reduces the number of roads, pits, and pads required.

Major Concerns:

Water Pollution, Soil Pollution, Air Pollution, Water Table Depletion, Catastrophic Accidents (blowouts, explosions, fires, etc.)

For many people, the biggest issue is the chemicals that are added to the frac water and drilling muds. Exactly what chemicals are used and how much is not fully known. The Energy Bill of 2005 exempts oil & gas companies from having to disclose the proprietary chemical contents of drilling & completing processes. But the most commonly sited hazardous chemicals reported to be in these fluids are: acetone, benzene, ethylbenzene, toluene, and xylene. These are all toxic and/or carcinogenic substances that have well-known and serious negative health effects.

What hasn’t been made clear is the level of risk assumed at the concentrations used. If a drilling accident or spill occurred, would the exposure level from soil, water, or air contamination be lethal, moderate, or minuscule? And how does it compare to the exposure we experience every day from products in our homes, automobile exhaust and our local factories? We need to put it in perspective. Again, the industry says this almost never happens and if it ever did, the exposure levels would be so low that it would not present a serious problem. On the other side are the environmentalists who claim that it does happen and it is a serious problem. What’s the real story?

Water Pollution - How often does it happen? Again, let’s look at Texas. The Texas Groundwater Protection Committee’s Joint Groundwater Monitoring and Contamination Report – 2004 (TGPC, 2005) lists 1,440 groundwater contamination cases (of all types) in a twenty-county study area. This 20 county area includes the Barnett Shale ‘sweet spot’ where heavy drilling has occurred. What they discovered was that the vast majority of cases did not involve oil & gas field operations but rather spills and leaks of finished petroleum products. Of these cases:

- 1,428 cases were not related to oil & gas field operation and involved contamination by gasoline, diesel, or products, mostly (1,020) related to releases from petroleum storage tank facilities.

- 12 cases were related to gas & oilfield activities.

The report did not state the scope of the contamination and the impacts each case had, but it puts it into perspective … only 12 out of 1,440 contaminations were due to gas & oilfield operations. By comparison, it doesn’t seem to be a huge problem, even in heavily drilled Texas.

Here at home, the NY State Office of the Attorney General states that, “Oil spills from leaking underground storage tanks at homes and gas stations are the largest single threat to groundwater quality in the United States today. An estimated 1.2 million tanks nationwide, many of which were installed prior to new regulations in 1988, are a concern because tanks corrode quickly when buried unprotected in the soil. Corrosion, and other factors such as improper installation, spills during product delivery, and piping failures, have already caused more than 400,000 confirmed underground storage tank leaks nationwide.” A 1998 survey by the DEC found that gasoline spills contaminated more than 800 private wells and forty-seven public water supply wells in New York State. This is something that

is happening, but no one’s talking about shutting down gas stations. An occasional well accident is something that iscould happen and people are talking about abandoning the natural gas industry.

Nonetheless, water pollution from gas and oilfield operations can happen, and it can happen in a couple of different ways:

- Well Casing/Cement Failure - After the well casing (piping) is put in the ground, the drilling company pumps cement along the outside of the casing from top to bottom. This seals off the surrounding rock layers from the gas and high pressure frac water, preventing contamination of any underground water. If the cementing of the well casing is not done properly, or if the cement does not seal off as it should (during the high-pressure frac’ing process), the frac water could flow up along the outside of the well bore and into other layers of rock which may contain well water. * The DEC doesn’t require that the cement be tested for strength as it is in bridges and buildings.

From what I’ve been able to determine, well casing or cementing failures are an extremely rare occurrence as the industry claims. I’ve only found 2 cases where gas well casing failures caused water well pollution. I saw mention of another in Madison, Ohio but apparently it was only methane that found it’s way into the water (no fluids). I could not find any further details about that one. I wouldn’t doubt that there are more, but for all the hours of searching I did, this is all I could come up with.

CASE #1 - In Grandview, Texas, (Jan 200 8) it is thought (but not proven) that the well casing or concrete failed during the frac’ing process of a newly drilled gas well. In this case, high sulfate concentrations, other contaminants, and traces of toluene were found in 3 water wells within a couple hundred yards of the gas well. The water wells were drilled into a shallow groundwater supply called the Woodbine aquifer. At two different times after the incident, the landowners had the water tested by independent labs which confirmed the previous results. The article did not state what the actual levels were but, in each test, the toluene was below the EPA max. acceptable level. * It should be noted in this case that the EPA had tested this aquifer several years before the drilling took place and found that 61% of the samples were above the EPA limits for sulfates with traces of other gasoline additives, insecticides, pesticides, and solvents. So it seems believable that the gas well was not responsible for all of the contamination. The original news article never mentioned this, nor have any of the environmental sites that are using this incident as an example. I’ve not been able to find any reports of the contamination spreading to any other local wells.

CASE #2 - In Clark, Wyoming, (Aug 2006) a drilling rig hit an extremely high-pressured gas pocket at about 8,500 feet. The gas shot up the well with enough force that it blew out a weak spot in the side of the well casing (underground). In this episode, one water well on an adjacent property was affected and it has tested above EPA limits for toluene. As in case #1, the article did not say what the exact toluene levels were. Were they way above the limit or just slightly above? No mention was made of any follow-up testing and what the results might have been. Monitoring wells have been dug all around the affected area. Again, I have been keeping an eye out for articles and reports of the contamination spreading, but have found none.

Note: Environmentalists often site two cases in Texas (towns of Chico-2005 & DeBerry-1997) where nearby water wells were contaminated, but these were not gas wells involved. They were ‘injection wells’ (discussed later) into which the state of Texas allows all kinds of drilling wastes to be pumped at high pressure. It was determined that the operators were pumping into the wells at excessive pressures.

This is the type of accident (well casing/ cement failure), though, that would pose the biggest risk to a major aquifer. But how much of a risk? Critics warn that one well accident could condemn the drinking water for large portions of the state. How likely is this? The first accident mentioned above affected only 3 nearby water wells, with toluene levels below EPA limits. The second blowout did put toluene levels above the EPA limit but has so far only affected one nearby water well. How much effect would this type of accident truly have on a major aquifer, where the dilution rate would be considerable? With the millions of wells drilled in this country, can anyone find a case of an entire aquifer being condemned due to a gas drilling mishap? I can’t, and something of that magnitude would be hugely publicized. As I said before, this type of failure is extremely rare. Part of the reason may be that, this the last thing that the drilling company wants. If it does happen, the well is ruined and it’s a major loss for the gas company at $3 - $5 million per well.

- Pit Failure - Most drilling companies keep their contaminated waste water in open earthen pits that have a one-piece poly liner covering the bottom and sides of the pit. Accidental contamination can occur if the waste water escapes from the pits into the surrounding soil and leaches into a nearby water supply. These spills can be caused by poor pit construction (cave-ins), torn liners, and stormwater overflows. In my opinion, these pits are the weakest link in the whole drilling process.

This type of accident occurs more frequently, but again, in relation to the number of wells drilled, it’s not an everyday occurrence. There are however, several recent and well publicized incidents of contamination due to waste water pits leaking. Four of those incidents occurred in Garfield County, Colorado where the drilling companies located their pits right on the banks of a popular irrigation-source river. The pits leaked and the waste water went right into the river (duh!). Colorado has since introduced legislation that prohibits the use of open pits within a certain distance to rivers and streams. In such cases, drillers are now required to use ‘closed loop’ systems where the water is pumped directly from the well equipment into a holding tank. * The NY DEC has no such regulation and allows pits to be within 50 ft of rivers and streams (duh!). It’s been shown that ‘closed loop’ systems actually save the drilling companies money while reducing their liability. With environmental pressure building, we’ll see more of these systems in use.

One of the issues here is the thickness of the poly liners used in these pits. I’ve heard that some liners are only about 6 mil, while other states such as Michigan require 50 mil. * Unfortunately, the NY DEC has no spec for the liner thickness. There’s been a lot of attention paid to Hickory, PA, where a pit liner leak apparently contaminated a landowner’s pond. This case has been exploited by the ‘anti-drilling’ environmental groups, one of whom made several videos of the landowner and a few neighbors relating the problems they’ve experienced due to the gas wells. These videos are very one-sided, long on sentiment and short on fact but they can be seen at damascuscitizens.org.

New Mexico is another area often sited by environmental groups and, it’s true, they’ve had some serious pollution due to these waste pits. However, most of it is due to the fact that, for a long time, they never even required pit liners. Drilling companies are required to immediately report pit failures or any other episode resulting in contamination. Small pit/liner leaks may take several days to notice with small volumes released. Major pit/liner leaks are usually noticed quickly. Requiring a thicker pit liner may be an option when writing the terms for our lease.

- Ground Spills - Accidental ground spills of gasoline, diesel fuel, and other liquids can occur on a drill site just like any other industrial or construction site. Most spills of this type are small spills because human error is involved and the mistakes are quickly detected/corrected. Determining an average frequency of these incidents is very difficult, but after reviewing several monthly reports (for the state of Texas), it would seem that a typical month might record 30 well-related spills of all types. The spill materials are put into 3 categories, “crude oil, gas well fluid, and products”. Of the 30 incidents, 5 might involve gas well fluids from a tank (as opposed to a pipeline or other container). Reasons for the spills were things such as “opened wrong valve”, “internal rust or corrosion”.

- Injection Wells - In some states drilling companies are allowed to drill “disposal wells’ deep into porous rock formations. They then pump the contaminated waste water from drilling operations into these wells. The wastes are supposedly down so far that they can never make their way back up to the strata where fresh water supplies exist. * The DEC says that there are ‘a few’ injection wells in NY and that those are used for solution salt mining. A search on the DEC web site for all active wells in NY seems to indicate that this is true. It’s unclear however, how they monitor what wastes actually wind up in these wells. Injections wells are something that we don’t want in our area and, if need be, we can word our lease to prevent this from happening.

- Water Table Disturbance - Any time a well is drilled through a water table, it’s bound to ‘stir up’ the water and sediment. This can happen with water wells or gas wells and it is not uncommon. One article I read explained that, naturally occurring hydrogen sulfide and salt tend to lie on the bottom of the aquifers, but when disturbed, they can mix with the water to deliver an unpleasant taste and odor. But the disturbance is usually minimal and clears up a short time afterward. In extreme cases, very small water wells can empty into the well shaft before the crews have a chance to set the casing and concrete. These small wells are typically very shallow and will be replenished over time by rain water or ‘bleed’ from another nearby underground pool.

Disturbing other layers of rock close to the water table can sometimes cause low levels of natural gas to find it’s way into water wells. This can happen even when drilling another water well on an adjacent property. In some cases, the problem may actually be due to a rusted or corroded casing of the water well itself. A Canadian study has shown that the fugitive methane is often neutralized (oxidized) by bacteria in the water. But with larger amounts of methane, for wells located outside of any structure, simply installing a vented well cap may provide sufficient venting prior to water entering the home.

Should any of the above conditions occur, the DEC should be notified and they will have the drilling company set up an alternate water supply. In any event, this emphasizes the importance of pre-drill water testing and having a properly worded lease to help ensure that the drilling company corrects the situation and/or pays for another suitable water well for you.

Soil Contamination - The causes of soil contamination are the same as for water contamination mentioned above. In addition, some states allow ‘land farming’. This where the small pieces of rock from the drilling operation are washed and then spread over any nearby fields. There are some concerns about this practice due to the fact that the bits of shale and other materials brought up by the drilling process may have a low level of radioactivity . These materials are known as NORM (Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials). So how bad is this stuff?

This is one thing that the DEC has tested (from NY wells) and it has been found to be extremely low level, in most cases indistinguishable from ‘background’ readings. Terry Engelder, prominent Geology Professor at Penn State, says the level of radioactivity is so low that it is comparable to that given off by the luminescent dials we find on wrist watches. Regardless, the DEC has said that on-site land farming is not allowed; that all such wastes are to be trucked to an off-site, certified waste disposal area.

Air Pollution -

- Exhaust From Machinery - The largest source of air pollution would probably be the exhaust from trucks, generators, and drill rigs, all of which are operating around the clock. Environmental sites warn of the ‘smoke belching’ diesel engines releasing benzene and other particulate matter into the air. But, how is this any more threatening to our environment than the machinery found at big construction sites or the highway repaving projects that we see every summer? And how does it compare to the countless numbers of diesel engine tractor trailers rolling on our local roads? Gas well drilling sites are just temporary whereas those big rigs are rolling through our community all day, every day.

One problem area often mentioned by environmental sites is Boulder, Wyoming, where pollution from vehicles and equipment in the gas fields — along with dust, weather and geography — have helped raise ozone levels to those of big cities in the summertime. Does this mean that any area getting gas wells will suffer the same fate? The simple answer is, no. The scope of the operations there is on a scale that we are not likely to see. These are federal lands that were opened up to an army of drillers. They did not have individual property owners to deal with and they didn’t utilize directional drilling. Rather, they put in over 1,000 vertical wells using tight 40 acre spacing at a density of 64 wells per sq. mile (see photos at ww.voiceforthewild.org/blm/Jonah_field/). For us to see that level of activity, they’d have to pull every drill rig from the Barnett Shale, ship them up here, and drill non-stop for over a year. Adding to the problem there are other unique factors. Ozone needs sunlight to form, and environmental officials believe the ozone levels in Wyoming this past winter were exacerbated by heavy snow cover, which intensified the sunlight by reflecting it off the snow. In 2007, when the area had little snow cover, there were no elevated ozone readings. Also contributing to the situation are geographical factors of the area. Rare temperature inversions occur there (cold air is trapped close to the ground) and the surrounding mountains actually help hold the pollution in the valley.

Directional drilling in our area will help reduce the overall air pollution because operators can extract the same amount of gas from one horizontal well drill pad as they can from 16 vertical well drill pads. That’s 15 fewer drill pads, roads, and pits that need to be built by excavators, bulldozers, dumptrucks, etc..

- Evaporation - Some of the toxic chemicals used may also contribute to air pollution. Benzene and some other toxicants found in frac water are highly evaporative chemicals that do not mix well with water. Being lighter than water, they can sit on the water’s surface, evaporate, and be discharged to the air. I’m not sure that this is a bad thing. Not that we want chemicals in the air, but isn’t it better to have it in the air than the water? Isn’t this exactly what ‘scrubbers’ do when they treat soil and water from spill areas? They evaporate chemicals and discharge to the air. But, what is the quantity that we’re talking about here? And if it’s so hazardous, why aren’t the drill site workers who are around it every day falling over dead? The fact is acetone, benzene, toluene, and xylene all break down in the atmosphere within days. But, let’s put it in perspective.

In 2002, Lockheed Martin reportedly released 23,766 lbs. of known and suspected toxicants into the air and water while Hadco released 12,020 lbs. Add to that the emissions from all the other factories, gas stations, and home furnaces in the area and the numbers would be huge. Or again, let’s compare it to the benzene produced by the motor vehicles we drive. Based on average benzene emissions from auto tailpipes, a Wisconsin study estimated that, on a one mile section of Interstate 90/94, motor vehicles unleashed approx. 4,260 lbs. of benzene per year. That’s just a one mile section! The bottom line is, if your driving your car in traffic, you’re sniffing benzene. It seems inconceivable to me that evaporation from a few temporary waste water pits could equal or exceed those figures.

- Flaring - Before putting a new gas well online, the operator often needs to gets rid of excess frac water from the well. They do this by igniting a stream of gas direct from the wellhead, a practice known as flaring. This can be a long, noisy process that may be repeated for several days and for hours at a time. On the other hand, flaring can be avoided altogether if the operator has equipment that can separate the large amounts of water that initially comes out of a new well. Concerns have been raised about the chemicals released from flaring because, along with the methane there are other gases, frac fluid, etc. being burned.

I have not seen any reliable reports stating what the emissions of this activity are, probably because no two flaring situations are the same. The makeup of the gas, the well pressure, and the duration will always be different. I’ve seen claims that there are as many as 200 different components given off by flaring but they never mention in what amounts. Many critics fail to recognize the difference between gas well flaring, oil well flaring, and refinery flaring. Gas well flaring is a short-term, temporary activity, not something that continues on throughout the life of the well. But, lets compare it to another industry. The asphalt manufacturing process reportedly releases millions of pounds of the exact same toxins found in oil & gas production. When you think of the miles and miles of roads in the US, there has to be way more air pollution from asphalt than gas production. If you’re opposed to gas drilling are you also advocating that we stop paving our roads, parking lots and driveways?

* The DEC states that operators are supposed to notify surrounding property owners before flaring operations begin. Operators are required to obtain flaring permits if they are going to flare for over 72 hours straight. But the only way the DEC will find out about violations is if someone issues a complaint to them.

- Water Depletion - It reportedly takes 3 to 5 million gals of water (or more) to drill and complete a well. There’s a lot of concern over where this much water will come from and what the loss of that much water will do to our ecosystem. First of all, most people do not have a good idea of what a million gallons is, so let’s clarify. It’s approximately one and a half Olympic sized swimming pools. Or, if you’re more measurement minded, it’s the volume of one 51 foot cube. It is doubtful that drilling companies will try to drill water wells onsite to furnish their water needs. Time is money in this business and, even with a good water well, it would take them 2 to 3 weeks to fill their tanks. Their preferred source will be surface water (ponds, rivers, etc.) It should be obvious that extensive dewatering of our ponds, rivers and streams is not a good idea. But when water and flow levels are normal they should be able to tolerate some limited donations. And what harm would there be if large quantities were taken from the Susquehanna River when it’s near flood stage?

Drilling companies cannot just help themselves to the water. They must apply for permits with the Susquehanna River Basin Commission (SRBC), who will determine how much water they can obtain at any one time. It’s encouraging that the SRBC already caught and shut down a couple of Pennsylvania drilling operations for taking local water without the proper permits. The Pennsylvania DEP then held a meeting with 150 oil and gas industry leaders to make sure that they knew the rules. Hopefully, they will be just as diligent in NY. * I’ve heard that the SRBC only accepts permits twice a year. This is not very accommodating to drillers and may actually invite noncompliance.

Some drilling companies have already contacted local municipalities with requests to purchase water. The amount purchased will be controlled by our local water officials, who will determine how much can be spared. It deserves mention that the drilling companies are paying a hefty price per gallon for this water and, if handled properly, the revenue from these sales will be a welcomed addition to our cash-strapped local systems. The need for water may present money making opportunities for others in our area as well.

The shortage of water is an issue that many drilling companies have already faced in some gas-rich but water-starved areas of the country. And they’ve come up with some solutions. Most drillers now recycle as much water as possible. In addition, they’ve combined efforts with the local communities to build retention ponds that are filled a little at a time when the community water supplies can afford to ‘donate’. They’ve also channeled unwanted runoff from heavy rains into the ponds, thereby reducing the need to access community water supplies. It seems to me that, if increased drilling is coming our way, it would make a lot of sense to build some of these retaining ponds. We could also have ‘water sales’ every time the Susquehanna is ready to overflow it’s banks. One way or the other, this is another area where our lease can be worded to prohibit taking water directly from our properties.

Catastrophic Accident Possibility

- Blowouts - Occasionally, a large release of gas may accidentally occur at gas well sites. This is known as a blowout and it can happen when unusually high-pressured pockets of gas are encountered during drilling. Normally, the weight of the drilling muds and mechanical devices known as ‘blowout preventers’ keep these surges in check. But, on rare occasions the pressure is so great that it overcomes all resistance and blasts out through the top (or side) of the well casing. Of concern is how quickly the methane dissipates and whether or not it contains large quantities of hydrogen sulfide (sour gas). Evacuation of surrounding homes could be required, much the same as if a gas main were to rupture somewhere. Depending on the pressure involved, blowouts may take up to several days to be brought under control. There have been a couple of very rare cases where sour gas wells were lethal to those very near the well site. It’s believed that the gas in the Marcellus Shale is of high quality (sweet gas) and does not contain large amounts of hydrogen sulfide.

- Explosions - In extreme cases, the friction caused by the rushing gas (from a blowout) can heat up the well casing to the point that the gas ignites resulting in an explosion. The resulting fire makes working conditions more difficult and it can take a couple of weeks to bring the situation under control. Again, evacuation of surrounding homes could be required especially if the threat of wildfires exists during the dry season.

Blowouts are certainly very serious situations but they rarely happen and getting gas out of shale rock like the Marcellus is not that easy. Typically, shale needs to be prodded and poked (frac’ed) in order to obtain enough pressure to make even an average producing well.

But this does bring up the question of preparedness. In heavy drilling states like Texas, they have ‘Well Control Companies’ who specialize in taking care of emergency situations related to well drilling. Do we have any companies like that in NY? If so, how far away are they? And could our local emergency crews handle situations like this? Is evacuation education & planning a regular part of training for our emergency crews? Should we have at least one specialist in the area?

SUMMARY

I believe that I’ve shed light on the main things that the industry would prefer you didn’t know. I believe that I’ve also put into perspective some of the claims of the critics. Keep in mind I’ve listed nearly everything that can go wrong with a gas well and it may be intimidating. But again, put it in perspective. If you listed everything that can go wrong with the Lockheed Martin plant, or the Exxon Mobil tank farm, or even local gas stations it would be intimidating as well. The fact is these things don’t happen frequently and the numbers say that well drilling isn’t any worse than many other industries that we take for granted. In fact, it’s far better than some.

I truly believe that environmentalists serve an important purpose in our society. They are constantly monitoring the world around us and making us aware of potential dangers. But all too many of their dire warnings include phrases such as, “might lead to”, or, “could possibly result in”, or, “at risk of”. This might be OK if we are venturing into a new arena, but the truth is, we have enough history on well drilling to determine what the risks really are.

We live with risk every day. Try doing an internet search for gas trucks and pipelines exploding, or tankers leaking, or factory farm pollution and see how many ‘hits’ you get. You know that LP canister on your gas grill? Check out how many of those claim lives and destroy property. One study shows your risk of becoming ill and dying from benzene (all sources) is only half that of being struck by lightning; that you’re approximately 10 times as likely to die from electrocution, 55 times more likely to die by drowning, and 481 times as likely to die by an accident in the home. The numbers say that you’re 589 times more likely to die in a car accident and 13,125 times more likely to die if you smoke cigarettes. Death from gas well causes doesn’t even register on the scale.

What this all boils down to is potential vs. probability vs. need - or more simply, risk vs. need. Whenever we hear of someone dying in an auto accident, we’re reminded that the potential for our own death is there every time we drive. But we weigh the probability vs. the need to travel and we continue driving. By getting behind the wheel, we’re saying that over 43,000 deaths per year by auto accident is an acceptable risk vs. the need to drive. By comparison, there is a much smaller number of deaths and contaminations per year attributed to gas wells yet, many say it’s not worth the risk. If you argue that the risk associated with drilling gas wells is not acceptable, then you are essentially saying that we don’t need the natural gas. Or, maybe you’re just saying ‘not in my back yard’. The fact is, we do need the gas. And we have no choice but to drill these wells where the gas is located.

When I look at the numbers, I’m not convinced that the risks outweigh even the financial needs. This area of ours has been economically depressed for some time. And it doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of hope for the future. I don’t know how some of our local farmers have managed to hang on for all these years. And many others who were once gainfully employed by local factories have lost those jobs and are now ‘just getting by’. With middle-class incomes disappearing, fuel prices skyrocketing, and the economy in recession, unfunded mandates are forcing our cash-strapped local governments to raise property taxes and cut services. What’s the outcome of this downward spiral? I consider these issues just as much a part my environment as the ‘green’ issues. Could gas well activity help change this? Absolutely.

It’s estimated that the financial benefits of the Barnett Shale play has pumped 5 to 6 billion dollars back into the local Dallas-Fort Worth economy and will continue to do so for some time. In addition, there have been generous grants to schools and community organizations by the oil and gas companies. I’m not saying that I think it’s OK for these companies to pollute our environment as long as we get some money for it. I’m saying that, in terms of accidents and pollution, I don’t see the numbers that make them any worse than other big businesses. And in light of the potential benefits to our local economy, I think the risks are worth it on a financial basis alone. And those risks can be reduced by using improved technology, equipment, and procedures.

But there’s more. To address this issue fully, we need to look at the big picture. What kind of risk is our nation taking by not continuing to develop our oil and natural gas resources? Where will our oil and gas come from? The economic security of this country is of prime importance to all of us. And having ample, ready supplies of natural gas may play a key role in keeping this country afloat in the near future. What I’m talking about is an energy crisis situation known as ‘Peak Oil’.

Many industry experts say that it’s not a matter of ‘if’ but rather, a matter of ‘when’ this global crude oil crisis takes place. Emerging countries like China and India are rapidly increasing their oil consumption and they will continually be fighting for a larger and larger share of the available global oil supply. The true ‘giant’ oil fields that provide much of today’s oil are mostly mature fields with declining production. These experts claim that newer, smaller oil fields are not coming on line fast enough, and their production will not be large enough to even offset the declines of the existing fields, let alone make up for the increase in demand. At some point, they warn, supplies will fall far short of demand. Basic economics says that, when demand greatly exceeds a limited supply, prices skyrocket and the product goes to the highest bidder.

If you haven’t read about how ‘Peak Oil’ could affect our nation, you owe it to yourself to do so. For an enlightening, but worst-case scenario, try reading the remarks of James Howard Kunstler (http://www.kunstler.com/spch_hudson.htm). Whether or not you agree with the author’s bleak portrait of the future, I think we need to at least listen to these arguments and ask ourselves, “Is it possible?” And, if so, shouldn’t this risk play a part in determining the needs associated with natural gas drilling”?

If “Peak Oil’ becomes a reality to the extent some think it could, the negative impact on our economy and our way of life could be devastating. Cheap gasoline would be a thing of the past, with many of us unable to afford to drive our vehicles. The cost of any product that’s shipped or trucked (that’s just about everything) would skyrocket, causing sales to plummet and companies to go out of business. Heating oil would be unaffordable, so large numbers of people would go back to using wood and coal stoves, which are about 50 times more polluting than gas furnaces. Huge numbers of trees would be chopped down to burn. Even garbage service would be unaffordable, so people would turn to burning and illegal dumping to get rid of their trash. If you believe these experts, the environmental effects of not drilling could be devastating.

No one knows for sure if ‘Peak Oil’ will ever happen. There are those who think that it’s just a big scare story or even something dreamed up by the oil and gas companies to help open doors to more drilling. But the fact is, many of the warning signs are there and ‘Peak Oil’ happened once before, although just on a national level. Only 50 years ago people laughed at the suggestion that the US could not supply all of it’s own oil needs. But they were wrong. At least back then, we had a safety valve and could purchase foreign oil. Now we find ourselves heavily dependent on foreign oil and ever closer to supply problems. This time we have no back up plan and many think our national ‘leaders’ are failing us by not standing up and addressing this situation now.

If ‘Peak Oil’ comes about, this nation will need all types of energy sources available. The emerging renewable energy sources (wind, solar, etc.) must play a big part, but they will take decades to develop and won’t even come close to providing all of this nation’s energy needs. We’ll need every bit of domestic oil and natural gas we can get our hands on. Having a ‘not in my back yard’ attitude is not going to get it done. If there’s even a slight chance of our oil supply being greatly diminished by uncontrollable foreign events, then I’m of the opinion that the need outweighs the risks and we should pursue drilling.

That said, I would like to see the EPA, the DEC, and local officials learn from previous problems and become better prepared to handle increased drilling activity and become more proactive to preventwould like to see pressure put on our state legislators to enact legislation requiringcan be employed while still maintaining efficiency and profitability. Implementing better safeguards and regulations can be done and has already been done in New Mexico and Colorado. There are already signs that certain local legislators and environmental groups are not going to let what happened in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico happen in New York. These are highly controversial issues and you can bet that they will be monitored closely.

Many feel that, if there’s gas below us, the oil & gas companies will be coming to get it one way or another, especially if this nation faces some type of energy crisis. Jill Morrison, of the Powder River Basin Resource Council (Wyoming), warns of unseen problems but states, “ .. this is the richest industry in the world, and they’re going to come whether you want them or not.” Indeed, many of our neighbors have already signed leases, increasing the chance that oil & gas companies will be here sooner or later. Signing a good lease is one way we landowners can protect ourselves. Our goal is to develop a lease with the necessary environmental provisions, yet still remain marketable to the oil & gas companies. But there must be a balance of protection vs. risk vs. need.

Kevin Lewis

The Friendsville Group

RALPH PETERS: ONE SMART WRITER July 11, 2008

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EDITOR’S NOTES: Today’s column by Ralph Peters, New York Post, should be required reading for all.  A retired Army officer, Peters has penned 22 books and hundreds of columns.

An opinion columnist for the New York Post, he is a member of the boards of contributors at USA Today and Armchair General magazine, a columnist for Armed Forces Journal and a frequent guest on television and radio. He’s on Fox News frequently. 

Here’s an excerpt from the column “Intellectuals Lie” which ran yesterday in the NY Post.  Peter is one of the many reasons I read the Post daily.==Al Czervic

Please, educate me: In over 5,000 years of more or less recorded history, how many tyrannies have been overthrown by noble sentiments? How many genocides have been averted by reasonable discussions? How many wars have been prevented by Quakers?

As William James - no archconservative - put it a century ago, “History is a bath of blood.” It’s been a long time since we got badly splashed (9/11’s casualties were an average day in Normandy). We’re so spoiled that we’ve forgotten how brutal humankind can be. But our enemies are determined to remind us. Meanwhile, they practice on the innocents close at hand.

If the pen truly were mightier than the sword, the defense industry would be making ink, paper and keyboards, rather than smart bombs and body armor. A pen wielded by a talented writer may wound a target’s ego, but a sword will cut off the writer’s head.

Pacifists mean well. But they’re a dictator’s best friends. The man who won’t fight for justice abets the terrorist, the tyrant and the concentration-camp guard.

All decent men want peace. But wise men know that not all men are decent.

The use of the pen is an indulgence we can afford only because better men and women grip the sword on our behalf.

DENNIS MILLER: CHURCH AND STATE July 11, 2008

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Isn’t it great we live in a country where a Federal Appeals Court can declare the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional because the words “under God” are a violation of separation of church and state? Well, you know something, your honors: following that logic, wouldn’t the fact that you were sworn in with your hand on a Bible render you unemployed? Or maybe we should respond by withholding your obviously unconstitutional “In God we trust” paychecks, huh? Or why don’t we just change the phrase to “One nation under a crushing blanket of overly sensitive political correctness?”

If you haven’t heard, Michael Newdow, a 49-year old atheist, created a media sensation  after bringing a lawsuit on behalf of his 8-year old daughter. Well, Mikey, you did a great job of protecting your kid, didn’t ya? Put her in the middle of this jingoistic maelstrom. Yeah, you are the dad of the year. Why don’t you pick your trophy up when it’s safe to come out of hiding?

By the way, to all the people out there making death threats against this man and his daughter: if God had wanted you to kill in His name, you’d be living in the Middle East, not the Midwest.

Well, anyway, it’s good to know that all children are now guaranteed the right to come into their classroom in the morning and burn the flag, as long as they don’t salute it.

You know folks, I haven’t quite figured out the math on this one yet, but I think the aggrieved minority in this culture now is the majority.

And, by the way, to the two judges who authored this fiasco: instead of church and state, maybe you should be worried about the separation of your head and your butt.

EDITOR’S NOTES:  Nobody does it better than Miller.  He’s better than Hannity, El Rushbo, and GG Liddy all put together. Go Dennis, GO! — Al Czervic

MARINES CALL IN NAVY AIRSTRIKE July 10, 2008

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MARINE/NAVY JETS DROP 4 500 JDAMS ON IED FACTORY. WARNING — SALTY USMC LANGUAGE

more about "MARINES CALL IN NAVY AIRSTRIKE", posted with vodpod

NEW TOYS: THE FLIPBAMA ACTION FIGURE July 10, 2008

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HEY KIDS! New from Marxist Toys: The Flipbama Action Figure.

He stretches, he wiggles, he molds to whatever opinion his audience wants at the moment! He’s the latex candidate, always ready to agree with you and then, when your back is turned, change and reappear in another opinion right before your very eyes!

Be sure to get the  SpinBama Action figure, too. He spins, he flips, he flops, he flat out lies about his position, and then hides under his desK.

He’s slippery and that’s what makes him so much fun to mess with.

It’s the SpinBama Action figure, only from MARXIST toys.

(Available with and without nuts wherever BS is shoveled. Be sure it’s authentic — sniff  it first. If it doesn’t smell, it’s a FAKE.

Remember, if it’s socialist spin you want, you want it from MARXIST TOYS.

Jesse Jackson:  ” I liked the SpinBama so much, I neutered the company”.


NAZI PETTING ZOO July 10, 2008

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EDITOR’S NOTES: This is a street theatre goof on passersby in Austria. Kind of an Andy Kaufman/Borat deal. We found it amusing. Al C.

In 1938 Austria joined the Third Reich.
Millions cheered Hitler and in the referendum 99.75% said ‘yes’ to ‘Greater Germany’.
But after World War II, many Austrians sought comfort in the idea of Austria as “the Nazis’ first victim”.
Factions of Austrian society tried for a long time to advance the view that it was only annexation at the point of a bayonet(te).
But it’s time to embrace history.
It’s time to remember the feel-good days of 1938.
It’s time to let our real feelings out!
It’s time to hug the Nazi, Austria!
Finally!

CHENANGO COUNTY HOTBED OF GAS DRILLING July 9, 2008

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SEE ALL THE STORIES IN OUR ARCHIVES ABOUT THE GAS RUSH

CLICK HERE FOR FULL INTERACTIV MAP OF NY/PA GAS WELL DRILLING ACTIVITY

A VISIT TO THE LATEST DRILL SITE UNDERWAY IN CHENANGO COUNTY NEW YORK

STORY/PHOTOS BY AL CZERVIC

A search of DEC well drilling permits reveals that Chenango County is a hotbed of  gas drilling activities in the past two weeks.

A total of 9 drill permits have been issued since June 15th.  One near Smyrna, one in Oxford, 4 in Afton and 3 in Coventry.

We were in the Oxford  area on business and stopped by the Rohman farm to take some shots of the establishment of the Rohman #1 well.

No one was home for comment, and we did not enter the drill site per signs at the entrance.

According to permit records, the drillers intend to drop a bit 5,400 feet into the earth before turning horizontal and developing the well.

It’s exciting to see the first activity of drilling in the area. Seismic trucks have been on the road  for months exploring the region and doing site surveys.

We’ll be checking back frequently to update with more pictures and information about this well. Stay tuned.

NOTE TO  ‘THE DAILY STAR’ and THE BINGHAMTON PRESS/SUN/BULLETIN :

Attention, editors: YOU HAVE BEEN SCOOPED!

And by a mean nasty evil conservative BLOGGER!

How do you like them apples? — Al C.

A portion of the drilling platform (table) awaits assembly

The entrance to the wellsite

The well is surrounded by working dairy farm-pastures, fields.

The initial grading, gravel paving, and arriving equipment. The site is approximately 1 1/2 acres.

JACKSON SLAMS OBAMA IN OPEN MIKE GAFFE! July 9, 2008

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BREAKING HARD AND FAST

FROM THE DRUDGE REPORT:  4:45 PM EDT

DRUDGE IS REPORTING A QUOTE FROM THE TAPE: 

“cut his nuts off”…535 PM EDST

EDITOR’S NOTES : What’s this ? Advocating Black on Black Violence?

What happened to the Man Of Peace????  BREAKING MORE DEVELOPING

REV. JESSE JACKSON APOLOGIZES TO SEN. BARACK OBAMA FOR ‘CRUDE AND HURTFUL COMMENTS’ CAUGHT BY OPEN MIC… CNN DESCRIBES AS ‘UGLY WORDS,’ ‘VERY, VERY DISPARAGING’; JACKSON IN ‘DEEP DISTRESS’… FOX NEWS IN POSSESSION OF TAPE AND WILL PLAY IN ENTIRETY TONIGHT ON ‘O’REILLY’, ‘HANNITY AND COLMES’; OBAMA: NO COMMENT… DEVELOPING…

 

Statement: For any harm or hurt that this hot mic private conversation may have caused, I apologize. My support for Senator Obama_s campaign is wide, deep and unequivocal. I cherish this redemptive and historical moment.
_My appeal was for the moral content of his message to not only deal with the personal and moral responsibility of black males, but to deal with the collective moral responsibility of government and the public policy which would be a corrective action for the lack of good choices that often led to their irresponsibility.
_That was the context of my private conversation and it does not reflect any disparagement on my part for the historic event in which we are involved or my pride in Senator Barack Obama, who is leading it, whom I have supported by crisscrossing this nation in every level of media and audience from the beginning in absolute terms._ UPDATED 454 PM EDT

 

QUOTE OF THE YEAR: July 9, 2008

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The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism. But, under the name of ‘liberalism,’ they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program, until one day America will be a socialist nation, without knowing how it happened.”

- Norman Thomas, U.S. Socialist Party presidential candidate 1940, 1944 and 1948

EDITOR’S NOTES: Discuss it. I almost never agree with ravings of socialists, but this guy was right.

WHAT ARE THEY AFRAID OF? July 9, 2008

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BLACK CABLE CHANNEL WILL BROADCAST DNC CONVENTION, BUT NOT GOP.

African American-themed cable network TV One plans to break from its usual entertainment programming to provide extensive coverage of the Democratic National Convention in August.

 ”Sen. Barack Obama running for president is a huge deal for TV One as it is for the African American community,” said Johnathan Rodgers, president and CEO of TV One, a channel in about 40 million homes. “African Americans have fallen in love with his candidacy, his family  … we will be covering the democratic convention all the time.”

But John McCain shouldn’t expect the same treatment. The network doesn’t plan any coverage of the Republican Convention.

“We are not a news organization,” said Rodgers, speaking at the opening session of the semi-annual Television Critics Association press tour in Beverly Hills. “We are a television network designed to celebrate African American achievement. If Hillary was the nominee, we would not be covering this year’s Democratic Convention.”

READ MORE HERE

EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK:  We’ll let some of the comments on this story do the talking for us:

Comments

Does that mean channels who have predominantly white audiences don’t have to cover Obama?

Posted by: hmmm | July 08, 2008 at 11:29 AM

I wonder the reaction if a station that catered to whites refused to show the Dem’s convention.

Oh, wait, a station that catered to whites would be racist.

Posted by: Thomas | July 08, 2008 at 12:11 PM

And they wonder why I consider them slaves to the DNC. They would actualy get more done if they split the black vote and made the parties fight for their vote.

Posted by: How fair is that? | July 08, 2008 at 12:12 PM

goes to show that Blacks are racists. i want to hear nothing more of Imus….

 

CHENANGO COUNTY HOTBED OF GAS DRILLING July 7, 2008

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A VISIT TO THE LATEST DRILL SITE UNDERWAY IN CHENANGO COUNTY NEW YORK

STORY/PHOTOS BY AL CZERVIC

A search of DEC well drilling permits reveals that Chenango County is a hotbed of  gas drilling activities in the past two weeks.

A total of 9 drill permits have been issued since June 15th.  One near Smyrna, one in Oxford, 4 in Afton and 3 in Coventry.

We were in the Oxford  area on business and stopped by the Rohman farm to take some shots of the establishment of the Rohman #1 well.

No one was home for comment, and we did not enter the drill site per signs at the entrance.

According to permit records, the drillers intend to drop a bit 5,400 feet into the earth before turning horizontal and developing the well.

It’s exciting to see the first activity of drilling in the area. Seismic trucks have been on the road  for months exploring the region and doing site surveys.

We’ll be checking back frequently to update with more pictures and information about this well. Stay tuned.

NOTE TO  ‘THE DAILY STAR’ and THE BINGHAMTON PRESS/SUN/BULLETIN

Attention, editors: YOU HAVE BEEN SCOOPED!

And by a mean nasty evil conservative BLOGGER! 

How do you like them apples? — Al C.

 

A portion of the drilling platform (table) awaits assembly

The entrance to the wellsite

The well is surrounded by working dairy farm-pastures, fields.

The initial grading, gravel paving, and arriving equipment. The site is approximately 1 1/2 acres.

WHO IS NEXT UNDER THE BUS? July 6, 2008

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Who’s next under the bus?
1. Rep. Alice