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Aboard the Condoleezza Rice

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted February 13, 2008.


Clearly, what's good for big oil isn't good for most Americans. So why are the interests of oil companies mistaken for those of the nation?
Robert Scheer

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Whadda you mean "we," Mr. TV Pundit? When you say "we" are doing better in Iraq or, even more absurd, that "we" were right to invade that country in the first place, are you putting Joe Blow American in the same bag as the top officers of Exxon, which made $40.6 billion in profit last year thanks to the turmoil in the energy markets? That royal "we" is good for the royals who control our government, but its persistent use embodies a pernicious lie that betrays the core ideal of representative democracy.

Ever since "we" invaded Iraq, most of us have gotten nothing to show for it other than an enormously increased national debt that we will be paying off for decades to come and an economy that is sputtering into recession. Oil sold for $22.81 the year before the war was launched against a country with the world's second-largest holding, and the average price last year was almost three times that, at $64.20.

With oil bouncing up to $100 in the fourth quarter, Exxon recorded the highest corporate quarterly return ever. Chevron, the country's second-biggest oil company, saw profits rise 29 percent that quarter, contributing to an enviable profit of $18.7 billion for 2007. Clearly, what's good for big oil is not good for most Americans, few of whom would look back on 2007 with favor.

It's easy for the Bush big shots to equate the fortunes of big oil with that of the nation. After all, George W. got to be president only because his failed career in the Texas oil industry exposed his charms to the big energy guys, who then bankrolled his political career. Dick Cheney was an out-of-work defense secretary when picked to be CEO of Halliburton, which has profited mightily from its dealings with Exxon, not to mention running the Iraq franchise.

And the image we should all recall is of the Chevron tanker named Condoleezza Rice. Only in America would we think it not a conflict of interest that Rice was paid handsomely for being on the board of Chevron from 1991 until she resigned to go to work in the Bush White House. How worried can she be about the deteriorating position of the United States in the world when her oil company buddies are doing so well?

We are conned since early childhood to look with dark suspicion upon anyone who points a finger of accountability at the robber barons of the corporate world. It is for that reason that Exxon's outrageous profits made in exploiting an energy crisis that has hurt so many ordinary Americans barely elicits media outrage of any sort. Nor does this fact get much play in the presidential race. To her credit, Hillary Clinton took umbrage over Exxon's then record-setting profit of $39 billion last year, stating: "I want to take those profits and put them into an alternative energy fund ... that will actually begin to move us toward the direction of independence."

From the hysterically negative response of the right-wing media, you would have thought she had hailed the second coming of Karl Marx. No wonder this year with even higher profits there was no similar outcry from any of the leading candidates. They should be outraged because the taxpayers they are supposed to represent are forking over a lot of money for the military in order to make the world safe for Exxon.

The lifeline of Exxon is not its oil drilling skills but rather the power of the U.S. government, particularly the military, that can be marshaled to intimidate those nations that would dare challenge Exxon's right to profit exorbitantly. Whether it's about pushing for a pipeline crossing Afghanistan or tying up Venezuela's foreign assets in international courts, as Exxon managed to do last week, the U.S.-based oil giants strut with the full confidence that Uncle Sam will back them up.

But who will back up Uncle Sam except ordinary American soldiers and taxpayers who sacrifice to fight and fund battles that have nothing to do with their national interest? What a sorry record U.S. oil companies have compiled in places like Venezuela, Nigeria and the Persian Gulf down through the decades. But throughout those imperial adventures backed by U.S. gunboat diplomacy, there was the illusion that the plundered loot would be shared with the folks back home. The next time you fork it over at the pump remember the $40.6 billion Exxon got, and you will get the point that "they" and "we" are hardly in the same boat.

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Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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That profit is our money too
Posted by: SalB on Feb 13, 2008 8:30 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the government had a surplus, everyone on the right wanted "their" money back. We didn't want to invest it in new government projects to help our infrastructure, no, we all wanted that tax refund because it was our money.

But when corporations post record profits - profits from selling us products at prices far higher than it takes to produce them, we all just smile and tell them "job well done." Well those oil company profits are my money too - I buy gas, my family buys motor oil, and we all use plastic all the time - that is our money. Why do "they" get to keep it? Were is my gas pump rebate?

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The Military Serves at the Pleasure of Corporations ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Feb 14, 2008 1:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the expropriation of indian lands, to the shores of Tripoli, from Latin America to Asia from the time we declared independence our military has been there to enforce our will on other peoples and countries to protect the corporation's property and profits. Latin America alone has been 'invaded' or 'black OPed' more than a hundred times.

US Marine Corp Major General Smedley Butler wrote a book, " War is a Racket" about how the military was used around the world to enforce corporate will and how wars have made millionaires and billionaires here at home.

What is happening now is nothing new. It is the same old game in not so new clothes. Americans should be taught some real history.

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The Condoleezza Rice!
Posted by: peacefullaim on Feb 14, 2008 5:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Somehow seems ironically fitting she has an oil tanker named for her, doesn't it??

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LaurelJensen
Posted by: laurel.jensen on Feb 14, 2008 6:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And that's the bottom line. It's not just oil companies either. It's been fruit in Central and South America, minerals in Africa, rubber, cotton, on and on.

It's amazing that we in the West don't put two and two together - our "way of life" depends on "imports" of all kinds and the vast majority of those imports come from countries that were colonized by Europeans with the explicit mission to send the "wealth" back to the mother country. So what's changed? Not much. We are still living in a era of expanding global economic colonization that's creating massive inequity, desperation - and terrorism.

A close look at countries that have snuggled up to western energy companies show that their populations don't benefit, although the ruling class does. Leaders who decide to use their resources to help their own people and take a tougher approach to how much "profit" has to stay in country, get targeted by the West for regime change. We are brutal and it's time to own it and hopefully, change it.

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Mr. Sheer calls it as he sees it – correctly.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Feb 14, 2008 8:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At last, someone with his eyes open, Robert Scheer, puts the cost of the Iraq occupation in the right context: as a multi-billion-dollar, taxpayer-financed direct subsidy to american petroleum conglomerates.

We are not only being gouged at the pump by oil companies, but are being gouged by our own government for that oil's extraction in the first place. We're paying twice for the oil we waste in our inefficient autos; so by the time one adds up the TOTAL price, including the tribute we pay indirectly to oil companies through income taxes – most of it wasted in a bloated defense budget – the actual price is closer to $5 or $6 per gallon, maybe more.

Seen in this light, the cost of alternative fuels makes economic sense. But don't let your beard grow waiting for those innovations to grab a share of the market. With oil companies in control, having purchased Congress some time ago, they will never allow new technologies to become anything more than bromides providing false hope, carrot-on-a-stick articles for pop-tech magazines.

Only when things get so bad that social unrest is imminent, or oil is in such short supply that it is no longer profitable for extraction, or both, will oil companies look to alternatives with any seriousness. And only then if they can profit exorbitantly from them.

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A half billion dollars a day
Posted by: mbrock on Feb 14, 2008 9:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At a hundred dollars a barrel, Americans who own oil (that would be everyone from "big oil" to Kansas farmers) are making a half billion dollars a day. The Saudis make a billion a day. All that is needed to sustain that is constant turmoil in the Middle East. Bet on that horse!

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Moral dilema
Posted by: willymack on Feb 14, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We're facing-and losing-a battle for the minds of our people. We've been saturated by the idea that those who "excel" at accumulating wealth are GOOD, maybe SUPERIOR people, who should be looked up to and accorded special priviliges and honors. No thought is given to the fact that if some of us become obscenely wealthy, it's because they were aided and abetted by those whose labor and minds they exploited to get where they are, and who almost never reward them in a fair manner. It's much cheaper to bribe some congressman or senator to keep wages low and to provide only minimal benefits or none at all. We need to stop tolerating immoral exploiters and their enablers.Judging from the aftermath of the 2006 election, this will be much easier said than done.

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Sending our boys
Posted by: maxloen on Feb 14, 2008 10:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And that's why Wall Street wanted to raid the Social Security fund. With that money they wanted to "buy" as many resources/assets worldwide as they could and then, when the 'natives' tried to regain rights to the soil under their feet, send the marines to enforce the deed signed by their (our) s.o.b oligarch.
If the scheme would have worked at that time, the one Francis Fukuyama arrogantly called "The End of History", guess who would have payed for the invasion(s) to secure their profits?
I'm pretty sure they are still very much unbothered by what a few atomic bombs can do to the environment.

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I'm sick of the...
Posted by: VickyinSD on Feb 14, 2008 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
whole fucking thing... all the assholes in govt. who are only out for their own best interests, as well as their corporate scum-bag cohorts who don't care who they screw over as long as they get their outrageous fucking profits, with the blessings of the current administration!!!

And where the hell are the idiots we elected to fix this shit? Why is everyone so afraid to take on the corruption and Constitutional destruction that is running rampant in DC?

START A REVOLUTION, and COUNT ME IN!!!

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» RE: I'm sick of the... Posted by: Mamarianne