Do you cover your ears and sing LA LA LA LA real loud often if you don't like opinions that aren't your own?
IMO I find she doesn't. She articulates an intelligent argument of her views. It's all there in black and white.
Do you cover your ears and sing LA LA LA LA real loud often if you don't like opinions that aren't your own?
Bombing a sour gas line in a community of oil patch workers who know the risk of what runs through that line IS terrifying and risking the population. And as the people who work for the corporation, who run the plants and maintain the pipeline, you are again attempting to coerce that population.
I could declare you having 'lost' now, and roll my eyes, but I'm not a child.
Do you cover your ears and sing LA LA LA LA real loud often if you don't like opinions that aren't your own?
IMO I find she doesn't. She articulates an intelligent argument of her views. It's all there in black and white.
That's why it's in purple. This time, I find an element of bias. It's all there in black and white ... no grey. Right or wrong with no room for negotiation. We have people die around here from hydrogen sulphide poisoning too. This is mining country. Sudbury Basin ores are high in sulphur content. It also forms in liquified manure spreader tanks. Just recently, three people died in one.
Whatever this destruction, it might help to know whether the person who placed the charge was experienced. If so ... he knew what he was doing in placing the charge so earth shut off the gas. If he wanted to cause death ... he would have blown the pipe.
What is it to an oil company to pay off some fines and continue polluting? I see this all the time in the pulp and paper industry in BC. It makes me sick. These b@stards are causing leukemia in children because it's less expensive to "externalize" the cost of waste removal and pay fines than to clean up their mess.
This time, I find an element of bias. It's all there in black and white ... no grey.
And here we have the Temagami old-growth forests being spiked.
And see, that pisses me off just the same. Well, sorry, worse even since it's a DIRECT threat. Terrorizing the workers in order to try to force the hand of business. Especially a business that, in the end, is about supplying its workers. A vicious cycle. How many of the people who spike these trees live their lives without ever using wood? None. But they think it's okay to injure or kill to be heard. :angryfire:
Bombing's not necessary to address concerns like that. There is SO much power behind the environmental movement right now, that this sort of thing is often the last resort only for conspiracy theorists who are unwilling to believe what's been found.
The rates of leukemia are worst in cities, near gas stations. They haven't been found to be any higher in the vicinity of flare stacks (which are used less and less, and have changed dramatically in their efficiency over the years). The government DOES these studies, and they do release their findings. There just happen to be people who don't bother to put the time into looking for them, and would rather resort to hysterics.
Ultimately, no matter how many times these morons risk their lives and the lives of anyone else, people will keep gassing up vehicles and keep heating their homes. If you think for one second that the worst source of pollution is flare stacks, and not the combined output of all our personal gas burners, you'd be sadly mistaken.
Maybe you need to go around and lecture everyone that has lost a kid to pollution then - set them straight in their crazy thinking.
You can start with a friend of mine that lost his two year old daughter to leukemia.
I'm sure your love for big industry and your little "facts" will warm his heart.
Who needs a child when you can be lectured by a neocon?
Here we go again:
Main Entry:ter·ror·ismPronunciation: \ˈter-ər-ˌi-zəm\ Function:noun Date:1795 : the systematic use of terror especially as a means of coercion
— ter·ror·ist\-ər-ist\ adjective or noun
— ter·ror·is·tic\ˌter-ər-ˈis-tik\ adjective
Source
Main Entry:ter·rorPronunciation: \ˈter-ər, ˈte-rər\ Function:noun Etymology:Middle English, from Anglo-French terrour, from Latin terror, from terrēre to frighten; akin to Greek trein to be afraid, flee, tremein to tremble — more at trembleDate:14th century 1: a state of intense fear
2 a: one that inspires fear : scourge b: a frightening aspect <the terrors of invasion> c: a cause of anxiety : worry d: an appalling person or thing ; especially : brat
3: reign of terror
4: violent or destructive acts (as bombing) committed by groups in order to intimidate a population or government into granting their demands <insurrection and revolutionary terror>
Source
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So the bombing of the gas line was against a corporation not a government or population. It wasn't meant to cause fear but was meant to cause property damage.
It was meant to stop people from dying due to the pollution not cause it.
So you and Avro both fail - again :roll:
Was your friend living closer to a flare stack or a gas station? Downwind from a gas plant? A refinery? Pesticide plant? Scott there are a plethora of pollutants in the world right now capable of causing leukemia, and not all are petro related, and flare stacks, of the petro side of things, are the least of your worries. So explain how bombing sour gas lines is justified because of a child in a completely different part of the province, not likely even exposed to the same pollutant?
And if you can't do so without getting rude and calling names, don't bother. I'll stick with civil convo instead thanks. But thanks for being off the mark on my party affiliation, it proves a lot for me.
Thank you Scott you have presented a very good case for benevolent terrorism in my opinion.
We can redily understand that terrorism has gotten a bad rap. Does it really deserve it?