Showing posts with label Reasons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reasons. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

LibertyNEWS TV - "The Top Ten Reasons for Obama to Attack Syria"

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LibertyNEWS TV - "The Top Ten Reasons for Obama to Attack Syria"

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Here"s At Least 260,000 Reasons Why College Isn"t Worth It

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Here"s At Least 260,000 Reasons Why College Isn"t Worth It

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Americans Are Huge: 5 Surprising Reasons Why We May Be Getting Fatter

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Americans Are Huge: 5 Surprising Reasons Why We May Be Getting Fatter

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

14 Reasons the Dollar is Doomed

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14 Reasons the Dollar is Doomed

Saturday, March 8, 2014

10 Reasons Why You Want To Live In A Community

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10 Reasons Why You Want To Live In A Community

Saturday, January 4, 2014

7 reasons why violent crime is in a tailspin


Cate Gillon / Getty Images



Can violent video games help prevent real-world violence? Some experts say it can and cite it as one of the lesser-known factors contributing to a two-decade decline in violent crime in the U.S.




By Andrew Blankstein, Investigative Reporter, NBC News


Sharper policing strategies, stiffer prison sentences and newer technologies are again being credited as police officials proffer explanations for the two-decade decline in violent crime in America’s biggest cities.


But experts say the real reasons behind the downturn — which included double-digit decreases in homicide rates last year in New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles — are more complicated and may involve factors as mundane as that X-Box sitting in the living room, Americans’ changing work habits and what comes out of your gas pump.


Here are seven other seldom-mentioned factors that those who study crime — and even some who fight it – say may be helping keep a lid on harmful behavior:


Xbox effect: Dinner bells that summoned children from the great outdoors have long gone silent, and youths and young adults are spending more time on indoor pursuits involving high-definition TVs, gaming consoles and computers. That, say researchers, is having a positive impact on crime. Why? Fewer young people on the street mean fewer potential criminals and fewer targets for criminals.


Potential criminals may also be spending more of their time stealing virtual cars or robbing virtual banks.


Two college professors in Texas working with a researcher at the Center for European Economic Research released a study in 2011 showing violent video games such as “Grand Theft Auto” or “Call of Duty” could mitigate aggressive behavior and lead to a decrease in crime. The researchers called the phenomenon the “incapacitation effect.” Translation: When you are at home playing video games, “You are not hanging out on street corners, in alleys or out with your buddies getting into trouble,” said University of Texas, Arlinginton, Professor Michael R. Ward, one of the authors.


Ward and his research partners calculated that the correlation was fairly weak — only about a 1 percent decrease in violent crime for every 100 percent increase in sales of violent video games – hardly “a panacea for crime fighting,” he noted. 


Still, said John Roman, senior fellow in the Justice Policy Center at the Urban Institute, the benefits may extend beyond keeping potential criminals and victims inside.


“People who might have a predilection for violence, they act it out through video games,” he said.


Gadgets and technology also have had other impacts on criminal behavior. Street corners and drug dens are no longer as dangerous as they once were, because cellphones and the Internet have largely taken their place as marketplaces for illicit goods, says UCLA Public Policy Professor Mark Kleiman.


“The cellphone and the beeper have made open air drug dealing and crack houses mostly obsolete,” he said.


The Urban Institute’s Roman said the availability and pricing of technological innovation is also changing the criminal dynamic. 


“When a hot new product doesn’t have a cheap substitute, there’s a little spike in robberies,” he said, but as soon as cheap substitutes appear and prices fall, so does crime.


For example, Roman says wearable technology – watch phones, Google glasses, etc. – may be the next targets for armed robbers and thugs, but only until cheaper substitutes come out.


Housing projects: Cold, impersonal, utilitarian, dense and scary. Those were just some of the characteristics of your typical inner-city housing project built from the 1940s through the ‘70s. But with authorities taking wrecking balls to many of these magnets for violent crime in recent years and building more livable replacements, that equation appears to be changing.


M. Spencer Green / AP file



Demolition begins at the last high-rise of Chicago’s Cabrini-Green public housing complex on March 30, 2011. Cabrini-Green was built on Chicago’s North Side starting in the 1940s.




Susan Popkin, a fellow at the Urban Institute’s Metropolitan Housing and Communications Policy Center, studied long-term effects of the destruction of huge housing projects in Atlanta and Chicago.


 “We found that overall of the city there was a huge reduction in crime where the public housing was demolished and a net decline in violent crime citywide, which was sustained, from 2000 to 2010,” she said.


When the housing project residents moved to other neighborhoods they brought crime with them, but the net effect for the city overall was still a lower crime rate, Popkin said.


It’s not clear if other cities are seeing similar results. In Los Angeles public housing is becoming more diffuse and police are emphasizing partnerships with other government agencies to bring resources to the projects. Popkin said people are taking better care of housing developments, which might also being having a positive effect on the crime rate.


Cocaine market cracked: A surge in crack cocaine use is often blamed for fueling the explosion in gang warfare and violent crime that led to record murder rates in the early 1990s in many big cities across America. But little notice is typically paid to the role that declining cocaine consumption has played in violent crime’s tailspin.


A survey by the 2011 by the National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that the number of Americans who said they used cocaine fell 40 percent from 2006 to 2011. Over the same period, there was a comparable decline in dependency.


“It’s the biggest win ever in the history of drug control and nobody pays much attention,” says Jonathan Caulkins, a Carnegie-Mellon professor and co-director of Rand Corporation’s Drug Policy Research Center.


 Meanwhile, maturation of drug sales and distribution networks also may be playing a role, as violence has claimed the lives of the most combustible sellers. And Maryland Professor Peter Reuter said baby-boomers still using crack cocaine aren’t the negative force they once were because they are “aging out of violent crime.”


© Bettmann/CORBIS



Attendant Joe Turchiano pumps gasoline in Shirley, on New York’s Long Island, on May 14, 1979, as an alcohol-unleaded gasoline mixture goes on sale for the first time.




Lead footprint: Exposure to lead among children has long been linked with lower IQs and cognitive skills, and its physiological impact on the brain also has been connected to the sorts of impulsive and aggressive behaviors that underpin violent crime. In the late 1970s, lead was removed from gasoline and paint, resulting in the lead levels in American bloodstreams falling 80 percent by 1991. But could an environmental impact also spill over into social policy?


In a landmark 2007 study, Amherst College Public Health Professor Jessica Wolpaw Reyes found a remarkable correlation between lead exposure and violent crime. According to her calculations, exposure to the heavy metal could have accounted for between 28 percent and 91 percent of the 83 percent increase in violent crime in the U.S. between 1972 and 1992. And as lead exposure dropped, so too did violent crime, falling 56 percent during the 1990s, she found.


Reyes forecasts that the trend will continue, with violence decreasing by as much as 70 percent by 2020.


Roe v. Wade: The conclusion of the lead study referenced another factor thought to significantly influence the falling crime rate: Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark decision by the U.S. Supreme Court legalizing abortion.


In 2001, University of Chicago Economics Professor Steven D. Levitt and Stanford Law Professor John J. Donohue published a study that later became the basis for a chapter in the best-selling book “Freakonomics,” arguing that legal abortions appeared to account for as much as a 50 percent plunge in crime between 1985 and 1997. Underlying their theory was the assumption that legal abortions led to fewer unwanted babies being born and that those babies would have been at increased risk for criminality as adults because they were more likely to suffer abuse and neglect as children. The study found that in five states that legalized abortion before Roe, crime started falling before the rest of the country. Additionally, from the year of the Roe decision to 1988, states with high and low abortion rates had identical crime patterns. This was happening as the crack epidemic and urban violence began to peak.


Home bodies: Conventional wisdom says that crime goes up when the economy turns down, but numerous studies have shown otherwise. That’s because while adversity breeds desperation, it also creates more supervision.


Police and social scientists were watching closely for a possible spike in violent crime during the Great Recession that began in 2008, but it never materialized. That’s partly because more people were staying home because they lacked work, deterring criminals through their presence or quickly phoning police if they see suspicious behavior, the experts say. Other subtle social forces were at work as well. Since the 1990s, for example, Bureau of Labor Statistics surveys have consistently found that between 20 and 25 percent of the employed do some or all of their work at home. And a growing pool of retirees helps bolster the number of stay-at-home crime-stoppers.


Immigration: New immigrants are often perceived as contributing to disorder, but the reverse is often true. Harvard Professor Robert Sampson, author of “Great American City: Chicago and the Enduring Neighborhood Effect,” examined crime statistics amid one of the largest influxes of new arrivals in U.S. history and found that, for the most part, immigrants brought with them strong work ethics, tight-knit family structures and a distaste for violent street crime.


Sampson and his colleagues examined violent crimes involving 3,000 men and women in Chicago from adolescence to age 25 and found that first-generation immigrants were 45 percent less likely to commit violence than third-generation Americans, while second-generation immigrants were 22 percent less likely to carry out such crimes.


Meanwhile, new arrivals helped revitalize urban centers that had been beset by lawlessness.


Academics have posited other explanations for falling murder and violent crime rates, including the fact that more criminals appear to be pursuing identity-theft related crimes that reduce the danger for them while allowing for potentially bigger pay days.


Or perhaps a generation that suffered the chaos and shame sown by drugs and violence has sought not to repeat the past. Maybe, it’s all part of an evolution.


Whatever the ultimate reasons behind the crime drop, the right blend of enforcement, collective and individual experience, culture and technology appears to be having a positive multiplier effect, said Los Angeles police Cmdr. Andrew Smith.


“Like the whole, crime reduction is really the sum of its parts,” he said. “And law enforcement and society are reaping the benefits.”


But UCLA’s Kleiman cautions that same complexity means there are no guarantees that the decline will continue.


“Nobody predicted the crime explosion that started in the early 1960s,” Kleiman said “and nobody predicted the crime collapse in 1994.”


More from NBC News Investigations:


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7 reasons why violent crime is in a tailspin

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

10 Stupid Reasons To Get Fired

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


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10 Stupid Reasons To Get Fired

Sunday, November 24, 2013

8 reasons not to go to college

Student debt

You may already be wondering, “what parent in their right mind would not want their kids to go to college?” 


I half expect the Child Protective Services to beat down my door just for writing this. It was not that long ago that I myself would have shunned this article, and concluded that its author is an unfit parent.  But a measured look at the reasons why college may not be the best choice reveals another side of the story that most parents aren’t usually exposed to.


I must state upfront that if our children desire a profession that requires college, of course we will encourage and support them to follow their dreams. However, they will definitely know the consequences versus the benefits.


First, let’s examine the traditional path that was ingrained in all of us.


Do your homework. Get good grades. Go to a good college. Get a job. Work for 45-plus years to pay off all debts. Save for your kid’s college and your retirement. Play by the rules. Success will be yours.


Sound familiar?


We’ve all heard this mantra from family, teachers, employers and the TV, as if it’s the only path society provides for success. For many, as the economy worsens this myth gets echoed even more loudly. “We need more education to compete in a weaker job market,” society says. But is it really true given the current economic situation?


I understand that for some people college will be a necessary step in pursuing their dreams. For instance, those who want to become certified doctors in the US must study at an American Medical Association approved university.


But first they should ask themselves “why” they want to be a doctor.


Is it to help people? To make a nice income? Is it for prestige among family and peers? Then, it may be wise to ponder if becoming a doctor is the best way to accomplish those goals. Certainly there must be other ways to help people, make good money, and gain respect from loved ones without accruing a quarter-million dollar debt before working life begins, right?


Either way, college may be necessary for some to achieve their dreams. But let’s be sure our children know that there are other paths, other innovative ways to attain their goals, and certainly other ways to spend 4-8 of the best years of their lives.


Here are eight reasons why college will not be encouraged in our household:


1. It is Obsolete


Why does a nursing student need four more years of English Lit or Algebra? Likewise, why would a business major have any need for Anatomy and Physiology? I know, I know, back to that whole college-is-teaching-kids-to-think argument. Or maybe the “well-rounded” school of thought? I don’t buy it. After 13 years of schooling prior to college, most subjects outside of a degree’s focus seem to be a waste of time and money.


Additionally, the world is changing at lightening-fast speed, but the education system is still moving at a snail’s pace. At the exponential rate of change in science and technology, by the time someone graduates from 4-6 years of college what they were forced to learn the first couple of years is most likely obsolete, requiring even more schooling.  What a racket!


What’s more, with a smartphone and Internet, all of the world’s knowledge is literally in the palm of our hand.  Incidentally, advanced knowledge is not confined to the brick-and-mortar walls of universities anymore.


2. Horrible Job Market


In this poor economic climate where America’s job market has entered a prolonged drought, college graduates are no longer guaranteed a job.  In fact, only 53% of recent college graduates in the U.S. have full-time employment.  And even global youth unemployment has been labeled a “crisis“.


According to the New York Times analysis of recent unemployment numbers:


Employment rates for new college graduates have fallen sharply in the last two years, as have starting salaries for those who can find work. What’s more, only half of the jobs landed by these new graduates even require a college degree, reviving debates about whether higher education is ‘worth it’ after all.


So, the myth that kids must attend college to get a job is proven false.  Kids today need more than the standard education to stand out in a crowded field of cookie-cutter graduates.


3. Prohibitive Cost


The cost of going to college versus the benefits make it a terrible investment. Entrepreneur James Altucher breaks down the numbers quite accurately:


The average tuition cost is approximately $ 16,000 per year. Plus assume another $ 10,000 in living costs, books, etc. $ 26,000 in total for a complete cost of $ 104,000 in a 4 year period. Some people choose to go more expensive by going to a private college and some people choose to go a little cheaper by going public but this is an average. Also, a huge assumption is that its just for a 4 year period. According to the Department of Education, only 54% of undergraduates graduate within 6 years. So for the 46% that don’t graduate, or take 10 years to graduate, this is a horrible investment. But lets assume your children are in the brilliant first half who finish within six years (and hopefully within four).


Is it worth it? First, let’s look at it completely from a monetary perspective. Over the course of a lifetime, according to CollegeBoard, a college graduate can be expected to earn $ 800,000 more than his counterpart that didn’t go to college. $ 800,000 is a big spread and it could potentially separate the haves from the have-nots. But who has and who doesn’t?


If I took that $ 104,000 and I chose to invest it in a savings account that had interest income of 5% per year I’d end up with an extra $ 1.4 million dollars over a 50 year period. A full $ 600,000 more. That $ 600,000 is a lot of extra money an 18 year old could look forward to in her retirement. I also think the $ 800,000 quoted above is too high. Right now most motivated kids who have the interest and resources to go to college think it’s the only way to go if they want a good job. If those same kids decided to not go to college my guess is they would quickly close the gap on that $ 800,000 spread.


There is not much more to say.  It’s is a bad investment for parents, and student loans seem financially irresponsible as a burden to place on our children before they start their professional life.


college debt


4. Debt Serfdom


As the cost of living continues to outpace pay increases, it’s difficult enough just to survive week to week, let alone get ahead financially.  When young people begin their adult lives saddled with hundreds of thousands of debt, it almost ensures that they will be locked into a lifetime of debt serfdom.  In other words, they’ll be trapped into working whatever job they can find just to pay this obligation regardless of their passions. Add on the pressure and manufactured prestige of “owning” a home, having a nice car, starting a family or dressing a certain way, and you have all the makings of wasting a life trying to pay for these things. I’m not sure this was part of the original American Dream, but, sadly, it is indisputably what it has become.  Surely, there are more fulfilling ways to spend our limited time on this planet than running on the same hamster wheel our entire lives.


5. Knowledge is Free


It’s important to highlight the difference between school and knowledge. These things do not go hand in hand. Many people go to college and never achieve any useful knowledge, while many people who never attend school are some of the wisest and most successful people in the world.


In the 1700s, knowledge was limited to those with the resources to buy books, or those who could afford to send their kids to school (most stayed home to work the family trade).  Ben Franklin understood that in order to have a level playing field in society, everyone must have access to knowledge.  So he founded the first public library in America (which later became the University of Pennsylvania).  Now that the Internet acts as a global open-source library and is giving away knowledge, everyone has the ability to learn about what they’re most interested in for free.


No need to waste money just to get a piece of paper saying you “officially have gained knowledge”. What is the goal; the piece of paper, or the actual knowledge?  If it is the knowledge, as I hope it should be, then college is not the most efficient way to reach that goal anymore.


6. Wasted Youth


To all those who said they had the time of their life in college, I ask, “Couldn’t you get drunk and flirt with the opposite sex without college?” We likely had the time of our lives because we were young, healthy, carefree and it was the first time we were out of our parents’ control.  College just happened to be the place where we lived this experience.  But it’s a tall price to pay, since all of those factors don’t change in the absence of college.


Furthermore, how many of you went to college purely out of obligation? My parents never gave me the option, even though, in retrospect, I wasn’t mature enough to appreciate my overpriced education. So, I dropped (flunked) out. It wasn’t until later in life when I knew what I wanted to be, that I began to appreciate school.  Then, I got straight A’s in route to becoming a Registered Nurse.


In these most amazing years of life, transitioning from child to adult, imagine what could be experienced or achieved when you’re not locked in a dorm out of obligation (See the countless alternatives to college in my final point).  Finally, college will always be there for your kids no matter when and if they decide to go.


7. Limited Life Choices


Many people that we meet say they’re envious of our permanent travel lifestyle, but they feel too trapped by financial obligations to attempt an alternative lifestyle.  This is the result of the debt serfdom cycle explained earlier that begins with student loans. Because of the debts incurred while at college, and a host of other reasons, many young adults end up limiting their options in life. We are usually told the opposite, but once a student commits to a certain major they may feel obligated to only pursue that career even if it falls out of favor with them.  Most kids usually don’t know what they want at 18 years old.


Life should be a collection of experiences, not a collection of shiny trinkets that mean nothing on our deathbeds.  If we seek a life outside of the proverbial box — a life of travel, of passion, of adventure, of independence — then societal pressures and college debt become a prison that locks us into a narrow range of experiences. Once we step out of the box and realize this, the floodgates of alternatives to the “normal” path open wide.


Choices


8. Countless Alternatives


This is the other side of the story that parents aren’t supposed to see, or even contemplate for their kids.  First, it begins with wanting something for your child that’s far more important than societal success — happiness!  This can only be achieved if we allow our children to live their passions.  After all, this life is theirs for the making, and we view our job as a guide to help them follow their own path, not to dictate some societal fantasy.


Even our parents are still bitter that we gave up on the traditional definition of success to pursue an alternative lifestyle of homeschooling and extensive adventuring.  Our happiness seems to take a backseat in their mind compared to the anguish they feel about missing their grandkids, and our rejection of the dreams they had for us.  Although this has been somewhat painful, we’re grateful to them for helping shape what we believe is important for our children.


So what alternatives are available instead of going to college?  First, they can take online courses through OpenCourseware or iTunes if they want to accrue college credits.  They can learn a skill by becoming an apprentice.  They can volunteer for a charity or even a big company to learn about how those organizations work.  They can travel by picking up odd jobs along the way (or obtaining ESL certificate to teach English abroad).  They can start a business, a nonprofit organization, or monetize a blog.  They can find a mentor or become a self-taught expert in whatever field that moves them.  They can create something beautiful; art, music, handmade crafts, write a book, or build something.  This list is endless, and they will gain great knowledge with each of these examples and more.


Finally, they can just get a part-time job and enjoy their carefree youth until they discover their passion. We must stop assuming that a “lack of direction” equals failure.  It doesn’t; not if they’re happy.  We get one go around in this life and it shouldn’t be wasted doing something that others expect us to do.


At this point, our boys learn what interests them and is pertinent to their lives.  Some would say they “world school“.  We all learn better when we’re inspired.  And we have great confidence in this approach to prepare them for life.  The universe has a funny way of giving people what they desire.  Sadly, most people are too busy complaining about their situation to even define what they want.


In conclusion, we teach our boys that they should do what they love. That happiness is far more important than any status symbol or paycheck, no matter what anyone thinks. No dream is too big to achieve. The college-job path is only one way to achieve certain goals among a host of other perhaps more rewarding experiences.


SEE ALSO:
Why university is a scam: the college bubble
Britain’s Eton College asks teenage candidates to justify shooting protesters


Source: http://www.bohemiantravelers.com/2012/02/8-reasons-we-wont-push-college-on-our.html





Hang The Bankers | He Who Controls the Money Supply, Controls the World



8 reasons not to go to college

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Jesse Ventura 63 Reasons to Believe There Was a Conspiracy to Assassinate JFK [HD]

A featured video on the subject of assassinations:



Jesse Ventura 63 Reasons to Believe There Was a Conspiracy to Assassinate JFK [HD]

Jesse joins to Steve to discuss his new book, “They Killed Our President: 63 Reasons to Believe There Was a Conspiracy to Assassinate JFK John F. Kennedy .” …
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Jesse Ventura 63 Reasons to Believe There Was a Conspiracy to Assassinate JFK [HD]

Monday, October 7, 2013

New Reasons To Be Terrified of XL Pipeline Obama Is Considering




Spill TK MAP: This map shows both existing and proposed Canadian and U.S. pipelines that carry tar sands oil, including controversial Keystone XL Pipeline.

Spill TK
MAP: This map shows both existing and proposed Canadian and U.S. pipelines that carry tar sands oil, including controversial Keystone XL Pipeline.



This is Part 1 of a 2-part Series


(Next: A Cautionary Tale—Tar Sands Oil Spills and Health)


Debate continues to rage over whether the Obama administration should approve TransCanada Corporation’s contentious Keystone XL pipeline.


Meanwhile, little attention has focused on the impact of tar sands oil spills in far-flung states. Two accidents, in Arkansas and Michigan, raise largely unaddressed questions about the true cost to human health and the environment—and the high cost and difficulty of cleanup. But there are other issues as well, ranging from the political and economic impact to the behavior of the corporations involved to the very nature of the substance itself.


IMAGE: https://secure3.convio.net/engage/images/content/pagebuilder/mayflower_tar_sands_oil_spill_EPA.jpg


mayflower_tar_sands_oil_spill_EPA


Pipe Dreams—or Nightmares?


The more recent of these disasters came on March 29, when a 22-foot gash opened in ExxonMobil’s 65-year-old Pegasus pipeline. It dumped some 210,000 gallons of tar sands oil into the streets of Mayflower, Arkansas, and into nearby Lake Conway.


More than six months after that lake of viscous tar sands crude engulfed a subdivision, many homes—both within the core spill area and at the periphery—stand deserted.


Among the few inhabitants who remain are those too old or too poor to leave, while many others simply have no place else to go. The streets are dotted with For Sale signs that beckon no buyers. Many people are ill, suffering from respiratory problems, chronic headaches, debilitating fatigue and other complaints.


Environmental scientist Wilma Subra says the symptoms are consistent with known effects from exposure to petroleum products—and to the volatile chemicals used to dilute the gummy Canadian oil so it can flow through a pipeline.


While cleanup continues, the legal battles have just begun. Among them are class action and civil suits, plus a lawsuit filed by the US Justice Department and the state of Arkansas for alleged violations of state and federal environmental laws, including the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts.


ExxonMobil Lied About What Spilled


For weeks after the spill ExxonMobil withheld crucial information about the nature of their product from state and local officials. The oil giant insisted it was conventional crude—which is cheaper and easier to clean up—while downplaying the amount and extent of contamination. Early on, company officials claimed that nearby Lake Conway was oil-free—though internal emails showed that they knew otherwise.


IMAGE http://www.desmogblog.com/2013/04/01/everything-you-need-know-about-exxon-pegasus-tar-sands-spill


Capture


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The March 2013 Exxon Tar Sands Spill in Mayflower, Arkansas



IMAGE:  http://www.desmogblog.com/2013/04/01/everything-you-need-know-about-exxon-pegasus-tar-sands-spill


A Billion Dollar Spill?


Far to the north, 40 miles of Michigan’s Kalamazoo River shimmer with a slick rainbow sheen. It’s the toxic legacy of the largest, most expensive onshore oil spill in US history.


On July 26th, 2010, Enbridge Energy’s “Line B” pipeline ruptured, belching over a million gallons of tar sands oil into a field near Marshall, Michigan. Some of that flowed into nearby Talmadge Creek and on into the Kalamazoo—sites of previous industrial dumping and heroic cleanup efforts.


Three years later, so much heavy Canadian crude still coats parts of the river bottom that last March, the  the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ordered Enbridge to resume dredging the river.


The agency estimates that perhaps 180,000 gallons remain submerged, “plus or minus 100,000 gallons.” Federal fines of $ 3.7 million pale beside actual cleanup costs, which now exceed a billion dollars.


Enbridge contends it spilled a mere 843,000 gallons—although EPA evidence shows far more. The company waited a week to disclose that the spill was not ordinary oil, but instead thick tar sands oil. Some 320 people have reported health problems, and litigation is ongoing in a host of lawsuits.


IMAGE: Irridescence


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Oil and Water…


Even these accidents, however awful the consequences for local residents, fail to paint a picture of the potential for catastrophe in the Keystone XL Pipeline project.


If completed, this pipeline would funnel nearly 35 million gallons of Canadian tar sands oil—a day—from Alberta to Texas Gulf Coast refineries.  Along that 1,179-mile route, the line would cross six states in America’s heartland, and traverse the Ogallala Aquifer that provides drinking water for two million people.


Though the location of oil and gas pipelines is public information, neither TransCanada nor the State Department has revealed Keystone XL’s exact route. But the general path is clear. Keystone will cross a remarkable 1,748 bodies of water in all, including the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers.


In an accident, numerous toxic chemicals would be released, including benzene, a known human carcinogen. One at-risk ecosystem, Nebraska’s fragile Sandhills region, lies along the Keystone route, with ancient dunes so permeable that nearly 100 percent of rainfall enters the shallow Ogallala Aquifer. This means that a relatively minor spill can have major consequences.


***


While spills are the most immediate threat posed by the pipeline, much of the Keystone debate has focused on climate change. NASA climatologist James Hansen has called Canadian oil sands crude “one of the dirtiest, most carbon-intensive fuels on the planet.”


How bad? It emits 14 to 20 percent more greenhouse gases than conventional crude, according to a congressional report. But the environmental group Rainforest Action Network (RAN) says it’s much, much worse:


Tar sands oil is the worst type of oil for the climate, producing three times the greenhouse gas emissions of conventionally produced oil because of the energy required to extract and process tar sands oil. . . increased greenhouse gas emissions associated with tar sands development is the main reason Canada will not meet its Kyoto reduction commitments.


IMAGE: http://greenpeaceblogs.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/TarSands.jpg


Tar Sands Toxic Waste


Oil or “Molasses”


Tar sands oil should not be confused with conventional crude. Alberta’s oil is a gelatinous mix of tarry petroleum and sand, known as diluted bitumen or “dilbit.” It’s often likened to asphalt: it is so thick and gooey that it won’t flow through a pipeline on its own. For transport, it’s thinned with liquefied natural gas and a range of chemicals, some of which are extremely toxic.


It’s far stickier than other petroleum products—and it sinks in water, which is why oil sands spills are extremely difficult to clean up, said Stephen K. Hamilton, a Michigan State University aquatic ecology professor who’s advising the state and the EPA on the cleanup in Marshall. “The bitumen reverts to its molasses-like nature once the diluent evaporates, and is nearly impossible to remove from surfaces…and river banks,” he said. “The EPA estimates that a significant fraction of the spilled oil remains in the sediments even after all the time and money invested in cleanup, and I am sure we will never get it all out.”


IMAGE: http://assets.inhabitat.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2013/04/pegasus-oil-spill-arkansas-exxon.jpg


pegasus-oil-spill-arkansas-exxon


Dirty Oil, Dirty Politics


Legally, bitumen is not even considered oil. In 2011, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) ruled that “the term ‘crude oil’ does not include “synthetic petroleum.” That distinction exempts Enbridge, ExxonMobil, TransCanada and other companies that transport tar sands crude from paying the 8-cents-per-barrel petroleum excise tax. Thus, the companies shipping a substance that’s more toxic and harder to clean up than standard petroleum products do not even have to pay into the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund, which was created by Congress in 1986 in response to the Exxon Valdez disaster.


Cleanup of the massive Deepwater Horizon oil spill and a host of smaller accidents drained the fund to risky levels, according to a Government Accountability Office report. As of March 2011, the fund had shelled out $ 629.5 million for Deepwater. Liability for oil companies caps at $ 350 million; the fund covers the rest, up to a billion dollars per incident.


But tar sands oil gets a free ride, with transport companies putting nothing aside to help pay for pipeline breaks or other accidents.


The House Natural Resources Committee criticized the exemption, noting that “it is important that all oil companies be held responsible for the disasters associated with the products they sell and the taxpayers not be forced to pay the bills of cash rich oil companies.”


Indeed, keeping the exemption in place through 2017 would mean $ 409 million in lost revenue. With skyrocketing dilbit imports from Canada, it’s no small concern. The 220,000 barrels (42 gallons each) imported per day in 2000 jumped to over 650,000 barrels in 2011.  Producers hope to top 1.5 million barrels in the next six years, according to Canada’s National Energy Board. A series of major spills could bankrupt the fund—leaving taxpayers with a massive cleanup bill.


TransCanada’s environmental assessment estimated that Keystone XL will discharge 11 “significant” spills of 2,100 gallons or more in the US over its 50-year lifespan. An independent analysis by Dr. John Stansbury, an engineer and professor at the University of Nebraska, presents a far more alarming scenario: up to 91 serious spills over that same period. His study includes key data omitted by TransCanada.


IMAGE: http://cdn.theatlanticwire.com/img/upload/2013/04/01/RTXY4BW/large.jpg


largeA Hazard to “Life, Liberty, and the Environment”


Pipelines break for many reasons, from advancing age and weak welds to natural disasters and construction accidents. But transporting heavy, toxic dilbit further increases stress on pipelines, according to a recent Cornell University study.


It’s 15 to 20 times more acidic than conventional heavy crude, with five to 10 times more sulfur. Because it’s so thick, it’s often pumped at higher temperatures and pressures than other petroleum products. Its varying composition and consistency bring large, frequent swings in pressure that can create new cracks or widen existing ones—a factor that may have played a role in ExxonMobil’s Arkansas break.


And that was no isolated case. From 2007 to 2010, dilbit pipelines in the northern Midwest dumped three times more oil per mile than the national average for conventional crude. Since the Keystone’s Phase 1 pipeline opened in June 2010, there have been at least 35 incidents. It pumps dilbit from Alberta to refineries in Illinois, a line that breezed through the permitting process during the Bush Administration, with little public awareness.


The string of accidents prompted pipeline safety regulators to subsequently deem Keystone 1 a hazard to “life, property, and the environment”—and issue a “Corrective Action Order” to address multiple problems.


IMAGE: http://insideclimatenews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/home_page_slideshow/oilincreek.JPG


oilincreek 


“A Complete Breakdown of Safety”


Regulators realized in the late 1990s that pipeline operators were losing control of their systems, says Richard Kuprewicz, president of the engineering consulting company Accufacts, Inc. and adviser to the U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA). Minimum safety guidelines were updated back then, but now, he says, “we’re seeing a rash of ruptures.There’s no doubt that there’s something wrong with current pipeline safety regulations.”


In a recent speech to oil and gas pipeline compliance officers, PHMSA associate administrator Jeffrey Wiese admitted that the regulatory process he oversees is “kind of dying” and that his office has “very few tools to work with” in enforcing safety rules. “Do I think I can hurt a major international corporation with a $ 2 million civil penalty? No,” he said.


Before they failed, both the Mayflower and Marshall lines were known to have developed cracks. The defect that caused the six-and-a-half-foot hole in Enbridge’s Line 6B was noticed at least three times, but both regulators and the company ignored it. Likewise, ExxonMobil Pipeline Co. inspected the section of Pegasus that later burst in 2010 and again in early 2013. But again, nothing was done.


At a hearing on the Michigan spill in 2012, National Transportation Safety Board chairman Deborah Hersman stated, “This investigation identified a complete breakdown of safety at Enbridge,” and likened employees’ poor handling of the rupture to “Keystone Kops.”


Despite numerous alarms it took operators in Michigan nearly 12 hours to shut down the 30-inch wide pipeline. Another six hours passed before they located the spill site.


The transportation safety board also cited weak federal regulation and oversight of emergency procedures, and poor assessment and repairs of pipeline health.


IMAGE: http://reglinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/pipeline.jpg


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Fast-Tracking the Pipelines


While TransCanada awaits a decision on Keystone XL, it’s unclear whether Exxon’s 858-mile Pegasus pipeline will reopen. The company hasn’t made public its plans for the line, which will require written permission from PHMSA to restart. Analysts conjecture that Pegasus may be in such poor shape that it will need significant repair—or that Exxon may be weighing construction of a new, larger replacement.


But other lines will soon be shipping tar sands products to the Gulf for refining and export. Enbridge plans to expand its Alberta Clipper pipeline from Canada to Wisconsin, which would carry up to 880,000 barrels a day, more than Keystone’s planned 830,000-barrel capacity.


The company’s 774-mile Trunkline is scheduled to go into operation in 2015, using converted gas lines that run from Patoka, IL, to St. James, LA. There is concern that these lines, which have been in the ground for years, were not built to current standards and may not be able to withstand the heavier load of tar sands oil. But these conversions are subject to fewer regulations and generally win swift approval.


***


The safety issue clearly gets short shrift. PHMSA, the entity charged with oversight, has been understaffed by an average of 24 employees each year between 2001 and 2009. And last year, it had funding for just 137 inspectors in total. That’s nowhere near enough to police the industry.


As a result, regulators are forced to essentially leave safety evaluations up to the companies–even allowing them to plan their own future pipeline routes. The two assessments submitted for Keystone XL were prepared with blatant conflicts of interest: one by a former client of TransCanada, and the second by a member of the American Petroleum Institute, the oil and gas industry’s largest U.S trade association. The EPA commented that the documents lacked needed information on water protection and an improved emergency response plan.


IMAGE: http://reglinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/pipeline-safety.jpg


pipeline-safety


Americans Don’t Even Gain


Americans risk environmental catastrophe while gaining…next to nothing.


As the Rainforest Action Network notes:


Keystone XL is an export pipeline. In presentations to their investors, Gulf Coast refiners have revealed plans to refine Keystone’s Canadian crude into diesel and other products for export to Europe and Latin America. Proceeds from these exports are earned tax-free. Much of the fuel refined from the pipeline’s heavy crude oil will never reach U.S. drivers’ tanks.”


(More on this point from the environmental advocacy group Oil Change International, here.)


With Liberty and Justice for…Oil


The pressure from industry has been considerable. With well-funded publicity campaigns promoting “energy independence,” it’s not so surprising that in March 2012, President Obama signed an executive order expediting infrastructure permits that will fast-track oil and gas pipeline projects.


One of the loudest arguments for Keystone XL approval is job creation—a projected 20,000 construction and manufacturing jobs, according to TransCanada. But the Cornell Global Labor Institute examined their data and came up with a far lower estimate: somewhere between 2,500 and 4,650 temporary, direct jobs would come from pipeline construction over a two-year period.


In fact, the U.S. State Department estimates that the six states along the pipeline route will gain a total of just 20 permanent pipeline operation jobs. Meanwhile, with 571,000 agricultural workers employed in those states, a spill that poisons farmland and ground water could mean a significant economic hit, not to mention the potential harm to the region’s substantial tourism industry (which in South Dakota alone brings in $ 865 million a year).


If Obama is under pressure to hand the industry another fortune, imagine the pressure the Canadian leadership faces. Evidence of this was on display during a late September visit to New York City by Canada’s Conservative Prime Minister, Stephen Harper. In an unusually pugilistic stance for a Canadian, Harper declared that he “won’t take no for an answer” from his much larger neighbor to the south.


“The logic behind this project is simply overwhelming,” he said.  And he added (apparently drawing another bloated figure out of the north-of-the-border air), it “will create 40,000 jobs in the U.S.” His incentive to sell the project is clear enough: Canada’s share of U.S. crude oil imports rose to 38.7 percent in February, the highest in at least two decades, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration data.


IMAGE: http://www.nationofchange.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article_main_image/PipelineSpillAftermathinArkansas060513.jpeg


PipelineSpillAftermathinArkansas060513


As Kuprewicz, the engineering consultant, notes: “We’re not going to get rid of oil and gas pipelines, so we need to operate them safely.” But the question remains: Is shipping more tar sands oil into the US the wisest choice?


(Next: Part 2—A Cautionary Tale: Tar Sands Oil Spills and Health)


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New Reasons To Be Terrified of XL Pipeline Obama Is Considering