We are in mortal danger of annihilation. The fight to the death - TopicsExpress



          

We are in mortal danger of annihilation. The fight to the death assaults on workers have gotten even more deadly and will sweep forward exponentially faster, in workplaces everywhere, not just in the oil patch. The battle has intensified, and is entombing workers regardless of where they are. They will come in ever widening & deepening waves of greed, contempt, disregard and criminal activity that avarice and hubris bought, giving legal but not humanitarian or ethical legitimacy to the advancing mercenaries. When a state/industry/organization/employer is used as a worse example than Texas relative to regulatory or allowable protections for workers, we should be put on urgent notice. Even if one doesnt consider the absolute blitzkrieg that will happen after January 1, 2015 when the nations newest mercenaries entrench with their deadly counterparts in Congress, fortifying their ranks and power, intensifying the brutal attacks, we are in mortal danger. As we have seen, the enemies are heavily armed, ruthless and sustained by more of the same unlimited cash that they used to terrorize their way into way congress to join the existing corrupt keepers of the gates The cash will continue to flow unabated, just as our blood will continue to do unless we get off of our collective asses and push back with whatever weaponry and bodies we can throw against them. it is critical that every one of us act like our livelihoods and lives are literally at stake. They most certainly are. .......despite these serious injuries and some 115,000 gallons spilled in those first 10 blowouts, the North Dakota Industrial Commission, which regulates the drilling and production of oil and gas, did not penalize Continental until the 11th..........Continental blamed “an irresponsible supervisor” — just as it had blamed Mr. Rohr and his crew, contract workers, for the blowout that left them traumatized. .......despite these serious injuries and some 115,000 gallons spilled in those first 10 blowouts, the North Dakota Industrial Commission, which regulates the drilling and production of oil and gas, did not penalize Continental until the 11th..........Continental blamed “an irresponsible supervisor” — just as it had blamed Mr. Rohr and his crew, contract workers, for the blowout that left them traumatized. nytimes/interactive/2014/11/23/us/north-dakota-oil-boom-downside.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=second-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news
Posted on: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 21:22:53 +0000

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