This is a short preview of what is to come for everyone.
Dyuce Woodson: James
Casey Leach: Kate
Zach Bigley: Narrator
GET PUMPED ENG 104
https://soundcloud.com/bigleyzach/eng-104-final-project-preview
This is a short preview of what is to come for everyone.
Dyuce Woodson: James
Casey Leach: Kate
Zach Bigley: Narrator
GET PUMPED ENG 104
https://soundcloud.com/bigleyzach/eng-104-final-project-preview
They way we act in times of stress can show us who we are. The way we act in times of distress define us as a society and species. In the book Odds Against Tomorrow, after the flood, the author Nathaniel Rich described some of the people in New York as if they had lost all of their societal common sense. They were expressed as if they were creatures that did not belong in the bodies that encased their inner beast. It was like they had forgotten that as a people, we need to band together in times of sorrow and pain, not hurt each other.
In class, we talked about the tar pits in Canada. They are obviously terrible for the environment and they help Canada’s GDP immensely, but we didn’t talk about why they are so awful for the environment.
The tar pits excrete oil sands and create a barren wasteland of ugly earth that can be seen from space. The miners not only clear the areas of all life and green, but they destroy the water supply in the surrounding areas. A report about water usage in the mines said, “To produce one cubic metre (m3) of synthetic crude oil (SCO) (upgraded bitumen) in a mining operation requires about 2–4.5 m3 of water (net figures).” The oil sands mining company is currently allowed to divert 359 million m3 of water, more than two times the amount needed for the local city. This is a problem that changes not only the environment in a negative way, but it is hurting the locals in many ways.
The locals are not only unable to fish and hunt, as was mentioned in lecture, but their lively hoods are completely changed by the oil sand pits as well. They are forced to assimilate into the culture that the sands bring with it. That means that they get jobs mining the sand and in production. My question is; is it worth it? Is it worth the jobs? Their lives are completely changed by this monster that comes charging in and seems to destroy everything in its path.
While I might not agree with the politics necessarily, I thought that this was a very interesting video on the tar pits.
It made me think about all the things that they go through up there and how the big companies get away with a lot. It is a problem that needs to be dealt with.