Some More News - SMN: Why All The Train Derailments?
Episode Date: April 12, 2023Hi. In today's episode, we look at the response to the recent Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, how both Republicans and Democrats share in the blame, and... how corporate greed increases the likelihood of disasters exactly like this. SOURCES: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1fSgTS3_Mf9eZxfk8Rq9GgBrYmBzoLLdxNJ2csZC14JU/edit?usp=sharing Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews What's better than getting one pair of Shady Rays and not worrying if you break or lose them? Getting two! Go to https://shadyrays.com/morenews and use code morenews and for a limited time, when you buy one pair of Shady Rays, you'll get a second pair FREE.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
.
Hello, news chicklets.
Chicklets, like the candy?
Little chickens?
Anyway, I'm a five-time Golden Necktie Award winner,
Cody Johnston, a newsman, a man of the news,
and welcome to Newsman.
And here is some news, a train derailment.
No, not the recent Seminole Gulf Railway train derailment
with propane, the recent Norfolk Southern train derailment. No, not the recent Seminole Gulf Railway train derailment with propane.
The recent Norfolk Southern train derailment
carrying hazardous materials.
No, not the recent Norfolk Southern train derailment
involving hazardous materials in Detroit.
The recent Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio.
Okay, damn it, all right.
No, not the recent Norfolk Southern train derailment
in Ohio near Springfield.
The recent Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio near Springfield. The recent Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio
in East Palestine.
Okay, there we go.
Finally got there.
My gosh, boy, that was a real, what's the word?
Like when nothing goes right and it's a huge catastrophe.
A real plane wreck, that's the phrase.
Anyway, East Palestine.
Why?
Hey, good, weirdly worded question.
Let's talk about it.
Let's talk about this one train derailment,
even though there have been a ton more since it,
including ones that happened
while we were writing this episode
and presumably filming and editing this episode.
So on February 3rd, 2023,
a Norfolk Southern rail line in East Palestine, Ohio,
derailed, throwing 38 cars off the track, where trains live,
and into the grass, where plants and animals live.
Of the roughly three dozen cars that derailed,
11 were carrying hazardous material and 12 caught on fire.
Investigations revealed that it was likely a malfunction
of a wheel bearing overheating and failing
that caused the derailment.
While nobody was killed or injured
during the derailment itself,
the train cars were carrying a variety of flammable
and toxic chemicals.
But if you're worried that those chemicals
were accidentally released into the environment,
allow me to calm those fears by assuring you that they absolutely were not
accidentally released into the environment.
They were intentionally released into the environment.
Hooray, celebrate.
We have balloons, we don't.
Okay, on February 6th, there was a controlled release
of toxic fumes from the burning train cars
by Norfolk Southern, which was done out of concern
there would be an explosion.
The presumably very smelly cloud included a laundry list
of chemicals that sound like one of the Joker's
gift receipts, stuff like vinyl chloride, butylacrylate,
isobutylene ethyl-exylacrylate, ethylene glycol,
monobutyl ether,
and archaeus vaporien.
Last one's a Pokemon.
But the rest of those that were pronounced correctly
are very real chemicals that are arguably just as lethal
as the most formidable Charizard.
Toxic fumes, gotta catch them all.
The EPA reported that five chemicals known to be toxic
were released into the air, soil, and external bodies
of water near East Palestine,
which again is the area where plants and animals live.
Animals like puppies, scorpions,
and also people like Firf Jenkins,
East Palestine's veteran mail carrier.
Now, I don't actually know anyone in East Palestine
and therefore can't confirm whether Firf
is still slinging mail or if he actually exists.
I merely picked his name at random
to represent the people of East Palestine
and underline the point that human beings live in the area
where Norfolk Southern blew up their poison train,
a thing they did not have to get permission
from anyone to do, especially not FERF.
One of the chemicals released,
vinyl chloride has been linked to liver cancer,
according to the National Cancer Institute.
Additionally, when vinyl chloride burns,
it becomes phosgene and hydrogen chloride,
which are highly toxic gases.
They're the super shredder
to vinyl chloride's regular value meal shredder.
And wouldn't you know it,
government authorities identified phosgene
and hydrogen chloride as fumes
that were produced by the train cars.
For context, phosgene was responsible
for most of the chemical weapons deaths in World War I.
It is colorless with a strong odor
that causes breathing problems and vomiting.
Fun chemistry facts we discovered
while dousing people with it in war's glorious name.
Firf remembers the war, doesn't he?
He remembers what he did, doesn't he?
And just in case you thought you'd seen the final escapee
in this chemical jailbreak, butylacrylate was also released
as a result of the derailment.
According to the CDC, acute exposure to butylacrylate
can cause irritation to the eyes, skin,
and respiratory tract, including breathing problems.
So bad, naughty stuff needs a spanking
these naughty chemicals do.
Luckily, the town of East Palestine was evacuated
in the immediate aftermath for five days.
On February 8th, five days after the derailment
and two days after the controlled release
of the toxic fumes, residents were instructed
by Republican governor of Ohio, Mike DeWine,
that it was safe to return.
But despite these assurances, residents weren't so convinced
and didn't exactly trust Norfolk Southern
or the local authorities after the train had just ripped a big toxic fart on their town.
We have to have proper testing. We cannot
get a two and a two three and in your papers say one.
You're not satisfied with the testing that's been done at your house?
No, and you're gonna smell it as soon as you go into
my house. I don't feel safe taking my kids into town, especially to the house. Like my neighbor
right across the street from me literally got diagnosed yesterday with chemical pneumonia.
What does the government do? Whose responsibility is it? Because I'm not quite sure that the,
you know, Norfolk Southern is really doing much.
Don't blame these people at all. Their concerns are pretty darn reasonable,
given that the Chuchuca boom has been killing thousands of animals in the area.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources has estimated that over 43,000 aquatic animals
have died following the derailment.
And I may not be an ecologist,
but that seems like a lot of animals to poison all at once.
Indeed, one might argue too many.
If my math is right, that's roughly 425.7
metric Cruella de Ville's in one mass poisoning.
People reported their pets getting sick or dying,
including chickens, cats, and dogs.
And although these reports haven't been officially quantified, once you start getting piles of
dead frogs, I'm honestly gonna believe you about your dead chickens.
That's not a huge jump.
Frogs are the chickens of the creek.
Ah, I said jump like a frog.
Hop a hop. Hop, hop!
But seriously, many animals have died. And still, the information coming out of East Palestine
has been confusing at best.
Even though several photos and videos taken
of the ongoing event have gone viral,
it's unclear what exactly they're depicting.
Wow.
Look at all that. Look at it.
It's all in the bottom of the creek bed.
That rainbow sheen could be chemicals
forming a film on the water,
but it could be wokeness run amok.
It could also be biofilm,
an organic substance created by dead or decaying animals,
which would make sense
given the sheer number of the aforementioned
deceased fish and frogs.
So the water could just be filled with more dead animals
in the back room of a pet store,
rather than polluted with toxic chemicals.
And wouldn't that be a relief?
So, okay, how polluted are things?
Is it really safe for people to be going
about their daily lives, swimming through
that chemical cloud
like they're conducting business on a foggy London morn?
There's a lot of confusing information flying around,
in addition to the toxic chemicals flying around,
and distrust of officials is high for obvious reasons.
When you let railroad billionaires
duke their dirty train poison all over town
because corporate profits have more rights and power
than the American people,
your constituents are going to look at you,
dare I say, askance.
Ohio State and federal officials have said
that they have not detected dangerous levels
of chemical substances in homes they have tested
or in the municipal water.
But these are the same officials that said
it was safe for residents of East Palestine
to come back into their homes,
even as all the dogs and cats were dying
in each other's arms, like the characters in Chernobyl,
the HBO show.
And the real event, I guess.
But mostly the HBO show.
And true, it's not outrageous to believe
that drinking water might be safe
even if the surface waterways are polluted.
But the water testing itself has been,
you know, a little messy, a little sloppy,
a little drunk at the Build-A-Bear workshop,
if you know what I mean, you know what I mean,
you know what I'm talking about.
Which is not generally the vibe you want
during the aftermath of a catastrophic train derailment.
While the Ohio EPA has been doing weekly tests of the water,
Norfolk Southern has also been testing the water
and has reportedly had issues in terms of sampling errors,
such as air bubbles in the samples
or samples not being acidified correctly
according to EPA guidelines.
It doesn't mean that drinking water is necessarily unsafe,
but it's weird to conduct your testing more loosely
than a hungover driving instructor
when you're trying to convince people
that their drinking water isn't death elixir.
Also, locals are still reporting symptoms like headaches,
fatigue, skin irritation, and anxiety,
which could be caused by pollutants
or by the overwhelming psychological trauma
of a chemical explosion.
Perhaps both, both sides.
Because at Norfolk Southern, their motto is,
"'Eat fistfuls of shit and fear, you peasants."
It's not as catchy as it could be, but it's pretty close.
They should tweak it.
Also their mascot is a railroad tycoon
polishing his monocle behind the wheel of a locomotive
riding along a track of human bones.
It's captivating imagery.
Can't you just see it on a T-shirt?
Available for a reasonable price in a merch store, perhaps.
Get them while they're definitely real.
To be clear, when we say that the symptoms
some of the people of East Palestine are experiencing
may be psychological,
we don't mean that people are making up their symptoms
or that their symptoms aren't real and serious.
Psychogenic illness in response to anxiety
over contamination is a real and documented thing.
Physical symptoms can originate from mental distress.
So that's a possibility, but it's also very possible
that people are having reactions to actual chemicals
still left behind by the derailment.
And I'm not a doctor, legally,
but it seems like we should at the very least
be taking these reported symptoms very seriously
when the short and long-term health of the population
of an entire town is on the line.
The EPA has conducted a number of air quality tests
in the area and found that the 79 chemicals
that they've been monitoring have been below levels
of concern for short-term exposure
and predict that the concentrations will dissipate.
Texas A&M University researchers analyzed the EPA's data
and while their testing mirrors the results of the EPA,
the researchers noticed that there are significant amounts
of compounds that can cause headaches,
eye and lung irritation, and in the long term, cancer.
A particularly concerning chemical
noted by the A&M analysis is acrolein,
of which they found levels that were sometimes
above the threshold for long-term health consequences
to people's lungs.
Texas A&M researchers acknowledged
that residents would have to be exposed for months or years
to see some of these health issues.
And the EPA contends that the concentration
of the chemicals are likely to go down,
meaning people wouldn't be exposed to high enough levels
to pose a serious health risk.
So basically the EPA is admitting
that these chemicals can damage people's breathing
or even give them cancer,
but because the levels are so low, maybe they won't.
Like garnishing your macchiato
with a light misting of arsenic,
just enough to get the tongue numb.
This probably, but probably and maybe actually
aren't comforting words for residents
who had a poison train explode in their backyards.
Also, as we noted at the top of this episode,
this keeps happening.
Just keeps happening.
Trains apparently derail every damn day in America,
and it's not comforting to know
that it's not a major chemical disaster most of the time.
Car accidents also happen every day,
but you know, cars aren't on permanent tracks
and are kind of dependent on hundreds of people
on the road driving safely.
And if every 0.1% of the time a car crash
created a TNT style explosion that wiped out a city block,
we would find those odds unacceptable.
Or like if hypothetically someone was manufacturing cars
that would occasionally drive on their own and crash
and then burst into flames,
that totally hypothetical scenario would be very concerning
despite how rare it was.
And so the chemical effects being temporary
in this one event doesn't really calm the mind
when it's part of a larger systemic issue.
So what are we gonna do about this, if anything?
And why did it happen?
Why?
These are great questions.
I am asking right now.
I'm very smart at the questions and can juggle very well.
And to answer those questions,
I'm gonna need to take an ad break
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Hey, hello, hi, we're back.
We were just discussing
the Norfolk Southern train derailment
and the effects it had on the local people and environment
because we love fun.
And now it's time to sink our luscious sexy teeth
into the consequences.
What has been done?
What could have been done?
Has anyone gained superpowers from the chemicals
where they turn invisible
or at least have a bunch of spikes on them
like that guy whose name I can't guess from X-Men 3?
To answer that last question first, no.
And to guess, hug monster, you know,
like watch out or he'll hug you
and stick you with spikes at some point during the hug.
X-Men 3, the best MCU movie that's in the MCU.
Have fun in the comments.
But the EPA ordered Norfolk Southern
to test for toxic dioxins,
which the EPA said it will oversee.
Great, that sounds reasonable and responsible. Unlike the plan to deal with said dioxins, which the EPA said it will oversee. Great, that sounds reasonable and responsible.
Unlike the plan to deal with said dioxins,
which is to send the contaminated soil around the derailment
to a nearby incinerator and burn it.
That plan has come under harsh criticism,
including some from former EPA official Kyla Bennett,
who has now become an environmental activist,
highly critical of the EPA.
Her fear is that we don't actually know the extent
of what chemicals may be in the soil
and that burning them would just release
whatever's in there into the air,
which is way worse than just leaving it in the dirt
where it is.
Even the EPA itself has stated in the past
that burning chemical compounds found in the soil
would be iffy, writing in a technical brief that the effectiveness
of incineration to destroy certain compounds
and the potential to create harmful byproducts
in the process is not well understood.
Even the incinerator itself is kind of shady.
According to reporting by the Guardian,
the Heritage Thermal Services incinerator burns
Department of Defense chemical waste,
resulting in a federal lawsuit filed
by local environmental groups.
It was also the subject of the EPA investigation
that found the facility had violated the Clean Air Act
almost 200 times between 2010 and 2014,
and has currently recorded violations
in eight of the last 12 quarters.
So I'm not an incineration specialist, legally.
But that facility seems like maybe not the best choice
in this situation.
Indeed, it kind of seems like the equivalent
of a government mandated tire fire.
But I guess it's not as if there are any great options
after you crash a chemical train in a small town
and then burn its contents to prevent a real disaster.
Crisis avert-ish.
Another question is whether Norfolk Southern acted hastily
in releasing the burning chemicals from the railway car.
As we mentioned earlier,
Norfolk contends this was done
to prevent a possible explosion,
but it turns out that not everyone was on board
with the whole let's release chemicals into the air plan.
And that includes hazardous material specialist,
Sil Caggiano, a retired Ohio fire chief,
who was also a member of Ohio's
Hazardous Materials Technical Advisory Committee.
We basically nuked a town with chemicals
so we could get a railroad open.
And we're gonna be looking at this thing
five, 10, 15, 20 years down the line
and wondering, gee, cancer clusters could pop up,
well water could go bad.
Mustache Sill claims that Norfolk Southern
detonated the containers, quote,
"'Because the alternatives to what they did
"'would have taken too long and cost them too much money.
"'If they had put the fire out,
"'they would still have had to handle
"'every one of those containers and its content
"'as hazardous waste,
all non-marketable.
And they would have to have gotten rid
of all that contamination.
This way they don't have contamination anymore.
It burned up and it spread over God knows how much.
They got off very cheap in my book.
But still Caggiano's just one mustache
with a really cool name and a really cool mustache.
What's one awesome name against the mighty Norfolk Southern?
How many mustaches do they have?
We don't know, we can't know, they will not tell us.
But Pennsylvania Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro,
whose name is markedly less cool,
is also criticizing Norfolk Southern for their hastiness
in detonating the train containers.
In a letter to the CEO of Norfolk Southern,
Governor Shapiro claimed that Norfolk Southern
didn't want to explore other possibilities
and that their decision to burn the chemicals
in order to clear the rail line more quickly, quote,
"'Injected unnecessary risk and created confusion.'"
However, when asked about this,
Norfolk Southern CEO, Alan Shaw rebutted by pointing out, quote,
no, uh.
Governor DeWine and Governor Shapiro and Mayor Conaway
and Fire Chief Drabeck and the National Guard
were all aligned that this was the right decision to make
in terms of public safety.
Ooh, I love a good he said, he said,
especially when the wellbeing of thousands of people
are at stake.
He said that we can't legally play this song.
According to Governor Shapiro's letter,
Norfolk Southern personnel acted on their own at the scene,
separate from local agencies, which caused confusion.
And at the time of this writing,
at least 30 lawsuits have already been filed
against Norfolk Southern,
alleging that both the initial derailment
and the following planned detonation of chemicals
was negligent.
According to a lawsuit filed by Morgan and Morgan,
the chemicals shouldn't have leaked out in the first place,
not even after derailment.
And the decision to dump over 1 million pounds
of cancer causing vinyl chloride directly
into the environment was just the chemically burned cherry
on top of the sundae of failure.
Just a real hideous cherry,
a real Phantom of the Opera looking piece of shit.
Hell yeah, look at that little Phantom mask on him.
It's adorable and sexy and hideous. Yum.
So in other words, it seems like Norfolk Southern
is doing its best to be recognized as the greatest threat
in Captain Planet's rogues gallery,
right in front of Sludge Fuck and the Sweaty Oiler.
If you're watching this and saying to yourself,
man, it really seems like a potentially massive
environmental disaster in small town America
should be bigger news.
You're absolutely right.
Unfortunately, one of the initial issues
with the derailment was getting news stations
to pay attention to it at all.
In fairness, the country had something far more urgent
to focus on at the time.
The giant Chinese balloon that had been floating
across parts of the United States has been
shot down.
Well, new details have emerged about the Chinese spy balloon investigation.
In February, a suspected Chinese spy balloon flew over the United States.
The Pentagon, as you may have heard, is now tracking a very high altitude Chinese spy
balloon over the northern United States.
Damn you, Sky Orb!
And fuck you too!
The sighting of the Chinese balloon
was reported on February 2nd,
and the East Palestine, Ohio derailment
occurred on February 3rd.
Media Matters did an analysis of the balloon
versus the train derailment coverage,
and they found that from February 4th to the 13th,
there were only two programs that bothered to discuss
how weak our regulations
for hazardous materials are,
specifically due to rail lobbyists
that absolutely include people
representing Norfolk Southern.
They also found that exactly zero
of the big corporate broadcasts
discussed the lack of safety regulations.
So even when it was being covered,
nobody was really talking about the role deregulation
and competence and plain old greed
had played in the disaster.
So if you feel like the coverage of the Ohio derailment
has been spotty and inconsistent,
and took too long to trickle into the national discourse,
you're probably not imagining things.
An article by Molly Taft for Gizmodo reveals
that there are only three newspapers in the county
that contains East Palestine.
And all three of them are owned by the same company
and have a tiny staff
that includes zero environmental reporters.
And the two local news outlets closest to East Palestine
have of course suffered massive layoffs in recent years,
as is the custom for journalism these days.
This meant there were few resources to cover
and disseminate news about the derailment.
In addition, a reporter who was trying to cover
the catastrophe was arrested in a shocking response
by law enforcement.
Sorry, I meant a typical and routine response
by law enforcement.
Let's go, let's go.
Please do not touch me.
Out, out, please.
Do not touch me.
Do not touch me.
You're under arrest.
I'm under arrest.
Please get out of my house.
Please get out of my house.
Sir.
Please get out of my house.
Oh my God.
Apparently, if you want to be a hard-hitting reporter,
you have to get hit hard by the police.
The reporter, Evan Lambert of News Nation,
was trying to cover a news conference
on the derailment held by Ohio's Republican Governor,
Mike DeWine.
According to the Washington Bureau Chief of News Nation,
Mike Figuera, Lambert was quietly talking
while setting up a live shot.
Local law enforcement then confronted Lambert
and said he was out of line for talking
when the governor was talking.
Apparently, talking while Mike DeWine is speaking is illegal
because he is some sort of celestial emperor.
Should have offered him cheese with that DeWine.
Waka waka, police brutality.
After Lambert said he was just doing his job
and hadn't broken any laws. They dragged him to the ground
because this country rules and is totally normal.
Charges against Lambert were ultimately dropped,
although I can't imagine what the charges even were.
Talking out of turn, I guess, because this is study hall?
Anyway, Molly Taft, the Gizmodo writer I mentioned earlier,
contends that the lack of strong media coverage
and investigative reporting,
in combination with a weak response
from the Biden administration,
has helped to fuel right-wing talking points
about a grand conspiracy to poison people.
And she's super not wrong.
If no one reliable is giving you any answers,
you are gonna turn to whoever is offering them.
Like how I learned to build a shed through Pornhub comments
after Home Depot banned me for sleeping
in their gardening section.
It's exactly like that thing I just described
and there's no difference anyway.
Because of these talking heads
looking to make a buck off of hysteria,
vague conspiracies and overgeneralizations
now surround the Ohio disaster.
In between treatises over how much he wants teens
to get married and pregnant
and how trans people are womanhood vampires,
professional creep and dead-eyed freak Matt Walsh
found time to tweet some S-tier goofball shit
about the derailment.
He wrote,
"'Last week they wouldn't shoot down a spy balloon
"'over Montana for fear of the impactailment. He wrote, last week, they wouldn't shoot down a spy balloon over Montana for fear of the impact on civilians.
The week before, they blew up thousands of gallons
of toxic chemicals and poisoned the air and water supply
in order to clear a train derailment.
Someone makes sense of this.
Sure thing, Matt, I'll help you out.
So as we discussed earlier,
the they that blew up the trains was Norfolk Southern,
a private company that has control over a railway
in our very capitalist and cool country,
and was allegedly able to act independently
during the response to the derailment,
something you probably support
since you hate the idea of government
when it's not catering to you.
Meanwhile, the they that waited to explode a balloon
while it hovered over populated areas
was the US government and Pentagon.
That's not to say the government doesn't bear responsibility
for deregulating the rail industry
or for their tepid response to the derailment,
but the decision to burn a million pounds of poison
and the decision to spare a mysterious balloon
were made
by two completely different entities,
and not a single they as implied
by Matt's excellently baby brain tweet.
Matt Walsh succumbs to wokeism, uses a pronoun.
I don't wanna dwell on it, but it's kind of amazing
how unserious Matt Walsh
and the other conservative pundits like him are.
Like there are so many ways you can use the derailment news
to point out why Biden sucks,
as long as you're not beholden
to pushing your political narrative at the same time.
But since Walsh is a weird right-wing grifter and,
oh yeah, dead-eyed freak,
he certainly can't admit the role
that deregulation might play in this event.
So instead he felt the need to try and mush together
two talking points that have literally nothing to do
with each other, implying that the Biden government
is the sole reason behind this disaster
and follow-up hazard.
That said, it's not not the fault of the government,
including Biden's administration.
They are after all in charge of like everything, but it's also not only Biden's administration. They are after all in charge of like everything,
but it's also not only Biden's fault.
It's more like a melange of fault,
a fruit medley of blame swirling in your mouth
and most of it's fucking melon.
And in these partisan times,
that mixture is often lost by a lot of people,
but not us and our big hunky brains.
And so of course, it's now time to point some juicy fingers.
Can you taste it?
Can you taste my fingers?
But first, we have to do an ad break.
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Sweet, healing blame.
Let's do it, starting with the big G.
When I say the government bears some responsibility
in this disaster,
I don't just mean the Biden administration.
There have been many hands contributing
to this shit casserole, including the Trump administration
and Republican opponents to Obama era regulations.
We'll dive into that shit casserole with more gusto later.
But first let's talk about Joe Biden,
or should I say job hiding,
cause he's hiding from his job.
Where is he?
You know, fuck you.
That was, It's fine.
Instead of quickly and decisively issuing a condemnation
of Norfolk Southern and committing
to strengthening regulations,
the Biden administration has been frustratingly evasive
about the whole train problem.
In the immediate aftermath of the derailment,
Biden made no public statements.
On February 16th, 13 days after the derailment
and 10 days after the controlled release of the chemicals,
the White House Press Secretary revealed
that Biden had offered Ohio's governor federal assistance.
You know, quietly and discreetly,
because for some reason we didn't want to make a fuss
about the president offering federal assistance
to a small town besieged by toxic gas.
And on February 17th, the White House released a fact sheet
indicating that they had deployed federal resources
to East Palestine shortly after the derailment.
Still, Biden himself hasn't deigned
to actually visit the town
or even give a public statement directly from his own mouth,
which he likes to call the Joe hole.
Finally, on February 21st, 19 days after the derailment,
Biden tweeted about the ordeal
with some light criticism of Norfolk Southern saying,
"'Today the EPA ordered the train company, Norfolk Southern,
"'to pay for the cleanup and disposal
"'of hazardous materials.
"'This is common sense.
"'This is their mess.
"'They should clean it up.'"
Which, sure, that's all well and good,
but it's hardly a fist pumping moment of justice.
That's kind of the bare minimum, late.
Obviously the people who own the poison train
should be responsible for cleaning it up
when it spills its poison everywhere.
This gentlest of rebukes from the president
just sounds like a tired substitute preschool teacher.
Where's the cranky old popcorn fart who challenged a guy
from Iowa to a pushup competition and once punched malarkey
in the dick so hard that there has been no malarkey since.
But yeah, great.
Norfolk Southern should clean up their mess.
Good point from the Joe hole.
Or rather it could have been because Biden's DOJ is siding
with Norfolk Southern
in the company's bid to block lawsuits
related to their reckless handling of hazardous materials.
Specifically, they're doing this in a Supreme Court case
that would stop a previous lawsuit
that was brought by a rail worker who has cancer.
The worker alleges that his cancer was caused
by exposure to asbestos and other chemicals
while working for Norfolk Southern.
And that he was not provided PPE
or measures to protect himself.
This suit predates the derailment,
but if it is struck down, it would set a precedent
that might make it more difficult for people affected
by the derailment to sue Norfolk Southern,
and in general would make it more difficult
for people to get any justice
when it comes to large corporations.
Nothing like some good old fashioned tort reform
that protects weak and feeble corporations
from the vicious claws of the people they've injured.
Corporations are people.
If a person had 5,000 lawyers.
So yeah, Biden sucks.
Sucks right from his Joe hole.
Then of course, Pete Buttigieg took about 10 days
to tweet about the derailment,
which isn't ideal given his position
as Secretary of Transportation,
and I'm almost certain and now told
that a train does count as transportation.
In a CBS interview, Buttigieg acknowledged
that he could have spoken sooner
about how strongly I felt about this incident,
and that's a lesson learned for me.
Oh good, well, as long as he learned his lesson.
Nevertheless, Buttigieg's people are frustrated
at the heat he's getting and are quick to point out
that Buttigieg did 23 interviews
in the 10 days after the accident
and was never asked about it.
Of course, the argument they're making
is that it was the media's responsibility
to bring up the derailment
and not the Secretary of Transportation's duty to,
I don't know, maybe mention it once
over the course of two dozen interviews.
The great communicator, tongue tied
because he can't think of the incident
he felt so strongly about.
And while it's not wrong to say that it was a failure
of the media to not ask about it,
it's an odd defense to say that it was a failure of the media to not ask about it, it's an odd defense to say
that the government official responsible
for every moving vehicle in the United States
didn't have any responsibility to address the derailment
on his own.
But don't worry, Donald Darius Jefferson Trump
was ready to pick up the slack and visit East Palestine
to pretend to be a hero.
We're bringing thousands of bottle of water,
Trump water actually, most of it.
Some of it we had to go to a much lesser quality water.
You wanna get those Trump bottles, I think,
more than anybody else, but we're bringing a lot of water.
Thanks for the water, you coo-having,
anthropomorphic casino rug,
but because Democrats had bafflingly seeded the issue
and stepped down from the ladder
that was right next to the hoop,
they could have just dropped the ball in.
Daddy indictment was able to show up
and lie as much as he wanted, uncontested.
He claimed that Biden and FEMA said
they would not send federal aid to East Palestine
under any circumstance, which is not true at all.
Governor Mike, I need a bottle for all my dewine,
has confirmed that the White House has offered help,
but that he hasn't accepted the help.
And when a reporter asked Trump about his administration
killing an Obama era regulation
that would have required trains carrying hazardous materials
to have more modern braking systems,
Trump fell back on his battle-tested strategy
of denying objective reality
and somehow getting away with it.
What do you make of Biden,
or rather Buttigieg's criticism
of you pulling back rail regulations?
Do you think it would have made a difference?
No, it had nothing to do with it.
Uh, yeah.
You did have something to do with it.
Like, objectively so.
You did that thing.
But even though Trump is lying about this,
by filling a void left by the Biden administration's
lack of response, he is able to quite effortlessly
win the optics game.
I guess, is there anything that you'd wanna share
with the folks who don't live here in East Palestine
to kinda spread some message out to the rest of the people
who might be watching about what's actually happening here? It's crazy and I think they should do more about
it. All these little Trump burritos know is what their parents have told them and that a former
president visited their little town and claimed he cared about them. Yes, he's lying to them,
but if they feel like the government's abandoned them, what's stopping them from believing that lie?
Even if Biden quietly offered help to the governor of Ohio
behind the scenes, which he did,
he couldn't be bothered to come to East Palestine
and let the residents know he's got their backs.
Trump may be acting in grotesquely bad faith,
but given the tepid response from Biden and Buttigieg,
it does kind of seem like the White House
doesn't care about them.
Buttigieg claimed in a tweet that he's constrained
by Trump era deregulations,
but critics say he does have the authority
to expand the definition of high hazard trains
to cover trains like the recently exploded one,
which would then allow for greater regulation.
Obviously, whether he's able to do it might involve courts
or require legislation, but shouldn't they try?
Or at least make a show of trying.
I mean, come on guys, how hard is it to impress a child?
They're so gullible.
Luckily, while the Biden administration's response
has been limp and floppy,
plenty of progressive politicians have been speaking out
about the situation and either calling for action
or taking direct action themselves. Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown visited East Palestine Many of progressive politicians have been speaking out about the situation and either calling for action
or taking direct action themselves.
Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown visited East Palestine
and acknowledged locals' frustration,
expressing a need for rail regulations,
saying, I want to see rail safety legislation pass
in the next few weeks.
It didn't.
Bop and Bernie Sanders is using the current scrutiny
on the rail industry to demand that Norfolk Southern
cover sick leave for employees,
a thing it is kind of weird
they aren't already required to do.
The progressive group River Valley Organizing
is on the ground canvassing and holding public meetings,
creating a list of demands they have of Norfolk Southern
following the disaster,
as well as convening scientific and environmental experts
to answer the questions that residents have over safety.
All of this is good, but unfortunately,
progressive efforts to take on this issue
have already been undermined by the Biden administration's
stance on the Railway Workers Union,
when the administration prevented rail workers
from striking and forced through a deal
for the Rail Workers Union that still didn't address
their need for paid sick days.
Rail workers have been complaining about companies
putting profit over worker welfare
and rail safety for a while now.
Back in June of 2022,
division president of the transportation communications
union Dom Grissom warned,
"'The railroad business model and increased pressures
"'from management have created a ticking time bomb
"'on our nation's rails.
And he wasn't the only guy who could see the future.
Back in 2021, rail unions warned
of precision scheduled railroading,
a cost cutting method of decreasing the amount of time
taken for operations.
The unions argued that this rigid time cutting scheduling
makes it harder for workers to conduct safety checks.
Time is money after all, in that both are fake.
And if you make enough money,
you can feel confident risking a chemical spill
over a Midwestern town because you can afford
the limited repercussions if any even exist.
When your profits are in the billions,
fines for flagrantly endangering the public
are just part of the cost of doing business.
To wit, in 2022, Norfolk Southern's gross profit
was $4.8 billion.
Their initial response to the derailment
was to offer a $25,000 payoff to East Palestine,
as in the entire town and not individuals,
before it was clear that the disaster
was going to receive any scrutiny and attention.
That's less than pennies to them.
Then they upped that to $6.5 million
after all the press coverage,
but that's just pennies to them,
only a fraction of what they spend on stock buybacks.
It's almost as if this company is so big
that they can do whatever they want
because the repercussions are nothing to them.
Go capitalism.
Seriously, please leave.
The Ohio Attorney General is suing Norfolk Southern
over the derailment,
but it's unclear whether Norfolk Southern
will face any consequences for the disaster,
which is a problem because while we can point
at the Biden administration's lackluster response
and failure to support the rail union
or the Trump administration's gutting of rail regulations,
Norfolk Southern and the rest of the rail industry
have fought hard to systematically push
for deregulations for decades.
In 2014, in response to an increase in train derailments,
the Obama administration proposed to increase regulations
on trains carrying hazardous waste.
But after pressure from the rail industry,
the regulations only ended up focusing
on crude oil transport rather than hazardous chemicals.
You know, like the kind in the train
we've been talking about.
In addition, the train that derailed in East Palestine
isn't classified as a high hazard flammable train.
See?
In 2015, the National Transportation Safety Board argued
that trains carrying chemicals like vinyl chloride
should be considered high hazard flammable trains,
even if they were smaller trains.
But the Obama administration denied them that classification
for some reason.
They did require trains classified as hazardous
to upgrade to ECP brakes
or electronically controlled pneumatic brakes,
but Republicans delayed the requirement for years.
Hey, here's a totally unrelated fact.
In 2017, the rail industry donated $6 million
to GOP campaigns, and after that,
Trump and Senate Republicans rescinded the regulation
that would force the rail industry
to update braking systems
on trains carrying hazardous materials.
Boy, that shouldn't be a thing that is true.
And yet it is a thing that is true
because of an abstract concept we invented
to quantify purchasing power.
For years and years, corporations like Norfolk Southern
have fought tooth and rail to stop safety regulations
that could prevent disasters
like what happened in Ohio.
But the CEO of Norfolk Southern says he's deeply sorry.
So I guess that's that.
Nothing more to see here, folks.
They said, sorry, let's pack it up.
But before we go, maybe we should go through a history
of how corporations like Norfolk Southern
have regularly gotten away with ecological
and health disasters, you know, for funsies.
Norfolk Southern's East Palestine derailment
isn't our country's first time at the old train fuck rodeo.
As I noted at the beginning of this,
there are an average of 1,700 train derailments
in the US every year,
although most of them don't result in as spectacular
a chemical explosion as the East Palestine derailment.
But in general, there have been many, many disasters,
even bigger ones, where corporations get away
with the devastating long-lasting impacts of their fuck up.
There are so many of these examples,
there's only one good way to go through them all,
with a song. Me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, And socks in their father's mouth.
Boy, that's a weird turn.
Okay, so just to recap my song.
In 2005, a train derailment in Graniteville, South Carolina
resulted in the deaths of nine people
and a leak of 90,000 tons of liquid chlorine,
which killed another person four months later.
15 years later, people were still coping
with the health impacts, including decreased lung function,
increased blood pressure, and PTSD.
The rail operator?
Our friends at Norfolk Southern.
In a lawsuit, Norfolk Southern was ordered to pay $2,000
to each person affected by the evacuation
and $200 per person per day spent evacuating,
which seems like kind of not a lot of money
for being gassed with chlorine
and enduring 15 years of potential health impacts.
That's 2K per Joker origin story.
In total, Norfolk Southern spent around $10 million
in settlements during which lawyers
for the rail operator complained
that the plaintiffs used unfair emotional appeals
by talking about the deadly chemicals
that killed those who could not outrun it,
even though that seems to be exactly what happened.
On top of that, Norfolk Southern had to pay $4 million
for the derailment.
So roughly 14 or $15 million total
for blasting a town with 90,000 tons of chlorine
and oh right, also killing 10 people.
Hey, remember earlier when I said that Norfolk Southern
reported $4.8 billion in profit in 2022?
Well, they reported $4.8 billion in profit in 2022? Well, they reported $4.8 billion in profit in 2022.
So that $14 million penalty for poisoning people to death
with their train super fucking sucks.
It's the monetary equivalent of a dunce cap,
just the cost of doing business.
It's literally baked into corporate budgets.
Because these kinds of accidents are so common,
there have been plenty of blink and you'll miss it disasters.
Like the train that derailed in Northern Louisiana
on January 27th of 2023 and leaked propanoic acid
forcing an evacuation of the area.
But it's not just the trains that are to blame
for dousing the American people with their deadly farts.
A factory explosion that occurred on February 20th
of this year, also in Ohio,
has received almost no national attention.
I hadn't even heard of it until just now
and I scrapbook corporate environmental disasters.
It's a weird thing that I do.
The explosion in Oakwood Village involved lead materials
and locals weren't immediately informed
of the potential danger of lead contamination.
Incidentally, the community where the explosion occurred
is two thirds black, which probably has nothing to do
with the lack of attention they've received
compared to East Palestine.
Oops, we just got banned by Florida's public school system.
While it's true that hazardous train spills
that result in disasters like the Graniteville chlorine spill
or East Palestine explosion aren't too common,
it seems that companies are often a little too relaxed
about making sure their huge metal chemical buckets
on wheels are safe.
Violations of regulations for hazardous cargo
have been increasing, which could either be good or bad,
depending on how you look at it.
In the past five years,
inspectors have seen a 36% increase in violations,
but this could simply be the result of a 2016 audit
by the Department of Transportation's
Inspector General's Office
that cracked down on slackadaisical rail inspectors.
So violations could either be increasing
or we're just recording them more accurately
because of the crackdown on inspections.
But just in case you were worried,
there aren't more examples of companies getting away
with inflicting grievous harm on the general public.
And if you were weird, don't fret, there's definitely more.
Perhaps one of the most flagrant cases of a CEO getting away
with incredible and deadly corruption is Don Blankenship,
former CEO of Massey Energy,
and an aggressive lobbyist who ignored safety regulations
in his coal operations.
He was at the helm at Massey Energy in 2000
when a massive coal slurry leak poisoned the fresh waterways
with 300 million gallons of coal sludge,
killing millions of fish,
contaminating the water of tens of thousands of people,
and making sludge fuck disgustingly horny.
Fortunately, he went to jail for his crimes.
I'm just kidding, sorry.
I can't, I can't say it with a straight face.
Hoo boy, the news is fun, gang.
No, obviously Don Blankenship did not go to jail
because he makes too much money
for too many powerful people.
People like Mitch McConnell and Elaine Chao,
who during the Bush administration helped ensure
that the investigation into Martin County coal
ended up closing with just a $5,600 fine.
But I'm sure Blankenship learned his lesson,
you know, which is what happens
when you suffer absolutely no consequences
for your reckless behavior.
I mean, what are we gonna do?
Send him to prison?
It's not like he went on to cause the death of 29 people
in a mine explosion in 2010, except holy fucking shit,
that's exactly what he did.
Blankenship secretly conspired to violate safety regulations
for the upper big branch mine that he ran in West Virginia.
And it turned out that those safety regulations
were pretty important because the mine fucking exploded.
For that, Blankenship did go to federal prison
for 10 months, which doesn't seem like a lot
for killing 29 people with your flagrant negligence.
But hey, it's more than most former CEOs get.
But despite his obvious ghoulish crime,
Blankenship refused to succumb to the woke mob
and complained in an open letter to Trump
that coal supervisors are not criminals
and the laws they work under today
are already frightening enough for them.
See, the laws that he specifically ignored
resulting in the deaths of 29 people were scary, you guys.
At least as scary as a horrific mine explosion,
if not more so.
Hasn't he already been punished enough?
I'm so scared.
Thankfully, Blankenship received a well-deserved reprieve
from the tyranny of the consequences of his own actions
when he scored $86 million in a payout
after his company, Massey Energy,
was bought out by Alpha Natural Resources.
What do you call a golden parachute
for committing an atrocity?
A parachute made of human screams?
Look, prison sucks.
It's a broken predatory system
that runs on an engine of human suffering,
just like corporate America.
So you'll rarely hear me argue in favor
of longer prison sentences for anyone,
unless it's for like a really sinister character,
like Hitler on a motorcycle made up of tinier Hitlers.
But the naked cynicism and disdain the justice system shows
for people who have the audacity to be poor is staggering.
Mandatory minimum sentencing for drug crimes,
if death or serious injury results is 20 years.
Blankenship violated safety regulations
and blew up 29 of his employees,
landing him a body count higher than most serial killers.
And he got 10 months.
And this was after he already put people in danger
10 years prior.
If our justice system has any point,
shouldn't it be making sure that people
don't keep doing bad things to other people?
And so why is it somehow different
in Don Blankenship's case?
I guess because he did it
in the pursuit of corporate profits.
It's somehow not the same as a drug dealer
shooting someone or causing an overdose.
Not only that, Blankenship managed to get $86 million
from the very company he fatally mismanaged.
I'm not saying we should throw all CEOs in prison
when their crimes kill people.
I'm not only saying that,
but we could at least be consistent
on what the punishment for killing people is
and not have the sentence be inversely proportional
to your 401k.
That shouldn't even be a controversial take, right?
If you purposefully ignore regulations
that you know are there to protect lives
and it results in people dying,
you should be held accountable for it,
the same as anyone else.
You killed those people.
So to answer what happened in East Palestine
and why it happened, well,
it's kind of a failing of our criminal justice system.
While our government goes after a disproportionate amount
of offenses committed by the lower classes,
these huge, terrible, disaster-causing corporate crimes
are getting slaps on the wrist
because these companies give our government money
and handle our infrastructure.
You know, like the mafia would.
It's a mob doing what it wants
while working with the people who enforce the rules.
And when they don't enforce the rules,
then those rules are going to be broken a lot.
And I think this is why mainstream Democrats like Biden
have a lot of trouble addressing this stuff.
Because in order to fix this,
you'd have to take on corporations head on.
Corporations that are no doubt seen
as vital to our infrastructure.
By coming down hard on these CEOs,
you'd be waging war with a huge part of capitalism.
And by extension admitting the faults of that system,
including the blood on our own government's hands.
Meanwhile, Republicans can circumvent the issue
by blaming the woke mob or whatever, whoever, whatever.
The wokes made me poison the people.
That's the edge they have.
They can make up a boogeyman, fire up their base,
and still manage to avoid the actual hard conversation. I'm not even exaggerating.
After seeing another Norfolk Southern train derailed this weekend, I was reminded of the
fact that the company wrote to shareholders stating that it is focused on DEI. This
administration's focus on DEI is forcing private companies to rethink their goals,
and one has to wonder, was Norfolk Southern's DEI policies
are directing resources away from the important things
like greasing wheel bearings.
Extremely unserious stuff.
Just honka honka clown shoes bullshit.
It seems so overtly obvious that DEI or diversity,
equity and inclusion has absolutely nothing to do
with a train derailing or a bank failing for that matter.
But if you're someone who's angry,
perhaps screwed over by a similar disaster
or just tired of seeing corporations get away
with so many crimes or misdeeds
or who feels like the country is degrading
and basic quality things like infrastructure
or wages or whatever,
well, you want someone to actually explain
what's going wrong and how to fix that thing.
And if no one will actually admit
to what the problem really is,
or even recognize that there is a problem,
it's easy to find yourself believing anyone offering answers
even if the answer is, you know, silly and wrong.
Like how isobutylene, one of these spilt chemicals,
is also used for a process designed
to detect and hunt boars. Whoa. Now, isobutylene, one of these spilt chemicals, is also used for a process designed
to detect and hunt boars.
Just a coincidence.
It's a coincidence.
Like how Norfolk Southern ships to a place
called the Wild Boar Mine?
Seriously?
Okay, calm down.
Calm down, calm down, everyone.
Everyone be cool!
Everyone be cool!
Everyone be cool.
I'm gonna go, I'm gonna do, I'm'm gonna do I'm gonna do like a little bit of I'm gonna do some research. Okay, no one freak out. No one freak out. No one's gonna no one's no one is freaking out. No one freak out because no one is freaking out. I'm gonna I'm gonna warn the country of the impending hog disaster. Fucking hell fuck. They have our trains.
We're already dead okay bye We're already dead. news. We've got merch with stuff on the merchandise that you can get from links.
We have a podcast called even more news, and we've also got this show as a podcast.
It's called some more news. Check out. That's it.