Today’s Oracle takes us back to the Aquarius daily of March 21, 2006
Few things in the world are as neat as we want them to be. Anyone who presumes to know someone’s feelings in advance has pretty much left the human realm and entered some other realm. You’re even having a difficult time deciding what is important to you. You can doubt all you need to doubt, but that does not change a basic fact: in one certain situation, someone really does care how you feel. But all of this is getting a bit soggy, and you have some important mountains to climb. Doing something ambitious would help you clear your mind.
(The Daily Oracle is a random selection from one of 10,000 Eric Francis horoscopes. New horoscopes by Eric are published weekly plus twice a month in Planet Waves Astrology News and Planet Waves Light. The Oracle itself is a divination tool available to subscribers to either of these services.)

CQS Health Alert
May 30, 2010
Subject: [cqshealthalert] BP oil, dispersants, and seafood
Reply-To: cqshealthalert-owner@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun, 30 May 2010 09:52:05 -0400
From: Jonathan Campbell
To:
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BP is apparently using toxic kerosene as a dispersant for the oil slick, even though the EPA as forbidden its use. Why? Public Relations. Apparently the dispersant makes it look like the oil slick is smaller than it really is – it keeps the oil under the surface of the water. Underwater scientists say that the oil plumes are 30 ft thick and 26 miles long. The result is that the surface booms usually used to keep oil from getting to the shore are not working. Oil is washing ashore.
There is a company from South America with a natural cleanup product that would adsorb the oil, but BP and the Coast Guard are not paying any attention. It appears the only thing that counts is PR for BP.
A warning on fish: Please make sure that if you buy fish that it does not have any chance of coming from in or near the Gulf of Mexico. Fishing has been banned, but that would not stop people who are desperate to make their living from doing so. Buy only fish that likes cold, northern waters, or the Pacific. Ask your fish dealer to tell you where the fish comes from.
Here is a website of the fish usually found in the Gulf:
http://www.rodnreel.com/gulffish/gulffish.asp
Regards
Jonathan