I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Friday, July 01, 2011

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Re: [OregonDems_etc] Drowning Fish?

 

Thank you for posting this. I used to subscribe to Palast's newsletter, but I got repeated notices that I had unsubscribed (I had not). I wrote to Palast's people about it and asked if it was happening to anybody else, but they didn't seem concerned about it, so I decided to not be paranoid.  I eventually gave up trying to subscribe. Maybe I'll try again, since you've reminded me again why I value Palast's work.

I sent the following message to NPR's On The Media (usign the online form at http://www.onthemedia.org/emailform/contact-otm/).  I've said repeatedly I question the value of "speaking truth to power" - I believe in "speaking truth about power" - when I post to the message boards on NPR, I'm writing for other listeners, not NPR.  I'm distressed On The Media's new format seems to preclude this.

Anyway, here is my message:

I tried to post this on your website, but the internet gremlins apparently ate it:

Wow, hate your [website] format. Seems designed to exclude dialogue. I want to pitch a story idea, but not sure where or how to do it. Greg Palast wrote:  "According to the scientists on NPR, every one of whom is in BP's pay, Mother Nature herself was cleaning up the oil from BP's blow-out, so don't worry about the fish. But [Palast Associate] Zach [Roberts] found out that BP's fish story was baloney. "  Wow, is this true?  If so, how about an investigation into how NPR selected scientists to comment on the BP disaster, and how they've let the public down by their lack of balance?  Also, I used to hear Palast a lot on local NPR talk shows.  Then one time the formerly congenial host (Ross Reynolds) went after him like  a Schnauzer and he was never on again. Did NPR headquarters send down the word there'd be no more funding for KUOW if they didn't toe the line and exclude him as a guest (like Chomsky)?  Or is there a Palast smear squad that follows him around (like the one Chomsky has) that got to Reynolds?  Remember, your name is "On The Media" - you've been doing a lot of fluff lately, this could be a really good story!

On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 3:10 AM, Scott Peden <scotpeden@cruzio.com> wrote:
 


 

Drowning Fish?

by Greg Palast
June 30th, 2011




July 3 would have been my parents' 67th Anniversary. 67 years. Maybe it was the triumph of Hope over Reality (still have that Obama 2008 poster?). Or maybe something else, something that those of us who haven't walked that far down the path can't imagine.

My Dad's last wish the night before he died last November was to dedicate some of his small savings to the Palast Investigative Fund.

It's the only time I wished he'd been an investment banker. He wasn't, so the Gil Palast Memorial Fund is small. And therefore, I appreciate deeply the donations many of you added to it.

My mom asked me to wait until my parents' would-have-been anniversary to announce the recipient of the Gil Palast Really Tiny Memorial Fellowship in Investigative Reporting.

And the winner is: Rob Roberts, fish biologist.

Except his name isn't Rob and he doesn't know a damn thing about fish.

His real name is Zachary "ZD" Roberts, photo journalist extraordinaire.

Zach, under the name Rob, scoped out the Gulf Coast for our team immediately the BP Deepwater Horizon explosion.

If you google Zach Roberts, "Greg Palast" also comes up, making his undercover work more difficult than it need be. But google the name Rob Roberts and you get lots of hits including a sex offender and a fish biologist.

Using the name Rob (one of his many legal names, so it's legit), Zach could go where US media fear to tread: where BP doesn't want cameras to snoop.

Here's what he found. According to the scientists on NPR, every one of whom is in BP's pay, Mother Nature herself was cleaning up the oil from BP's blow-out, so don't worry about the fish. But Zach found out that BP's fish story was baloney. From local fisherman, Zach learned that fish were DROWNING.

Until I heard this from Zach, I didn't know a fish could drown.

They can, a biologist (a real one) explained to me. And they have, by the gazillions - but BP's rent-a-professor operation had drowned out the findings.

Yes, Mother Nature has created bacteria that can eat crude oil (good), and the bugs have had a party feasting on BP's gunk. Then these bacteria had bacterium babies (bad). These little buggers, like all creatures, breathe — and so they sucked all the oxygen out of the water. Result: fish drowned.

BP denies it — and the Department of Interior can't find the fish corpses. The Department hired these same biologists who are suckling on the BP money teat. They could not find the dead fish despite searching by sticking their white canes in the Gulf waters.

But we could. It's not easy finding a biologist who is not licking BP's candy cane. But we found a couple: You can meet them — and the deceased fish—in our film on BP, broadcast last week in Europe. The full-monty US version is on its way.

This year, Zach completed the first round of shooting in Alaska for his film on Sarah Palin. Click here for some of the killer shots from his portfolio, including the one at the top of oil from the Exxon Valdez — taken 21 years after the spill by Roberts in advance of our filming in the Arctic for our Arctic-to-Amazon investigation of BP and Big Oil.

Zach, by the way, conceived and edited the comic book, Steal Back Your Vote (2008), and convinced Bobby Kennedy and I to write it, along with artists Ted Rall and Lloyd Dangle.

The Fellowship will provide Zach a small stipend to work with us for one year. [I'd like to make it two years, and would appreciate your tax-deductible donations to do so. I don't want to pressure you, but my mother is 89 and it would break her heart if the Gil Palast Memorial Fund ran out of funds. Mom has also requested the list of names of all you subscribers who have NOT donated; which gives you a hint as to how she maintained a successful 66-year marriage.]

Thanks again to you all. We're working hard to produce no-B.S. journalism and your support goes along way. We look forward to sharing our forthcoming reports with you over the next several months, and will keep you informed on "Rob" Roberts' ongoing work.

When in the course of human events it becomes necessary to expose the bastards, you can count on us.

— Greg Palast and the Palast Investigative Team

*****

Forensic economist and journalist Greg Palast, author of the New York Times bestsellers, Armed Madhouse and The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, wrote and presented the documentary, "BP: In Deep Water," for England's Channel 4 and Europe ARTE network. An interactive video-text version will be released in the USA in November.

Subscribe to Palast's Newsletter and podcasts.
Follow Palast on Facebook and Twitter.

GregPalast.com




























--
I want to play in your town for you and 2 of your friends. 
http://eventful.com/performers/matt-love-/P0-001-000156481-4/demands

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
MARKETPLACE

Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.


Stay on top of your group activity without leaving the page you're on - Get the Yahoo! Toolbar now.

.

__,_._,___

No comments: