Damon Anti-Fracking Hoax

LogikAndReazon

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Feb 21, 2012
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For his next escape
By PHELIM MCALEER

Last Updated: 12:23 AM, September 26, 2012

Posted: 10:24 PM, September 25, 2012

Matt Damon and John Krasinski ran into a big problem while making their film “Promised Land”; how they solved it tells us a lot about Hollywood.

Some time ago, the two actors decided to make a movie about fracking — a method of getting once-inaccessible oil and gas out of the ground that has become the bête noire of many environmentalists.

The two wrote a screenplay they said was about “American identity . . . and what defines us as a country.”

It was the usual Hollywood script. We all know the . . . drill: Damon’s character works for an “evil” oil company. He comes to small-town America and sells locals a dangerous bill of goods.

Then he encounters two problems — his corporate heart is melted by an attractive local woman and Krasinki’s character, an environmentalist, reveals the oil company plan to exploit, pollute and leave.

Shocked townspeople feel betrayed. Damon is conflicted — will he go with the company and his career, or with his heart and ride back into town in his white SUV, denounce the oil company and save the day?

The filmmakers were so pleased with the script that they announced it would be promoted as a potential Oscar winner.

But then came trouble.

I broke the news that “Promised Land” was about fracking and now I can reveal that the script’s seen some very hasty rewriting because of real-world evidence that anti-fracking activists may be the true villains.

In courtroom after courtroom, it has been proved that anti-fracking activists have been guilty of fraud or misrepresentation.

There was Dimock, Pa. — the likely inspiration for “Promised Land,” which is also set in Pennsylvania. Dimock featured in countless news reports, with Hollywood celebrities even bringing water to 11 families who claimed fracking had destroyed their water and their lives.

But while “Promised Land” was in production, the story of Dimock collapsed. The state investigated and its scientists found nothing wrong. So the 11 families insisted EPA scientists investigate. They did — and much to the dismay of the environmental movement found the water was not contaminated.

There was Wolf Eagle Environmental Engineers in Texas, a group that produced a frightening video of a flaming house water pipe and claimed a gas company had polluted the water. But a judge just found that the tape was an outright fraud — Wolf Eagle connected the house gas pipe to a hose and lit the water.

Other “pollution” cases collapsed in Wyoming and Colorado. Even Josh Fox, who with his Oscar-nominated documentary “Gasland” first raised concerns about flammable water, has had to admit he withheld evidence that fracking was not responsible.

These frauds and misrepresentations created huge problems for the Damon/Krasinski script about “what defines us as a country.................”



Read more: Matt Damon’s troubled frack attack—Phelim McAleer - NYPOST.com
 
Granny says dat frackin' liable to `cause earthquakes an' foul up drinkin' wells...
:confused:
Sierra Club warns of fracking risk
Oct. 5 (UPI) -- U.S. advocacy groups said they replicated an EPA study that determined fracking chemicals from natural gas drilling were present in Wyoming water samples.
The Sierra Club, Earthworks and the Natural Resources Defense Council said they confirmed, with the help of an independent expert, that an EPA study in Wyoming highlighted the risks associated with hydraulic fracturing. Energy companies working shale natural resources utilize hydraulic fracturing, known also as fracking. The process uses abrasives and chemicals to extract natural resources from rock formations. Some of the chemicals are considered harmful to the environment.

The Environmental Protection Agency said it found levels of glycols and other synthetic chemicals associated with fracking in monitoring wells in Wyoming. Its draft report in December found chemicals in monitoring wells were "well above" drinking water standards.

The EPA report said chemical levels in Wyoming aquifers were "generally below established health and safety standards" in actual drinking water. "This report raises the alarm on the public health threats posed by dirty and dangerous fracking and the need to rein in a oil and gas industry that remains unchecked and unaccountable for their toxic pollution," Deb Nardone, a natural gas campaigner for Sierra Club, said in a statement.

However, Energy in Depth, a group formed by several energy-industry organizations, said is found more than 50 individual measurements in the EPA report that were discredited by the USGS. Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead, who backs pro-coal legislation, said state policy would be "guided by science."

Read more: Sierra Club warns of fracking risk - UPI.com
 

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