
"There is no one who wants this over more than I do. I would like my life back."
-BP CEO Tony Hayward, who also attended a yacht race in the Isle of Wight during this oil crisis.
So, BP has gone and done it now. They have messed with Texas. Tar balls have begun to show up on the beaches at Galveston, and the oil keeps coming. Here we are, almost three months later, and the oil keeps flowing. The Exxon Valdez disaster was nothing compared to this. We already surpassed that amount of oil in just two weeks.
Of course, I know nothing about how to contain an oil spill, but I am continually dumbfounded when I watch the CNN live feed of the oil spewing out into the gulf, and nobody can do anything about it. Why do we have the technology to build such equipment to get the oil, but we don't have the technology to stop it? I have a feeling that when it comes to spending money to obtain oil, there is no limit, but to protect the environment when an accident happens, suddenly there is nothing anybody can do.
I think if BP had been honest and forthcoming about everything that's going on, and the people in charge acted a little more compassionate, there wouldn't be this utter hatred of them that Americans have right now for this company. They constantly try to downplay the effect of the spill, at first claiming that only "5,000" barrels a day are spilling into the ocean, when in actuality it's more like 50 or 60 thousand. They have referred to the damage in the ocean as "tiny." They refuse to talk to CNN, or even let reporters take pictures of animals covered in oil.
Then you've got the CEO taking a vacation to watch a yacht race in England. What the hell? You know, I took a vacation recently, after working a FREAKIN' YEAR to earn it. And this guy wants to take a vacation during the biggest oil crisis in history? The way I (and most people) see it is...you don't get a vacation until every last drop of oil is cleaned up. Bastard.
BP should look to Toyota for how to handle a crisis. Toyota is now admitting to everything they have done wrong and trying desperately to correct it. They have spent millions, if not billions, on fixing cars that probably don't even have anything wrong with them. Owning a Toyota myself, I have received numerous letters from them updating me on which cars are being recalled and why. Will I buy another Toyota? I don't know, but I don't feel the hatred for the company like I do with BP.
I really hope that when we buy our next car, the prices for hybrids come down. I'd buy one in an instant. Oil dependency has got to stop.
-BP CEO Tony Hayward, who also attended a yacht race in the Isle of Wight during this oil crisis.
So, BP has gone and done it now. They have messed with Texas. Tar balls have begun to show up on the beaches at Galveston, and the oil keeps coming. Here we are, almost three months later, and the oil keeps flowing. The Exxon Valdez disaster was nothing compared to this. We already surpassed that amount of oil in just two weeks.
Of course, I know nothing about how to contain an oil spill, but I am continually dumbfounded when I watch the CNN live feed of the oil spewing out into the gulf, and nobody can do anything about it. Why do we have the technology to build such equipment to get the oil, but we don't have the technology to stop it? I have a feeling that when it comes to spending money to obtain oil, there is no limit, but to protect the environment when an accident happens, suddenly there is nothing anybody can do.
I think if BP had been honest and forthcoming about everything that's going on, and the people in charge acted a little more compassionate, there wouldn't be this utter hatred of them that Americans have right now for this company. They constantly try to downplay the effect of the spill, at first claiming that only "5,000" barrels a day are spilling into the ocean, when in actuality it's more like 50 or 60 thousand. They have referred to the damage in the ocean as "tiny." They refuse to talk to CNN, or even let reporters take pictures of animals covered in oil.
Then you've got the CEO taking a vacation to watch a yacht race in England. What the hell? You know, I took a vacation recently, after working a FREAKIN' YEAR to earn it. And this guy wants to take a vacation during the biggest oil crisis in history? The way I (and most people) see it is...you don't get a vacation until every last drop of oil is cleaned up. Bastard.
BP should look to Toyota for how to handle a crisis. Toyota is now admitting to everything they have done wrong and trying desperately to correct it. They have spent millions, if not billions, on fixing cars that probably don't even have anything wrong with them. Owning a Toyota myself, I have received numerous letters from them updating me on which cars are being recalled and why. Will I buy another Toyota? I don't know, but I don't feel the hatred for the company like I do with BP.
I really hope that when we buy our next car, the prices for hybrids come down. I'd buy one in an instant. Oil dependency has got to stop.