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In reply to the discussion: The Siegelman Saga: Alabama G.O.P. Wrestles with Retraction (!!) [View all]Coyotl
(15,262 posts)63. Don't forget the Big Oil vendetta = ExxonMobil’s Alabama Paydirt
Gov. Don Siegelman, the Roughly $3.6 Billion, ExxonMobil, and Pissing Off BIG OIL.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x3070446
ExxonMobils Alabama Paydirt
Scott Horton - November 4, 2007 - http://www.harpers.org/archive/2007/11/hbc-90001584
Back in 1904, Ida Tarbell published what ultimately was to be seen as the seminal work of the muckrakers, The History of Standard Oil. It appeared first in nineteen installments in McClures Magazine, a rather less successful competitor of Harpers, and shortly after the last installment appeared, Tarbell published the work in book form as well. In her work, Tarbell exposed the dark underside of corporate deal-making, the series of interlocking directorates and manipulations which had allowed John D. Rockefeller to build the oil leviathan and dominate the American market. Tarbell demonstrated that Rockefellers success came not so much from business acumen (though she never contested that he had plenty of that) as through a thorough understanding of how to game the system. John D. Rockefeller was a power unto himself. Politicians around the country were made and broken to suit him.
But Tarbells disclosures fueled the drive for antitrust legislation and a fairer and more competitive business environmenta drive which was, in its time, championed by progressive politicians of both parties, but particularly by Theodore Roosevelt. By 1911, Standard Oil was broken into thirty companies.
But over time, like the liquid-metal monster in the Terminator series, Standard Oil pulled itself back together again. It was aided in this process by a change in attitudes across the political spectrum, but most particularly it was aided by Americas campaign finance system in which politicians standing for election require increasingly larger sums of money to pursue their campaigns, and support from the corporate till is essential. The final act of rebirth occurred when the two principal surviving pieces of the company, Exxon and Mobil, merged at the close of 1999. The resulting behemoth, ExxonMobil, is the largest publicly traded integrated petroleum and natural gas company in the world. It is also the worlds largest petroleum and natural gas company by revenue, with revenues of $377.6 billion in fiscal year 2006.
The State of Alabama believes that it was victimized by ExxonMobil. According to the states complaint launched by the Administration of Governor Don Siegelman, ExxonMobil committed fraud and underpaid the state in a contract dispute over natural gas pumped from Mobile Bay. Alabama won that litigation, and a jury awarded the state a judgment against ExxonMobil of roughly $3.6 billion. Not chump change ............
But Tarbells disclosures fueled the drive for antitrust legislation and a fairer and more competitive business environmenta drive which was, in its time, championed by progressive politicians of both parties, but particularly by Theodore Roosevelt. By 1911, Standard Oil was broken into thirty companies.
But over time, like the liquid-metal monster in the Terminator series, Standard Oil pulled itself back together again. It was aided in this process by a change in attitudes across the political spectrum, but most particularly it was aided by Americas campaign finance system in which politicians standing for election require increasingly larger sums of money to pursue their campaigns, and support from the corporate till is essential. The final act of rebirth occurred when the two principal surviving pieces of the company, Exxon and Mobil, merged at the close of 1999. The resulting behemoth, ExxonMobil, is the largest publicly traded integrated petroleum and natural gas company in the world. It is also the worlds largest petroleum and natural gas company by revenue, with revenues of $377.6 billion in fiscal year 2006.
The State of Alabama believes that it was victimized by ExxonMobil. According to the states complaint launched by the Administration of Governor Don Siegelman, ExxonMobil committed fraud and underpaid the state in a contract dispute over natural gas pumped from Mobile Bay. Alabama won that litigation, and a jury awarded the state a judgment against ExxonMobil of roughly $3.6 billion. Not chump change ............
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K&R & Bookmarking & Are you posting over at DAILY KOS? where a person can subscribe to a feed? nt
patrice
Dec 2012
#1
I believe he could commute his sentence as Bush did with Scooter, or outright pardon him like Ford
rhett o rick
Dec 2012
#10
Yes. The sole authority for granting pardons is given to the President in Art II, Sec. 2,
AnotherMcIntosh
Dec 2012
#15
This must be kept upfront - such injustice should not be allowed to happen
riverbendviewgal
Dec 2012
#4
Related "Hindsight is 20/20 for Mike Hubbard: Don't mix business and politics" Montgomery Advertiser
jody
Dec 2012
#5
Not a bribe in the worst sense, and most likely Scrushy didn't have the bad rep he does now.
freshwest
Dec 2012
#25
TV, that night, in AL, went blank, for 20 minutes, BY COINCIDENCE, just that story, on 60 Minutes.
Festivito
Dec 2012
#47
No coincidence. Saw that when PBS was going to play 'Death of a Princess' in Houston.
freshwest
Dec 2012
#69
Can someone give me the detailed skinny on what happened here? I'm at a loss to this situation. nt
cecilfirefox
Dec 2012
#20
I really want to see this man released. Here is some more about working on his pardon:
freshwest
Dec 2012
#21
Holder did it with Stevens because the corruption of his prosecutors in that case had been exposed.
former9thward
Dec 2012
#48
There is a place o White House.gov for petitions.... commute sentence for the New Year!!! nt
kelliekat44
Dec 2012
#29
Every DAY that passes, that Obama doesn't pardon Siegelman, is a nasty stain on his record
99th_Monkey
Dec 2012
#32
Chalk this up as more reasons to hate Rove-Bush and his honchos and throw them all in jail.
Auntie Bush
Dec 2012
#71