spotter export or do they totally own us? what kind of oil are we talking about? he was quoted as saying the reality as transcanada corporation ceo russ girling has said, quoting the boss now is not a drop of oil transported through keystone would be exported, period. what he is saying is everything that comes through the pipeline isn t going to be exported. it s pretty bold claim and that is like saying, actually, we are going to be exporting water and putting oil in the pipeline. what is it, dude? they are desperate. they are feeling the heat and they are afraid that president obama is going to say no to this. some environmental concerns were addressed by pointing to the state department report. think about this. they are using the state department report as some of the best ammunition out there to get this approved. he says with input from more than two dozen state and federal agencies, the environmental and market issues have been
whatever the safety data suggests. watching a town blown leveled i mean, destroyed, blown to smithereens makes me painfully acutely aware of moving this rail. which is happening right now as we re talking. remember, the incidents with pipelines can be much larger on a volume basis when there is a rupture like the pegasus line in arkansas. the kalamazoo spill in michigan. we re still pulling tar sands oil out of the kalamazoo river. moving by pipeline isn t necessarily the solution. the argument on the other side is, it s good for the country, it s jobs, everything we do has risks, we drive cars around, we lose tens of thousands of people a year to car accidents. one out of every barrel of oil. one out of every eight barrels of oil that comings out of the ground in the world comes out of a pickup truck or car in america. i m a big supporter of electric
pipelines can be much larger on a volume basis when there is a rupture like the pegasus line in arkansas. the kalamazoo spill in michigan. we re still pulling tar sands oil out of the kalamazoo river. moving by pipeline isn t necessarily the solution. the argument on the other side is, it s good for the country, it s jobs, everything we do has risks, we drive cars around, we lose tens of thousands of people a year to car accidents. one out of every barrel of oil. one out of every eight barrels of oil that comings out of the ground in the world comes out of a pickup truck or car in america. i m a big supporter of electric vehicles using dr. gas. hydrogen fuel celled vehicles. i do say this again. we re going to produce the natural gas and the oil in this
yeah, this thing i have to say, i am agnostic on this, whatever the safety data suggests. watching a town blown leveled i mean, destroyed, blown to smithereens makes me painfully acutely aware of moving this rail. which is happening right now as we re talking. remember, the incidents with pipelines can be much larger on a volume basis when there is a rupture like the pegasus line in arkansas. the calkalamazoo spill in michi. we re still pulling tar sands oil out of the kalamazoo river. moving by pipeline isn t necessarily the solution. the argument on the other side is, it s good for the country, it s jobs, everything we do has risks, we drive cars around, we lose tens of thousands of people a year to car accidents. one out of every barrel of oil. one out of every eight barrels
a obama won, all of these blacks vote the higher numbers than than whites in a lot of states, therefore, everything is great. the senate nobodies tell you what s really going on. african-americans struggling to advance in a lot of key races, we don t allow a lot of available candidates for governor. the pipeline isn t really there either. the real challenge, not just about today. not sure when the numbers will increase by a lot. cory booker and barack obama, very singular examples and unusual people in politics, viable african-american white candidates right now. i want to thank sam sear. chris christie is set to one a landslide in new jersey. that next.