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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bald Eagle who wrote (527932)1/22/2004 3:21:06 PM
From: JDN  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Well, I dont mean boiling like it was in the software field before, frankly that wasnt healthy and its led to this overseas placements, but I guess I would say anyone who is qualified to work in their field will be able to find a satisfactory job. jdn



To: Bald Eagle who wrote (527932)1/22/2004 3:22:42 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
HOT as in WMD's run by Bush's great pick to lead the economy of the jobLOSS recoverY????
WMD in Our Own Backyard
Trains loaded with toxic chemicals put millions at risk.

By Jonathan Turley
Since Sept. 11, President Bush has repeatedly stressed
that the country is at war and that we all must make
sacrifices for national security. Indeed, hundreds of
soldiers have been killed or wounded in Afghanistan
and Iraq. Environmental laws and civil liberties have
been rolled back. Citizens must shoulder a projected
10-year deficit of up to $5 trillion.

However, at least some corporate citizens are being
held to a different standard — requiring neither sacrifice
nor security. When it comes to the giant railroad
company CSX, even a threat to the government seems
an insufficient reason to threaten profits.

With roughly $1 billion in annual sales, CSX is one of
the most profitable transportation corporations in the
country, but it has managed to pay no federal taxes in
recent years (instead receiving $164 million in tax
rebates). Now CSX is running a train in Washington
that could be viewed as a terrorist version of the "Little
Engine That Could."

CSX operates a stretch of highly lucrative rail line that passes through the heart of
Washington. The company uses it to move huge tank cars filled with poisonous
chemicals, considered by the Department of Transportation as "toxic by
inhalation." The same type of chemicals killed thousands of people in 1984 in
Bhopal, India. For example, CSX routinely moves 90-ton tank cars of chlorine
through the capital, above ground, within four blocks of Congress.

Immediately after the 9/11 attacks, CSX was forced to halt the transports
because of the high danger of terrorist attack. However, 72 hours later, the
administration agreed to let the tanker cars roll again, despite warnings from the
FBI and outside experts that they were ideal terrorist targets and potential
weapons of mass destruction.

Dr. Jay Boris, a senior scientist for the Naval Research Laboratory, recently
revealed the expected casualties from just one of the 90-ton tanks of chlorine
exploding in a terrorist attack or an accident in the heart of the capital. A
poisonous cloud would cover an area within a 14-mile radius of the explosion —
an area made up of federal agencies, Congress, the Supreme Court and the
White House. Projected deaths would occur "at the rate of 100 per second"; an
estimated 2.4 million people would be at risk.

Greenpeace, the Sierra Club and other groups have taken pictures of the tanker
cars, with the Capitol Dome in the background. The shots show cars covered in
graffiti — one illustration of how easy it is to make direct contact with the trains,
which move slowly in urban areas. Of course, a high-powered rifle or a simple
grenade would be sufficient to set off the cars.

Despite this, lobbyists for chemical and transport companies have successfully
fought requirements to reroute the trains. After all, the Chlorine Institute insists, "it
is clear beyond doubt that no plan, no matter how well conceived and well
implemented, can 'assure' that terrorists will be prevented from carrying out their
acts of terror."

Of course, we could at least try. For example, we could bar the transport of large
quantities of chemicals within the capital, as well as in other cities like New York,
Chicago and Los Angeles. For CSX, however, an alternative route around
Washington would probably mean losing business and reducing its profits.

Why would an administration that has prescribed the seizure of tens of thousands
of nail clippers from airplane passengers in the cause of homeland security allow
90-ton, unguarded tanks of poison gas to move at low speed within blocks of
Congress and through the heart of our government buildings? It may have
something to do with the friends that CSX keeps in Washington.

CSX has been a longtime campaign supporter of President Bush and remains one
of the 100 biggest campaign contributors annually, particularly to Republican
candidates. Former CSX Chief Executive John Snow helped lead the field of
corporate managers minimizing their contribution to the public coffers while
maximizing their own profits. (Snow received $36 million in compensation and the
company forgave a $24-million personal loan — even as the company's stock
value fell.) Bush liked Snow's style so much he made him the country's Treasury
secretary. In addition to Snow, a CSX transportation official was put in charge of
the Army Corps of Engineers.

The CSX case reinforces the view that sacrifices made since 9/11 seem to fall
primarily on individual citizens rather than corporate citizens.

Meanwhile, the trains continue to roll. Let's just hope that Al Qaeda will remain
so focused on nail clippers as a weapon of choice that it will not notice the
slow-moving trains of explosive poisonous gas passing through the heart of our
capital.

Jonathan Turley is a professor at George Washington Law School.