Untouchable Big Oil Threatens All Life On Earth

octopus-monopoly600In a system that puts profits over everything, small gangs of billionaires are given free rein to plunder the planet. One of the richest power cliques in the Empire’s inner circle is also imperiling all life on earth at an alarming rate, only to make their pockets fatter.

In the United States, the oil industry is a giant, cash-engorged beast with the loyal servitude of the state at its beck and call. It’s vast accumulation of wealth led to its vast accumulation of power and influence in today’s society.

All life on Earth is threatened by catastrophic climate change–the main culprit is so powerful that the US government is set up to serve it, rather than regulate it.

In this episode of The Empire Files, Abby Martin uncovers Big Oil’s strong-arm reach–its growth, its crimes, its power and its impunity.

Featuring interviews with two investigative journalists who have covered oil disasters on-the-ground, Antonia Juhasz, author of “Black Tide: The Devastating Impact of the Gulf Oil Spill”, and Greg Palast, author of “Vulture’s Picnic: In Pursuit of Petroleum Pigs, Power Pirates, and High-Finance Carnivores”.

 

Untouchable Big Oil Threatens All Life on Earth

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The Next Four Months Will Determine the Future of the Internet

InternetRock1997.jpgTwo weeks ago, an internal Federal Communications Commission (FCC) memo was leaked, calling to remake today’s neutral Internet into a ‘pay to play’ system like cable TV. If set in motion, these rules would abolish the Internet’s longstanding the concept of Net Neutrality, or nondiscriminatory access online.

After the document was leaked, hundreds of thousands of Internet advocates flooded the FCC with calls and emails to oppose the pro-business proposal. Putting words to action, dozens of activists also formed a “People’s Firewall” for eight days outside the FCC to demand an Internet free from corporate corruption.

The people’s strong response forced the corporate media to finally cover the issue. As TIME Magazine reported:

“The Internet has become a new public utility, many Net-neutrality advocates argue, and should be treated as such. The nation’s largest cable and phone companies fiercely oppose that idea — fearing greater regulation — and are mobilizing their lobbyists and allies on Capitol Hill to push back.

“The FCC’s eighth-floor executive office has been thrown into chaos amid a mounting backlash that shut down its phone lines as a growing number of open-Internet advocates camp out in front of their office.”

FCC chair Thom Wheeler even stopped by the camp to declare his support for an “open” Internet. Unfortunately, his rules benefit no one but giant telecommunications corporations. We must force the FCC to change these rules by reclassifying the Net as a common carrier so it can be regulated to protect Net Neutrality.

Thankfully, enormous people’s pressure has already forced the FCC to consider implementing the Internet common carrier status. But we need to work together to push the commission to cement the notion of Net Neutrality once and for all.

Over the next four months, the FCC is hosting a public comment section through its official channels. During this time, education will be key to develop a national consensus that the Internet should operate as a public utility, with equal access to all.

Check out Abby Martin’s interview with Matt Wood, Director of Free Press, about why you should care about the death of Net Neutrality:

Matt Wood of Free Press on the Death of Net Neutrality

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Another must watch piece is Breaking the Set‘s coverage of the FCC protests and interview with Casey Rae, Director of Future of Music Coalition, about why Net Neutrality means so much to independent artists and musicians (Segment starts at 2:24).

Breaking the Set on the Fight to Save Internet Freedom

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Take Action Now

Submit your comment to the FCC here.

Here’s a blueprint:

“I urge you to reject the rules proposed on May 15, 2014 and restore online nondiscrimination by reclassifying broadband as a telecommunications service.

The FCC claims it wants an open Internet without fee based tiers, but the court has made it clear this can only be accomplished by reclassifying the Internet as a common carrier. This label is consistent with what the Internet is: a public utility where people have equal access to all sites and all sites are treated equally.

Please cement Net Neutrality into law.”

Written by Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers. Edited by Abby Martin, photo by Internet Rock

Big Oil is More Than Big Trouble for the Environment

MEDIA ROOTS – The global petroleum industry has long been the antagonist for environmental and animal-rights advocates. But more recently, “Big Oil” has emerged as a literal threat to democracy for its vast political influence and ability to contrive wars for profit. A report released last month by the National Wildlife Federation exposed to what extent the oil industry, along with coal, affect elections in America.

Speaker of the House John Boehner tops the list of congressman receiving financial aid from the energy industry. Many of these donors stand to benefit from the proposed construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, an ecologically-damaging project that would send diluted bitumen – a tar-like substance – to American oil refineries, and the congressman has repeatedly castigated the president for delaying its permit. If that wasn’t bad enough, the congressman actually owns investments in some of these companies. Congress is exempt from various trade-laws and last year 60 Minutes highlighted Boehner’s record of insider-trading.

More recently, Congress passed a bill referred to as the “Stop the War on Coal Act.” Congressman Johnson, also a Republican from Ohio, authored the bill and explained the bill wasn’t about climate change as much as it was about public health and safety. But dissenters of the bill argue it actually endangers millions of Americans and virtually declares war on public health. Furthermore, the bill could possibly pave way for a similar bill that would further secure the stature of the petroleum industry.

Big Oil should be considered a big country

Seven of the top ten highest-grossing corporations in the world, as ranked by Fortune magazine earlier this year, are of the oil industry. Royal Dutch Shell, the list’s top revenue-generator, is on par with the gross domestic product of Iran. But if it was its own country, it would be the twenty-fifth highest-grossing country in the world.

When considering these seven corporations together, they are the sixth highest-grossing entity worldwide – government or corporate. And because these entities are private corporations, and considered persons by the Supreme Court, they are not subject to the same level of public scrutiny or congressional oversight. While it may not be surprising that over three-quarters of all petroleum refined in the United States produces gasoline, diesel, and jet fuels, it may be news to some just who is consuming these fuels the most.

The petrodollar war, not the terror war

Purchasing over one percent of the world’s refined oil – by far more than any other single entity – is the U.S. Department of Defense. Over half of this consumption is used to fuel jet engines with the Air Force being the branch of greatest oil demand. The department consumes nearly double the amount of fuel annually as the Republic of Ireland and, during the height of battle in Iraq just a half-decade ago, American troops were consuming well over one million gallons of fuel daily making them the highest oil-consuming soldiers in world history. This past year, the military handed taxpayers a $20 billion energy bill which roughly equates to the cost of an automobile tank for every man, woman, and child in the country.

Less than a month after 9/11 several news outlets were reminding readers that oil was actually more of an issue than terrorism. L.A. Weekly pushed the envelope of sensitivity by offering “it’s the oil, stupid” just eight days after terrorists allegedly hijacked four airplanes. These claims are based on the fact that Big Oil has been vying for an Afghan pipeline for decades.

During the Bush-Cheney era, both of whom are previous oil executives themselves, Big Oil lobbied the federal government over $393 million, with nearly a million dollars diverted to Senator Obama during his 2008 campaign for the White House. But as the majority of Americans of all political backgrounds continue to favor renewable energy options, this Congress continues to turn a blind eye and instead demonizes governments – such as those of Iran and Venezuela – that refuse to trade crude oil in U.S. Dollars. “Petrodollar warfare” is the true reason why the U.S. invaded Iraq in 1990, and again in 2003, and is why Iran continues to remain in the military’s crosshairs.

Corporate media complicity

Meanwhile, the corporate media establishment has yet to connect the dots of history for the general public or sound the alarm on the true cause of this grim outlook. In fact, many of these outlets outright support the industry as reported in a Media Matters study earlier this year regarding the coverage of the Keystone XL pipeline. The report showed that while only a quarter of Keystone XL coverage featured the massive demonstrations of people speaking out against the project, the media continued to parrot industry job estimates even though these predictions had already been widely discredited.

Starting in 1980, the FCC began deregulating the media industry which resulted in over 90% of media outlets being owned by just six corporate entities. Already this year over $153 million oil industry dollars have been spent in the corporate media establishment – mere pocket change for this influential group of executives. The result is a misguided society concerned more by the threat of terror than the more realistic threat of economic collapse.

Embedded below is an episode of FTM Daily, a radio program hosted by economist Jerry Robinson, which further explores the extent of the petrodollar system, its influence on the value of the U.S. dollar, and reveals who the major players are.

Oskar Mosco is the managing editor for Media Roots.

Photograph: © 2013 David Oppenheimer – Performance Impressions

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Earlier this year on FTM Daily, Jerry Robinson features an examination of the

Petrodollar system that is what the now-volatile U.S. Dollar is based on.

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Surveillance State, TPP Secrecy, Drugged America

MEDIA ROOTS  – On BTS, Abby explains law enforcement solution’s to police speedtrap cameras being vandalized: add more cameras to watch the cameras! RT Correspondent Lucy Kafanov joins Abby from Beirut, Lebanon, to dig deeper into what is driving the anti-American demonstrations across the Muslim world. Then, International Campaign Director for Public Citizen, Melinda St. Louis, joins Abby for a discussion on the secret negotiations surrounding the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) Trade agreement. BTS wraps up the show by exposing the US pharmaceutical industry’s goal to over medicating America.

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Cameras Watching Cameras, TPP Secrecy, Drugged America

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Tune in from 6-6:30 EST M-F on your local cable station

OR watch live at http://www.RT.com/usa

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FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin

Massachusetts Resolves to End Corporate Personhood

MEDIA ROOTS – Massachusetts just became the seventh state in the nation to officially call for a repeal of Citizens United, the 2010 court case that recognized corporations as people and money as speech. That landmark ruling is the primary reason for the development of “super PACs” in the last two presidential elections. A super PAC is a political action committee that is able to accept unlimited political donations as long as they are not spent directly on candidates’ campaigns.

Referred to as “independent-expenditure only committees” by the Federal Election Commission, super PACs received considerable backlash from last year’s Occupy Wall Street movement. Additionally, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) recently published the donations made by 23 American billionaires to super PACs this election season. “Billionaires buying the 2012 elections have a combined $195 billion in wealth,” Sanders explains in the report’s introduction. “More than the bottom 43% of American households – 50 million families.”

The grassroots organization Move to Amend has been working since 2009 to amend the US Constitution to ensure the end of corporate personhood and Coffee Party USA has been calling to repeal Citizens United since its inception. Also, over 200 local governments now support the call to repeal this piece of controversial legislation.

Oskar Mosco

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Senator Bernie Sanders discusses the need for a constitutional amendment

to undo the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision of 2010.

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Photo provided by Flickr user  labiagaferrer

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