miércoles, 16 de junio de 2010
Derrame del alma
Un derrame cerebral
un derrame espiritual
pero el mundo distraído
entretenido
mientras la Tierra herida
de nuevo
un derrame del alma
regada tras regada
y la actitud pasiva del ser humano
su pasión pasiva por actividades que no practica
gritando por los triunfos de los otros
quejándose de las derrotas de otros
ni siquiera de ellos
vida floja
vida sin interés
vida sin esfuerzo
todo fácil
comida rápida
relaciones rápidas
fast food
fast sex
fast love
el derrame de no entender
el derrame de distraernos siempre
vivir distraídos
existir distraídos
pero la Tierra sí se salva
siempre se salva
la especie humana no
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The catastrophic gusher of oil unleashed by the explosion of BP’s Deepwater Horizon rig last week is on track to quickly exceed the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill, an independent expert warns. An explosive burst of oil destroyed the exploratory rig 41 miles off the Louisiana coast on the eve of Earth Day, killing 11 workers. After the shattered hulk of the rig sank to the ocean floor a mile down, the pipeline continues to spew oil that has now reached shore, with an end weeks or months away. John Amos, the president and founder of the nonprofit firm SkyTruth, “which specializes in gathering and analyzing satellite and aerial data to promote environmental conservation,” estimated from satellite photos that the calamity is increasing at a rate of 850,000 gallons (20,000 barrels) a day:
ResponderEliminarThat’s right: more than 6 million gallons spilled into the Gulf of Mexico so far. This, and other radar images that SkyTruth is getting, confirm what we’ve seen on the NASA/MODIS images so far, and support our conservative calculations showing that in the first week of this spill at least 6 million gallons have entered the Gulf. That’s a spill rate of at least 850,000 gallons (20,000 barrels) per day, 20 times larger than the official Goast Guard estimate of 42,000 gallons per day.