Mother of all gushers - BP Oil Disaster in Gulf of Mexico

While reading the latest SOTT story about this disaster, goose-bumps shot through me when I read about the possibility of this oil spewing out for 15 years and I remembered a dream I had last year.

In the dream a small silver ball (golf-ball size) appeared out of the sky and passed through the roof of my house, but remained quite solid. It bounced on the floor and then this single silver ball suddenly split into two, both the same size as the first. The two silver balls then bounced around the house and became 4, then 8, then 16, then 32 as they continued to split in two, doubling their number with each split, but always remaining the same size. Soon the entire house was overflowing with these silver balls and then they started spilling through the doors and windows into the yard, doubling every second or so, soon swamping the entire street, then neighbourhood, city, state, country, oceans and finally the entire globe! It was truly one of the worse nightmares I've had, despite not being violent or gory or anything like your typical nightmare. In the dream, when I realized the situation was getting out of hand and that the world was about to end, I remember thinking how odd it was that one little point (the single silver ball at my house) would be the source of the entire world's ending.

And the reason I had the goose-bumps when reading about the oil disaster is because of the similarities to that dream (how one single "anomaly" or "point source" could expand uncontrollably into something that could potentially destroy the world's oceans).
 
Wow, 3D Resident,

That's a fascinating yet horrifying dream. While you are seeing from it from the perspective of how one local event can have a global effect (butterfly effect),
I saw something else.

I saw cellular replication (remember biology class and how cells divide and grow?) of an external or alien life form, perhaps a virus but also perhaps a species.

Since dreams communicate to us through a symbolic language, there is often an overlapping of interpretations: the literal and the metaphoric. And for each type, there can be many differing interpretations that can co-exist and offer insight, OSIT.

Gonzo
 
Laura said:
Andromeda said:
Perceval said:
This will allow the water, under the intense pressure at 1 mile deep, to be forced into the hole and the cavity where the oil was. The temperature at that depth is near 400 degrees, possibly more. The water will be vaporized and turned into steam, creating an enormous amount of force, lifting the Gulf floor. It is difficult to know how much water will go down to the core and therefore, its not possible to fully calculate the rise of the floor.

The tsunami wave this will create will be anywhere from 20 to 80 feet high, possibly more. Then the floor will fall into the now vacant chamber. This is how nature will seal the hole. Depending on the height of the tsunami, the ocean debris, oil, and existing structures that will be washed away on shore and inland, will leave the area from 50 to 200 miles inland devoid of life. Even if the debris is cleaned up, the contaminants that will be in the ground and water supply will prohibit re-population of these areas for an unknown number of years.

:cry: Add to this the upcoming hurricane season, and there is a big chance that a lot of people are going to be completely devastated soon.

I wrote to Allen West, co-author of "The Cycle of Cosmic Catastrophes" about this scenario and he replied to my question "Is this scenario possible?":

Allen West said:
No. I worked as an oilfield geophysicist on hundreds of wells, and I know for a fact that what he is saying is highly imaginative, but totally wrong. While it is true that there are serious dangers from the pollution and from other leaks in the well casing, there are zero risks of the scenario he describes.

But then, the planet is doing a lot of weird things lately, so who knows???

I have some more info from the good professor. I asked for a technical explanation as to why the idea was impossible. He writes:

"1) IDEA: eroding the pipe.

ANSWERS: A) oil is a lubricant, so the casing is somewhat protected. B) it is a misconception that the oil contains high levels of abrasives -- it almost never does, because the rock from which it comes is porous rather that loose. 3) companies have been producing oil for decades from high-volume wells. Such erosion is not a problem on timescales of a few months, though it could happen over many years, after which they just replace the production pipes.

2) IDEA: collapse of "cavern."

ANSWERS: A) companies have been pumping oil from reservoirs for more than a century. While there is sometimes subsidence, it is always minimal and never catastrophic. B) he ignores the fact that by the time the pressure from the reservoir equalizes with the sea floor pressures, nearly all of the oil will still remain in the rocks. There is no "cavern" into which the sea floor can collapse. This idea displays a lack of understanding of "pools" of oil, which in reality, are typically layers of hard sponge-like rock that contains only a few percent oil by volume. Even when empty, they are not very compressible."
 
I was talking with an archeologist friend this morning about the oil spill. We were wondering if the spill could effect the Gulf Stream heat engine that feeds the North Atlantic. We could not find any published research relevant to this question. He's checking with some climatologist friends to see if there is any evidence for this scenario. Would Allen West, Laura's contact, or another expert known by a forum member, be able to share any useful information?
 
The pressures involved in the blowout are much greater than 5,000 feet of ocean depth. The hydrocarbon reservoir is 35,000 feet below the earth's surface. The Tiber field is one of the largest reservoirs of hydrocarbons ever drilled. The folks who think this hole is going to run dry in our lifetime or that it can be capped with conventional methods haven't studied the problem. It seems the deep water drilling industry is incompetent or they have a dark agenda.

Transocean Ltd. Press Release said:
Transocean Ltd. (NYSE: RIG) announced that its ultra-deepwater semisubmersible rig Deepwater Horizon recently drilled the deepest oil and gas well ever while working for BP and its co-owners on the Tiber well in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. Working with BP, the Transocean crews on the Deepwater Horizon drilled the well to 35,050 vertical depth and 35,055 feet measured depth (MD), or more than six miles, while operating in 4,130 feet of water.

This impressive well depth record reflects the intensive planning and focus on effective operations by BP and the drilling crews of the Deepwater Horizon," said Robert L. Long, Transocean Ltd.’s Chief Executive Officer. "Congratulations to everyone involved."

These achievements are the latest in Transocean’s history of world and other records dating back to the 1950s. In 2005, the ultra-deepwater drillship Discoverer Spirit set the record for the longest Gulf of Mexico oil and gas well at 34,189 feet, MD. Most recently, the Transocean jackup GSF Rig 127 drilled the industry’s longest extended-reach well in 2008 while working for Maersk Oil Qatar AS at 40,320 feet MD with a 35,770-foot horizontal section. The well was drilled offshore Qatar in 36 days and was incident-free.
Transocean also holds the current world water-depth record of operating in 10,011 feet of water set while working for Chevron in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico.
The Deepwater Horizon, placed into service in 2001, is a dynamically positioned ultra-deepwater semisubmersible rig capable of working in water depths of up to 10,000 feet.

Read more: http://www.creditwritedowns.com/2010/05/how-bps-deepwater-horizon-oil-find-was-originally-reported-in-september-2009.html#ixzz0pe4lwvDF

Methane(CH4) and other hydrocarbons escaping the deep earth reservoir under enormous pressure and velocity below 5000 feet of ocean will likely make it impossible to contain the blowout. The vast reservoir of hydrocarbons under deep earth pressure insures this disaster will be uncontainable by conventional methods. The Russians reportedly have used tactical nuclear weapons to collapse bore holes in a number of deep drilling blowouts on land.

I was astounded when I read the depth of the bore hole on a blog. It looks the comet has a serious competitor with corporate criminal irresponsibility in the race to turn out the lights on mankind’s evolutionary impulse.

Edits:

The above information is incorrect. The blowout occurred on the Macondo Prospect, not the Tibor well. The depth of the hydrocarbon reservoir is variously reported by Dow Jones to be 11,000 feet to 18,000 feet. My apologies for not double checking the information.


http://www.sott.net/articles/show/209573-Mother-of-all-gushers-BP-Oil-Disaster-in-Gulf-of-Mexico-A-Timeline said:
First, the BP platform was drilling for what they call deep oil. They go out where the ocean is about 5,000 feet deep and drill another 30,000 feet into the crust of the earth. This it right on the edge of what human technology can do. Well, this time they hit a pocket of oil at such high pressure that it burst all of their safety valves all the way up to the drilling rig and then caused the rig to explode and sink. Take a moment to grasp the import of that. The pressure behind this oil is so high that it destroyed the maximum effort of human science to contain it.

There is a critical problem with the entire concept of deep water drilling. What do you do when a blowout occurs below 5000 feet of ocean? Human decision making based on game theory and probability has a dangerous flaw. It is the famous black swan!
 
Hey go2, thanks. I have been trying to follow it all, too. Any references for this statement?

The Russians reportedly have used tactical nuclear weapons to collapse the bore hole in a number of deep drilling blowouts.

Thanks in advance;

P
 
Hi Potomus,

Video here and other references to the Russian experience with using tactical nukes on blowout wells are on google and youtube. The Russian's assert hydrocarbons are not organic in orgin, but exist as complex molecules evolved from CH4 since the formation of the earth. They have drilled deep to prove you can find hydrocarbons everywhere if you drill deep enough. The depth I recall is below fifteen thousand feet. The dinosaur theory of oil formation is primitive, but so is the idea that you can drill deep bores under water, where it is nearly impossible to contain a runaway.

Forget boycotting BP, confiscate their assets.
 
http://www.seizebp.org/

Seize BP Days of Action
Demonstrations happening in more than 50 cities
Thursday, June 3 - Saturday, June 5



The greatest environmental disaster with no end in sight! Eleven workers dead. Millions of gallons of oil gushing for months (and possibly years) to come. Jobs vanishing. Creatures dying. A pristine environment destroyed for generations. A mega-corporation that has lied and continues to lie, and a government that refuses to protect the people.

When the bill comes due, BP will pick up and leave town. The corporation will be “reorganized” or dissolved with its assets handed over to some other conglomerate before it has to pay out. Its executives will be paid handsomely; the people whose lives it has destroyed will be left to suffer.

From Thursday, June 3 to Saturday, June 5, actions will take place across the country to demand: Seize BP! We will be organizing demonstrations in more than 50 cities to protest the mounting economic and environmental damage from BP’s offshore oil drilling and to demand that BP’s assets be immediately seized and put in trust.

The much-hyped “top kill” has failed. For several days, BP continued to build up the belief that the operation might be working when it already knew it was doomed. The Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen spoke like a true BP company man repeatedly telling the public that the operation was succeeding.

The reality is that, faced with a preventable crisis for which it had no contingency plan, BP is now trying to buy time by spewing lies to cover up the spewing oil. The “lower marine riser package cap” about to be tried actually risks increasing the flow of oil. The drilling of a relief well will be completed no sooner than August, and it may not be successful then.

Oil marshBP has no intention of picking up the tab for the destruction it has caused. The communities of the Gulf region whose livelihoods have been destroyed cannot rely on BP to come to the rescue. The Seize BP Campaign is demanding that the government seize BP's assets and place them in a trust to be used to provide for compensation and damages.

Actions are taking place in Fort Lauderdale, New Orleans, Austin, Washington D.C., Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle and many more. We will be posting the Thursday – Saturday actions on SeizeBP.org, so please click here and let us know your plans so we can help get the word out on the website.

NO CAP – No Immunity for BP!

Just over a week ago, Seize BP launched the No Cap on Damages campaign, which is having a major impact. More and more in Congress are moving to support lifting damages—but we are not there yet. Take a moment now to send a letter to your elected official telling them that BP must not be granted immunity from damages.

The Oil Pollution Act of 1990 caps damages for oil companies responsible for offshore drilling accidents at $75 million on top of recovery costs. Some in Congress have suggested creating a higher cap—but there should be no immunity at all! They caused the damage, they must pay for it. BP rakes in over $90 million dollars a day in pure profit—that’s money after all their “expenses” including their wealthy executive salaries and perks.
 
Hey go2, thanks. I watched the video. I like the essence, but I am a little wary of a site that would categorize NASA's lunar impact experiment as "Obama bombing the moon" to try and gain leverage against his nobel prize. Reminds of Sean Hannity (vanity) this morning claiming that the activists in the Gaza Flotilla were "terrorists." Still in all though the abiotic oil theory has been discussed on this forum a bit, as searching 'abiotic' will show. I have some papers here and the notorious "Briggs Letter" and these would seem to stand in the face of the decaying dinosaur theory.
Best.

P
 
If this is true:
Mike Adams in sott article said:
To collapse the well and plug it for good would destroy BP's chance to siphon off oil and sell it for profit (until at least August, when the pressure relief wells are expected to be completed). And that is perhaps the single most important reason why oil is still flowing out of that well right now.

And this is true:

sott article said:
A massive spill off Saudi Arabia in 1993, pretty much censored from history until now, dumped nearly 800 million gallons of oil into the Persian Gulf, which would make it more than 70 times the size of the Exxon Valdez spill. But remarkably, by employing a fleet of empty supertankers to suck crude off the water's surface, a dedicated team was not only able to clean up the spill, but also salvage 85 percent of the oil. And of course, as we saw above, the Iranian national oil company was ignored despite offering its expertise with cleaning up regular spills in the Persian Gulf.

Then why isn't BP pulling oil from the surface with their own ships while they wait for their relief wells to be finished?
 
Gonzo said:
Wow, 3D Resident,

That's a fascinating yet horrifying dream. While you are seeing from it from the perspective of how one local event can have a global effect (butterfly effect),
I saw something else.

I saw cellular replication (remember biology class and how cells divide and grow?) of an external or alien life form, perhaps a virus but also perhaps a species.

Since dreams communicate to us through a symbolic language, there is often an overlapping of interpretations: the literal and the metaphoric. And for each type, there can be many differing interpretations that can co-exist and offer insight, OSIT.

Gonzo

Funny you should say that because in the dream the silver ball actually originated from space, so your interpretation makes a lot of sense actually. (And in the dream, I instinctively knew the ball was somehow alien.) I really should have discussed this in the Dream Forum when I had the dream all those months ago.

Regarding the oil disaster itself, what Allen West said about the sea floor not being able to cave in actually makes a lot of sense. Given that he's an expert in the field, I guess we can assign a very low probably of a tsunami occurring.
 
Unless someone decides to trigger an earthquake machine. Then you could have a tsunami and everyone would blame BP. It can get real nasty when one psychopath turns on another. Now, I was just joking until I realized it actually could happen - sickening thought.

Gonzo
 
Sheer unadulterated criminal negligence by the oil industry and their government minions:

http://www.countercurrents.org/eley140510.htm said:
What Caused The Explosion On The Deepwater Horizon?

By Tom Eley

14 May, 2010
WSWS.org

As more details emerge about the explosion and sinking of the Deepwater Horizon, which killed 11 workers and spilled millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, it has become clear that the single-minded drive for profit and a total lack of regulation created the disaster.

In the immediate aftermath of the explosion, oil giant BP, rig operator Transocean and the Obama administration all took the position that the disaster was an unforeseeable event. Interviews with workers, information gathered by researchers and testimony given to Congressional and Coast Guard hearings prove, however, that there was in fact ample warning that a disaster was possible, even likely. But BP and its partners, Transocean and Halliburton, disregarded these warnings.

They could do so with impunity. There exists no regulatory body in the oil industry to defend the safety interests of workers and the environment, the Mineral Management Service (MMS) of the Department of the Interior having long ago ceded all meaningful regulatory control to the industry itself.

Buildup to disaster


Evidence revealed in Congressional testimony, press accounts and gathered by University of California professor Robert Bea has provided a detailed picture of the weeks and hours leading up to the explosion.

Deepwater Horizon was not an extractive oil rig, but an exploratory rig. When it exploded on April 20 it was in the process of completing its exploration by capping the well it had bored some three miles below the ocean floor, before moving on to another exploration site. This required the rig to plug the oil well and separate its riser piping from the wellhead to the rig. A separate rig would later have come to access the sealed wellhead.

Deepwater Horizon’s exploratory drilling had been troubled by unusually frequent and forceful contact with explosive natural gas deposits, known in the industry as “kicks,” workers say. Only weeks before the fatal explosion, so much gas forced its way up the well bore and onto the rig platform that an emergency freeze was placed on many activities aboard the rig in order to avoid triggering an explosion.

According to one worker’s account, submitted to Bea, “at one point during the previous several weeks, so much [gas] came belching up to the surface that a loudspeaker announcement called for a halt to all ‘hot work,’ meaning any smoking, welding, cooking or any other use of fire. Smaller belches, or ‘kicks,’ had stalled work as the job was winding down.”

“As the job unfolded ... the workers did have intermittent trouble with pockets of natural gas,” another rig employee reported to Bea. “Highly flammable, the gas was forcing its way up the drill pipes. This was something BP had not foreseen as a serious problem, declaring a year earlier that gas was likely to pose only a ‘negligible’ risk. The government warned the company that gas buildup was a real concern and that BP should ‘exercise caution.’”

The day of the explosion, engineers reportedly argued over whether or not to remove dense drilling mud from the well bore, replacing it with much lighter sea water. Normally this step is taken only after a second cement plug is hardened in the piping, a process that takes several hours. Until this plug is fully installed, heavy mud is the first line of defense against kicks and “blowouts,” when oil and natural surge up the bore to the rig platform.

The decision was taken to replace the mud before plugging the well, even thought this would increase the chances of an explosion—and even though the operation failed a critical pressure test the same day, BP and Transocean executives admitted to the House Energy Committee. This clearly reckless decision to press forward was very likely done to protect BP’s profit interests, both because it paid rig owner Transocean an estimated $500,000 per day for use of Deepwater Horizon and its crew, and because it was anxious to bring the new well into active production.

A worker told the Wall Street Journal that the crew was in fact preparing to drop the cement plug down the riser—standard procedure—when the order came to instead pump out the mud. “Usually we set the cement plug at that point and let it set for six hours, then displace the well,” he said. The worker told the Journal that this dangerous step was first cleared with the MMS. The MMS refused comment.

It is likely that this decision combined with the failure of two other lines of defense: cement outside the well bore’s piping under the ocean floor, which is designed to prevent natural gas from moving up the bore and the riser to the rig; and the blowout preventer, a massive piece of equipment that sits on the ocean floor and is equipped with powerful hydraulic shears whose task is to sever piping in the event of a blowout.

Halliburton, which contracted for the cement and mudding work on the rig, had deployed a new chemical cement that it said would be resistant to structural damage caused by methane hydrates, which were present in the undersea rock in high quantities. But Bea, an expert with decades of experience in oil extraction engineering, said that when he saw the formula for Halliburton’s cement, he said “Uh oh.”

Bea told the Times-Picayune that Halliburton had produced “many excellent papers” that claim “because of the chemicals they’ve added, they think the cement can cure rapidly.” But Bea explained that the same chemicals they added likely gave off too much heat, thus thawing gases lodged in the rocks from their methane hydrate form and sending them up the bore and riser.

When the cement failed, gas began to force its way up the riser. At this point, concrete well plugs in the pipe should have blocked the gas. But contrary to normal practice, the final plug had not been installed, and the salt water was not heavy enough to stop the high pressure gas from rising.

On the evening of April 20, a geyser of seawater erupted onto the rig, shooting 240 feet into the air. This was soon followed by the eruption of a slushy combination of mud, gas and water. At this point workers knew they were in danger because the mud could only have come from 10,000 feet down, Bea said. On the rig, the gas component of the slushy material quickly transitioned into a fully gaseous state and then ignited into a series of explosions and then a firestorm. Workers immediately attempted to activate the blowout preventer, but it too failed.

Ironically, at the moment of the explosion a number of BP officials, recently helicoptered to the rig, had gathered for a celebration with rig staff marking seven years of a “spotless” safety record. Those at the party were thrown violently to the floor by the force of the explosion.

Bea, who headed up an independent team of scientists that investigated failure of levees during Hurricane Katrina, compared the two events. “BP fell into the same damn trap, and they were not engineering; they were ‘imagineering,’” he told the Times-Picayune. “Risk analysis continues to mislead us because we’re only looking at part of the risk. The same trail of tears led to Katrina, to the Massey Big Branch (coal) mine disaster, and it’s showing up here again.”

“For me, the tragedy of Katrina was floating bodies and the homes and businesses that were destroyed,” Bea said. “This time, it’s different. Certainly the people on the rig were killed and the pieces of equipment were destroyed, but like Katrina, there’s another non-voting population getting hurt this time and it is those marine animals that are our equivalents.”
A collapse in regulation

The series of mechanical failures and human errors that conspired to produce the disaster aboard the Deepwater Horizon were not random accidents, as the Obama administration and much of the media seek to portray them. They arose from the deregulation of the oil industry that has advanced for decades under both Republican and Democratic administrations. These conditions made a major spill inevitable— if not on the Deepwater Horizon, then on some other rig. Indeed, thousands of oil rigs operating under precisely the same regulatory environment that produced the Deepwater Horizon disaster continue to extract oil even today.

The Deepwater Horizon, it has become clear, was operated in the total absence of real government regulation. This is most evident in relationship to the rig’s blowout preventer, its final line of defense.

At hearings in Louisiana held by the MMS and the US Coast Guard, the head of MMS’s Louisiana engineering operations, Frank Patton, who had given BP authorization to begin drilling at the Deepwater Horizon site, admitted that he had performed no inquiry and had been given no assurance that the rig’s blowout preventer would function in the event of a spill. He also admitted that he had certified “hundreds” of oil rigs without verifying the efficacy of their blowout preventers. These rigs presumably continue to operate in Gulf waters—a handful in deeper water than the Deepwater Horizon.

At House Energy Committee hearings held Wednesday, the head of Transocean, Steven Newman, confirmed that one of the Deepwater Horizon’s shear rams, devices used in blowout preventers to sever pipes, was altered in 2005 at the request of BP and with the approval of the MMS. It was modified for testing, but in the process was likely rendered useless for a real emergency.

The MMS was also aware years ago that shear rams are likely to fail in emergencies, even when functional. A 2002 study by Per Holand, a Norwegian engineer, found that shear rams are not powerful enough to cut through joints in piping, which account for about 10 percent of total surface area in a blowout preventer’s piping. None of Holand’s resulting proposals were acted upon.


Another 2002 study conducted by the MMS revealed that in laboratory testing of one manufacturer’s shear rams half failed. Seven other makers refused to have their shear rams tested.

Yet another report commissioned by the MMS in 2004 questioned whether shear rams could even function under immense oceanic pressures such as those experienced by the Deepwater Horizon. The devices were literally untested in deep sea conditions. The study authors called this a “grim snapshot of the lack of preparedness in the industry to shear and seal a well with the last line of defense against a blowout” in deep water. In spite of the study, no standards were put in place.

In a 2000 safety alert the MMS “urged” deep sea oil rigs to include a backup device used to activate blowout preventers in the event of an explosion. The device, known as a “deadman,” was included on the Deepwater Horizon. But, according to testimony given to the House Energy Committee, the device’s battery was likely dead. The MMS, it has been revealed, does not inspect—let alone enforce—the use of blowout preventers. Other oil producing nations, including Norway, Canada and Brazil, require a second backup device that can be activated by sound. It is not required on US rigs.

It has also been revealed that the number of drill site inspections carried out by the MMS dropped by over 40 percent between 2005 and 2009, even as the number of drill rigs operating in US waters rapidly increased. Penalties issued by MMS for regulatory violations fell from 66 in 2000 to 20 last year. By all accounts, regulation depends almost entirely on industry “self-enforcement.”

The gutting of regulation continued into the Obama administration. Under Obama, the MMS intervened in a court case last summer to allow BP to proceed with exploration and extraction at its Deepwater Horizon site without submitting a legally required environmental impact study. Obama promoted a vast expansion of offshore and deep sea drilling, declaring the industry to be safe, without having addressed any of the outstanding safety issues.

Yet, like the more immediate causes of the explosion and sinking on the Deepwater Horizon, none of these regulatory decisions were mere “mistakes.” Regulation in the oil industry—as in every other US industry, including the financial system—has been reduced to its present state by a series of conscious political decisions enacted at every level of government by both Republicans and Democrats.

This political shift, in turn, has arisen from the demands of the US corporate and financial elite, who have sought to dismantle every obstacle to their personal enrichment—regardless the costs for their workers and the health of the planet.

Blatant criminal behavior by the corporations and the government. Again, who you gonna call to do anything about this intolerable situation?
 
Guardian said:
Ok.. I gotta ask...is this making anyone else alternate between bawling like a baby and wanting to break something? I can't look at these pictures without getting all girlie. :curse:

I cried and cried for hours till I was so exhausted that I couldn't cry anymore. This is going to ruin everyone's environment and why arent the people making a big deal. Why arent other countries pressuring the U.S. to do something, its going to mess up their enviroment too.

The first thing I thought, this is a ploy to make us more dependent on corporate food system.

To physically see this ongoing mess (not political games, the police state, faraway wars, the poisoning of our food supply... that only if you compare all the data together will you see a picture of what is going on) shows how really asleep people are (feeling like its my fault, I know its not, its hard to tell the heart that) that is what gets me more sad :cry:

Mark said:
I apologize if this is noise but I am nevertheless reminded of this:
Rev. 16:3 said:
The second angel poured his bowl into the sea. It became like the blood of a dead body, and every living thing in the sea died.

That's exactly what I thought, the religious people may use it as an excuse to be more fundamental or go to church for brainwashing (like the guy who's trailer got hit by an asteroid)

I live in Gator Nation :-[ Florida will see how the Gulf Islands are doing in July when I go visit a friend at her vacation home.
 
More heart-crushing images coming out of Louisiana - http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/06/caught_in_the_oil.html :(
 
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