Maybe we should try to learn from history and not from idiot president's and politicians (not to mention moronic news reporters)
MALAQUITE BEACH, Texas — The oil was everywhere, long black sheets
of it, 15 inches thick in some places. Even if you stepped in what
looked like a clean patch of sand, it quickly and gooily puddled around
your feet. And Wes Tunnell, as he surveyed the mess, had only one bleak
thought: "Oh, my God, this is horrible! It's all gonna die!"
But
it didn't. Thirty-one years since the worst oil spill in North American
history blanketed 150 miles of Texas beach, tourists noisily splash in
the surf and turtles drag themselves into the dunes to lay eggs.
"You
look around, and it's like the spill never happened," shrugs Tunnell, a
marine biologist. "There's a lot of perplexity in it for many of us."