Recent comments

  • Reply to: Seven Faces of NRA/ALEC-Approved "Stand Your Ground" Law   12 years 6 months ago
    Perhaps you are not aware, maybe you just haven't researched the subject, or you like to distort the facts. Guns Save Lives Stories: Where's the cavalry? 8/21/2002 Who Will Tuck Them In Tonight? 5/22/2002 Armed Homeowners Help Nab Serial Armed Robber (Rockledge, Florida - May 21, 2002) 5/22/2002 Armed robber killed by store owner (2 Articles, With Update) (Cleveland, Ohio - May 14, 2002) 5/16/2002 Man kills one of two assailants (Hampton, Virginia - May 13, 2002) 5/16/2002 Shop owner who killed robber had been shot before (Update) (McAllen, Texas - May 10, 2002) 5/16/2002 Hero teacher back to school after using firearm to capture assailant who shot police officer (Jersey City, New Jersey - May10, 2002) 5/16/2002 Shop owner kills robber (McAllen, Texas - May 09, 2002) 5/16/2002 Teen shot after breaking into apartment (Jacksonville, Florida - May 03, 2002) 5/16/2002 Two home invaders killed in shootout with resident (2 Articles) (Houston, Texas - May 04, 2002) 5/16/2002 Police believe man acted in self-defense in shooting death (Las Vegas, Nevada - May 02, 2002) 5/16/2002 Store owner rescues robbery victim (2 Articles) (Houston, Texas - April 29, 2002) 5/16/2002 Man breaks into house of estranged wife and is killed (Spokane, Washington - April 28, 2002) 5/16/2002 Man who captures intruder 'was just protecting my family' (Glendale, Oregon - April 19, 2002) 4/26/2002 Suspect in theft shot, killed by businessman (Las Vegas, Nevada - April 25, 2002) 4/26/2002 Home intruder shot dead by woman (3 Articles) (Seattle, Washington - April 25, 2002) 4/26/2002 Jury acquits man of murder, cites self-defense (Dallas, Texas - April 18, 2002) 4/26/2002 Unseen stories 4/24/2002 Store owner takes shot at robber (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma - April 17, 2002) 4/21/2002 Woman Shoots Intruder Dead (Santa Fe, New Mexico - April 19, 2002) 4/21/2002 Shooting of estranged husband self-defense (LaPorte, Indiana - April 07, 2002) 4/21/2002 Victim strikes back in running CBD gun fight (Durban, South Africa - April 17, 2002) 4/21/2002 Store Employee With Gun Thwarts Would-Be Robber (Bethlehem, Pennsylvania - April 17, 2002) 4/21/2002 2002 Darwin Award Nominee -- Tries to Steal Gun from Gunowner, Shot dead (Albuquerque, New Mexico - February 04, 2002) 4/21/2002 Jeweler recalls minutes of terror (Snohomish, Washington - April 16, 2002) 4/21/2002 Kidane Acquitted (Fresno, California - April 12, 2002) 4/21/2002 Teen kills would-be rapist (Bushbuckridge, South Africa - March 26, 2002) 4/21/2002 "NO!" spoken in Shotgunese sends stalker to hospital (Desert Hot Springs, California - April 14, 2002) 4/21/2002 Officer labels shooting as self-defense (Titusville, Florida - April 10, 2002) 4/21/2002 Woman will not be charged in fatal shooting (LaPorte, Indiana - April 10, 2002) 4/21/2002 Businessman wounds robber (3 Articles) (Snohomish, Washington - April 13, 2002) 4/21/2002 Fatal shooting a case of self-defense (Houston, Texas - April 09, 2002) 4/21/2002 No charges filed in fatal shooting (Muncie, Indiana - April 09, 2002) 4/21/2002 D.A. rules February shooting death justifiable (Topeka, Kansas - April 08, 2002) 4/21/2002 Self-defense cited in shooting death (Mims, Florida - April 07, 2002) 4/21/2002 South African store owner defends himself against four robbers (Pretoria, South Africa - March 7, 2002) 4/21/2002 The Vershire Murder 4/14/2002 Gun Helped Thwart Murderers Who Went and Killed Elsewhere (Vershire, Vermont - July 19, 2000) 4/7/2002 Clerk wounds robber who had history of crime (Muncie, Indiana - April 05, 2002) 4/7/2002 One-shot granny kills intruder (Potchefstroom, South Africa - April 05, 2002) 4/7/2002 Teen is charged with felony murder after homeowner shoots accomplice (Kansas City, Missouri - April 05, 2002) 4/7/2002 Man kills roommate who turned violent (Houston, Texas - April 05, 2002) 4/7/2002 Neighbor: Intruder Chose Wrong House (2 Articles) (Kansas City, Missouri - April 03, 2002) 4/7/2002 West Valley police seek burger-joint thieves (West Valley City, Utah - April 03, 2002) 4/7/2002 Two charged in slaying of burglary accomplice (Las Vegas, Nevada - April 04, 2002) 4/7/2002 91-year-old neighbor saves woman from ex-boyfriend (2 Articles) (Clintonville, Ohio - April 03, 2002) 4/7/2002 Paintgun attacker shot by real gun (2 articles) (Lakewood, Colorado - April 03, 2002) 4/7/2002 Pickup's owner kills suspected burglar (Houston, Texas - April 3, 2002) 4/7/2002 Man kills robber in TV-style home invasion (Memphis, Tennessee - April 02, 2002) 4/7/2002 Owners recount robbery attempt (Lebanon, Oregon - April 02, 2002) 4/7/2002 Homeowner helped break robbery ring, Sheriff calls him a hero (Dentsville, South Carolina - April 02, 2002) 4/7/2002 Man shoots, kills intruder while second suspect flees (Birmingham, Alabama - March 28, 2002) 4/7/2002 Clerk Won't Be Charged For Shooting Robber (Towson, Maryland - March 28, 2002) 4/7/2002 Clerk Foils Attempted Carjacking (Edmond, Oklahoma - March 29, 2002) 4/7/2002 Taking care of business - Update on the Geckle Brothers (Baltimore, Maryland - March 19, 2002) 4/7/2002 Man aids wounded neighbors, shoots attacker (Phoenix, Arizona - March 29, 2002) 4/7/2002 Threat of gun ends robbery attempt (Selma, Alabama - March 28, 2002) 4/7/2002 Man holds alleged thief at gunpoint (Rome, Georgia - March 20, 2002) 4/7/2002 Drivers, choose your weapons! (Spring Hill, Florida - March 21, 2002) 4/7/2002 Man shot while breaking into home (Dentsville, South Carolina - March 22, 2002) 4/7/2002 Jury rules shooting self-defense (Hancock, Mississippi - Februrary 08, 2002) 4/7/2002
  • Reply to: BREAKING: Intuit Out of ALEC; Coke, Kraft, Pepsi, too, while Koch Stands Ground   12 years 6 months ago
    http://bit.ly/I6RfMc "Like any global business, FedEx participates in a range of civic and political engagement groups that represent or could impact our customers' business interests," FedEx spokesman Mary Donahue said. "We cannot speculate on our future relationships, but we regularly review our membership in all of these organizations."
  • Reply to: The Fracking Frenzy's Impact on Women   12 years 6 months ago
    It's been going on a lot longer than 50 years, and some of the explosives used in the testing process included napalm followed by gasoline. NSI Technologies has a good history of fracking here; http://www.spe.org/jpt/print/archives/2010/12/10Hydraulic.pdf Halliburton is the master of this technique. Only recently have states started to require the industry to disclose make the components used in the hydraulic fracturing (fracking) process, so that potential impacts on nearby groundwater sources and surface water can be examined. The US is the primary source for many requests of natural gas, as it has in place hydraulic fracturing infrastructure - other countries do not (yet). However, the US also has a growing population, so the extraction and transportation of the gas must be examined for conflicts with the surrounding human and natural environment. I am sorry you think this is mass hysteria caused by the environmental community. If the US was a mass wasteland, you would probably not see any concern at all and you could go about your daily job with no one questioning your business. Unfortunately, that is not the case.
  • Reply to: ALEC Ratified the NRA-Conceived Law That May Protect Trayvon Martin's Killer   12 years 6 months ago
    I am just curious, with all of the controversy surrounding how the media has manipulated and/or twisted facts in the Trayvon shooting, why do you still use a photograph of a 12-year-old Trayvon when in fact he was 17 and 6"3". I have no opinion on anyone's guilt or innocence, but I feel its important to point out distortions in media.
  • Reply to: The Fracking Frenzy's Impact on Women   12 years 6 months ago
    Robb, you may want to check out the recently released USGS study on this issue. Here is an EnergyWire report on it. EnergyWire article and USGS Abstract. USGS is studying this potential relationship and has posted an abstract. See link directly below: USGS Abstract on Earthquake Relationship to Drilling ENERGYWIRE: EARTHQUAKES: 'Remarkable' spate of man-made quakes linked to drilling, USGS team says Mike Soraghan, E&E reporter Published: Thursday, March 29, 2012 Picture (Device Independent Bitmap)A rash of earthquakes in the middle of the country appears to be related to oil and gas drilling, according to a group of researchers at the U.S. Geological Survey. "A remarkable increase in the rate of [magnitude-3.0] and greater earthquakes is currently in progress," the scientists state in the abstract for their study. "A naturally-occurring rate change of this magnitude is unprecedented outside of volcanic settings or in the absence of a main shock." The surge in temblors is "almost certainly man-made," they found, and all of the potential causes they explore in the paper relate to drilling, or more specifically, deep underground injection of drilling waste. Casting the quakes as a trend could make it more difficult for oil and gas companies and state regulators to discount the earthquakes related to drilling as rare, isolated events. That, in turn, could provide new ammunition to critics who want stronger regulations, or even a ban on drilling. The group of scientists, led by geophysicist William Ellsworth, is to present the paper next month at the annual meeting of the Seismological Society of America in San Diego. The abstract for their study has already been posted. The study found that the frequency of earthquakes started rising in 2001 across a broad swath of the country between Alabama and Montana. In 2009, there were 50 earthquakes greater than magnitude-3.0, the abstract states, then 87 quakes in 2010. The 134 earthquakes in the zone last year is a sixfold increase over 20th century levels. The surge in the last few years corresponds to a nationwide surge in shale drilling, which requires disposal of millions of gallons of wastewater for each well. According to the federal Energy Information Administration, shale gas production grew, on average, nearly 50 percent a year from 2006 to 2010. "This is very peculiar, what's going on," Ellsworth said in an interview with EnergyWire. But there are disagreements about whether some of the events were triggered by activity related to drilling. And the abstract states, "It remains to be determined how they are related to either changes in extraction methodologies or the rate of oil and gas production." The abstract states that a "modest" increase in quake activity near the Colorado-New Mexico border starting about 10 years ago was "due to" increased seismicity in a nearby coalbed methane field in the Raton Basin. That contradicts a USGS report that said "we do not have any firm evidence of a direct relationship between the fluid disposal and the earthquake swarm." But Ellsworth said that conclusion is dated. "The 2002 report was very cautious," he said. "Our report is based on another 10 years of data." More recently, the study abstract says, another spate of tremors that began in 2009 "appears to involve a combination of source regions of oil and gas production." That combination includes a "swarm" of earthquakes in north-central Arkansas tied to underground injection of wastewater from hydraulic fracturing (Greenwire, June 22, 2011), along with other tremors in central and southern Oklahoma. In Oklahoma, the rate of earthquakes greater than magnitude 3.0 "abruptly increased" from an average of 1.2 quakes a year for the previous half-century to more than 25 in 2009. But a study by the Oklahoma Geological Survey released earlier in 2011 found that most of the state's seismic activity did not appear to be tied to injection wells, although it said more investigation was needed. In their study, the USGS scientists did not include a magnitude-4.0 earthquake in January in Youngstown, Ohio, that scientists have linked to underground injection of fracturing wastewater, or a magnitude-5.6 earthquake near Oklahoma City in November. But another paper to be presented at the San Diego conference by University of Memphis seismologist Stephen Horton concludes that the November quake was "possibly triggered" by nearby waste injection wells. There are 181 injection wells in the Oklahoma county where the November earthquake happened. But Ellsworth said researchers are also looking at "enhanced oil recovery" wells where oil and water are withdrawn. "We don't know exactly what's going on, whether it's related to injection or withdrawal," he said. "We don't understand why it went up so quickly in Oklahoma, where recovery has been used for years." The USGS paper is to be presented by Ellsworth, a former president of the Seismological Society, who is at the Geological Survey's Earthquake Science Center in Menlo Park, Calif. The paper does not link any of the earthquakes to hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," itself, but to injection wells that accept wastewater from "fracked" production wells. Induced seismicity Geologists have known for decades that deep injection of industrial waste can lubricate faults and unleash earthquakes. One of the most famous instances of man-made earthquakes, or "induced seismicity," occurred in the late 1960s at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal near Denver, where the Army manufactured chemical weapons. Man-made earthquakes are rare. And quakes caused by underground injection have not caused injuries. Still, there are more earthquakes linked to injection of oil and gas waste than there are documented cases of drinking-water contamination linked to hydraulic fracturing. And in the last year, earthquakes in Arkansas and Ohio near heavy drilling areas have set people on edge, forced the shutdown of wells and inspired new restrictions on injection wells (Greenwire, Jan. 5). No injuries were reported from those quakes, but they have caused some to question drilling practices and strengthened the opposition of others. Earthquakes unleashed by drilling wastewater fall into a gap in federal environmental laws. Oil and gas producers are exempt from provisions of the hazardous waste statutes designed to prevent industrial waste injection wells from triggering earthquakes (EnergyWire, March 12). States can adopt stricter rules. Ohio is adding additional seismic testing in the wake of its tremors, but other states have not followed suit. U.S. EPA has a team developing a series of recommendations to suggest to state regulators on earthquakes. The team started work last June and says it hopes the recommendations will help in "managing or minimizing" earthquakes triggered by oil and gas waste injection wells (EnergyWire, March 15). In addition, the National Academy of Sciences is studying how several forms of energy production trigger earthquakes. According to the NAS website, the group's report, "Induced Seismicity Potential in Energy Technologies," is due out this spring.

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