Sunday, January 1, 2012

A Frackin' New Year!

Whee! Whoopie! It's a brand new year, one I've been hoping (and, there's a good chance) I won't live through because I don't wanna see what kind of damnblasted folderol The Powers That Be Princes of This-World have actually planned to make us, in Machiavellian fashion, roll with it and under it just glad that the 12/21/12 crap that they've been pushing for decades -Nostradamus! Ninurta! Naughty Comets! Mayan and old Book of Common Prayer calendars and Pope predictions running out, ayeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.

My own default comfort zone explanation For It All is that da grate god Skientz has allegedly disovered that the Universe is expanding 'faster than they thought before', Which I think means them subatomic particles / electronic yinyangs are moving away from each other, causing disintegration and ensuing what the late, great Steve Allen called DUMPTH.

Anywaaaay, I'm back to bitching. (I do thank God for all the Good Stuff & Critters, including the real purty blessed pink 'n' turquoise sunsets the last few days, but oh PLEASE manifest Your YAH-SHUA Name and like totally & permanently RESCUE us!!!)

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Click here: 4.0-Magnitude Earthquake Strikes In Northeast Ohio

 Related: "Mort Zuckerman' fracking - Google Search... Will turn up the linked article below. Mort, on The McLaughlin Report, made fracking sound like Our Fossil Fuel Savior. I thought, Inve$$$$tor, perchance??!
Web profracks are heard to say (1) those environmentalists are gonna ruin everything because they're against fracking (2) Fracking is another cracked idea foisted upon us by environmentalists (3) Anti-fracking is an Ay-rab, OPEC plot.  We'll see.  After all, even if a lotta earthquakes don't come to Previously Stable Ground, there are lots of reasons to brace your water heater, not have shelves overhead, put your collectables behind doors on padding...   

http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2011/12/02/zuckerman-with-fracking-american-can-escape-the-energy-trap

McDONALD, Ohio — Officials said Saturday they believe the latest earthquake activity in northeast Ohio is related to the injection of wastewater into the ground near a fault line, creating enough pressure to cause seismic activity.

The brine wastewater comes from drilling operations that use the so-called fracking process to extract gas from underground shale. But Ohio Department of Natural Resources Director Jim Zehringer said during a news teleconference that fracking is not causing the quakes.

"The seismic events are not a direct result of fracking," he said.

~~~Not direct, huh? But maybe only like a car slipping on ice runs into another car that runs into you?~~~

Environmentalists and property owners who live near gas drilling wells have questioned the safety of fracking to the environment and public health. Federal regulators have declared the technology safe, however.

Zehringer said four injection wells within a five-mile radius of an already shuttered well in Youngstown will remain inactive while further scientific research is conducted.

A 4.0 magnitude quake Saturday afternoon in McDonald, outside of Youngstown, was the 11th in a series of minor earthquakes in area, many of which have struck near the Youngstown injection well. The quake caused no serious injuries or property damage, Zehringer said.

Thousands of gallons of brine were injected into the well daily until its owner, Northstar Disposal Services LLC, agreed Friday to stop injecting brine into the earth as a precaution while authorities assess any potential links to the quakes.

Michael Hansen of the Ohio Seismic Network said Saturday that more quakes are possible, most likely small ones, until the pressure at the fault line has been completely relieved.

The temblor Saturday appeared to be stronger than others, which generally had a magnitude of 2.7 or lower. Some residents reported feeling trembling farther south into Columbiana County and east into western Pennsylvania.

Area residents said a loud boom accompanied the shaking. It sent some stunned residents running for cover as bookshelves shook and pictures and lamps fell from tables.

A few miles from the epicenter, Charles Kihm said he was preparing food in his kitchen when he heard a noise and thought a vehicle had hit his Austintown home.

"It really shook, and it rumbled, like there was a sound," said Kihm, 82. "It was loud. It didn't last long. But it really scared me."

There are 177 similar injection wells around the state, and the Youngstown-area well has been the only site with seismic activity, the department said. Zehringer said that to shut down all of the wells because of seismic activity near one would be an overreaction.

Patti Gorcheff, who lives about 15 miles from the epicenter, said her dogs started barking inexplicably Saturday and the ornaments on her Christmas tree began to shake. Her husband thought he heard the sound of some sort of blast.

"This is the biggest one we've had so far," said Gorcheff, a North Lima resident who has raised concerns about quakes and drilling-related activity in the region. "I hope this is a wake-up call."

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Dear Ms Gorcheff: A 4.0 is what we, on the facetiously-named 'Pacific' Coast call an Oh, Doggonit, I Guess That Was a Quake, Please God Let That Be IT, and Not a Prequel to a REAL One.

Safety, Peace, and Clean Truth to us all!!!

Also~

http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2011/12/30/103-year-old-woman-that-faced-eviction-gets-new-lease-on-life/?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-nb%7Cdl9%7Csec3_lnk1%26pLid%3D124000