we know 21st-century technology guarantees the land’s protection

adn.com | environment : Oil spill is the North Slope’s biggest ever By RACHEL D’ORO, Associated Press Writer

More than 200,000 gallons of crude leaked from a ruptured transit line onto the tundra in Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, making the spill discovered earlier this month the largest ever on the North Slope, according to an official estimate released Friday.

The estimated spill size of 202,000 to 267,000 gallons far surpasses the 38,000 gallons spilled in 2001, officials said. …

[I]t was not expected to be as large as the BP spill, said DEC spokesman John Dixon.

“I’d be surprised if it even exceeds 500 gallons,” he said. [mjh: Surprise!]

To date, workers have recovered 52,920 gallons — or 1,260 barrels — of crude.

mjh’s blog

Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski:

But if Arctic oil development was going to harm the environment or wildlife, then I would agree opening it would not be worth the cost. But the vast majority of Alaskans, including Alaska’s Eskimos who know it best, support ANWR’s development because we know 21st-century technology guarantees the land’s protection.

ABQjournal: Wilson Record a Maverick Streak, Not GOP Buckin’ By Michael Coleman, Of the Journal

Those who oppose oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge have won some nail-biter victories in Congress in recent years, but Sen. Pete Domenici keeps demanding a rematch.

The New Mexico Republican and chairman of the Senate energy committee maneuvered again last week to open the refuge to oil companies by putting the measure in the federal budget. Domenici keeps using that tactic because the federal spending blueprint is immune to a filibuster….

Domenici told me late last week that America needs Alaska’s oil and he’s willing to take the political heat to get it.

“For those who can’t vote for it because of political reasons, that’s their prerogative,” Domenici said. “But I don’t want to let another opportunity pass on my watch.”

mjh’s blog — Oil and Gas Contributes $179.7 million – 74 percent to Republicans
The Money Behind the Debate Over Drilling in ANWR

Oil companies are hoping their considerable political clout, built up over years of generous campaign giving and lobbying, will put drilling in ANWR over the top. The oil and gas industry has contributed $179.7 million since 1989 to federal candidates and political parties, 74 percent to Republicans. … [mjh: Coincidence?]

Safety does not erode

ABQjournal: Bomb Designer Questions U.S. Nuclear PolicyBy John Fleck, Journal Staff Writer

The history of U.S. nuclear weapons policy looks to Richard Garwin like an alcoholic for whom the answer to any problem is another drink: “More nuclear weapons, please.”

To Garwin, the latest effort to design a new generation of nukes— the “Reliable Replacement Warhead”— has the appearance of another binge coming on.

The Reliable Replacement Warhead, Garwin told a packed audience Friday at the University of New Mexico, “is not necessary.”

This is no peacenik talking. Garwin, a physicist who helped design the first U.S. H-bomb, has advised the federal government on nuclear policy and technology for much of the past five decades. …

While no decision has been made to go beyond paper design studies, the managers of the National Nuclear Security Administration have quickly made the Reliable Replacement Warhead the centerpiece of their plans for the future. …

“The Reliable Replacement Warhead is the rage this year,” Garwin said during his UNM talk. …

Garwin said there was also no reason to think aging weapons posed greater risks of accidental detonation.

“There’s no question of safety,” he said. “Safety does not erode.”

Former top judge says US risks edging near to dictatorship

Former top judge says US risks edging near to dictatorship by Julian Borger

Sandra Day O’Connor, a Republican-appointed judge who retired last month after 24 years on the supreme court, has said the US is in danger of edging towards dictatorship if the party’s rightwingers continue to attack the judiciary.

In a strongly worded speech at Georgetown University, reported by National Public Radio and the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, Ms O’Connor took aim at Republican leaders whose repeated denunciations of the courts for alleged liberal bias could, she said, be contributing to a climate of violence against judges. …

She pointed to autocracies in the developing world and former Communist countries as lessons on where interference with the judiciary might lead. “It takes a lot of degeneration before a country falls into dictatorship, but we should avoid these ends by avoiding these beginnings.” …

[During the Schiavo affair,] DeLay later called for the impeachment of judges involved in the Schiavo case, and called for more scrutiny of “an arrogant, out-of-control, unaccountable judiciary that thumbed their nose at Congress and the president”.

Such threats, Ms O’Connor said, “pose a direct threat to our constitutional freedom”, and she told the lawyers in her audience: “I want you to tune your ears to these attacks … You have an obligation to speak up.

“Statutes and constitutions do not protect judicial independence – people do,” the retired supreme court justice said.

She noted death threats against judges were on the rise and added that the situation was not helped by a senior senator’s suggestion that there might be a connection between the violence against judges and the decisions they make.

The senator she was referring to was John Cornyn, a Bush loyalist from Texas….

From the Gas Bag

Truth Detector: Dubai Waves Good-Bye, Hello Halliburton & Wal-Mart!

[mjh: More of the wit & wisdom of Lush Limbaugh, gas bag.]

They’re pulling out of there, saying, “Screw you! To hell with it.” Now, we’ve got an opportunity here, folks. You know me: I always try to look at events and say what is the opportunity. The opportunity is, all right, everybody wants an American company to run these ports. Take advantage of this, make a move. Get Halliburton in there today. Make a move, and ram this right down Chuck Schumer’s throat…

That company is Halliburton. Wal-Mart could do it, too. They’ve shown ability to manage and move large amounts of goods with security and a good health care program for the employees.

[mjh: In the midst of this, he vaguely accuses Bill Clinton of being involved in this, especially the 45 day waiting period. Yawn. Lush, Clinton isn’t president anymore. And Bob Dole was just as involved.]

Old News

ABQjournal: Bird Causes Backyard Bonanza By Julie Medina, Journal Staff Writer

The bird was first seen on Pueblo Solano NW in the North Valley on Dec. 1.

Bratton said she was lucky and saw it when she was taking her daughter to horseback riding lessons.

“I remember telling my daughter, wouldn’t it be fun if it came to our feeder,” Bratton said.

On Feb. 21, her wish came true. Bratton saw the same bird, with the protruding lower bill, eating at her feeder.

Albuquerque's Yellow GrosbeakOn March 12th, the Albuquerque Journal, having exhausted everyone’s interest in Calvary Chapel many times over, discovered the yellow grosbeak in Albuquerque, 3+ months after the Trib and 2.5 weeks after a couple of local bloggers. But, hey, more people are interested in a far-from-rare televangelist than a bird, right? mjh

PS: Knowing that one of my 3 regular readers works for the Journal, I always worry this may be the last straw. But that camel’s got back, baby! At least, I never refer to it as the “Urinal.”

What’s Old Is New Again

Government subverts its own ideals By ALLAN M. JALON

Thirty-five years ago Wednesday, a group of anonymous activists broke into the small, two-person office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Media, Pa., and stole more than 1,000 FBI documents that revealed years of systematic wiretapping, infiltration and media manipulation designed to suppress dissent.

The Citizens’ Commission to Investigate the FBI, as the group called itself, forced its way in at night with a crowbar while much of the country was watching the Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier fight. When agents arrived for work the next morning, they found the file cabinets virtually emptied.

[This break-in] remains one of the most lasting consequential (although underemphasized) watersheds of political awareness in recent American history, one that poses tough questions even today for our national leaders who argue that fighting foreign enemies requires the government to spy on its citizens. The break-in is far less well-known than Daniel Ellsberg’s leak of the Pentagon Papers three months later, but in my opinion it deserves equal stature.

Found among the Media documents was a new word, “COINTELPRO,” short for the FBI’s “secret counterintelligence program,” created to investigate and disrupt dissident political groups in the United States. Under these programs, beginning in 1956, the bureau worked to “enhance the paranoia endemic in these circles,” as one COINTELPRO memo put it, “to get the point across there is an FBI agent behind every mailbox.”

The Media documents — along with further revelations about COINTELPRO in the months and years that followed — made it clear that the bureau had gone beyond mere intelligence-gathering to discredit, destabilize and demoralize groups — many of them peaceful, legal civil rights organizations and anti-war groups — that the FBI and Director J. Edgar Hoover found offensive or threatening. …

The sheer reach of a completely politicized FBI was one of the most frightening revelations of the Media documents. … “Neutralize them in the same manner they are trying to destroy and neutralize the U.S.,” one memo said.

Sky Cops

I despise the routine use of helicopters by the police. That the cops would troll the skies, pissing away money, looking for something to justify their noise riles me.

Sure, we need copters to haul victims to a hospital. We may need them in certain emergencies. We DO NOT need them patrolling routinely.

If it were just one copter, maybe it would bother me less. But BCSD has more than one, APD has more than one, more than one news station has one. And then there are myriad Feds.

I’ve been awakened in the middle of the night by a copter shining its light into my bedroom. I’ve stood in its spotlight while walking the dog. It doesn’t make me feel a whit safer. mjh

ABQjournal: Copter Spared In Vetoes By Carolyn Carlson, Journal Staff Writer

The Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Department will get $865,000 for a new helicopter to replace the one shot down, allegedly by a Paradise Hills man in August.

Sheriff Darren White said Friday that acquiring a new helicopter was the department’s top priority during the recent legislative session. He said the money allocated along with insurance money from the downed aircraft and some money thrown in from the county will be enough to buy a new one.

He anticipated it will cost about $2 million to replace the helicopter and its on-board technology.

“We are very pleased. That money will go a long way to putting another chopper in the air,” White said. “This also brings a bit of healing to the department.”

White said it would take about a year before the new helicopter was in operation.

“There are some unique characteristics we will need because of our high altitude and warm temperatures,” White said. “No matter who wins the bid we will probably be on a waiting list to have it built.”

The $2 million price tag includes a $250,000 infrared camera used to track people and cars at night, White said. [mjh: You can run but you can’t hide.]