I was scared to death right then. I mean, I just — that’s all that was going through my head was just, I’m fixing to die. This is it. We’re not going to get off of here.—Christopher Choy
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PAG e-NEWS: 12 May 2010
— questioning dogma, ideology, authority, reality, and whatever is left
— peeking behind the curtain
— thinking outside the program
— looking below the surface
— lifting the veil
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Published by Peter A. Gersten, Esq. (ufolawyer@msn.com)
Website: http://www.pagenews.info
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THE UNCONTROLLABLE OIL GUSHER
Why do commentators continue to call this disaster a spill? It’s more like an uncontrollable gusher of black poison. And I am for bringing back lynching parties and public hangings for any CEO who participates in a crime against humanity. In this case death by drowning in oil would be more appropriate for these monsters.
Is Gulf oil rig disaster far worse than we’re being told?
Reports about the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill have been largely underestimated, according to commentators, including Paul Noel, a Software Engineer for the U.S. Army at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. He believes that the pocket of oil that’s been hit is so powerful and under so much pressure that it may be virtually impossible to contain it.
Get Some Perspective on the Massive Oil Spill
Google Earth brings the spill closer to home
Deepwater Horizon Worker Details Survival
On the night of April 20, 23-year-old Chris Choy found himself at ground zero in what has now become a national environmental nightmare, when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico 50 miles off the Louisiana coast.
As Fears Grow for Weather Deterioration Surrounding the Massive Oil
Spill on the Gulf Coast – Rings Appear on United States Weather Radar.
Spill on the Gulf Coast – Rings Appear on United States Weather Radar.
I am told though that similar rings appeared on April 29, 2010 over the same area where more than 20 people lost their lives as the most serious flooding in memory hit Nashville, TN.
Oil executives shift blame at Senate hearing
Three big oil and oil service companies all pointed fingers at one another for blame in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in testimony Tuesday at the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.