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Public Meeting in New Orleans: The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism

Three months after the explosion of BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig, which killed 11 workers, hundreds of millions of gallons of toxic oil have spewed into the Gulf of Mexico.The consequences of the spill have only begun to be felt. It will affect the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of people and cause untold damage on fragile ecosystems throughout the region.

It is time to draw up a balance sheet of the disaster. BP’s cost-cutting and deliberate disregard of warning signs in the run-up to the explosion; the government’s abject failure to regulate the company; the drive by both the Bush and Obama administrations to expand off-shore oil drilling despite environmental concerns—all of this paved the way for the disaster in the Gulf.

Throughout the crisis, the Obama administration—which intervened in 2009 to ensure that BP’s drilling would go forward—has insisted that BP’s profits must be guaranteed, even though the real damage done by the spill far exceeds the value of the corporation.The $20 billion escrow fund agreed by Obama and BP amounts to only a minuscule portion of the damage done to the people of the Gulf Coast. Statements by “claims czar” Kenneth Feinberg make clear that the vast majority of those affected will received inadequate assistance--if any.

The Gulf oil spill has once again demonstrated the immense danger to the world’s population from global capitalism, in which giant forces of production—and potentially destruction—are controlled in the interests of profit and private wealth accumulation.

In these meetings, WSWS writer Andre Damon, who has reported extensively on the disaster, will discuss the political and social origins of the crisis and explain the socialist response.

Tulane University
Tuesday, August 3
201 Boggs, New Orleans, Louisiana‎
7:00 p.m.
Public Meeting in Mobile: The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism

Three months after the explosion of BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig, which killed 11 workers, hundreds of millions of gallons of toxic oil have spewed into the Gulf of Mexico.The consequences of the spill have only begun to be felt. It will affect the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of people and cause untold damage on fragile ecosystems throughout the region.

It is time to draw up a balance sheet of the disaster. BP’s cost-cutting and deliberate disregard of warning signs in the run-up to the explosion; the government’s abject failure to regulate the company; the drive by both the Bush and Obama administrations to expand off-shore oil drilling despite environmental concerns—all of this paved the way for the disaster in the Gulf.

Throughout the crisis, the Obama administration—which intervened in 2009 to ensure that BP’s drilling would go forward—has insisted that BP’s profits must be guaranteed, even though the real damage done by the spill far exceeds the value of the corporation.The $20 billion escrow fund agreed by Obama and BP amounts to only a minuscule portion of the damage done to the people of the Gulf Coast. Statements by “claims czar” Kenneth Feinberg make clear that the vast majority of those affected will received inadequate assistance--if any.

The Gulf oil spill has once again demonstrated the immense danger to the world’s population from global capitalism, in which giant forces of production—and potentially destruction—are controlled in the interests of profit and private wealth accumulation.

In these meetings, WSWS writer Andre Damon, who has reported extensively on the disaster, will discuss the political and social origins of the crisis and explain the socialist response.

University of South Alabama
Wednesday, August 4
307 North University Blvd
7:00 p.m.
See video
The Gulf Oil Spill—Part Five: Residents respond to the disaster
See video
The Gulf oil spill: Part four—The environment
See video
The Gulf oil spill: Part 3—The social impact
See video
The Gulf oil spill Part 2—The effect on human health
See video
The Gulf Oil Spill--Part One: The economic impact
See video
Louisiana residents and fishermen denounce oil spill response
See video
Friend of house fire victim denounces shutoff policy
See video
Louisiana residents denounce British Petroleum response
See video
Lawyer for family of worker killed in blast says BP guilty of negligence
See video
20000 march for immigrant rights in Chicago

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Upcoming Meetings

Public Meeting in New Orleans: The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism
Tulane University
Tuesday, August 3
Public Meeting in Mobile: The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism
University of South Alabama
Wednesday, August 4

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