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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Cast Your Vote for the Worst Offender in the Corporate Hall of Shame

AlterNet. Posted May 24, 2007.


You can help choose the Worst of the Worst from a corporate culture gone bad.
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Last week, Filmmaker Robert Greenwald, director of Iraq for Sale: the War Profiteers, recently testified before Congress about corporate conduct in Iraq that included price-gouging, out-and-out ripoffs, incomplete projects, giving dirty drinking water to U.S. troops in the field, charging the government for gas shipments that were never made, putting troops' lives at risk guarding empty trucks on dangerous convoys in order to make a buck and a dozen other egregious offenses on the backs of U.S. taxpayers.

In response, Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Insanity, revealed just how low the bar has been set in corporate America. Kingston, with a straight face, turned to Greenwald and asked him, "Are you saying that profit is evil?"

This is the environment in which America's civil society operates today. Whereas conservatives once defended the basic principles of capitalism, reactionaries like Kingston have come to view any attempt to hold corporations accountable for their actions as a form of socialism unto itself.

This week, Corporate Accountability International launched its "Corporate Hall of Shame" in an attempt to "publicly challenge corporations and expose their abuses, political influence and manipulation of public policy."

The tricky part, of course, is selecting the worst offenders. Kathryn Mulvey, executive director of Corporate Accountability International, said that while "all of the nominees deserve this infamous dishonor," the NGO would allow visitors to its website determine who deserves the honor. Said Mulvey: "We look forward to seeing which ones concerned citizens believe are the worst of the worst." The project follows Corporate Accountability International's previous campaigns -- the grassroots organization organized the successful Nestle boycott in the 1970s, got General Electric to get out of the nuclear weapons business in the 1980s and fought Big Tobacco during the 1990s.

The nominees for this latest project are a who's-who of corporate malfeasance. Here's their "mug-shots," courtesy of the Hall of Shame.

Coca-Cola: The real cost of the Real Thing

What is the "Coke Side of Life" like on the other side of the world? In India, Coca-Cola bottling plants drain local water supplies, causing village wells to run dry. Plant workers in Colombia who fight for labor rights and decent working conditions are violently harassed. Here in the United States, Coke has worked to undermine public confidence in local water utilities through the marketing of its bottled water products, even though its water comes from municipal sources that they then mark up hundreds of times the original cost.

ExxonMobil: Slick lawyers -- and a lot of hot air

Even though ExxonMobil is the most profitable corporation in the world, the oil giant is still using its legal clout to avoid paying $4.5 billion in punitive damages from the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill. At the same time, Exxon is spending millions to delay action on global warming. As the only oil corporation that still denies the urgency of climate change, ExxonMobil spent nearly $16 million between 1998 and 2005 funding "junk science" from front groups that confuse the issue.

Ford: Driving America's dependence on oil

Automobiles are one of the biggest sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States -- and Ford's auto fleet has had deplorable fuel efficiency ratings. Ford also leads the industry in blocking state and federal efforts to improve auto emissions and efficiency. It was Ford's lobbyists that took the lead in keeping improved fuel efficiency standards out of the 2005 Energy Bill. Meanwhile, Ford has spent millions on "greenwashing" ads to portray itself as an environmental leader. In April, Ford awarded its new CEO $28 million for only four months of work, just as the company moves ahead with plans to close plants and cut more than 30,000 hourly positions.


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Tough choice!
Posted by: Rune on May 24, 2007 1:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ExxonMobil and Ford are combining to kill much of the entire planet while Coke concentrates on torture and murder to stifle dissent. I think I am going to vote for (or is that against?) Coke this time, because once the level of direct thuggery it supports begins to spread, it's very difficult to fight back. ExxonMobil is spending millions to lie to the world about global warming, but they are already beginning to lose that battle thanks to climate scientists around the world banding together to tell the truth as they see it.

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misses the point
Posted by: Rshaw on May 24, 2007 3:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this misses the point, it's systemic problems we are dealing with not a few bad apples. Change the system not the symptoms

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» Yep Posted by: kepstein7777
» Luck isn't enough. Posted by: Lincoln fan
» agree, corporate capitalism doesn't work Posted by: off-the-radar 2
» I agree Posted by: Lincoln fan
we the people need to get our act together
Posted by: Suzon on May 24, 2007 4:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
John Gray points out that globalization requires strong government. Unfortunately, we have just that. George W Bush has dismissed the US constitution as just a piece of paper.

Sorry, I'm not going to join the contest and vote. Let's condemn all wrongdoing. The big and little injustices combine to "normalize" corruption, yet most people would be happy to live and let live.

The solution is not to kick the advantage seekers and their supporters out, but to make advantage seeking futile. We the people need to get our act together under an egalitarian banner.

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Two Mistakes
Posted by: Lincoln fan on May 24, 2007 4:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it's a mistake to paint corporations as evil. It's a waste of enrgy that could be used in constructive solutions. Corporataions are not good nor are they evil. If a corporation can make a profit doing good, it'll do good; if it can make a profit doing evil it'll do evil.

I believe that the other mistake is to think that corporations are controlled by people. Corporations are not controlled by people. They are controlled only by two opposing forces. They are driven forward by their only reason for existance: profit. And they are held back by their only rein: government regulation.

The only way to gain control of the corporations is to first take control of the government.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director,The Lincoln Initiative

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» I agree Posted by: themotie
» I disagree Posted by: Don Garb
» RE: I disagree Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Two Mistakes Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: Two Mistakes Posted by: Doubtom
» RE: Two Mistakes Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Two Mistakes Posted by: ray burchard
"Vote"
Posted by: kepstein7777 on May 24, 2007 4:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or perhaps a gimmick to get you on their mailing list so they can send you junk mail and ask for donations?...Nah, they wouldn't do that. They're the good guys.

But I like the idea of a vote, just for fun. It's like American Idol. Who will be America's next sweetheart? I can't wait to see the results...We can even drag out last years winners and make them sing a cheesy medley together before we announce this year's winners.

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» RE: "Vote" Posted by: aussidawg
» Re: Do not call numbers.... Posted by: henderson
Bushed
Posted by: When In Doubt on May 24, 2007 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corporations are corrupt because "our" government is corrupt.
While the politicians {prostitutes} keep their offices with the mountains of money the corporations give them to defraud US, we will continue to receive the goverment that most "americans" DON'T participate in.
One should not urinate into the wind.

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1) George Soros 2) Albert John Dunlap 3) FED Chairman
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on May 24, 2007 5:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not in any particular order:
1) Mr.Soros's currency manipulation caused millions to go into poverty in Asia, political coups, violence in the streets, and instability in the Asia region. His attempt on the British pound cost the British people much money, loss in value, and the government a lot of money.

2) "Chainsaw" Al Dunlap. The name speaks for itself. This guys "claim to fame" is simply firing people to try to boost stock-prices, like at Sunbeam, etc.

3) Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (which ever one.) Manipulates the fake currency of the United States in the interest of the private bankers who make up the Federal Reserve System (which is a private entity not beholden to the Congress, the taxpayers, or the US Treasury.) Over the course of its history it has caused/exacerbated the 'Great Depression', devalued the dollar, participated in inflation, etc.

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» Go Ron Go! Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: Go Ron Go! Posted by: aussidawg
» Hey, WTF? Posted by: aussidawg
The hands-down winner: Oil companies.
Posted by: HughScott on May 24, 2007 5:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you like anecdotal information, then my background in the petroleum industry should capture your interest because it pertains directly to the White House.

After graduation in 1956 from Texas A&M with a BS in Geology, before entering the Air Force I worked for Atlantic Refining Company, now ARCO. By doing so, I followed the footsteps of my late father, Ed Scott, a career geologist/high-level executive for Union Oil of California (Unocal), which is well-known in the Bush administration.

For example, UN Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad worked for Unocal as a high-paid consultant. A former Chevron board member in addition to his Unocal connection, Khalilzad was appointed by President Bush to the National Security Council, where he reported directly to Condoleezza Rice.

Because Khalilzad’s assignment to the Council didn’t require congressional approval, he dodged a potentially difficult inquiry into his past as a State Department official under President Reagan. At the time, Khalilzad pushed for high-end weapons, such as surface-to-air missiles, for the Soviet-battling Mujahedin fighters in Afghanistan. U.S. funded and Pakistani-trained, they later became our enemy known as the Taliban.

When Bush 41 was president, Khalilzad worked for Paul Wolfowitz in the Defense Department. Prior to Gulf War 1, both Wolfowitz and Khalilzad advocated the use of military force to overthrow Saddam Hussein.

After Khalilzad left the DOD, he worked for the Rand Corporation, a rightwing think tank that performed research for the U.S. military, DOD and American intelligence community. Not surprisingly, Unocal was a Rand client.

While consulting for Unocal, Khalilzad participated in talks with the Taliban on Afghan oil and gas pipeline infrastructure, escorted a delegation of Taliban leaders that visited Unocal headquarters in Texas, and called for the United States to support their regime.

During the Clinton years, Khalilzad conducted risk assessments for Unocal on their proposed 900-mile pipeline project to transport natural gas from Turkmenistan to Pakistan through Afghanistan. Even as the Clinton administration began to recognize the repressive nature of the Taliban regime and its links to Osama Bin Laden, Khalilzad called for U.S. engagement with the Taliban.

The history of Unocal’s Middle East adventurism was featured in a Washington Post story headlined, “How Afghanistan Went Unlisted as a Terrorist Sponsor.”

The article said Unocal hired Henry Kissinger and former U.S. ambassador John Maresca for advisory work. Marcesca later became a Unocal vice president. Robert Oakley, former U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, was hired by Unocal as well for advisory work.

Richard Armitage, Deputy Secretary of State under Colin Powell, also performed Unocal contract work. No stranger to the pipeline business, Armitage was a member of the Burma/Myanmar Forum, a group that received major funding from Unocal. In 1997, he was implicated in a lawsuit filed by Burmese villagers who suffered human rights abuses during the construction of a Unocal pipeline. Halliburton, under Dick Cheney, also performed contract work on the Burmese project.

I could go on and on about the White House being controlled by oil company executives, but instead, I will relate the feelings expressed to my father, as told to me many times. The influence on government energy policies by petroleum companies would have concerned him greatly. For certain, Dad, who was honest to a fault, would not have wanted oilmen in the White House.

If alive today, Ed Scott would be the first to say that oilmen are greedy power-hungry people, care little about social issues and pledge loyalty to themselves, not the U.S. Constitution. To me, that pretty much sums up the Bush administration.

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the new moral baseline in America
Posted by: zooeyhall on May 24, 2007 6:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is the new moral baseline in America:

"If you make money, you don't make excuses"

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Political/Economic
Posted by: magistre on May 24, 2007 6:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it is a big mistake to look at Coke,Exxon,et.al. as "Economic Entities". When any "corporation" acts in a political way it is a political engine and in that respect we need to sit back and ask what's really going on here? And no, lets not be naive enough to believe what we're "told" and take it at face value.
In a day and age when "governmental entities" (CIA,etc.) are in actuality the largest drug cartel in the world and George W. Bush claims he is not trying to replace his own "Godfather" as "der Fuerer und der Veldt" you just can't take anything or anyone by words you must look at their actions.

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IT'S LEGAL SO IT'S OK
Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 24, 2007 7:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's all allowed to go on. There is no reason for corporations to operate any other way. We expect them to grow a conscience and behave in a responsible way. That's why we have law makers. That used to work, now they're all on the take. I still think that a well organized system of boycotting would serve us better than the people in charge. Now someone will tell me that there's nothing we can do. Keep on believing that. Thanks, ANNA

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Boycott the corporations
Posted by: windoe on May 24, 2007 7:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps a potent message to these criminal corporations is to boycott them en masse in any way we can. They need to lose face for their crimes, if we cannot sue them for pillaging the Treasury.

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Say what you will, but...
Posted by: outlander55 on May 24, 2007 8:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nothing will change as long as the White House is in the corporate pocket. As far as I can tell, no matter how much the people want change, our representatives in Washington D. C. only care about their jobs and to hell with what the people want. The people want out of Iraq, and the gov't does nothing to stop the insane war. They will not stand up to The Idiot in Chief. The people want an energy policy that doesn't allow the oil companies to rape us and the enviroment. What do you think will happen?
America, Jeffeson's vision of a free society, has been taken over in a relatively bloodless coup by the big corporations and if the "people" don't do something, nothing will be done. Any time there is a hearing, the corporate types refuse to testify under oath and then have the audacity to makes threats if any windfall taxes are passed into law.
The present administration is run along the same lines as organized crime was in the mid 20th century. Move so fast that by the time anyone notices... , too late.
It is the fault of the people. That's right, the people. We keep sending the same law makers to Congress and the Senate. The majority of those people vote to make laws that hurt the people of this country. They tell us that they want change, but we are still slipping into the abyss.
But, alas, the people of this country will wait until they can tear themselves away from the likes of American Idol, NASCAR, Play Station, and the other social opiates that Corporate America has provided. Voting is not something America cares about ("Why should I bother, nothing will get done") with only 25-30% turnouts on Election Day (one of the lowest turnouts in the world).

Americans have become complacent. They don't want to get involved in the process of their democracy because "it's boring", "I don't have the time", "Why bother", "let some one else do it". The people is what it is all about and the people fell asleep while the corporate entities stole our government. Welcome to modern Fascism.
Good night and good luck.

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» RE: Say what you will, but... Posted by: jonestown kool-aid
We HAVE to keep SCREAMING about this......
Posted by: Voicedude on May 24, 2007 9:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Outlander is absolutely correct!

Complacency and apathy allow these thugs to get away with murder - sometimes literally. Can you imagine if everyone who claimed after WWII that they either didn't know or couldn't speak up about Nazi Germany had actually STOOD UP and said 'NO!', what would have happened? No Hitler, no holocaust, and perhaps no WWII as we knew it. I'm not talking about speaking up in 1943 either, but back in the mid to late 30's when everything was getting set in place. The German people saw the signs, but were too afraid to speak up. And they had their very LIVES to worry about.

Today, all Americans are worried over is their lifestyle. BIG difference. And yet, we do little or nothing - with all the signs around us of the impending doom. What are we waiting for......1943?

That being said, this is a tough choice. Big Oil and Big Pharm are obvious choices, and I haven't been back to 'Wally World' since I saw the documentary.

But, to me, the hands down WORST is still:
HALLIBURTON! plain & simple.

Standing in the blood of our troops to cash their fat checks. Absolutely disgraceful!

Add to them their other War Profiteering buddies, Blackwater, WorldCom, CACI, etc. etc. and you've got examples of all that is wrong with Corporate America.

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Boycotting is useless
Posted by: Darrell Kern on May 24, 2007 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These companies will simply sell more for less in every other country- boycotting them is a noble thing to do, but it will only trim a big chunk of fat- That is better than nothing!

I will not participate in this voting for many reasons. If these corporation went under investigation- it is highly likely all of the files would end up in being housed in the same building like WTC-7- which would be bombed again and blamed on Iran- all evidence disappears and Haliburton shows up at twice the price to clean the mess.

To support local and small business is certainly a healthy step in the right direction- but the major masses cannot afford to support higher pricing.

Its truly heartbreaking.

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Greed
Posted by: snowhound on May 24, 2007 10:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, we are a nation under Greed but tell me what nation is any better. The only reason we get the headlines is because we have the most power. Any other goverment would do the same and they do much worse in most instances. It all comes down to the human factor and that we are not an advanced civilization. We act more like children in the way we always want more but ignore the consequences of our actions. Unfortunately, the only thing that will change this is the collapse of human civilization. We have only been the dominate species for a blip of earths timeline. Hopefully a future civilization will nurture the earth and it's inhabitants rather than destroying it. I guess our children will have to deal with the consequences of our actions.

I vote for Merk because they profit on human sickness and I see nothing worse than poisoning the human race through the marketing of synthetic drugs.

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Of All the Real Bad Guys Out There The Badest Has Got To Be...
Posted by: yellow on May 24, 2007 10:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Exxon-Mobile!! In 2005, after retiring CEO Lee Raymond with a $400 million golden parachute package, Exxon-Mobile, with an unprecedented book value of $405 billion and 11% profits for that year of $36.1 billion, ranked far and away Number One on the Fortune 500 list of Corporations. Aside from fighting authentic scientific research on global warming and just about everything else that's good for the world, they are gouging the American public like never before. In 2006, they reported another 10% jump in profits for the year over the previous year of 39.5% which was quite close to Walmart's profit rate for the year. Near $4.00/gallon gas prices at the pump for premium is criminal when the price per barrel is decreasing and hovering around $65 per barrel.

This brings me to my second point. What Exxon and the other big oil companies are doing is pure price gouging. Overall demand has grown slowly and steadily at aroun 1 to 2% annually (increasing from about 79 million barrels daily consumption in 2001 to just over 86 million currently) while supply is as high as its ever been. Global level of crude production have averaged about 73 million barrels a day with a global capacity of close to 100 million barrels. Oil stock inventories exceed 350 million barrels. Refinery capacity is being deliberately choked. A new refinery hasn't been built in almost 30 years. About 10 refining companies control about 83% of the US production of gasoline. A flurring of mergers in the 1990s created the current monopoly situation in refining. This in addition to investment bank and hedge fund speculation in oil futures has boosted the price of oil. There seems to be no connection between supply and demand according to a 2006 Report of the Senate Subcommittee on Permanent Investigations headed by Carl Levin. And the oil companies continue to make billions in profit while the public is gouged and the economy hangs in the balance. Maybe a windfall profits tax is in order.

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» A Senate Inquiry? Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: A Senate Inquiry? Posted by: yellow
U.S.A., Inc.
Posted by: aussidawg on May 24, 2007 11:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no longer any seperation between the government of this country and it corporations. They are one entity. The corporations have bought and paid for our government, with the possibility of maybe the judicial system, and probably that also. Just look at the co-operation between corporations and government. Bu$h creates a Medicare prescription drug plan that gives the insurance industry a free check (anyone heard of the gap in coverage after a certain dollar amount in benefits have been paid?) AND the pharmaceutical industry (Medicare cannot negotiate the prices drug companies charge for their poison) get the same. Then there is the oil industry. They are reaping record profits, yet the Bu$h Administration has exempted them from paying royalties on profits derived from drilling on public land. This will cost us, the taxpayers around 5 billion dollars in revenue. Then there is the Senate. Just two weeks ago, they gave approval for the pharmaceutical industry to continue its monopoly on grossly over-priced drugs (these drugs are marked up as much as 500,000% from the cost of the ingredients they are made from!) and at the same time sold us out for a litte money in their campaign coffers. They voted to continue the prohibition on the importation of equivalent medications from countries like Canada and the UK. Besides the fact that these drugs are far less expensive than the drugs sold here (as much as 50% less for the same medication), they are also safer as the review processes in these countries are more stringent that they are here. We now pay the highest prices in the world for medicine. Further, they have increased the risk getting dangerous drugs by compromising the safety review process by the FDA (over 100,000 people in the U.S. die annually directly as a result of using FDA approved prescription drugs. More information on this can be found here). Then of course we have Halliburton. This is the company that sells sewer water to our troops, sells them sodas for $45 per case, and does their laundry for $100 per load whie paying $.60 per hour for foreign workers that they then charge us $10 per hour. Their stock has risen some 3000% during Cheney's reign (more on this here.)

As Bob said in an earlier post, the only way to get control over corporations is to get control over our government. Yet that seems to be an almost impossible task...our mainstream media is corporate owned also so the people are only given the information the corporate world (and government) want them to know. Folks, we have a problem here without an apparent solution. Any suggestions?

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Wrong Place for the Blame
Posted by: sofla100 on May 24, 2007 1:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a waste of time to blame corporations for doing what corporations believe they are required to do. Their main reason for existence is profit, increasing the bottom line of their shareholders so even more money gets invested into the company. It is up to government to set minimum wage standards, labor requirements, health and safety standards, etc. As a matter of fact if a modern American corporation did not act as competitively as possible, it would very likely go out of existence, and very quickly. If a modern American corporation did not say outsource jobs to China or India, it could never compete in the sale of its finished goods. Bottom line, government must be made stronger. So called "free trade" needs to be reigned in. Agreements between the developed countries not to allow corporations to work in poor countries, unless it can be guaranteed workers will not be exploited must be made. As for the corruption of public officials that prevents adequate regulation of corporations, this is a sad product of our capaign financing laws and laws letting lobbyists run amok. Reign this in, and the corruption, gut free trade, and we will see a big improvement. Otherwise, blaming individual corporations for these things is like blaming single individuals for getting sick when they all have been exposed to the same disease.

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The hands-down winner: Oil companies (continued).
Posted by: HughScott on May 24, 2007 2:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Coexisting with the petroleum industry-White House connection is the subversive rightwing organization, Project for a New American Century (PNAC).

Not coincidentally, Dick Cheney, Zalmay Khalilzad and Richard Armitage -- all former oilmen -- are PNAC members (called “signatories”). Oilman Bush is linked to PNAC through his brother, Jeb, a PNAC founder.

Another original PNAC member, Steve Forbes, has publicly stated he wants the IMF out of Iraq and private oil companies in.

Some critics have dubbed PNAC’s imperialist goals the "Cheney strategy," which employs a U.S. foreign policy based on securing direct global energy control by the Big Four American/U.S.-tied oil giants -- Chevron. Exxon-Mobil, BP and Royal Dutch Shell. Simply put, the PNAC/Cheney strategy is aimed at controlling the world’s major oil and natural gas deposits.

For AlterNet users unfamiliar with PNAC who desire more information, visit my non-profit investigative website, FreedomCentralUSA.

AlterNeters spooled up on PNAC will appreciate an alphabetical list of 225 signatories, including Democrat hawks with liberal skins, such as Clinton's former Secretary of State, Madeline Albright.

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Halliburton
Posted by: fanny666 on May 24, 2007 2:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure, the oil companies, pharma, defense contractors, etc...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 24, 2007 2:41 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All of whom are owned by the same financial Wall Street funds and banks:

Barclays UK, FMR Fidelity, State Street Corporation, Vanguard, Capital Research, Wellington LP, Morgan Stanley, Mellon, Axa, Citigroup etc - just look at the ownership:

1. Who owns Exxon?
2. Who owns Coke?
3. Who owns Ford?
4. Who owns Halliburton?
5. Who owns Merck?
6. Who owns Kimberly-Clark?
7. Who owns Wal-Mart

This article also fails to discuss the corporate media (TimeWarner, Disney, General Electric, Viacom, etc.) - all of whom are, surprise surprise, also controlled by the above funds and banks. The incestous nature of the ownership is revealed by looking at Who owns Citigroup? - the webs of ownership are designed to hide the real powers behind the throne, but just look at the fortune 500ers for their names.

There is also an argument that the worst of the worst are the big public relations firms, however: Edelman, Burson Marsteller, Golin/Harris, Euro RSCG, Fleishman-Hilliard, Ruder Finn, Qorvis Communications, the Rendon Group, etc - they provide the slick Goebbels-inspired lies that make everything else possible - such as the oh-so lucrative invasion of Iraq.

Take your pick - there's no shortage of candidates!

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Coca-Cola is another Walmart
Posted by: lively56 on May 24, 2007 5:41 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A friend of mine recently decided to take a Temp job at our local Coca-Cola plant in Austin, Tx. He lasted one day. Some of the things he described that went on there are abhorrent, to say the least. He worked the evening shift that day. First of all, not one of his co-workers could speak english. except perhaps a few words. He said he was the only caucasion on the shift. He was refered to as the white boy. He said the training on the fork lifts consisted of, get on it and go as fast as you can. He saw one kid run over his own foot with a fork lift, and the sup.'s response was, if you can still walk I wouldn't report this because you will probably be fired. He saw another kid go around a corner so fast that he flew off the lift. Now mind you, this was all in a space of one night. At the end of the shift he was asked to help clean up the area after the shift ended. He agreed to help. When they were almost finished, which took a little over an hour, he was told, oh by the way, when you clock out, clock out when the shift ended. So in other words he was supposed to help clean up for free. He put the extra time on his time card anyways and the sup. came along and changed it to the regular time.
I think it's high time to boycott Coca-Cola. Besides any drink that would dissolve battery acid, doesn't belong in the human body to begin with. CORPORATE AMERICA IS A DISGRACE TO THE HUMAN RACE!!!

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Short list
Posted by: YogiBear on May 24, 2007 10:39 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What about the makers of the Pinto, who knew the car would explode in a certain number of cases, but gauged the amount paid out in lawsuits would be more profitable still, then fixing the problem?

What about the cigarette industry which convinced even healthcare professionals they were safe all the while having conducted studies proving otherwise, and then hiding the research from the public, while marketing smokes to kids?

Man oh man, it's a long list.

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They Rule
Posted by: fanny666 on May 25, 2007 3:17 PM   
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On the topic of who owns what... this is a fascinating website... click on "LOAD MAP" and pick some of the favorite maps...

They Rule

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Read "The Jester"
Posted by: Drumboy on May 25, 2007 6:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By J Patterson and A Gross.

Enjoy the vile story, clowns.

Then follow up on on the Source.

Get It Yet?

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Charopos do you use the Alternet just to spread you anti-semitic idiocy..
Posted by: yellow on May 26, 2007 12:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
because it is clear to most that you have quite low intelligence.

Wiemar Germany faced two basic economic problems and they originated in heavy industry NOT finance, which by the way was majority Non-Jewish despite the presence in the economy of such large banking houses as Kuhn & Loeb and the Warburgs. The twin problems were slightly rising real wages against stagnating profits as well as low productivity. In addition, Germany and German industry was heavily import dependant and a weak RM also harmed profit margins. In addition, Germany began to develop a need to export in order to expand profits and global market competition was difficult for Germany with US, UK, France, and some others in the international trade game. German fascism resolved all the above problems by force including import dependancy which was resolved by stealing occupied countries resources as well as forced slave labor by foreign captives taken back to Germany by the SS during WWII. Despite all this low output was never resolved and the Deutsche Arbeiters Front forced German workers to make up low hourly productivity with extended hours and production line speed ups. By 1938, hourly wages and weekly salaries formed the lowest part of the German GNP ever in recorded history. It was thus the crisis of German monopoly capitalism which brought the Nazis to power and revived the falling rate of profit. The military-industrial complex was at work in Germany as consumption was crowded out by military investment. And of course a flurry of Foreign Direct Investment from the US, France, Sweden, and the UK worth billions helped pull Germany out of the depression while making huge profits for the corporations investing. Banking played little role as FDI, profits, and higher taxes drove the economy. Interest rates were not at issue most of the time in Post WWI Germany. And of course, as all countries that attack the Jews, Germany lost her best professionals, scientists (like Einstein), intellectuals, and business leaders. How stupid of Hitler.

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we still need the corperations.
Posted by: c.e.stokes on May 28, 2007 9:51 AM   
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we need the corperations. they are the only ones who can make the changes that are needed.but, We need to force change in them.I have no problem with making money,and advancing their company's but, they should reinvest more for better ways of production. it is up to US to make them change. it is we who use these products.

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What, no Monsanto on the list?
Posted by: justaguy on May 28, 2007 8:55 PM   
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Now that is a corporate of pure evil.

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THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA
Posted by: Roverton on May 29, 2007 3:26 AM   
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... has betrayed America on every level. Theirs is a crime against humanity. Their lies will be accounted for one day in the Hague.

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» RE: THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA Posted by: Voicedude
Can I write in...