Posts Tagged ‘President’

What experience exactly can Sarah Palin offer our President on Oil Spills?

July 27, 2010 - 11:29 pm 6 Comments

Question by vote out all RINOs: What experience exactly can Sarah Palin offer our President on Oil Spills?
INTRODUCTION TO THE EXXON VALDEZ LITIGATION

On March 23, 1989, the supertanker EXXON VALDEZ pulled out of Valdez, Alaska, loaded with more than 56 million gallons of crude oil. Captain Joseph Hazelwood, the master of the vessel, had spent the day drinking with crew members. Bartenders testified that he had consumed at least eight vodka doubles, and Coast Guard tests showed his blood alcohol level stood at .241 — more than six times the permissible level under Coast Guard regulations. Third Mate Gregory Cousins was on duty beyond the limits specified by federal fatigue laws. Hazelwood, Cousins and the rest of the crew faced a night voyage through ice in Prince William Sound.

Hazelwood’s intoxication was evident from the alcohol on his breath, his speech (captured on audiotape) and, most of all, his actions as his ship navigated the Sound. While passing through fishing grounds, Hazelwood took the EXXON VALDEZ outside established shipping lanes to avoid ice. He put the vessel on automatic pilot, accelerating directly at Bligh Reef. Hazelwood then left the bridge in violation of federal pilotage regulations. As he went below, Hazelwood gave vague instructions to the inexperienced and fatigued Cousins. Within minutes, the supertanker struck Bligh Reef, spilling 11 million gallons of oil, “the largest oil spill and greatest environmental disaster in American history.”

At trial the jury learned how Exxon’s management of its shipping company made such a catastrophe inevitable. ["Exxon" refers to Exxon Corporation and its subsidiary (and former division) Exxon Shipping Company.] Exxon knew that the results of a major oil spill in the Sound would be as horrendous as they turned out to be, and it so stipulated at trial. Exxon also knew that Hazelwood had a history of alcoholism and poor judgment that made his command of the EXXON VALDEZ a recipe for disaster. After Hazelwood went through an alcohol rehabilitation program in 1985, Exxon made no provision for post-treatment evaluation, aftercare or monitoring. Instead, it immediately reassigned Hazelwood to command, fully understanding that a master “with an alcohol abuse problem was a potential for a disaster to the environment.” Exxon senior management received repeated reports of Hazelwood’s open drinking between 1985 and 1989, but did nothing about it.

In 1989, Exxon’s chairman admitted that putting Hazelwood in charge of a supertanker was a “gross error.” At trial, an Exxon manager conceded that Exxon’s “policies, knowing the risk to the public, of the catastrophic results of a supertanker accident, allow[ed] a relapsed alcoholic to command a supertanker,” and that Exxon’s attitude toward alcohol left him with “no policy to protect the safety of the public.” The evidence also showed that Exxon regularly violated federal fatigue laws and that its loaded tankers regularly departed Valdez in dangerous night-time ice conditions, simply to save money.

Exxon stipulated that its negligence caused this disaster. In Phase I of the trial, the jury found that Exxon and Hazelwood in fact had been reckless. And in Phase 111, the jury decided that the conduct of both Hazelwood and Exxon required assessment of punitive damages as a punishment and deterrent. In awarding billion against Exxon, the jury considered Exxon’s binding trial stipulation that its conduct had caused compensable harm of between 2 million and 8 million (not counting hundreds of millions in harm to tens of thousands of plaintiffs dismissed under the “Robins Dry Dock” doctrine). This award represented less than one-quarter of the increase in Exxon’s value, measured by market capitalization, from the time of the spill to the time of trial.

Throughout this complex litigation, Exxon and Hazelwood received extraordinary procedural and substantive protections. Punitive damages were assessed as a single sum for a mandatory class of all punitive damage claimants, guaranteeing that the defendants would face punitive damages only once. Through the bifurcation of punitive damage issues, Exxon had two opportunities to avoid any punitive damage liability. The court repeatedly told the jury that punitive damages were not favored. The Phase III punitive damage instructions endorsed nearly every mitigating factor asserted by Exxon. Further, most of Exxon’s motions to exclude evidence were granted, and almost all of the evidence that it requested be excluded was excluded.

http://www.jomiller.com/exxonvaldez/articles/intro.html

@Ci Ci

“she can offer her experience on control of oil, and oil overall.”

Are you fing kidding me. Do you really think that other than getting campaign funding, she has any knowledge of Oil operations?

I fill my tank everyday, does that give me experience LOL
@ Dastard

My point exactly.

Best answer:

Answer by purpleshamrock
Sarah Palin is probably one of the dumbest people in America. She can’t offer anything to us.

Give your answer to this question below!

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Straight Incorporated, President Bush

May 8, 2010 - 11:06 am 1 Comment


“Straight, Incorporated was a non-profit drug rehabilitation program in the United States that produced hundreds of reports of abuse of adolescents and their families during its 15 years of existence. Straight, Inc. was founded on April 22, 1976 by Mel Sembler and started its treatment program on September 1, 1976. This program was highly controversial due to the style of therapy it used, called “marathoning” that has been likened to brainwashing similar to the methods used on American POW’s captured by the Vietcong. Various allegations of abuse and lawsuits led to the end of Straight, Inc. The Fairfax, Virginia location was cited and shut down for 76 violations of client’s rights, including, but not limited to educational neglect, sleep, food and water deprivation, unlawful physical restraints, inadequate medical care, lack of trained or qualified staff, and allegations of non-reported sexual and physical abuse that resulted in paid lawsuits to several former clients. Many former patients of Straight have formed ‘survivor groups’ assembling themselves in small numbers seeking a means to understand the trauma suffered and supporting one another in grasping the reality of what happened in their lives. While gaining a reputation for controversial styles of therapy, including “spit” therapy and peer degradation, the Straight program lacked accreditation and could claim only a small degree of success among its clients that exceeded standard behavior-modification programs

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US Backed CIA Afghan Puppet President Karzai ‘may have drug problem’

April 9, 2010 - 3:07 pm 11 Comments


Karzai a heroin addict? NEW YORK – A former UN envoy to Afghanistan on Tuesday questioned the “mental stability” of Hamid Karzai and suggested the Afghan president may be using drugs. In an interview on msnbc’s “The Daily Rundown,” Peter Galbraith described Karzai as “off-balance” and “emotional.” Galbraith also called for President Barack Obama to vastly limit Karzais power to appoint officials within the war-torn country until he proves himself a reliable partner to the US “Hes prone to tirades. He can be very emotional, act impulsively. In fact, some of the palace insiders say that he has a certain fondness for some of Afghanistans most profitable exports,” said Galbraith, in an apparent reference to opium or heroin. When asked whether he meant Karzai has a substance abuse problem, Galbraith responded: “There are reports to that effect. But whatever the cause is, the reality is that he is — he can be very emotional.” Galbraith was interviewed via telecast from Norway. An e-mail to the Afghanistan Embassy in Washington requesting a response was not immediately returned. Galbraith was fired by the United Nations in September as the UN’s No. 2 official in Afghanistan after he openly accused his boss, Kai Eide, of concealing election fraud that benefited the campaign of the incumbent president. Eide angrily denied the accusation.

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Senate President Pro Tem Perata’s prison reform floor speech

January 27, 2010 - 7:09 am Comments Off


corrections management on a bipartisan 27-10 vote. AB 900 uses lease revenue bonds to generate $7.4 billion funding 53000 prison beds and expansions of rehabilitation programs. In addition, the measure sets a long list of conditions for the Department of Corrections to meet to eliminate gross mismanagement and improve rehabilitation, counseling, drug treatment and mental health programs. The provisions are aimed at reducing the state’s high recidivism rate. … California State Senate Perata …

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Senate President Pro Tem Perata’s prison reform floor speech

January 26, 2010 - 11:07 pm Comments Off


corrections management on a bipartisan 27-10 vote. AB 900 uses lease revenue bonds to generate $7.4 billion funding 53000 prison beds and expansions of rehabilitation programs. In addition, the measure sets a long list of conditions for the Department of Corrections to meet to eliminate gross mismanagement and improve rehabilitation, counseling, drug treatment and mental health programs. The provisions are aimed at reducing the state’s high recidivism rate. … California State Senate Perata …

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Is President Bush a dry drunk?

January 9, 2010 - 5:28 pm 3 Comments

A lot of 12 step people say he’s never really been treated for his substance abuse problems and is exhibiting the sort of black and white analysis of complicated issues that is classic dry drunk thought processes. You are either with us or against us is practically the motto of dry drunks. No shades of gray- it’s good vs. evil and anyone who doesn’t agree is evil. What do you think?

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