Man, people are pissed about that oil spill. But some of that blame is (rightfully) bouncing back to the congress-persons who voted for the Oil Pollution Act. Many believe that those who voted for it are directly responsible for the oil spill in the Gulf. That's a stretch... But they did enable British Petroleum to loosen their safety procedures, to operate without redundant oil spill prevention systems, to take risks, and be, you know, capitalist pig dogs. The argument is that this is why they're using the same oil spill clean up technologies used the in the late 70’s are still in place today.
The Oil Pollution Act diluted (heh heh) any motivation for improvement in oil spill safety, prevention and oil spill containment procedures by removing the penalties for neglect.
Many congress-persons who voted for this act are still in office today. The cry for these people to be removed is getting louder... and yes, I agree, but not for this. What we really should be outraged is that government, which demands obedience to protect us from these things, accepts no liability when they happen.
But anyway, here are their names (these congress-persons voted for the Oil Pollution Act of 1990):
United States Senators – [source]
Richard Shelby – Alabama
John McCain – Arizona
Barbara Boxer – California
Chris Dodd – Connecticut
Joe Lieberman – Connecticut
Joe Biden – Delaware (currently Vice President)
Tom Carper – Deleware
Daniel Inouye – Hawaii
Daniel Akaka – Hawaii
Dick Durbin – Illinois
Richard Lugar – Indiana
Chuck Grassley – Iowa
Tom Harkin – Iowa
Pat Roberts – Kansas
Jim Bunning – Kentucky
Mitch McConnell – Kentucky
Olympia Snowe – Maine
Ben Cardin – Maryland
Barbara Mikulski – Maryland
John Kerry – Massachusettes
Carl Levin – Michigan
Thad Cochran – Mississippi
Kit Bond – Missouri
Max Baucus – Montana
Harry Reid – Nevada
Frank Lautenberg – New Jersey
Jeff Bingaman – New Mexico
Chuck Schumer – New York
Kent Conrad – North Dakota
Byron Dorgan – North Dakota
Jim Inhofe – Oklahoma
Ron Wyden – Oregon
Arlen Specter – Pennsylvania
Tim Johnson – South Dakota
Orrin Hatch – Utah
Patrick Leahy – Vermont
Robert Byrd – West Virgnia
Jay Rockefeller – West Virginia
Herb Kohl – Wisconsin
U.S. House – [source]
Don Young – Alaska
Jon Kyl – Arizona
Howard Berman – California
David Dreier – California
Elton Gallegly – California
Wally Herger – California
Jerry Lewis – California
George Miller – California
Nancy Pelosi – California
Dana Rohrabacher – California
Henry Waxman – California
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen – Florida
Cliff Stearns – Florida
Bill Young – Florida
John Lewis – Georgia
Jerry Costello – Illinois
Dan Burton – Indiana
Pete Visclosky – Indiana
Hal Rogers – Kentucky
Barney Frank – Massachussetts
Ed Markey – Massachussetts
Richard Neal – Massachussetts
Steny Hoyer – Maryland
John Conyers – Michigan
John Dingell – Michigan
Dale Kildee – Michigan
Sander Levin – Michigan
Fred Upton – Michigan
Jim Oberstar – Minnesota
Gene Taylor – Mississippi
Frank Pallone – New Jersey
Chris Smith – New Jersey
Donald Payne – New Jersey
Gary Ackerman – New York
Eliot Engel – New York
Nita Lowey – New York
Charles Rangel – New York
Jose Serrano – New York
Louise Slaughter – New York
Ed Towns – New York
Howard Coble – North Carolina
David Price – North Carolina
Marcy Kaptur – Ohio
Peter DeFazio – Oregon
Paul Kanjorski – Pennsylvania
John Spratt, Jr. – South Carolina
Jim Cooper – Tennessee
John Duncan – Tennessee
Bart Gordon – Tennessee
John Tanner – Tennessee
Joe Barton – Texas
Ralph Hall – Texas
Solomon Ortiz – Texas
Lamar Smith – Texas
Frank Wolf – Virgnia
Jim McDermott – Washington
Nick Rahall – West Virginia
Alan Mollohan – West Virgninia
Dave Obey – Wisconsin
Jim Sensenbrenner – Wisconsin
andNow what ought to REALLY anger you is how many of these jokers are still incumbents TWENTY years after. That is greater of incumbents that existed under one party rule in China and the Soviet Union. I think only Castro has outlived these lifetime Congressional 'leaders'?
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