Industry Influence To Blame For Tavares, Florida Explosion

authordefault
on

This post originally appeared onย RingofFireRadio.com.

On July 29th, an explosion at a gas plant in Tavares, Florida injured eight people, leaving five of them in critical condition.ย  Three months prior to that, a fertilizer plant explosion in Texas killed 14 people and left numerous people injured and homeless.ย  And three years before that, an oil rig operated by BP, Transocean, and Halliburton exploded in the Gulf of Mexico killing 11 people and destroying an entireย ecosystem.

Countless other explosions, oil leaks, gas leaks, and other industrial โ€œaccidentsโ€ occurred all over the country in between these three major events, and every one of them has something in common:ย  They were all allowed to happen thanks to a lack of sufficient safety regulations.ย  And the lack of oversight was the work of politicians who are on the dole of industries that consistently put the health of their profits over the safety of their workers and theย public.

Mike Papantonio, a senior partner with the Florida law firm of Levin, Papantonio said, โ€œWhen you follow the money on stories like these, youโ€™ll almost always find out that industry money was enough to convince corrupt politicians that people are expendable and safety isnโ€™t as important as the next election cycle.ย  This is becoming the norm in our post-Citizensโ€™ United politicalย arena.โ€

In Florida, the site of the most recent explosion, the energy industry is the top campaign donor for political races, lobbying, and other political expenditures.ย  And what do they get in return for the millions they give politicians in the Sunshine State?ย  Tea Party Florida Governor Rick Scott and Republicans in Washington gave them the gift of a budget cut โ€“ a cut that dangerously lowered the budget of government agencies that oversee public and workplace safety.ย  The result is fewer regulators, fewer inspections, and more injuries.

This is the exact same scenario that played itself out in the West, Texas fertilizer plant explosion.ย  Analyses by writers like David Sirota writing for Salon.com tell us that the industryโ€™s fingerprints are all over the deregulation and lack of safety inspections that could have easily prevented the deadly explosion.ย  But, in true Republican fashion, industry money won the day, and the workers at that Texas fertilizer plant were the ones who paid the ultimate price for corporate greed and politicalย corruption.

And the story repeats itself again in the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster, where the industry had such a cozy relationship with the government and regulators that the company was actually allowed to fill out their own safety inspection reports!

When it comes to buying political influence, no other industry is more powerful than the dirty energy industry.ย  They consistently spend more on lobbying and campaign donations than any other industry, and as a result, they are able to write their own rules, consumers beย damned.

authordefault

Farron Cousins is the executive editor of The Trial Lawyer magazine, and his articles have appeared on The Huffington Post, Alternet, and The Progressive Magazine. He has worked for the Ring of Fire radio program with hosts Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Mike Papantonio, and Sam Seder since August 2004, and is currently the co-host and producer of the program. He also currently serves as the co-host of Ring of Fire on Free Speech TV, a daily program airing nightly at 8:30pm eastern. Farron received his bachelor's degree in Political Science from the University of West Florida in 2005 and became a member of American MENSA in 2009.ย  Follow him on Twitterย @farronbalanced.

Related Posts

on

The group behind the radical Project 2025 agenda is increasingly turning its attention to Europe.

The group behind the radical Project 2025 agenda is increasingly turning its attention to Europe.
on

Utilities asked EPA chief Lee Zeldin to unleash AI growth by scrapping carbon capture deadlines and other fossil fuel regulations, passing costs onto consumers.

Utilities asked EPA chief Lee Zeldin to unleash AI growth by scrapping carbon capture deadlines and other fossil fuel regulations, passing costs onto consumers.
on

The climate science denial group, which has been trying to make inroads into Europe, claims it has โ€œstrongโ€ ties to โ€œbig individualsโ€ in the U.S. administration.

The climate science denial group, which has been trying to make inroads into Europe, claims it has โ€œstrongโ€ ties to โ€œbig individualsโ€ in the U.S. administration.
on

The Alliance for Responsible Citizenship is the global far-right Woodstock, with political and thought leaders mingling with the business elite, conservative nobodies โ€” and me.

The Alliance for Responsible Citizenship is the global far-right Woodstock, with political and thought leaders mingling with the business elite, conservative nobodies โ€” and me.