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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Wall Street's Meltdown: How America Caught Speculative Fever
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Democracy and Elections:
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DrugReporter:
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Election 2008:
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Environment:
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Kyle Rabin
ForeignPolicy:
Iran, Israel and American Disinformation
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Health and Wellness:
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Hurricane Katrina:
From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished
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Immigration:
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Edward Alden
Media and Technology:
The Growth of Talking Points Memo: A Case Study in Independent Media
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Movie Mix:
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Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Our Next President Will Transform the Supreme Court
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Rights and Liberties:
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Naomi Wolf
Sex and Relationships:
New Poll: Parents Overwhelmingly Support Age-Appropriate Sex Ed
Scott Swenson
War on Iraq:
Revealed: "Secret" Executions Being Carried Out in Saddam's Old Intelligence Headquarters
Robert Fisk
Water:
New Information Shows How Climate Change Will Affect Water
Looking for an easy way to protest Bush foreign policy week after week? And an easy way to help alleviate global poverty? Buy your gasoline at Citgo stations. And tell your friends.
Of the top oil-producing countries in the world, only one is a democracy with a president who was elected on a platform of using his nation's oil revenue to benefit the poor. The country is Venezuela. The president is Hugo Chavez. Call him "the Anti-Bush."
Citgo is a U.S. refining and marketing firm that is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Venezuela's state-owned oil company. Money you pay to Citgo goes primarily to Venezuela -- not to Saudi Arabia or the Middle East. There are 14,000 Citgo gas stations in the U.S. By buying your gasoline at Citgo, you are contributing to the billions of dollars that Venezuela's democratic government is using to provide health care, literacy and education, and subsidized food for the majority of Venezuelans.
Instead of using government to help the rich and the corporate, as Bush does, Chavez is using the resources and oil revenue of his government to help the poor in Venezuela. A country with so much oil wealth shouldn't have 60 percent of its people living in poverty, earning less than $2 per day. With a mass movement behind him, Chavez is confronting poverty in Venezuela. That's why large majorities have consistently backed him in democratic elections. And why the Bush administration supported an attempted military coup in 2002 that sought to overthrow Chavez.
So this is the opposite of a boycott. Call it a BUYcott.
Of course, if you can take mass transit or bike or walk to work, you should do so. And we should all work for political changes that move our country toward a cleaner environment based on renewable energy. The BUYcott is for those of us who don't have a practical alternative to filling up our cars.
So get your gas at Citgo. And help fuel a democratic revolution in Venezuela.
Jeff Cohen is an author and media critic.
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