July 15, 2010

BP linked to release of Lockerbie bomber?



BP to drill for Libyan oil despite Lockerbie bomber furor

U.S. senators urge delays but BP says it will press ahead within weeks




 



LONDON — Oil giant BP said Thursday that it planned to start
 drilling off the coast of Libya within weeks despite calls from
 U.S. senators for a moratorium over the company's alleged 
links to the release of the Lockerbie bomber.
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., told NBC’s TODAY 
on Thursday that the U.K. government should investigate 
what role the company played in the decision to free
 Abdel Baset al-Megrahi in August 2009.


Image: Libyans greeting freed Lockerbie bomber Abdel Baset al-Megrahi
"We want a moratorium on the drilling [by BP] off Libya's coast. 
We believe BP should not be allowed to drill until we have resolution 
of this," she told the show.
Al-Megrahi, 57, is the only person convicted of carrying out the 
1988 bombing of a U.S. airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland, 
that killed 270 people.
He was released on compassionate grounds by the Scottish 
government after doctors said he was likely just months
from death. 
Nearly a year later, he remains alive.
BP signed a $900 million exploration agreement with
Libya in May 2007, 
the same month that Britain and Libya signed an agreement
 that paved the
 way for al-Megrahi's release from a Scottish prison.
BP has admitted that it lobbied the British government over
a prisoner transfer 
deal with Libya in late 2007, but denied playing any role in
the actual decision 
to release al-Megrahi nearly two years later.

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Why Whoopy is Dead Wrong In Defending Wash your Mouth with SoapMel Gibson


“You’re an anti-Semite. You’re a misogynist and you’re a racist.”
This is how Joy Behar, co-host of ABC’s The Viewdescribedactor Mel Gibson on the talk show’s July 12 episode.
Gibson, after all, can reportedly be heard on tape using racial slurs while criticizing the appearance of Oksana Grigorieva, his former girlfriend and the mother of his baby.
“You look like a f___ing pig in heat, and if you get raped by a pack of n___ers, it will be your fault,” Gibson allegedly told Grigorieva. Additionally, on another tape, Gibson reportedly refers to Latinos as “wetbacks.” Despite reports of such remarks, and the anti-Semitic streak Gibson showed when pulled over for drunk driving in 2007, Whoopi Goldberg, another co-host on The View, doesn't think Gibson is a racist. Her rationale?
“You can say he’s being a bonehead, but I can’t sit and say that he’s a racist, having spent time with him in my house with my kids. I can’t say it,” she told Behar.
On The View last night, Goldberg brought up Gibson once again. This time, however, it was to express her outrage that those who disagreed with her stance on the Braveheart actor dared to criticize her on blogs and leave angry phone calls with her assistant.
“Now, being a black woman, you’d think you would give me a little bit of, of, you know, leeway to have some feel if I was around a racist,” she protested.
But racism is complicated. Certainly, those with African-American ancestry know what it feels like to be on racism’s receiving end. However, there are lots of ways racism manifests itself, not all of them obvious. A racist isn't just someone who fancies white hoods and burning crosses and terrorizing people of color.
The dictionary tells us that racism is “the belief that… a particular race is superior to others” or that racism is “discrimination or prejudice based on race.” The hateful words that have reportedly flown from Mel Gibson’s mouth on multiple occasions indicate that his views fit this most basic definition of racism. If the voice on those tapes does, in fact, belong to Gibson, we know not only that the actor has no qualms about using dehumanizing terms to describe black men, but that he views black men as a group that runs around in “packs,” as animals do. We also know that he presumes black men are rapists and Latinos people who only arrived in the U.S. by illegally swimming across rivers. Collectively, these comments reveal prejudice and the notion that people of color are inferior — in short, racism.
I’m not sure exactly why Ms. Goldberg doesn’t see it this way. We know that she defended former boyfriend Ted Danson when he appeared in blackface several years ago during a celebrity roast. However, I also know that at times, Goldberg has spoken eloquently about race matters, such as when she defended the Black Panthers to a guest on The View who characterized them as whiny, privileged youths. Goldberg may be off about Mel Gibson, but she’s not altogether clueless about race relations. I believe that she simply has a difficult time swallowing the painful truth that our friends, lovers and family members may be racists or espouse racist views.
Mel Gibson may have set foot in Whoopi Goldberg’s home and been kind to her and her daughter, but that doesn't mean he can’t be racist. Think about it.  Staunch segregationist Strom Thurmond fathered a child with a black woman. He financially supported the child and visited her, all the while adhering to a political ideology that classified blacks as inferior. Was Strom Thurmond racist? Yes. Was Strom Thurmond kind to his mixed race daughter? Yes — based on his daughter’s accounts of him, that is.
People with racist views behave in contradictory ways, because after all, racism really makes no sense. I still marvel at the fact that for years, whites didn’t want to share swimming pools with blacks, but allowed black women to nurse their children. Which act is more intimate — breastfeeding or sharing a public pool?
Those of us who are mixed-race, adopted, belong to blended families or have married interracially may be related to folks who harbor racist views against people with our heritage. Take President Barack Obama. When he gave his famous “race speech” in 2008, he referred to his white grandmother as a woman “who helped raise me, a woman who sacrificed again and again for me, a woman who loves me as much as she loves anything in this world, but a woman who once confessed her fear of black men who passed by her on the street, and who on more than one occasion has uttered racial or ethnic stereotypes that made me cringe.”
Obama didn’t downplay or overlook his grandmother’s views, because he loved her. He recognized her views for what they were — racist. In this country, where similar views on race are ingrained in each of us early on, it doesn't help to take Whoopi Goldberg’s attitudes on the matter. We can't collectively pretend that racism only resides in those far away from us, rather than in those with whom we regularly open our lives to. We share meals with people who have racist views. We spend holidays with them. If we're to be honest, we hold many similar views ourselves. Let’s not ignore this fact. Racism can only be overcome if we identify and address it.
Photo Credit: David Shankbone

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Don't Cry For Me Argentina Gay Marriage Is HERE!


Put your Evita soundtrack on this morning, and head on down to the track "A New Argentina." There's a line in that song, "A new Argentina, the chains of the masses untied!" How apt, given that in the middle of the night, Argentina's Senate cast a historic vote breaking the chains of inequality that the country's gays and lesbians have faced when it comes to civil rights under the law. In a 33-27 vote, Argentina now becomes the first Latin American country to fully recognize marriage equality.
What a victory for gay rights advocates, who in recent days had to face a stepped up campaign of intolerance from the Mormon Church and the Catholic Church. Indeed, the Catholic Church helped organize massive rallies in Buenos Aires to oppose gay marriage, under the framework of children having the right to a mom and a dad. Ironic, one might say, that the Catholic Church in Argentina would center their argument against marriage equality around children's rights, given the lengthy history of Argentina's Catholic Church when it comes to (a) being engrossed in a child sex abuse scandal, and (b) the Catholic Church's acquiescence to, if not downright facilitation of, the seizure of children from tortured, disappeared and murdered women during Argentina's Dirty War. Children's rights: what a nebulous term for Argentina's Church.
But while the Argentine Catholic Church could use a history lesson this morning, the country as a whole is about to make history, becoming yet another country to take the bold step to recognize marriage equality. Sen. Norma Morandini, one of the 33 votes in favor of marriage equality, said that the Senate vote for gay marriage was a vote for humanity. She echoed the words of Argentina's President, Cristina Kirchner, in saying that gay marriage is a human rights issue, and one that countries should eagerly move to recognize.
"What defines us is our humanity, and what runs against humanity is intolerance," Sen. Morandini said. Nothing spells intolerance more than denying an entire bloc of citizens equal rights.
How big is Argentina's decision? Well, so big that it prompted Ricky Martin to tweet: "#Argentina votes yes on gay marriage! A great nation making history."
But even more so, Argentina's bold move toward marriage equality is another example of how when it comes to laws including LGBT populations, the United States is falling more and more behind the rest of the world. That's a fact not lost on Evan Wolfson from Freedom to Marry, the American organization working to achieve marriage equality here in the States.
"Today's historic vote shows how far Catholic Argentina has come, from dictatorship to true democratic values, and how far the freedom to marry movement has come as twelve countries on four continents now embrace marriage equality," said Wolfson. "Key to Argentina's human rights achievement was strong leadership from legislators and the president.  It is time we see more of our own elected officials standing up for the Constitution and all families here in the United States.  America should lead, not lag, when it comes to treating everyone equally under the law."
So there you have it, America. Argentina has a message for you, and it's that bold leadership requires standing up to the anti-gay forces that try to throw LGBT people under the bus. That's right. It's time to stand up to the Family Research Council, Focus on the Family, and the institutional Catholic Church, rather than living in fear of them. That's what fierce advocacy looks like.
Meanwhile, let's end this post with the words delivered by Argentina's Senate President after the historic vote. As the vote displayed on an electronic board for all to see, six words were uttered: "Gay marriage is law in Argentina."
Now those are six words to start your morning right.
Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

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