This is an extremely leaky flip-side argument.
You do raise an interesting point with how objective science really is, but that doesn't nullify the obvious danger that fracking raises.
I disagree that it is extremely "leaky", although obviously it is pretty flip.
oil and water, famously, don't mix. That is why a lot of oil exists underground, beneath significant underground water resources, where trapped in some manner within rock and under sealing rock formations that have prevented it from being displaced further towards the surface. Oil is a low specific gravity material, and whatever oil exists within the mass of the earth, occluded from oxygen or sulfur in reactive forms, will continue to rise within the earths depths towards the surface. I believe there are more hydrocarbon resources within the total mass from non-biological origins than from decaying materials covered with sediments and chemical rock deposits.
The fact that oil is almost always present at some level in our soil , water and air might cut against the grain of propagandists like yourself who want to push an unrealistic "problem" to the max.
It might be undeniable that fracking mobilizes trapped oil, but it is generally done with water displacement and the oil is harvested, and the levels of oil "pollution" have not been demonstrated objectively, which is to say scientifically, to be significant in comparison with the oil within our geology and aquifers at they have existed through geological history.
If no study has been done of undisturbed oil-bearing formations, you have no "baseline" for comparison of the effects of "fracking", and you are a disgrace to science to make unqualified political assessments of the problem.
My speculative sort of prejudices are set on the side that it is a real issue, and needs to be researched objectively. The same kind of speculative prejudices in me suggest that it a "problem" that will never really "surface", and if it does it is easy enough to clean water contaminated with oil. We have that problem already with almost all the pumps that bring water to our use, and some more responsible folks take precautions to use cleaner oils for lubrication or pumps designed to be less polluting. My legislative approach to the problem would be to require escrow accounts for oil from fracking operations and the funds s sequestered against future "cleanup" costs. Probably should be done with all oil pumping. It's the price of exploiting our resources.
I'm studying desalination technology and looking at the problems of toxic materials used in the processes, and the nature of desal water, trying to find a way to make it better water. . . .and cheaper water.
The problem with the political hype about technology and "progress" and population growth, is it's mostly ignorant, and mostly done for the benefit of industrial cartel folks like the Standard Oil corporates, aka Rockefeller, which is to say both the Bush and Clinton family political dynasties.
The intention of our "corporates" is to lock up our resources under their control. The political hype goes to drive out the competition, earlier referred to in this thread as the irresponsible and reckless wannabes in the competition, while the giants hire public relations firms, buy politicians, and use the regulations against their competition, with bureaucracies like the EPA solidly "in their pockets". With the giants, the EPA lawyers go out to lunch with the corporate lawyers and enjoy pleasant and convenient relations. with the competition, the little guys are run out of business with baseless lawsuits.