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129 comments on Record Oil Company Profits and High Gas Prices: A Connection?
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129 comments on Record Oil Company Profits and High Gas Prices: A Connection?
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While your compassion is admirable, I would prefer to live in a place where everybody can decide how much all the fatcats get taxed, rather than dragging the scapegoat-of-the-day-CEO through the mud.
This campaign against Lee Raymond is being orchestrated by two rather strange bedfellows, Bill O'Reilly and Charles Schumer. Raymond has been retired since January for God's sake. Nobody knew his name before last week. But now his $400 million is the solution to our energy problems? Ridiculous.
I myself think there is something truly shameful and disgusting about the way ALL of the very rich hoard wealth, and use it to appropriate a morally unseemly share of the planet's finite resources to themselves, and away from billions of others that need it. It may not be obvious that this is shameful and disgusting in a society as saturated with wealth-worshipping free market ideology as American society is, but for that very reason, what I just said sometimes just needs to be said. To a lesser extent, I think what I said is true also of all lesser degrees of affluence also.
There was an illuminating article just recently about what the very rich actually DO with their wealth: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/apr2006/rich-a19.shtml
When a company dominates a national industry for decades, and the population and GNP grow over that time, they get to see very big numbers on their balance sheets. There are more people, making more money, and (with current prices) Exxon is pulling down a higher portion of family income.
The numbers are driving a greater concentration of wealth and power for Exxon, and the way they are using that wealth and power is ... simply evil.
I think it is an unanticipated consequence of the stock market boom/bubble, and the well known connection between available shares and an aging baby boom population. Money flows into the stock market, supporting the bubble, and giving companies huge capitalizations. Management compensation, as a fraction of capitalization, is nothing ... while at the same time it is huge from a 'real world' perspective.
I was actually in a small company, and saw a couple guys turn into billionares on the day of public offering. It was actually freakier that a couple guys who knew me, who would say hi to me (a working engineer) in the elevator, were suddenly billionares.
Why did they get that rich? Well, they were certainly smart and hard workers ... but not even they expected that much. It was the dot com boom, and the market just threw money at them/us.
It's a strange world.