Author: mopress

  • Archiving the Gulf Death Watch: The Early Weeks

    Below are the links and clips that first appeared in the announcements section of the Texas Civil Rights Review before we read an analysis at The Oil Drum which is altogether logical and depressing. We are at a death watch now, praying for a miracle.–gm

    Link to critcal: TCRR Critical Calendar

    Our timeline of events for the first seven weeks with notes, press clips, and commentary. Our chief interest in the facts pertained to calculation of an oil containment and recovery “deficit” derived from subtracting official figures of millions of gallons of “oily water” recovered from official estimates of oil gushing up.

    But already by week eight the deficit figures calculated during week seven have become obsolete. As Rolling Stone’s Tim Dickinson reports, we should be considering the number that a NOAA group wrote on a white board shortly after the fatal blowout: 60,000 to 100,000 barrels per day. Since this is the moral equivalent of war, we should take the higher limit as the challenge before us.

    100,000 barrels per day is 4.2 million gallons per day, which means that oil containment and recovery capacities are missing at least 90 percent of the threat. By day 48 we calculated an average “oily water” recovery rate of about 400,000 gallons, but we do not know how to gauge the percent of oil to water, which could be as low (or lower than) 10 percent.–gm (updated June 13).

    Official Date of Blowout: Apr. 20, 2010

    Oil Spill Forecast June 16, 2010

    Forecast for June 16, 2010

    deepwaterhorizon.noaa.gov

    See Also

    New Orleans IndyMedia

    UGA GulfBlog

    Plume Detectives: “Think of it as gas-saturated oil that has been shot out of a deep sea cannon under intense pressure – it’s like putting olive oil in a spray can, pressurizing it and pushing the spray button. What comes out when you push that button? A mist of olive oil. This well is leaking a mist of oil that is settling out in the deep sea.”

    Louisiana Bucket Brigade Crisis Map Reports

    Grassroots Reports from Gulf Coast Community.

    Misdirection Exposed: Dylan Ratigan Clip

    Are we seeing the whole truth?

    Gulf Tribunal

    “We urge all readers to research the activities of Halliburton and BP in the months leading up to DeepWater Horizon’s explosion on April 20, and then sinking on April 22, which happens to be Earth Day.”

    Gulf Restoration Network

    See Latest Footage BP Doesn’t Want You to See: The amount of oil we encountered (on June 4 flyover) is staggering. The lack of response vessels working to contain this oil is bitterly disappointing. At the “source” we counted at most a dozen boats with boom working to contain the oil. However, the source is the only place we found these boats and none of them appeared to be skimmer vessels. Other than the “source” itself, we spotted no other containment efforts until we flew along the Louisiana coast from East Bay to Grand Isle.

    Defend New Orleans


    In an effort to provide regular news updates and accurate information about Louisiana seafood to journalists and the general public, the Louisiana Seafood Promotion and Marketing Board has launched a new website, www.louisianaseafoodnews.com.


    Gov

    USCG National Strike Force / Gulf Strike Team / Official DeepWater Horizon Response Website / US Navy SUPSALV / MMS

    Com

    Abanaki Oil Skimmers / CINC / ITOPF / Desmi Ro-Clean / Koseq / Lamor-Slickbar / RecoveredEnergy


    Watch the latest news video at video.foxnews.com

    More Video Resources

    Long Road to Restoration: PBS interview with RALPH PORTIER, Professor of Environmental Sciences, Louisiana State University (expert on microbial approaches to oil cleanup); and AARON VILES, Gulf Restoration Network (“this is going to be a years and decades problem”).


    The Oil Drum: A Busted Well Bore — All the Way Down?

    What does this mean? It means they will never cap the gusher after the wellhead. They cannot…the more they try and restrict the oil gushing out the bop?…the more it will transfer to the leaks below. Just like a leaky garden hose with a nozzle on it. When you open up the nozzle?…it doesn’t leak so bad, you close the nozzle?…it leaks real bad, same dynamics.

    We need to prepare for the possibility of this blow out sending more oil into the gulf per week then what we already have now, because that is what a collapse of the system will cause. All the collection efforts that have captured oil will be erased in short order. The magnitude of this disaster will increase exponentially by the time we can do anything to halt it and our odds of actually even being able to halt it will go down.

    Not so Fast: A Cracked Well Bore Would Already Have Done More Damage

    if there was a crack, in the same way as with the BOP, then over time that would have been eaten away as oil, gas and mud flowed through it. Once a flow starts it will rapidly eat out a larger passage, as the above has demonstrated. Once that passage was created then oil flow through it to the surface would make it impossible to see what was going on around the well (look at the cloud above the BOP). In fact there are very clear pictures from under the BOP. This would seem to show that there is no oil leaking there at present.

    Early Warning: Dylan Ratigan Clip

    Are
    we seeing the whole truth?

  • Mormons for Racial Profiling?

    Unsustainable Contradictions in Immigration Law

    CounterPunch / DissidentVoice / TheRagBlog

    By Greg Moses

    What’s up with the Mormons? Orem, Utah legislator Stephen Eric Sandstrom last week pledged to follow the lead of “my friend” Arizona State Senator Russell Pearce and expand the number of states with show-me-your-papers bills aiming to criminalize, jail, and deport irregular migrants.

    Rep. Sandstrom, who is a graduate of Brigham Young University and a former Mormon missionary to Venezuela, takes credit for co-founding a state’s rights organization called the Patrick Henry Caucus.

    Sandstrom’s “friend” Sen. Pearce of Arizona, sponsor of the recently signed SB-1070, hails from the Mormon stronghold of Mesa and claims to be the mastermind behind Maricopa County’s infamous Tent City Jail.

    For Pearce and Sandstrom, the crucial issue of liberty in the 21st Century would appear to involve the rights of states in relation to the federal government of the USA–never mind the rights of individual people who reside in those states.

    What’s curious about this particular Pearce-Sandstrom movement for state’s rights over individual rights is how it seems to contradict the interests of the Mormon family itself, which has been witnessing an increase in Spanish-speaking congregations.

    Last summer, Salt Lake Tribune writer Peggy Fletcher Stack reported increasing fears among Spanish-speaking members of the Mormon Church of Latter- day Saints (LDS) who were concerned about travel restrictions they were facing for missionary work and then-impending implementation of Utah’s anti-migrant law, SB-81. “People are very scared,” said one woman via translator.

    “Other than for its missionaries, the LDS Church takes a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ approach toward the immigration status of its members,” reported Fletcher Stack. “But some estimate between 50 percent and 75 percent of members in Utah’s 104 Spanish-speaking congregations are undocumented. That includes many bishops, branch presidents, even stake presidents.”

    Salt Lake City Police Chief Chris Burbank declared that Utah’s SB-81 would require illegal racial profiling, so he openly refused to enforce the self-contradictory statute. Last week Chief Burbank “blasted” Arizona’s SB-1070, telling KSL NewsRadio talk-show host Doug Wright: “This sets law enforcement back 30 to 40 years.”

    Mormon Times Columnist Jerry Earl Johnston shook his head last year in dismay over the unwisdom of the Utah anti-migrant legislation:

    “I can only speak from my own LDS experience here, but I hold Utah lawmakers responsible for breaking up good LDS families and forcing young American citizens out of their native land,” wrote Johnston, predicting that victory would not reward the shortsighted anti-migrant forces.

    “I could see these Hispanic brethren were going to win,” wrote Johnston. “I could see their faith, resilience and strength. They wanted to be in Utah more than Utah lawmakers wanted them out. They had weathered tribulations with good humor and without malice toward those who persecuted them.”

    Meanwhile, in the Mormon stronghold of Mesa, Arizona, represented by SB-1070 sponsor Sen. Pearce, the number of Spanish-speaking LDS congregations had grown from five to 13 between 2002 and 2007 according to East Valley Tribune reporter Sarah N. Lynch.

    Last fall, official LDS printing presses in Salt Lake City ran off an approved Spanish-language edition of the Mormon Bible–“The Santa Biblia: Reina-Valera 2009 (Publicada por La Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de los Últimos Días Salt Lake City, Utah, E.U.A.)–with an initial press run of 800,000 copies.

    “It is one of the most significant scripture projects ever undertaken by the Church,” proclaimed a notice of Sept. 14, 2009 posted at lds.org. “The volume contains new chapter headings, footnotes and cross-references to all scriptures used by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.” Announcement of the volume was reportedly shared among “thousands of Spanish-speaking Latter-day Saints congregations.”

    Mormon political leaders, like everyone else in today’s global economy, are confronting a real crisis in human welfare. Maricopa County in particular is a frontline disaster zone for the crisis in real estate values, mortgage defaults, unemployment, and revenue shortfalls.

    “In Maricopa,” according to an April report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Q3 2009 unemployment, “every private industry group except education and health services experienced an employment decline, with construction experiencing the largest decline (-32.2 percent).”

    Crisis reveals character. So when Mormon political leaders campaign for agendas of states’ rights according to Patrick Henry rhetorics of “liberty or death,” perhaps their Spanish-speaking LDS brethren can remind them that there are millions of people of goodwill in need of actual freedom-loving legislators in whatever state they have freely chosen to congregate and build up.

  • Grief and the Power of Media in the Gulf Coast

    Those who fail to remember the patterns of oil wars are condemned to repeat them.

    by Greg Moses

    Houston IndyMedia / DissidentVoice / CounterPunch / PetroleumWorld

    Shock and awe, misdirection, the whole truth turned upside down? Could it be that the obscenity-driven confrontation between Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser and Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal was a more exact replica of oil war shock tactics than I thought?

    Kirk James Murphy, MD, argues in the firedoglake blog that the sand-barrier plan to block the oil slick on the Louisiana coast is being pushed to completion by interests who would rather be rid of the marshlands than save them.

    Is our grief over the deathwatch at the Gulf Coast being crassly manipulated for the purposes of real estate development? Dr. Murphy’s blog-post quotes at length a May 8 report by Josh Wingrove of the News and Mail, pointing out that the barrier-island plan has been three years in the making.

    What wrenched our hearts out this week was the CNN presentation of Anderson Cooper’s visit to a dead marshland, recently killed off by a gooey assault of crude oil. Not even the bugs had survived, we were shown. Nungesser pleaded for immediate action. James Carville bore witness to the fact that nothing was being done anywhere in sight.

    Jindal and Nungesser have been arguing that barrier berms would stop oil from reaching more marshland. And their arguments make obvious sense under the circumstances.

    The danger in the dredging plan, argues Dr. Murphy, is that the dredged material would be drawn from polluted shipping channels and washed ashore during the volatile hurricane season coming soon. The oil will not be stopped, yet the toxic damage will be multiplied.

    There is money involved, of course. And already by Thursday evening Nungesser was on CNN demanding more.

    The CNN media campaign this week has the shocking effects that we remember from oil wars past. And the effects are especially felt among those of us who like Louisiana Congressman Charlie Melancon find it difficult not to cry at the sight of our dying Gulf. And there is no doubt that our shock is being played like a football on its way to one goal line or the other.

    But why does Dr. Murphy opine that the berms probably won’t survive the hurricane season, while he argues that they would dry out the marshes? And what good are wetlands anyway once they have been covered by bubbling crude?

    Dr. Murphy’s argument would place our shocked grief in alliance with the Corps of Engineers, who apparently resisted the berm idea until CNN tossed Nungesser a lateral pass this week. Given the velocities of these shock tactics, there is never very much time to decide things. And maybe the velocity alone is enough to raise suspicion. Except.

    Except in this case there actually is an enemy attacking the marshlands, and Nungesser appeared to be making his arguments in the company of lots of people. The image of Nungesser in a crowded room makes it more difficult to believe that his plan runs counter to the interests of people who live along the marshlands and who are working up a campaign of self-defense. But this is the way shock psychology would work with the power of images.

    It’s also curious that the Corps of Engineers is not more forthcoming for the cameras. Nungesser does make a point when he asks: where’s the plan? And compared with the images of oily death in the marshes, it would seem that the risk of drying wetlands is less inhumane to the doomed creatures of the Gulf. Once upon a time I walked to work through those coastal marshlands on my way to an offshore drilling job. On the Gulf Coast, from Corpus Christi to New Orleans, there is no such thing as a non-toxic option.

    Marshland protection is one of at least three scientific issues that are being fought on the fly during this oil spill. Thursday evening brings news of an “oil plume” that is about 1,000 yards deep and six miles wide drifting in the direction of Mobile Bay, Alabama. Reports say the plume is a toxic cocktail of dispersants and oil. Is it better or worse than an oil slick? Oil slicks either repel life or kill it. Plumes, apparently, allow life but at the cost of a living toxicity that will work its way up the food chain. Cancer clinics for everyone.

    When CNN flashes pictures of the oil operation, there is a ship spraying cascades of fluids onto the water. Is this the dispersant? Here and there we see comments from scientists saying that nobody knows if the dispersant is such a good idea. Is it better or worse than a slick of thick crude? LIke Nungesser’s berms, dispersants also raise questions of money trails.

    The third scientific issue of course is how to plug the hole. Speaking on Larry King Live, the legendary oilman T. Boone Pickens says either you get lucky or you drill a relief well. August is the frequently cited expectation for when the relief well will be completed.

    “We’ve been here 38 days,” said Pickens, “and we’ll probably be here 38 days more.” If Pickens is right, will it be possible to stop the oil from washing ashore?

    They say the first stage of grief is denial, and I don’t want to believe that any of this is happening. What Congressman Melancon did in public yesterday, we have been doing in our homes this week all along the Gulf Coast. You cannot love the Gulf Coast, witness this shocking trauma, and control your tears at the same time.

    But now on top of it all we have to watch out for the ways that our tears are being maneuvered into contracting strategies that may have no other uses beyond profiteering. I’m not convinced that there are worse things than a raw oil slick, not even if they are barrier berms or 6-mile plumes of noxious crap. But if it is the best thing for all God’s creatures on the Gulf Coast to just stand aside and accept the sacrifice that oil slicks bring once they are imminent, then it’s time we started moving from Denial to Acceptance at some improbable speed.

  • 'No one is thinking about the children' – A Mormon Republican Appeal

    Dear Editor,

    I am the branch president of one of the Spanish language congregations in Mesa, Arizona to which you made reference in your recent article on Mormons and profiling. I can tell you that there are many in this area (including much of the Anglo population) who truly abhor the things that Russell Pearce is doing and saying to this most vulnerable of people.

    I have been the branch President for just about 18 months and we have had over 100 convert baptisms in that period of time. Pearce and his acolytes give the church unwelcomed attention as did ex-governor Evan Mecham. Utah has Chris Buttars and we now have Russell Pearce to thank for giving Arizona Mormons another PR challenge to overcome.

    I attach a letter I wrote to Governor Brewer which outlines the shortsightedness of the recently passed legislation. I believe my letter represents the views of the majority of right thinking Mormons in Arizona. We clearly still have some knuckle dragging closet racists in the Church. We pray that they will recognize the evil in their ways.

    Thanks,

    William R. Richardson
    Mesa, AZ


    Law Offices
    Richardson & Richardson, P.C.
    1745 South Alma School Road
    Mesa, Arizona 85210-3010

    April 23, 2010

    The Honorable Jan Brewer
    Governor of Arizona
    1700 West Washington
    Phoenix, Arizona 85007

    Re: Senate Bill 1070

    Dear Governor Brewer:

    I am a fifth generation native Arizonan, father of six children and a confirmed Republican.
    I have been a member of the State Bar for over 26 years and have practiced in the area of
    commercial and bankruptcy litigation. I am active in both my religious community and in the
    community at large. I have worked with the youth here in the Valley for over 30 years in both
    church and youth athletics. I have first hand experience with many, many children of the immigrant
    population.

    My wife and I had the great opportunity to have in our home a lovely young lady whose
    family immigrated from Sinaloa, Mexico. After over approximately fifteen years of residence in
    Arizona, her father, who was a productive worker and homeowner, was deported. Because he was
    deported, this two earner family could no longer afford to pay the mortgage on the house they were
    buying. Thus, the mother who remained, ultimately took her young son (who knew next to nothing
    about Mexico) and moved to Mexico.

    The father could not find work in Mexico and the mother
    could find work that only paid 25¢ an hour. She has had to work 12 hours a day for about three
    dollars a day to survive. That meant, naturally, that she was unable to care for her seven year old
    son to any reasonable degree. The young lady who lived with me and my family, attended Dobson
    High and we paid everything for her including medical, dental, orthodontia, school fees, clothing,
    etc. This was a great blessing to us as we saw this young girl blossom with, at last, a little hope in
    her life. Oh yes, she’s an American as are most Arizonans – not by virtue of the national origin of
    their parents, but by virtue of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution.

    This underscores the difficulty that I, and many other right thinking Republicans have with
    Russell Pearce, Joe Arpaio and Andrew Thomas and those who espouse their policies. The passage
    of Senate Bill 1070 will further a policy that has damaged and will continue to damage the great
    State of Arizona. My concerns are as follows:

    ARIZONA CHILDREN

    By most estimates, there are approximately 400,000 undocumented immigrants in the State
    of Arizona. According to the estimates of FAIR, an anti-immigrant website, there are about two births for every undocumented immigrant. That suggests to me that there could be in the
    neighborhood of 800,000 young American children who are going to be affected by these policies.
    While I am certainly in favor of legal immigration, I think we need to tread lightly when we adopt
    policies which will clearly harm the well-being of our most vulnerable of citizens.

    I suggest to you that if CPS were to find Arizona children living in Arizona, as they will undoubtably have to live
    if their parents are forced to flee to Mexico, the children would be removed and given up for foster
    care. In Mexico and other Latin countries, they will have little chance for a decent education, for
    proper nutrition, and the list goes on. My personal example is testimony enough for me.

    Nobody is focusing on the children. As it is, many American children are not getting
    benefits to which they may be entitled because of other recent legislation that requires the parents
    to demonstrate their immigration status when approaching state agencies. Parents are simply afraid
    to seek the help their children may need.

    It seems a foolish thing to create a situation where parents
    are not allowed to care properly for their American children. The assumption has always been that
    anyone who works hard, studies hard and is a good citizen, should have at least an opportunity to
    succeed in our country. Apparently, that supposition does not apply if your parents were not born
    here. Perhaps these immigrant parents should drop their children off on the steps of the Capital
    Building on their way south so that the tax payers can REALLY take care of them.

    ALIENATION OF THE HISPANIC COMMUNITY

    It is against my nature, and perhaps yours too, to pander to any group to achieve my personal
    goals. However, in the case of the Hispanic population here in Arizona, no pandering is necessary.
    Any survey will demonstrate that Hispanics are by and large conservatives to the core. They believe
    in hard work and in earning what you receive. They are fiscal conservatives. They have learned to
    be so because of their economic situation. If they do not have the cash to buy something, they do
    not buy it. Although a certain amount of this attitude stems from the fact that many Hispanics have
    little in the way of credit and that many have no bank accounts, the principle of “pay as you go” is
    firmly rooted in our Hispanic neighbors.

    Hispanics are very family oriented and hold tight to their
    religious teachings. They have large families and are taught the values that come from tightly knit
    family units. They are firmly in favor of traditional marriage as well and recognize the value of a
    father and a mother in raising children in these days of licentiousness and depravity.
    The question is why would we alienate such a constituency that supports our Republican
    values.

    The legislation that is before you will do just that. It will alienate a population that in very
    short order will carry a very strong and influential voice in Arizona as children of the immigrant
    population reach voting age. Adoption of Senate Bill 1070 will drive away an otherwise
    conservative constituency that the Republican party needs if the Republican agenda is to be
    implemented in Arizona in the future. We need to address immigration problems but not this way.

    COST

    Our police officers and our cities are already burdened financially. There is hardly enough
    money to keep them going let alone impose additional costly procedures.

    IMPRACTICALITY AND UNFAIRNESS

    My family and my children have many Hispanic friends. The way the current bill reads, I
    must now act as an undeputized immigration officer or risk arrest or impoundment of my vehicle
    if I transport an undocumented immigrant – even a friend.

    I note that this provision applies to anybody who is “in violation of a criminal offense.” This
    language could ostensibly apply to one who has violated a city building code by installing sprinklers
    without a permit. The statute does not limit itself to c
    rimes that relate to transportat
    ion. Moreover,
    this statute will allow impoundment of vehicles if, for example, someone has committed speeding
    and other traffic offenses which may arise to varying degrees of “criminal” activity but which most
    citizens would not think serious enough to have their cars impounded. This is simply a punishment
    that does not fit the crime.

    Am I now required to investigate the
    immigration status of anyone to whom I give a ride? There are exclusions for emergency vehicles,
    but what about all of the Valley’s bus drivers and the light rail? How about the little league and
    softball coaches in some of the poorer areas of town? Do they now need riders to provide proof of
    citizenship before they can give a ride to a kid?

    VAGUE AND OVER ENCOMPASSING LANGUAGE

    My dad is a former Senator from Graham County, a former County Attorney and a member
    of the State Bar since 1940. He is 92 years old. Under the bill in question, he could only be
    presumed “not [to] be an alien who is unlawfully present” in Arizona only if he can show
    identification. He has none of the required identification. While the reverse presumption is not
    stated, the application of the statute will no doubt require the opposite assumption. The same
    difficulty will arise for all of our northern winter visitors who have none of the four required forms
    of identification.

    VIOLATION OF FEDERAL LAWS

    New section 13-1509 will surely be voided by the federal courts. It imposes on immigrants
    requirements that are far beyond what can be required under federal immigration law. The federal
    courts that have decided this issue have universally held that such requirements are pre-empted by federal law. See, e.g., Villas at Parkside Partners v. The City of Farmers Branch, No. 3:08 CV-1551-B (March 24, 2010, N.D. Tex.)(requirement of local residential occupancy license which
    could only be issued to citizens or legal residents).

    MEAN SPRIRITEDNESS

    Despite what the polls say, those in my social and economic sphere do not believe there is
    any reason for this legislation other than to make Arizona unfriendly to undocumented immigrants
    and their families. This very factor was one of the considerations of the Texas Court seized upon
    in invalidating that city’s not so veiled attempt to enforce immigration laws in their own unfriendly
    way.

    What is being practiced here is nothing more than bullying – and bullying with undertones
    of class and racial bias. One need only look at the websites of FAIR and other immigrant bashing
    organizations to see a clear bias for all but the white middle class. Indeed, many of these sites
    argue as did the “Know Nothings” of the nineteenth century, that the goal was less about
    immigration, and more about thwarting any unwelcome change in the culture of the era. The Know Nothing Party was especially hostile to the Irish and to the Catholics.

    THE ECONOMY

    I live in an upscale neighborhood in West Mesa. A short five minutes north of where I live,
    there are many, many apartments. The apartments are largely unoccupied due the flight of many
    immigrants who used to live and shopp in the area. Basha’s had to file for bankruptcy relief
    because the sales in its Food City stores suffered due to all the immigrant bashing and the
    consequent movement of many immigrants to other states.

    Even the conservative CATO institute has (for at least the second time) determined through an extensive study, that immigrants are a net
    boon to our economy. This is so even though they do use some educational and medical services. See: “Restriction or Legalization? Measuring the Economic Benefits of Immigration Reform,” by Peter B. Dixon and Maureen T. Rimmer, Trade Policy Analysis no. 40, August 13, 2009.

    CONCLUSION

    I am sure that this letter is too long for you to read personally. However, the hope that a
    staffer might read it and convey even a portion of my thoughts, is enough for me to make the effort.
    I will fight with my time, my voice and my money those who, for no other reason that they can
    bully others, continue to oppress the parents of so many American children.

    Close the borders. Seek sensible resolutions to the immigration mess that we have. But please do not frighten the children any more and don’t let a bunch of insensitive knuckleheads at the legislature intimidate you.

    There is a large part of the Republican party who is tired of Pearce and his acolytes and that number is
    growing.

    Thank you for considering my thoughts.

    Very truly yours,

    William R. Richardson

    cc: Senator Jay Tibshraeny
    Representative Warde Nichols
    Representative Steve Yarborough


    Editor’s Note: Letter posted with permission of author; formatted for web presentation from pdf original; some paragraph breaks added for readability; and notes incorporated into text.–gm

    Texas Governor says Arizona approach not Right for Texas

    I fully recognize and support a state’s right and obligation to protect its citizens, but I have concerns with portions of the law passed in Arizona and believe it would not be the right direction for Texas.

    For example, some aspects of the law turn law enforcement officers into immigration officials by requiring them to determine immigration status during any lawful contact with a suspected alien, taking them away from their existing law enforcement duties, which are critical to keeping citizens safe.

    Our focus must continue to be on the criminal elements involved with conducting criminal acts against Texans and their property. I will continue to work with the legislative leadership to develop strategies that are appropriate for Texas.

    –Excerpt from statement by Texas Gov. Rick Perry (April 29, 2010)