Johanna Faust, a mixed race Jew, prefers to publish pseudonymously. She is committed: first, to preventing war, ecological disaster, and nuclear apocalypse; last to not only fighting for personal privacy & the freedom of information, but, by representing herself as a soldier in that fight, to exhorting others to do the same. She is a poet, always. All these efforts find representation here: "ah, Mephistophelis" is so named after the last line of Christopher Marlowe's Dr. Faustus, whose heretical success flouted the censor for a time.

Ancient Western Code Broken: Plato & Pythagoreans Secrets Soon Revealed



There'll be the breaking of the Ancient Western Code....



Science historian cracks the 'Plato code'


(PhysOrg.com) -- A science historian at The University of Manchester has cracked "The Plato Code" - the long disputed secret messages hidden in the great philosopher's writings.


...Dr Jay Kennedy's findings are set to revolutionise the history of the origins of Western thought.


Dr Kennedy, whose findings are published in the leading US journal Apeiron, reveals that Plato used a regular pattern of symbols, inherited from the ancient followers of Pythagoras, to give his books a musical structure. A century earlier, Pythagoras had declared that the planets and stars made an inaudible music, a 'harmony of the spheres'. Plato imitated this hidden music in his books.


The hidden codes show that Plato anticipated the Scientific Revolution 2,000 years before Isaac Newton, discovering its most important idea - the book of nature is written in the language of mathematics....


"Plato's books played a major role in founding Western culture but they are mysterious and end in riddles," Dr Kennedy, at Manchester's Faculty of Life Sciences explains.

"In antiquity, many of his followers said the books contained hidden layers of meaning and secret codes, but this was rejected by modern scholars.


"It is a long and exciting story, but basically I cracked the code. I have shown rigorously that the books do contain codes and symbols and that unraveling them reveals the hidden philosophy of Plato.


"This is a true discovery, not simply reinterpretation."


This will transform the early history of Western thought, and especially the histories of ancient science, mathematics, music, and philosophy.


Dr Kennedy spent five years studying Plato's writing and found that in his best-known work the Republic he placed clusters of words related to music after each twelfth of the text - at one-twelfth, two-twelfths, etc. This regular pattern represented the twelve notes of a Greek musical scale. Some notes were harmonic, others dissonant. At the locations of the harmonic notes he described sounds associated with love or laughter, while the locations of dissonant notes were marked with screeching sounds or war or death. This musical code was key to cracking Plato's entire symbolic system.


... Plato's ideas were a dangerous threat to Greek religion. He said that mathematical laws and not the gods controlled the universe. Plato's own teacher had been executed for heresy. Secrecy was normal in ancient times, especially for esoteric and religious knowledge, but for Plato it was a matter of life and death. Encoding his ideas in secret patterns was the only way to be safe.

Plato led a dramatic and fascinating life. Born four centuries before Christ, when Sparta defeated plague-ravaged Athens, he wrote 30 books and founded the world's first university, called the Academy. He was a feminist, allowing women to study at the Academy, the first great defender of romantic love (as opposed to marriages arranged for political or financial reasons) and defended homosexuality in his books. In addition, he was captured by pirates and sold into slavery before being ransomed by friends.


Dr Kennedy explains: "Plato's importance cannot be overstated. He shifted humanity from a warrior society to a wisdom society. Today our heroes are Einstein and Shakespeare - and not knights in shining armour - because of him....This is the beginning of something big. It will take a generation to work out the implications. All 2,000 pages contain undetected symbols."


Read the entire article at Physorg.com


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This Interview With Tony Hayward May Make You Sick


original graphics: write for permission
...or just very very angry.
Maybe sad.

I was all three....

(alternate title: "Interview with Tony Hayward: Profits Up; Safety Still Paramount; Effects Mitigated; Cleanup Successful; Fishermen Happy; Environment Protected: Wouldn't Change A Thing: Sleeps Well At Night")
 



In His Own Words: Forbes Q&A With BP's Tony Hayward
Christopher Helman, 05.18.10, 3:50 PM ET

... an edited transcript ....
Forbes: So are you sleeping at night?
Hayward: Yeah, of course. Of course I am.
Is that the mark of a true leader, that you can delegate your worry, delegate your panic to your subordinates?
It's not a good idea to delegate panic, that doesn't help anyone. I do think being calm, clear and focused is important. We're very clear in each stage of this what our objectives are. In the subsea it's eliminate the leak--multiple options being deployed in parallel to eliminate the leak.
On the surface, it's called containment. Deploy everything we can get our hands on at containing the in the far offshore. Which thus far has been extraordinarily successful as almost none of this has gotten to shore.
On the shore, it's called defend the beaches. We’ve got now 10,000 people, 4,000 fishing boats defending the beaches. I have resorted on occasion to some Churchillian statements. The analogy with Normandy is quite good. It is like the Normandy landing. We don't know when we'll be successful but we will be successful. We will prevail. We can't predict exactly when that will be. I've also resorted to Churchill in the matter of: "When in hell, keep going" [chuckling].
Have you been cracking the spines of some Churchill tomes recently?
He's probably my all-time idol in terms of leadership. I've read a number of his books.
Who else do you go to for counsel in times like this? It must be lonely at the top of this giant company. The buck stops with you.
Everyone has big networks. In all walks of life at all levels you have a network friends, colleagues, acquaintances. I've got people I talk to. Some to share ideas, some to shoot the breeze.
How has BP's response to this spill helped you think differently about what you've accomplished in the past three years? Before this the conventional wisdom was that Tony has done a pretty good job turning around this company since John Browne left; he's learned lessons from the Texas City disaster and put changes into place. Now all that understanding, all that wisdom, is being tested. What have you learned?
I've thought from the moment I heard about this that we would be judged by our response. And what I said previously about how we're trying to respond by doing the right thing the right way in every dimension is absolutely the case.
Do I feel that anything I've done I would have done differently? Not at all. What we've done is as good now as it was. In reality, the company is much better able to sustain this sort of incident than it could possibly have been able to three years ago.
What changed?
Because we've had such a focus on safe and reliable operations. Such a focus on moving operating capability to the front of the company. Such a focus on making all those things absolutely important. We've built an enormous capability of doing that. We've trained thousands of people, recruited thousands of people. So the company is much better able to deal with this magnitude of challenge than it would have been three or four years ago.
It's clearly much better able to deal with it in a financial sense. It's running actually very, very well. This last year the financial performance has been very strong. And it's not accounting magic. It's been driven by operating performance. Very strong operating performance. We're much better able to deal with this.

What would have been different in BP's response had it happened three or four years ago? What changes have you put into place?
We would have been much less able to respond to the scale. With the focus we have and the intensity we have, we have mounted the biggest response--period--to an incident of this type that anyone working with us has ever seen. The guys in the Coast Guard say they've never seen scale of this response. I don't think the company had the ability to do that four years ago.
And yet the fact that BP had to call on Shell and Exxon and Petrobras and Aramco Services for help, shows that you weren't prepared for this kind of spill.
That's a very sensible thing to do when faced with the first of any situation. This is an industry first. Not in the history of the industry since we began exploring, developing and producing in deepwater, which was 20 years ago, has the industry had to deal with this issue. So we have an industry effort trying to solve an industry problem, which is a well leaking in 5,000 feet of water.
So BP passed your tests. The organization has shown you that that the changes you have put into place were successful?
I would say successful in terms of the capability of the response. I don't hear anyone faulting us on our response. We'd like to get the lynch off (laughing), but you know the intensity of the response is enormous. We're going to have Ken Salazar and Steven Chu here again tomorrow to …
To put their boots on your neck?
There's a bit of public rhetoric, what's actually happening in real life is something different.
Once the spill is over, once the cleanup has commenced, what changes will you put in place at BP to make yourself even better capable of responding to this in the future.
Of course all of that ultimately awaits the results of the investigation, determining what went wrong and how it went wrong. It would be foolish to speculate too much at this point, but I think there are some leading indicators where you would expect changes to occur. From my perspective there are two principal ones. First is this whole issue of the ultimate safety device, the blowout preventer failing. If the blowout preventer had functioned as intended, we would be dealing with a very serious industrial accident, but we wouldn't be dealing with an oil spill.
The second area as an industry we need to look at is what sort of emergency subsea intervention response do we hold as an industry? The reason we're seeing extraordinary success on the surface in terms of containment and preventing oil from getting to the beach is because after Valdez the industry put together a pretty phenomenal response capability and we practiced and drilled it every year for 20-odd years. And we have a very rigorous plan. The Gulf of Mexico spill response plan is four inches thick. It's approved every two years. The BP plan was last approved in June of last year. What you're seeing is the consequence of that, the planning and foresight and equipment being available and ready to go if there is an issue.
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Clearly, as the story is told one of the big lessons will be that we need to create the same sort of capability for subsea intervention. As it happens, because of the scale of what BP is doing, we had all the kit. We had all the ROVs [remote operated vehicles] because of the scale of our subsea operations in the Gulf of Mexico. We had two drilling rigs that we could move immediately to the location. Almost no one else would be able to mobilize as much equipment for the subsea operation as fast as BP has been able to. The industry will want to and should and will probably be required to put in place the same sort of capability to respond in the subsea as we have created on the surface.
What would be good new regulation vs. bad new regulation?
Good new regulation should do two things: It should introduce subsea response capability. It should probably require greater redundancy in safety systems. And it should primarily be focused on risk reduction. What we need to be careful to avoid is new regulation that we believe has reduced risk, but hasn't actually done anything to reduce risk at all.
For example?
You can imagine regulation that was intended to reduce risk but actually doesn't reduce risk, and you've led yourself into a false sense of security. You need to be thoughtful about understanding the risk and that's going to come from the investigation. That goes back to the blowout preventer. Does the blowout preventer testing regime need to go further or not? Probably yes, because it was tested 10 days before this incident.
How much redundancy should be built into a blowout preventer? I think it would be reasonable to say more than we had in the current system. In this blowout preventer there were three layers of protection. There was the switch on the rig, a remote activation in the BOP itself, in the pod, which was activated should the pod detect the rig was no longer there…
The dead man's switch?
Yeah, the dead man switch. As soon as the circuitry went dead with the fire, it should have fired. It didn't. And the third intervention was the manual intervention of the ROV. All three failed to get the desired result.
What I understand is that the shear rams closed but the oil is somehow still getting out around it…
Until we get the BOP off the floor I wouldn't speculate on that. I'd say belief, but it's based on diagnostics; it's not based on certainty.
What changes have you already ordered on your deepwater projects around the world?
We have implemented a much, much more expansive testing program for BOPs. Far and above what has already been very sensibly introduced by the MMS. They've issued two safety alerts requiring further testing. We've gone beyond that. As understanding emerges from this we will undoubtedly take further action. It is this notion--you want to be certain you're eliminating risk, not deluding yourself into thinking you've eliminated risk.
What other changes have you made? The blowout preventer seems to be the first place, but how about the order in which well completion techniques are done?
It's too early to say, but there's no evidence at this stage that there was any sort of major issue there. We'll have to wait for the investigation…
Certainly, though the speculation in the last couple days has been that it was BP engineers who said let's replace the drilling mud with seawater before we finish the plug.
The reality is there are going to be so many red herrings. You always do that (laughing nervously), that's always the procedure, right?
What other changes do you anticipate considering? I'm talking across the organization, reconsidering all your maintenance regimes or the way in which you approach drilling.
We will probably look harder at our relationships with some of our key contractors and satisfy ourselves that our oversight of their activities is as intense as it need to be. But the sequence here is: respond, investigate, learn, make changes. And trying to jump ahead and believing you've done something when in fact you've not addressed the risk, is important not to do because you delude yourself into a false sense of security.
The task today is the response. The task tomorrow is to investigate. Consequent of the investigation is to make changes that will reduce risk, introduce redundancy and make it much less likely to happen, and if it did ever happen we'd be in a better place to deal with it.
BP will be a stronger company as a result of this; safer, better prepared?
Absolutely.
But if you ask the man on the street what they think about BP--it's reputational integrity will obviously suffer. Just like it did after Texas City. How are you going to regain that?
Step one is how we respond. By doing the right thing the right way. Whether it's responding to the spill, or responding to the claims, dealing with the communities, ensuring that fishermen who can't fish today are getting money when they need it. It's those sort of things. I believe ultimately that if we can win the hearts and minds of the communities that are impacted, then we have the potential to enhance our reputation rather than have it damaged.
It's a big aspiration, but it's absolutely the way in which I and my team think about it. How do we actually demonstrate what real corporate responsibility is. This isn't about textbooks, this is real corporate responsibility. A company stepping up and taking absolute responsibility to do the right thing, to deal with a very serious situation, in all dimensions. Whether it's stopping the leak, cleaning up the beaches, hopefully preventing it from getting to the beaches, but if it does make sure it is properly cleaned up. And thirdly, dealing with the impact this has had on the communities.
In the past three years you've been more or less reticent about doing interviews; now you're doing them everyday, all day long. That new sense of transparency and openness, how has that been for you?

hayfuck.jpg
I'm a great believer that when things are going not well the leader should step forward and be seen to be present and take responsibility. And demonstrating to the world, and more important to his team, how the team is going to deal with it. It's part of the role when things are not going well. When they are going well I don't need to be out there--I'm not interested in being an iconic CEO, that's the last thing …
Is that right? Check the ego at the door?
I'm just not in that game. It's not me. But now there is a requirement for the face that is the leader of the organization to be seen. To be seen saying we are going to do the right thing. I wouldn't say I particularly enjoy it, but that's the role. Once things turn around I will disappear again.
Your thoughts and beliefs about the need to step up, and the need for BP to show responsibility and transparency, this wasn't just hatched into your mind overnight--I'm sure this is something that you have evolved into over your career, watching the industry, watching how your predecessor responded to disasters, learning from Exxon Valdez and all that. Can you tell me how you formed these notions about what your role needs to be in this time?
Not really. I've never thought about it.
[Laughing] Really?
Not in a deep profound way. If I'm honest, I'm following my instinct, actually. But I believe my instinct is absolutely aligned with what BP as an enterprise believes to be important. I must be careful I don't get misquoted like some of my fellow CEOs, but I believe that business can be a force for good. And it's times like this that we need to demonstrate exactly that. Not when it's hunky-dory and everything's wonderful, but actually when you're faced with this sort of challenge. Now demonstrate that you can be a force for good. In this situation it's doing the right thing, the right way, communicate openly and transparently about what we're trying to do.
How do you overcome the cynicism?
At the end of the day, actions speak louder than words. I can say this stuff forever and ever, but when it turns up on the ground--and you go talk to the fishermen, like I did three days ago, and talk to the parish president--they're saying you guys are doing a fantastic job, you're doing a great job. You're taking care of our people, taking care of our environment, you're doing what we want to see a company do. We have to keep doing that time and time again. If we do, maybe the message will get out. There will always be some cynicism, of course.
hayfuckgreen.jpg
Everyone always thinks: Big Oil is evil, and we should stop drilling in the deepwater altogether. What's the message you have for those people out there who don't know the extent to which we rely on deepwater oil and the Gulf of Mexico to keep this country going? What's your message for the average guy on the street who needs to be convinced of the importance of deepwater drilling not only here but worldwide?
Oil is an important part of America's energy security. It's part of a diverse energy mix that runs from coal to solar and everything in between. And when it comes to oil, then the deepwater today is between 25% and 30% of America's domestic oil production. And over the next 10 or 20 years it will rise to probably closer to 50% as conventional sources continue to decline and the industry continues to further develop the deepwater.
The industry will continue to develop the deepwater. The space program was not canceled because of Apollo 13. People didn't stop flying because the Air France plane coming out of Brazil went into the south Atlantic. We need to learn the lessons from this and make certain they're applied to reduce the likelihood of it ever happening again.
The industry has had a bloody good track record for 20 years now. We first went into the deepwater in the late 1980s. The number of wells drilled globally is between 4,000 and 5,000 in water depths greater than 1,000 feet. In deepwater Gulf of Mexico we have 1,500 wells drilled in deeper than 1,000 feet, and never has this happened. The track record to date has been actually pretty good. But clearly we now have a potentially catastrophic incident we need to learn from.
Will it be another generation before the U.S. government allows E&P companies to drill in the outer continental shelf areas of the Atlantic coast?
That's really going to be for the legislators to debate in light of what is learned from this incident.
Was there anything that you did following the Prudhoe Bay spill that you can point to, any specific changes in health and safety and environmental practices?
Prudhoe Bay was a failure to fully understand the risk. It was a gap in our risk assessment. We've done a lot of work in terms of enhancing risk assessment and ensuring it's very holistic.
What does that mean, holistic risk assessment?

It's having the aperture very wide rather than narrow.
Like in thinking about whether cutting capex [capital expenditures] could really lead to a problem?
There's no evidence that Alaska was anything about cutting capex, actually. It was just a risk that frankly was not identified. People just didn't expect that what they thought was perfectly pure oil actually had some water in it, and therefore you could get corrosion. It sounds simple, but it was an aperture that was too narrow in terms of thinking about the risk.
Back to the Gulf of Mexico, in recent days have you thought or learned anything about deepwater projects that were similar kinds of "no duh" realizations? The fact that water in oil can mix and corrode a pipeline--in hindsight that makes sense. Is there anything about deepwater …
I think it's too early. We really need to understand and get the results of the investigation.

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It really is too early, huh? I appreciate that you can't discuss …
My focus has been on responding, not in trying to figure out how we got here. My focus has been on responding. We have an investigation ongoing. Others have investigations ongoing. Our focus for the moment is responding. Eliminate the leak, contain the oil on the surface, defend the beaches. There will be time to really understand fully what's happened and therefore what we need to do differently.
Three months, six months?
The BOP is still on the seabed; the rig is still on the seabed. So putting all this together is quite a piece of forensic science.
Would you try to raise the rig? No, that's too big, right?
We won't. But it's possible the Marine Board might determine it's an important piece of evidence. More dramatic things have been done. The BOP is subpoenaed. It will be brought off the seabed and will be one of the key pieces of evidence.
So you can't do anything to it?
We're doing things to it, but we have to document everything we do.
Someone suggested detonating a thermite bomb in the BOP that would melt all the iron into a mass that would plug up the hole for sure. I imagine you won't get clearance for that? Red Adair, the famous wild well firefighter said something to the effect of, "If you think it's expensive to hire professionals, just try hiring amateurs to do the job." You're getting all these suggestions from amateurs, how do you manage that?
We have a process that screens all the suggestions … thousands and thousands from all over the world. People interested in trying to help. You never know when one of them might be a good idea that no one's thought of.
The approach is to be open and engaging with everyone who might be able to help.
In this building we've got every oil company you can think of. Every service company. The Department of Defense, the Navy, Department of Energy, NASA, NOAA. This is now an industry problem that the industry is dealing with, plus some of the greatest technical minds in the U.S.
Well with all that brain power you guys should have this solved by the weekend, right?

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We'll see. What we do know is that we'll solve it.
Will you solve it before the relief well is drilled?
Speculation. We have lots of options. We are creating many options all the time. We're loading bullets to go in the chamber, and after next week we will be firing bullet after bullet after bullet. And we'd all like to think that one of them will be successful. We just can't guarantee it. And in the meantime we have the insurance policy, the ultimate resolution will be in the relief well.
That makes me think… you didn't mean a real insurance policy of course, but if one was to go to Lloyd's of London and insure against a $25 billion hit to my market cap and $5 billion in punitive damages, what kind of premiums would you have to pay?
You can't insure. That's why we're self-insured. You can't insure risks you want to insure. And the things you can insure, the premiums are so high that it makes no sense for a company like BP to do anything other than self-insure.
But if you could figure out--if someone were willing to insure against a disaster like this--what the premiums would be, and whatever the premium might be, that would be on the order of what you would want to spend in a year to mitigate this kind of risk?
I don't think that's the way you think about it. You can't think about safe, reliable operations in terms of how much you want to spend a year. You have to think in terms of absolute risk elimination. That's what we're trying to do.
I'm surprised to hear that, because a lot of people would say this is a question of much you would be willing to spend to eliminate risk to a satisfactory degree.
That's not how we think about it.
So the sky is the limit on the dollar value that will be put into making sure that this kind of thing doesn't happen again?
Until we understand how it's happened, clearly you want to eliminate this occurring again, period.

Be seeing you.












"Are You F_cking Happy? The Rig's On Fire!"


More on the 'chest-bumping' episode between BP and Transocean (cf the US version of that 60 minutes)


The rig's on fire! I told you this was gonna happen!"


— By Josh Harkinson for MotherJones


...Tony Buzbee, a lawyer representing 15 rig workers and dozens of shrimpers, seafood restaurants, and dock workers, says he has obtained a three-page signed statement from a crew member on the boat that rescued the burning rig's workers. The sailor, who Buzbee refuses to name for fear of costing him his job, was on the ship's bridge when Deepwater Horizon installation manager Jimmy Harrell, a top employee of rig owner Transocean, was speaking with someone in Houston via satellite phone. Buzbee told Mother Jones that, according to this witness account, Harrell was screaming, "Are you fucking happy? Are you fucking happy? The rig's on fire! I told you this was gonna happen."


Whoever was on the other end of the line was apparently trying to calm Harrell down. "I am fucking calm," he went on, according to Buzbee. "You realize the rig is burning?"


At that point, the boat's captain asked Harrell to leave the bridge. It wasn't clear whether Harrell had been talking to Transocean, BP, or someone else.


On Friday a spokesman for Transocean said he couldn't confirm or deny whether the conversation took place. He was unable to make Harrell available for an interview.


During hearings held late last month by the Coast Guard and the Minerals Management Service, Harrell denied any conflicts with his BP or Transocean bosses. He said that he did not feel pressured to rush the completion of the well, even though the rig had fallen behind schedule.


Yet Buzbee's claims add weight to other statements that contradict Harrell's version of events. Testifying before the Coast Guard and MMS panel last month, Douglas Brown, the chief mechanic on the Deepwater Horizon, said that on the morning of the day that the rig exploded Harrell had a "skirmish" over drilling procedures during a meeting with BP's "company man," well site leader Robert Kaluza. "I remember the company man saying this is how it's going to be," Brown told the panel. As Harrell was leaving the meeting, according to Brown, "He pretty much grumbled, 'I guess that's what we have those pincers for,'" referring to the blowout preventer on the sea floor that is supposed to be the last resort to prevent a leak in the event of an emergency. The blowout preventer failed following the explosion on the rig, causing the massive spill. (Transocean's chief electronics technician, Mike Williams, also recalled the argument but named a different BP "company man," BP's top official on the rig, Donald Vidrine).


In a statement to the Wall Street Journal, Transocean appeared to back the claims that Harrell had feuded with BP: "The testimony certainly seems to suggest that [Harrell] disagreed with the operator's instructions, but what those were and why he disagreed are matters that will ultimately be determined during the course of investigations."


Other rig workers have also claimed that they were pressured by BP and their supervisors to cut corners. Transocean roustabout Truitt Crawford told the Coast Guard that he overheard senior management saying that BP was "taking shortcuts" by replacing drilling mud in the well with saltwater, which would have provided less weight to contain the well's surging pressure. Transocean's Williams told 60 Minutes that a supervisor had dismissed evidence that the well's blowout preventer had been damaged. And workers with Halliburton, the well's cementing contractor, had complained that BP's use of cement "was against our best practices" and told the oil company that it would likely have "a SEVERE gas flow problem" unless the well's casings were centered more carefully.


Buzbee told Mother Jones that the sailor's version of Harrell's phone conversation following the explosion was corroborated by a statement from a second crew member who says he also overheard the call. Both statements were taken in-person by Buzbee's investigator and safety consultant, who has interviewed some 60 people involved in the disaster, and signed by the witnesses, he said. Buzbee declined to make the full statements available to Mother Jones because, he said, "it is work product, meaning that it is something that I do not have to produce or disclose in litigation but that can be used at the right time in the litigation." He added that he intends to take a deposition from the crew members at a later time.




-------


In a related story, can anyone corroborate that the row over proposed practices led to Transocean people leaving before the accident?


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