Pajamas Media » Another Perspective on the BP Oil Spill

And let’s not forget that 11 workers died in the April 20 explosion. Among the casualties was Aaron Dale Burkeen, whose body was never found and whose parents Mary and Robert Burkeen gathered with other grieving family members at a memorial ceremony for the victims on May 25 in Jackson, Mississippi. Mary Burkeen worries her son’s life and death are getting lost in the shuffle: “Our son, we’ll never get him back,” she lamented. “When they get all this cleaned up, they can have their shrimps and their turtles and everything back. But we’re never going to have our son back.”

Quite right.  Would that the workers who lost their lives receive as much attention as the large-scale — but temporary — environmental damage caused by oil washing over the Gulf Coast.  We would do well to remember that oil is a natural as water, and regularly seeps into the oceans naturally in quantities many times the size of the Deepwater Horizon spill.  The ocean can handle the oil, but Aaron Dale Burkeen will still be gone when years from now when beachgoers are once again swimming in the pristine waters of the Gulf.

Burkeen and the others died ensuring that the rest of us have the energy we need to go about our business and pleasure, and risked their lives to bring forth the lubricant that greases the gears of our civilization. They should not be forgotten.

Apple vs. Amazon: The Great Ebook War Has Already Begun

Last night, several blogs including Venturebeat and NYT’s Bits Blog noticed something was amiss on the website of the world’s largest retailer: Amazon suddenly stopped selling books from Macmillan, one of the world’s largest book publishers.

Not every Macmillan book is gone, but popular ones such as The Gathering Storm are no longer sold by Amazon, either in physical or Kindle form. You can still find the Amazon pages for Macmillan’s books — you just can’t order the actual books.

According to the New York Times, the reason the books were pulled was the iPad. Macmillan told Amazon that it wanted to change its pricing and compensation agreement, upping the price of some books from $9.99 to $15 and splitting sales 70/30, the same model Apple uses for the iPhone app store and its upcoming iBooks store. Amazon’s apparent response was to flex its muscle and pull countless Macmillan books off the virtual shelves.