July 6, 2010, Wayne Madsen Report
WMR has been told by our Gulf coast sources in Alabama and Florida that there is a massive BP- and Coast Guard-led news blackout on information from the Gulf coast.
After our report on planned evacuations of certain residents of the Gulf coast, including those with respiratory ailments, was retracted by some websites after pressure was presumably exerted by BP's public relations machine, WMR will be heading down to the Gulf coast from July 10 to 15 to report from the scene of BP's massive environmental crime against nature.
In another WMR report, Pensacola sources report that the local cable company, Mediacom, the seventh largest cable company in the United States, has been blocking access to local Pensacola news broadcasts on the Gulf oil disaster since July 2.
WMR has learned that the 5 pm and 5:30 pm local news broadcasts from CBS affiliate WKRG-TV and ABC affiliate WEAR-TV, as well as the 6 pm national news broadcasts on the stations from CBS News and ABC News, respectively, are replaced by a black screen. NBC, MSNBC, Fox News, and CNN are unaffected by the cable company's blockage.
As WMR has only its subscribers to answer to, not advertisers or board members, we will bring unvarnished news from the Gulf, as well as photos, and hopefully, video reports.
There are also reports that the Coast Guard has blocked media access to the seas off the Gulf coast. We have discovered a way, which shall now remain a secret, to head into oil-laden Gulf waters without the interference of either BP Security personnel or the Coast Guard.
Although our actual itinerary must remain somewhat vague, WMR will be in the coastal areas south of New Orleans, as well as the coasts of Mississippi, Alabama, and the Florida Panhandle.
If any of our readers live in the Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, or Pensacola coastal areas and can point out leads, email us at wmreditor@waynemadsenreport.com or rightardia@gmail.com.
Rightardia has advised progressives to avoid the Florida Panhandle because of the oil spill. In addition, the Panhandle area is overwhelmingly conservative unlike Central and South Florida.
WMR has been told by our Gulf coast sources in Alabama and Florida that there is a massive BP- and Coast Guard-led news blackout on information from the Gulf coast.
After our report on planned evacuations of certain residents of the Gulf coast, including those with respiratory ailments, was retracted by some websites after pressure was presumably exerted by BP's public relations machine, WMR will be heading down to the Gulf coast from July 10 to 15 to report from the scene of BP's massive environmental crime against nature.
In another WMR report, Pensacola sources report that the local cable company, Mediacom, the seventh largest cable company in the United States, has been blocking access to local Pensacola news broadcasts on the Gulf oil disaster since July 2.
WMR has learned that the 5 pm and 5:30 pm local news broadcasts from CBS affiliate WKRG-TV and ABC affiliate WEAR-TV, as well as the 6 pm national news broadcasts on the stations from CBS News and ABC News, respectively, are replaced by a black screen. NBC, MSNBC, Fox News, and CNN are unaffected by the cable company's blockage.
As WMR has only its subscribers to answer to, not advertisers or board members, we will bring unvarnished news from the Gulf, as well as photos, and hopefully, video reports.
There are also reports that the Coast Guard has blocked media access to the seas off the Gulf coast. We have discovered a way, which shall now remain a secret, to head into oil-laden Gulf waters without the interference of either BP Security personnel or the Coast Guard.
Although our actual itinerary must remain somewhat vague, WMR will be in the coastal areas south of New Orleans, as well as the coasts of Mississippi, Alabama, and the Florida Panhandle.
If any of our readers live in the Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, or Pensacola coastal areas and can point out leads, email us at wmreditor@waynemadsenreport.com or rightardia@gmail.com.
Rightardia has advised progressives to avoid the Florida Panhandle because of the oil spill. In addition, the Panhandle area is overwhelmingly conservative unlike Central and South Florida.
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