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Gasland – The Movie

Josh Fox and James Hermann

Josh Fox (left) and James Hermann (right) at the screening of "Gasland" in Cooperstown, June 16, 2010




Josh Fox presented Gasland – The Movie last night in Cooperstown to a packed house and several standing ovations.The presentation was sponsored by the remarkable groups Sustainable Otsego and Otsego 2000.

Josh fielded questions from what was obviously a very well-informed public. A lot was learned this evening. I must say, it was one of the few times when I left the meeting not feeling disheartened. Combine that with the fact  that one of two bills before the New York State assembly, each calling for a moratorium on gas drilling in the Marcelllus Shale, had a good chance of passing the following day.

A call to action was made by Josh and the sponsoring organizations for audience members to call their representatives and the next morning expressing their support for the bills.

What can I say about this amazing film? It was a labor of love by a filmmaker who obviously loves where he lives and labored hard on this prize-winning film. Gasland is the winner of the Special Jury Prize at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.

 



Gasland is premiering on HBO, Monday, June 21 at 9 PM Eastern / 8 PM Central time. If you live anywhere in New York State, including New York City, you will really want to see this film. Natural gas drilling is the next environmental disaster waiting to happen. This film will inform you of the dangers, and what you can do about them.

 

You can find out more about Gasland  at http://gaslandthemovie.com/

 

Bunk

There has been some talk about a “debunking” of this film. That “ebunking is so lame as to be laughable, except that some people fall for it.
It nit-picks at some facts that Josh didn’t get perfectly right. That is a red herring. Nothing gets everything perfectly right, but Gasland is so right about the big picture, and almost every small detail is correct.


On the other hand, the oil and gas industries screw up in major ways frequently. The fact that they pay off government agencies with money, drugs and sex (or haven’t you been reading the newspapers?) to hide their screw-ups, doesn’t mean that they aren’t there.  This is a really bad problem. The industry  pays out millions if not billions, to cover up disaster after disaster, and then in its press releases says, “Hey look–we been doing this for so many years without a disaster!”


It would be nice if, at least by now, everyone understood how these industries work, especially after the glaring example of BP (Beyond Pollution) in the Gulf of Mexico. Keep in mind that Halliburton developed the casings to that oil well. They also developed the casings that will be used (if we don’t stop them) in the proposed gas wells. Halliburton also developed high-pressure horizontal hydraulic fracturing for gas. They pioneered new techniques in Iraq (covertly) during the First Gulf War.


Are we to trust our futures to the company that ripped off the American military in the Persian Gulf? How warm and cuddly does the word “Halliburton” make you feel?


What you have is a predatory industry who’s bottom line (their  only line) is profit, no matter what the cost to the people they lie to. Even most of the landowners who think they’ve “won the lottery” (really – some of them actually believe the BS that the landmen shoveled on them) soon regret their decision to despoil their land, heritage and health for a scam.


Somebody pointed out  that the natural gas industry’s  shills have spent more  possibly ten times more money on damage control from the film Gasland than Josh Fox did on making it.
Of course there’s another side to the story of Gasland. But it is weak and disingenuous at best. It’s paid for by the industry and their flunkies.  On the other hand, Gasland was made and is promoted by people who care about their homes, the environment, and the real good of the general populace, not just expedience  and greed for a few.

Take action:

Tell your Representatives to support the FRAC Act here


Josh Fox releases response to industry attacks on GASLAND,

“AFFIRMING GASLAND”

co-written with Weston Wilson, EPA, Professor Anthony Ingraffea, Cornell University, and Barbara Arrindell of Damascus Citizens for Sustainability and others.

41-page document addresses industry attacks point by point.

Read the document: http://www.damascuscitizens.org/Affirming-GASLAND.pdf


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