A mountain is composed of tiny grains of earth. The ocean is made up of tiny drops of water. Even so, life is but an endless series of little details, actions, speeches, and thoughts. And the consequences whether good or bad of even the least of them are far-reaching. —Sivananda
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PAG e-NEWS: 28 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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DEATH in the OCEAN
Sooner or later humanity’s attraction to the dark side will cause it to destroy its biosphere. And it will have technology to thank for making it all possible.
Oil spill brings ‘death in the ocean from top to bottom’
“This is terrible, just terrible,” says Dr Shaw, back on the boat. “The situation in the water column is horrible all the way down. Combined with the dispersants, the toxic effects of the oil will be far worse for sea life. It’s death in the ocean from the top to the bottom.”
BP Gulf catastrophe typifies corporate behavior in America
The Gulf of Mexico oil catastrophe, now in its 35th day, has struck land, coating tourist beaches, marshes and shorelines with a greasy black filth that metaphorically represents the corporate greed that now dominates the U.S. economy. We are all awash in the dark slime of corporations gone bad, and now we’re paying the price for allowing these companies to dominate our media, our government and our entire economy.
Fishermen sick from clean-up work in gulf
His lungs looked like the victim of a three pack a day smoker.
Media ignores Goldman Sachs’ ties to Corexit dispersant
In a recent New York Times’ article “Less Toxic Dispersants Lose Out in BP Oil Spill Cleanup”, journalist Paula Quinlan questions why BP is using the 100 % toxic, 54 percent effective dispersant Corexit to clean up the oil when twelve other dispersants proved more effective in EPA testing.