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As I sit here this morning overlooking pristine Sarasota Bay watching the pelicans and seabirds take up their daily feeding positions I can’t help but ponder the potential success, or failure, of this morning’s attempt by BP to cap their gushing oil geyser in the Gulf of Mexico.  One can only hope the undertaking is an unmitigated success.

The spill has brought many things into focus – our total lack of preparedness, our corrupt and antiquated Federal regulatory system, and, as the Deepwater Horizon well continues to pump death and destruction into the Gulf,  our overwhelming need to examine our century-old dependence on fossil fuels.  This tragedy can only serve as a harsh reminder of our need to transition to a cleaner, more environmentally sound energy policy.

But this transition won’t be easy.  Our schizophrenic country is currently torn by divisions between Tea Party supporters advocating deregulation and smaller government versus the the growing public realization – driven by the oil spill disaster – that we need more oversight of both big oil and Wall Street.  The cry “drill baby, drill” isn’t being uttered on many political talk shows this week, as big oil lackeys like Sarah Palin and Dick Cheney calculate the political fallout from the oil spill disaster.

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In the coming weeks, months and years, the American public is going to be reminded of the tragedy of the 11 deaths of innocent lives and inundated with images of the deadly oil slick killing all manner of sea, plant and animal life.  It ‘s a public relations disaster that the oil companies will not be able to bury, as they have in the past, with piles of lobbying cash.

We have to learn from our mistakes, and, though the tragedy of the Exxon Valdez didn’t seem to prepare us in any way for the current disaster, this Deep Water Horizon debacle should finally show us we can’t afford to be unprepared.  President Obama’s reliance on BP to “plug the damn hole” can only serve as a further illustration of the impotence, ineffectiveness and incestuous relationship of our elected officials regarding big oil.  On the other side of the ledger, many environmentalists will be re-energized by the disaster after losing public support during the “Climategate” fiasco.  Perhaps this tragedy can serve as a catalyst for change – creating a groundswell of support for a total reboot of our country’s energy and environmental policies.

Though it’s unrealistic to expect an immediate move away from an oil-based economy we can start the process.  We can use the current disaster to focus, re-energize and finance our commitment to transition to alternative energy systems, we can stop all plans for deepwater drilling in environmentally sensitive areas like the Arctic and we can hold big oil’s feet to the fire by instituting new regulations and safety guidelines to make sure this doesn’t happen again – and if it does – that technology is in place to deal with it.

The fox can no longer be allowed to run the energy hen house.  Fire or convict any Federal officials who may have taken bribes or favors from big oil in return for giving them favorable rulings on permits , leases and safety waivers – endangering lives, livelihoods and ecosystems.  Make BP go bankrupt if need be making Gulf coast businesses and individuals financially whole and financing the clean-up.  The oil-loving Bush years are over.  Let’s all work together to clean up this mess and move on to a cleaner, greener future.