Vatic Note: Please go to the link and check out the pictures at the top and the writing "within" the frame that holds the pictures. The photos are listed inside the box #1, 2, 3. Each has also writing below "within" the box, telling you what you are looking at. I bring this up because those pics and writing "within" the box cannot be copied or downloaded like you can with other pics Its the third one that shows the so called flow from a leak on the floor of the gulf. The "note" "within" the box says it was taken live stream on July 6, and yet if you look at the still of the flow and the writing accross the pic it says May 7, 2010, not July 6. Since they purge their mistakes and this particular way they have everything set up in that picture box with no ability for us to copy or retain the facts, it makes it easy for them to change what we discover or expose, so that is why I asked you to go there first to see for yourself. Now why change and say the date is recent??? I do not understand the logic behind that? . What I suspect is this; if we catch something we have no copy to prove what it was. That is why I am saying to check out the link before reading the article and see the date discrepancy before they correct it, fix it or change it.
As for the tar balls, We pointed out that on the Pensecola beach only tar balls and no regular oil were shown from visitors pics. We also reported this was a controlled released leak by BP so they could scare us into buying off using a killer chemical in the gulf in the millions of gallons to justify it. This explains why today they mention the oil tar balls themselves AND why they criminalized taking pictures, since those pics support the leak that came out about their scam. That definitely fits with our Whistleblowers explanation of what happened and how this is a totally controlled leak on purpose to give the impression of a big massive dangerous spill so everyone will become afraid and leave the area. Then Obama's Big multimillion dollar contract to Blackwater can go into effect by them going and collecting the guns house to empty house exactly like they did in New Orleans. I don't care what they "say" the contract is for since he already has a 2 million dollar contract for Afghanistan. They did the same thing in NO, under a different contract that was simply modified to allow payment for taking guns from people.
I consider this article another support proving that tar oil volcanoes are common and less dangerous than regular ones simply because they have organisms that eat the oil and will ensure the recovery of the Gulf once they have complete control of it at the shoreline. More and more is coming out that more and more supports the whistleblowers leak to the alternative press about what was really going on. Do we believe its still dangerous there? yes, Corexit is an intentional chemical weapon being used to do the job they hoped we would believe was the result of some far fetched accident. They always have multiple agendas as we have noticed and this one is a land grab as well as a gun grab and an RFID chipping as we pointed out yesterday with the intentions of Texas to do exactly that and TODAY, HERE IT IS, THE TAR BALLS HAVE REACHED TEXAS NOW RIGHT AFTER OUR STORY ON THEIR EVACUATION PROJECT WITH RFID/GPS tracking. Nice, huh?
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/05/1717418/tar-balls-reach-texas-every-gulf.html
Posted on Monday, 07.05.10
Tar balls reach Texas -- every Gulf state now touched
Staff and Wire reports
More than two months after oil from BP's blown-out sea floor well first reached Louisiana, tar balls are now washing onto a Texas beach, meaning the crude has arrived in every Gulf state.
Oil is still on the move, but the fleet of skimmers tapped to clean the worst-hit areas of the Gulf of Mexico is not. A string of storms has made the water too choppy for the boats to operate for more than a week off Florida, Alabama and Mississippi, even though the gusher continues.
Speaking in an interview with CNN this morning, Ret. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said that a massive Taiwanese oil skimmer -- which has been undergoing testing -- was slow to maneuver in the area crowded with small vessels.
Testing of the ship -- called ``A Whale'' and billed as being capable of sucking up 21 million gallons of oil water a day -- is still ``inconclusive,'' Allen said.
Meanwhile, the number of tar balls discovered in Texas is tiny compared to what has coated beaches in other Gulf states.
``It was just a matter of time that some of the oil would find its way to Texas,'' said Hans Graber, a marine physicist at the University of Miami and co-director of the Center for Southeastern Tropical Advanced Remote Sensing.
Hurricane Alex, which blew through the Gulf last week and made landfall along the border between Texas and Mexico, may have played a small role in bringing the oil ashore in Texas by increasing the westerly current near land, Graber said. But it was more likely due to normal coastal currents and local weather patterns.
NOAA scientists are looking at local weather, Hurricane Alex and Gulf vessels as possible sources for the tar balls, agency spokeswoman Monica Allen said Monday.
The distance between the western reach of the tar balls in Texas and the most eastern reports of oil in Florida is about 550 miles. Oil was first spotted on land near the mouth of the Mississippi River on April 29.
The spill is also reaching deeper into Louisiana. Strings of oil were seen Monday in the Rigolets, one of two waterways that connect the Gulf with Lake Pontchartrain, the large lake north of New Orleans.
The news of the spill's reach comes at a time when most of the offshore skimming operations in the Gulf have been halted by choppy seas and high winds. A tropical system that had been lingering off Louisiana flared up Monday afternoon, bringing heavy rain and winds.
Choppy seas have temporarily foiled attempts to see if the giant oil skimmer can be a silver bullet for cleanup efforts in the Gulf of Mexico.
Bob Grantham, spokesman for Taiwanese shipping firm TMT, says ``A Whale'' will need further testing off the coast of Louisiana.
Grantham says testing will resume as soon as the water is calmer.
Rough seas also kept clean-up vessels idle off the coasts of Florida, Alabama and Mississippi over the holiday weekend, officials said. The current spate of bad weather is likely to last well into this week, according to the National Weather Service.
``A Whale'' had undergone tests in a patch of water close to the wellhead over the weekend as the government tried to determine the vessel's effectiveness. The ship is also awaiting approval from the Environmental Protection Agency.
Miami Herald reporters Jaweed Kaleem, Jim Wyss, Fred Tasker and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/05/1717418/tar-balls-reach-texas-every-gulf.html#ixzz0svv1GDbQ
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