Dean, this oil stuff is hard to understand. When I lived on the coast in the 70s, it was common to go to the beach, and encounter tar balls. I went to the beach a lot, and we would take charcoal lighter fluid with us to get the oil off of us after surfing or just swimming.
Back then, tar balls and black oil marks on your legs were just considered a "natural" part of playing in the gulf surf. We could see the rigs, back then, because most of the drilling was in shallow water. The rigs all leaked, but nobody cared. We just made sure we had charcoal starter to wash it off of us -- how healthy is that.
Then again, the house I grew up in had asbestos siding.
Hey, I'm a cancer survivor. Go figure.
Gulf coast people are pretty hardy folks. They live through hurricanes, and like I said, polluted water is not a new thing along the Texas gulf coast. Polluted water (and air) means jobs down here, unless you fish for a living. And, even the fishermen were okay with it until it killed the fish.
Heck, under governor Dubya, Texas passed California to become the most polluted state. And, the most polluted parts of Texas are all along the gulf coast.
The gulf coast states are diehard red states, and they will still be out there at the tea parties shouting, "drill baby drill," no matter how bad this oil spill gets.
If you have lived in Northern California for long enough, there is no way you will be able to understand Texas -- or most of the South. I can almost promise that folks down here will not shed many tears for the environment -- but they'll curse the government for the loss of revenues from the fishing industry. Well, that's not completely true -- they will not care about the fishing industry, unless they make a living off of it, but they'll curse the government just because that's what people down here do.
BTW, I look at this and really worry bout the fisherman who are not wealthy to begin with, who stand to lose a lot. I'm not part of the gang that wants to put BP executives in jail -- I just want them to fix what's broken, and pay for the damage that their well caused. That's it.
I agree with President Obama that domestic oil production is necessary in the short term, and new drilling in the gulf is part of that, but we as a people need to understand that the easy oil in North America has already been sucked up, and new reserves in places like the deep parts of the gulf are going to be more costly to harvest, and will not come without risks.
This oil spill SHOULD be a wake up call to the fact that we need to have new plans for our energy future. But that will require a real grasp of reality. I hope we can grasp reality, or we're in trouble -- well, not me, but the kids who take over after I am gone.
CD