Archive for June 1st, 2011

fat cat

Recently, we asked Public Citizen supporters to tell the federal government what Wall Street greed meant to them. They did. More than 8,000 people sent in stories of lost jobs, lost health insurance and lost dignity.

Here is what some of them had to say:

“I have watched my friends who have masters degrees apply for food stamps.”

“We nearly lost our business in 2008. Next came my Dad who lost a third of his retirement.”

“Because of Wall Street, my son graduated a good school into a bankrupt economy. He is teaching T-ball and waiting tables for a living — jobs for a teenager, not a college graduate.”

“After a lifetime of never even being late on a payment for anything, much less missing one, we had to declare bankruptcy. Our son-in-law lost his job, and our grandson can’t find his first job after completing a community college certificate program.”

“I have been out of work since late September of 2008. … I have an advanced degree.”

“I lost my job. I was unable to find another job. I had to apply for unemployment. … I had worked all of my life and felt worthless now. I lost my health insurance not just for myself but for my children. After my unemployment benefits ran out, I had to go on welfare. In the meantime, I was diagnosed with a terminal disease.”

Public Citizen joined them in telling seven federal agencies to use a firm hand when creating rules to rein in out-of-control executive compensation at big Wall Street firms.

Let’s hope the government listens.

 

As our energy guru Tyson Slocum just wrote, fracking is more than just a controversial method for extracting natural gas , it’s another weapon in the oil industries’ inside-coat-pocket-o-tricks. Yeah! As if we really needed another reason to dislike Big Oil.

"Tyson Slocum fracking"

Tyson Slocum debates fracking, Eagle Ford and the Safe Drinking Water Act on CNBC

Last week as industry executives gathered in Houston for a major global energy conference, the Houston Chronicle ran a front page story entitled, “Fracking foes put industry on the defensive,” which it then featured later on that day on the often turned to “FuelFix” blog. In it, reporter Brett Clanton writes: “Anyone scoring the ongoing debate over hydraulic fracturing would notice that critics of the controversial oil and natural gas extraction process have lately put a few points on the board.” He goes on to quote Public Citizen’s energy program director Tyson Slocum:

The next order of business is going to have to be holding politicians’ feet to the fire.

This is pretty much exactly what Slocum did last night in a debate with industry talking head John Killduff on CNBC regarding the oil industry’s push to use a form of fracking to access and exploit oil locked in shale rock in an area in Catalina, Texas, called Eagle Ford.

Slocum began by explaining that for each shale well that is made six million gallons of clean drinking water must be used. The water is loaded up with toxic chemicals, which the industry will not disclose and doesn’t have to because they are exempt under the Safe Drinking Water Act, and shot into the shale rock where 85 percent of it will remain. This brings about all kinds of problems and questions like, can you light your water on fire?

And yet, industry claims it’s totally safe:

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