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www.CajunBMX.com
BMX Bicycle Racing in south Louisiana
www.GretnaBMX.com BMX track
in Gretna, Louisiana
www.ABABMX.com Official
site for ABA BMX racing
www.oldsmarbmx.org Oldsmar,
Florida BMX track
www.PearLandSpeedway.com
One of our 3 favorite tracks in Texas!
www.CowTownBMX.com One of
our 3 favorite tracks in Texas!
www.armadillo-bmx.com See
above Texas Rocks!
www.RiverRatRob.com
FUN website for south Louisiana outdoor/river events, etc.
www.BRParents.com
Baton Rouge Parents
Magazine is one of the oldest, continuously
published monthly magazines in Baton Rouge,
offering a distinctively local perspective on issues affecting
families
http://www.webstaurantstore.com our favorite supply shop
Our state and the entire gulf region will NEVER be the same. Ripple
effects of the BP oil spill
http://www.katu.com/news/photos/95866799.html
We think this could be BP's New Logo
 The
government of the United States must seize BP and freeze its assets,
and place those funds in trust to begin providing immediate relief
to the working people throughout the Gulf states whose jobs,
communities, homes and businesses are being harmed or destroyed by
the criminally negligent actions of the CEO, Board of Directors and
senior management of BP.
Take action now! Sign the Seize BP petition to demand the seizure of
BP!
200,000 gallons of oil a day, or more,
are gushing into the Gulf of Mexico with the flow of oil growing.
The poisonous devastation to human beings, wildlife, natural habitat
and fragile ecosystems will go on for decades. It constitutes an act
of environmental violence, the consequences of which will be
catastrophic.
BP's
Unmitigated Greed
This was a manufactured disaster. It was
neither an “Act of God” nor Nature that caused this devastation, but
rather the unmitigated greed of Big Oil’s most powerful executives
in their reckless search for ever-greater profits.
Under BP’s CEO Tony Hayward’s aggressive
leadership, BP made a record $5.6 billion in pure profits just in
the first three months of 2010. BP made $163 billion in profits from
2001-09. It has a long history of safety violations and
slap-on-the-wrist fines.
BP's
Materially False and Misleading Statements
BP filed a 52-page exploration plan and
environmental impact analysis with the U.S. Department of the
Interior’s Minerals Management Service for the Deepwater Horizon
well, dated February 2009, which repeatedly assured the government
that it was "unlikely that an accidental surface or subsurface oil
spill would occur from the proposed activities." In the filing, BP
stated over and over that it was unlikely for an accident to occur
that would lead to a giant crude oil spill causing serious damage to
beaches, mammals and fisheries and that as such it did not require a
response plan for such an event.
BP’s executives are thus either guilty
of making materially false statements to the government to obtain
the license, of consciously misleading a government that was all too
ready to be misled, and/or they are guilty of criminal negligence.
At a bare minimum, their representations constitute gross
negligence. Whichever the case, BP must be held accountable for its
criminal actions that have harmed so many.
Protecting BP's Super-Profits
BP executives are banking that they can
ride out the storm of bad publicity and still come out far ahead in
terms of the billions in profit that BP will pocket. In 1990, in
response to the Exxon Valdez disaster, Congress passed and President
Bush signed into law the Oil Pollution Act, which immunizes oil
companies for the damages they cause beyond immediate cleanup costs.
Under the Oil Pollution Act, oil
companies are responsible for oil removal and cleanup costs for
massive spills, and their liability for all other forms of damages
is capped at $75 million—a pittance for a company that made $5.6
billion in profits in just the last three months, and is expected to
make $23 billion in pure profit this year. Some in Congress suggest
the cap should be set at $10 billion, still less than the potential
cost of this devastation—but why should the oil companies have any
immunity from responsibility for the damage they cause?
The Oil Pollution Act is an outrage, and
it will be used by BP to keep on doing business as usual.
People are up in arms because thousands
of workers who have lost their jobs and livelihoods as a result of
BP’s actions have to wait in line to compete for lower wage and
hazardous clean-up jobs from BP. BP’s multi-millionaire executives
are not asked to sacrifice one penny while working people have to
plead for clean-up jobs.
Take
Action Now
It is imperative that the government
seize BP’s assets now for their criminal negligence and begin
providing immediate relief for the immense suffering and harm they
have caused.

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