Skip to main content
  • WSWS
  • ICFI
  • Mehring Books
  • ISSE
  • RSS Feed
  • Newsletter
ISSE logo
Student Movement of the ICFI and Socialist Equality Party
  • Declaration of Principles
  • Statements
  • News
  • Events
  • ISSE Groups
  • Get Involved
Home
  • Declaration of Principles
  • Statements
  • News
    • Education in the UK
    • Education in the US
  • Events
    • Calendar
  • ISSE Groups
  • Get Involved
    • Contact
    • Join

Public Meeting in Mobile: The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism

Previous | Image 1 of 3 | Next
Oil washed up on the beach in Gulf Shores, Alabama

The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism

Previous | Image 1 of 3 | Next
Children play among beached oil in Gulf Shores, Alabama

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
    August 3
    New Orleans
    Louisiana
  • University of South...
    August 4
    Mobile
    Alabama

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.

AttachmentSize
Downloadable Poster5.89 MB
Date: 
August 4, 2010 - 7:00pm
Event Type: 
The Gulf oil disaster and capitalism
Speaker: 
Andre Damon

Location

University of South Alabama
307 North University Blvd Student Center Room 212, Second Floor
Mobile, AL
United States
See map: Google Maps
  • Add new comment
  • Calendar

Upcoming ISSE Events

Social Inequality and the Destruction of American Democracy

  • Feb 9
    Ithaca
    New York
  • Feb 14
    New Orleans
    Louisiana
  • Feb 16
    Annandale
    Virginia

More meetings >>

Latest News Items

  • International Students for Social Equality (UK) meeting: Oppose extradition of Richard O’Dwyer to the US! - February 2
  • Australia: NAPLAN “breaches” by schools almost double - February 1
  • Emergency manager announces school closure in Highland Park, Michigan - January 31
  • London march against Academy status for schools - January 29
  • London primary school mounts legal challenge over academy status - January 29
more

Most Popular Stories

Today:

  • Ypsilanti, Michigan, board votes to close schools, impose layoffs
  • International Students for Social Equality (UK) meeting: Oppose extradition of Richard O’Dwyer to the US!
  • Statement of the ISSE

All time:

  • Join the ISSE
  • Ypsilanti, Michigan, board votes to close schools, impose layoffs
  • Contact the ISSE

Last viewed:

  • Public meeting in Ypsilanti, Michigan - The 2010 Elections: Lessons of the Democratic Party Debacle
  • Rally to Defend Public Education - Sep 24 - San Diego, CA
  • Students protest tuition hikes and police violence at UC Davis

Languages

  • English English
  • Français Français
  • Deutsch Deutsch