A Man-Made Tragedy of Increasing Proportions

I felt this picture, which I came across in regular browsing, was worth a post on its own.



The recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, where the Deepwater Horizon continues spilling hundreds of thousands of gallons (the figure is almost too incredible to believe) daily.  It is rapidly approaching the size of a small state.
An excellent article written at SeedMagazine.com by author Charles Wohlforth presents a thought-provoking perspective on the issue of blame, and who the recipient(s) should be as well as relating this incident to his own experiences covering the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989.  I recommend checking it out by clicking the following link: http://bit.ly/9WnKUQ.  He presents his point of view, and perhaps the very fact that efforts to clean up this devastating man-made disaster will all prove futile and fall short.  Perhaps provocative, perhaps correct, but certainly worth a view.
Aside from that, I have recently finished Medicine Under Sail by Zachary Friendenberg; the book I was writing about recently.  I am now faced with a decision to read either Longitude by Dava Sobel, or Rough Medicine by Joan Druett.  Decisions, descisions!  Any feedback would be welcome.
*photo provided by Maritime Texas Blog (also a great blog, check them out)