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..and meanwhile, thousands starved to death in .....
This really irks me...... it really does
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| Saturday April 7, 5:37 pm ET CHICAGO (Reuters) - Occidental Petroleum Corp.'s chairman and chief executive took in more than $400 million in compensation last year, the company said in a filing, one of the biggest single-year payouts in U.S. corporate history. The largest part of Ray Irani's 2006 payout was $270.2 million from the exercise of options awarded from 1997 to 2006, representing more than 7.1 million shares, according to the company's annual proxy statement, which was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in March. Irani also received $93.3 million in stock and dividends from a deferred stock program when the company closed the plan in October due to increases in liability and expenses for the program, the company said. Irani's salary in 2006 was $1.3 million and his cash bonus was $1.4 million, according to the filing. But stock and option awards and other benefits lifted his 2006 compensation to $55.6 million, the proxy said. In the proxy, the company said that from December 1990 -- when Irani succeeded Armand Hammer as chief executive -- through 2005, the company's stock rose to about $40 a share from $9 and its total shareholder return was 699 percent. "When you look at this, this is solid pay for performance," said Richard Kline, an Occidental spokesman. "It serves the best interest of the corporation and the best interest of the shareholder." Occidental shares closed on Thursday at $49.95 on the New York Stock Exchange. According to the Wall Street Journal, only a few CEOs have ever made more money in one year. In 2001, Oracle Corp. CEO Larry Ellison received $706 million from exercising stock options and in 1998, former Walt Disney Co. CEO Michael Eisner received $570 million, according to the newspaper. |
hmmm...Did he steal that money?
Or did he help create it?
Occidental's stock price has more than doubled since he took over as chairman. More than $23 billion in new wealth has been created for shareholders in the past 3 years (that means you if you own any mutual funds).
Not many people can do what this man has done. This is why the directors and shareholders place such a high value on his skills. Directing a huge multinational company isn't an easy thing to do. After growing the market cap of Occidental by 23+ billion dollars, he received less than 2% of that amount in compensation.
Sounds like the shareholders got a bargain to me. If I owned the stock, I would gladly pay up for that kind of performance.
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| Armand Hammer |
Re: ..and meanwhile, thousands starved to death in .....
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| Originally posted by LazFX This really irks me...... it really does SOURCE Sad really.... |
Last time I checked, many oil and gas companies lately have been making big bucks, no new information to me. More of a coincidence. Plus all the crazy payouts and corruption are boring repetitive day-to-day reoccuring type of events. I was only shocked at the shocking surprise of some of the TAs here. Nothing to see here.
I know gents, I am a capitilist whore when it comes to making and turning a few Dollars. But its just irks me that with all the wealth some have there are still starving people. I am not talking about the lazy focks that just collect Welfare or other types of Gov Assitance... but I am talking about the true poor.... IE; Africa, Middle East and yes, even some in the West.
Maybe its the old bleeding heart utopian liberal that is in me, but oh well, it is nice to dream......
If the oil companies are making such high profits that their CEOs are "earning" 400 million dollar annual paychecks, then they should not be getting ANY government subsidies of any sort.
Big oil gets billions of dollars a year in tax payer money when the industry does not need it to remain profitable.
This country will never have alternatives to oil if the government continues to give oil a competitive advantage, and an industry that is making record profits should not be getting government subsidies period.
But you won't hear any of the "capitalist" line toeing monkeys say anything bad about corporate welfare on this board.
I am no socialist, but you cannot look at CEO pay packages and say, on the whole, the system isn't broken.
MrS
Well the way I look at it is that if a company is making billions in annual sales, then why not pay a good CEO the bucks that they are being paid now. Being a CEO is a tough job and even though 400 mils seem a lot of money, to the owner making billions each year, its nothing because he
'd rather pay the CEO the bucks then do it himself.
There was some commentary on a nightly news show last night about CEO compensation and what not. One of the guests was from the Ayn Rand institute who discussed how those who are outraged at things like executive compensation are trying to make it a moral issue (i.e. the more money you make, the more immoral you must be or something like that). I wish I could find the transcript, though they only gave the guy about 30 seconds of airtime. For now, this will have to suffice.
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| Cross: "Shareholder Democracy" vs. Shareholder Rights (March 13, 2007) Irvine, CA--House leaders are promoting a new measure that would require all public corporations to hold annual shareholder votes to voice approval or disapproval of executive compensation. "While this measure is being portrayed as protecting the rights of shareholders," said Dr. Yaron Brook, executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute, "it is in fact a violation of those rights." "If a majority of shareholders wishes to hold an annual vote to voice approval or disapproval of their board's executive compensation decisions, they have long been free to implement such a policy. But most companies and shareholders have judged that such votes are not in their interest, and it is not hard to imagine why--they do not want to give anti-CEO pundits and politicians yet more fuel to grandstand about 'excessive' CEO pay. "To force shareholders and companies to adopt such policies against their judgment is not to protect shareholder rights, but to violate them wholesale." |
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| Originally posted by LazFX I know gents, I am a capitilist whore when it comes to making and turning a few Dollars. But its just irks me that with all the wealth some have there are still starving people. I am not talking about the lazy focks that just collect Welfare or other types of Gov Assitance... but I am talking about the true poor.... IE; Africa, Middle East and yes, even some in the West. Maybe its the old bleeding heart utopian liberal that is in me, but oh well, it is nice to dream...... |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Yep...It's farking terrible. But the "solution" is not to destroy the wealth others have created in order to redistribute it to the poor. Any attempt to reduce poverty this way will likely have the opposite effect...moving the middle class workers of those companies into the unemployment line. People need to realize what one person earns has no bearing on what someone else does or does not earn. The two are unrelated! When you earn your next paycheck, you aren't stealing food from the mouth of a poor Bosnian kid. That kid would be starving regardless of whether or not you showed up for work last week. If you want to blame anybody for world povery, you should blame the corrupt and overbearing governments of these countries...not an American businessman. |
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| Originally posted by Magnetonium To tell you the truth, its a humanitarian crisis. Over 45,000 people, mostly children, die of hunger every day. Many people know about this, but noone gives a shit. Remember the famous rock festival aimed to raise money and bring spotlight to the issue? Well, many people showed up, got drunk, partied, left shitloads of garbage on the fields, threw in a few pennies and got back to their lives like its no big deal. Noone cares. Just like politics. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Yep...It's farking terrible. But the "solution" is not to destroy the wealth others have created in order to redistribute it to the poor. Any attempt to reduce poverty this way will likely have the opposite effect...moving the middle class workers of those companies into the unemployment line. People need to realize what one person earns has no bearing on what someone else does or does not earn. The two are unrelated! When you earn your next paycheck, you aren't stealing food from the mouth of a poor Bosnian kid. That kid would be starving regardless of whether or not you showed up for work last week. If you want to blame anybody for world povery, you should blame the corrupt and overbearing governments of these countries...not an American businessman. |
lol marc, your reply showed up before my post...Are you practicing Voodoo?
What to do? Well charity is always nice. You can donate funds or volunteer your time at a private relief organization. There are many groups that do terrific things for the people in poverty stricken countries. And because the money isn't filtered through 60 layers of government bureacracy, a lot more of every dollar gets where it is supposed to go.
Ultimately though, the real solution is probably going to be the most painful one short term...a revolution in those countries. The Berlin Wall didn't come down because some politician decided to remove it. It fell because the people of East Germany realized they were oppressed by their politicians. They were being denied their freedoms by a corrupt socialist government, and they demanded an end to it.
Really, perhaps the best thing we can "do" about it is nothing. If we continue to alleviate these symptoms of corruption, we are only prolonging the misery of the people in those countries. It may be better if they just got fed up with their circumstances and took matters into their own hands.
Viva la Revolution!
Oh, wait.....

Yeah thats it! 
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt lol marc, your reply showed up before my post...Are you practicing Voodoo? What to do? Well charity is always nice. You can donate funds or volunteer your time at a private relief organization. There are many groups that do terrific things for the people in poverty stricken countries. And because the money isn't filtered through 60 layers of government bureacracy, a lot more of every dollar gets where it is supposed to go. |
I'm not too terribly surprised by this, nor do I see as incredibly outrageous given the substantial profits these oil companies are making.
But there are two things that come to mind:
1. Squirrel's right - our corporate welfare of tax breaks to these companies are a downright joke and should be removed completely.
2. Living wage - though not necessarily applicable to the oil companies, I do think it's interesting to see some corporations give a big fat "whaaa!" on it, which to me is a bit strange given their fat fucking CEO payouts. Granted, I concede living wages aren't the sure-fire answer to ending poverty, nor are they likely applicable to every/many situations. But I really do hope that giant corporations paying out oodles of bucks to their CEOs cease shedding tears if they are required to pay their workers a few more $.
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| Originally posted by MisterOpus1 2. Living wage - though not necessarily applicable to the oil companies, I do think it's interesting to see some corporations give a big fat "whaaa!" on it, which to me is a bit strange given their fat fucking CEO payouts. Granted, I concede living wages aren't the sure-fire answer to ending poverty, nor are they likely applicable to every/many situations. But I really do hope that giant corporations paying out oodles of bucks to their CEOs cease shedding tears if they are required to pay their workers a few more $. |
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| Originally posted by MisterOpus1 I'm not too terribly surprised by this, nor do I see as incredibly outrageous given the substantial profits these oil companies are making. But there are two things that come to mind: 1. Squirrel's right - our corporate welfare of tax breaks to these companies are a downright joke and should be removed completely. 2. Living wage - though not necessarily applicable to the oil companies, I do think it's interesting to see some corporations give a big fat "whaaa!" on it, which to me is a bit strange given their fat fucking CEO payouts. Granted, I concede living wages aren't the sure-fire answer to ending poverty, nor are they likely applicable to every/many situations. But I really do hope that giant corporations paying out oodles of bucks to their CEOs cease shedding tears if they are required to pay their workers a few more $. |
I'm surprised that people think others who are successful should be punished
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| Originally posted by EvilTree I'm surprised that people think others who are successful should be punished |
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| Originally posted by Magnetonium Well, lets not punish them by leaving things exactly as they are right now. What will that achieve? Some of them are of course righteous, but others are living off other people's misery and suffering. Supporting dictarships by doing business with them is not helping people out. Sure it might be all fair in legal terms, but look at these people ... I am not saying its all Americans fault in this issue as well and that we should redistribute the wealth, I never said that. I hate communism. Without getting into detail on the issue, I know some things can be done by our western society to make these people's lives better - like stop supporting the corrupt and dictatorship governments of Africa. If we do, then these governments will weaken. Instead of spreading democracy by the sword and ignoring wide-spread human rights violations and mistakes because these countries are our allies we need to start treating the humanitarian issue more seriously. Everyone can and should live happy and productive lives. There's enough food and resources for everyone on the planet to live happpy and sustainable lives. |
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| Originally posted by EvilTree I hope you know how much contradictory you sound comparing this post to the stuff you wrote on the Afghanistan thread. |
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| Originally posted by Magnetonium Ha! How contradictory is it that Americans are supporting the current Afghani regime that is filled with former war criminals, former Taliban members and sympathizers, drug dealers? Americans have actually supported and joined with even worse groups of people before though. |
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| Originally posted by EvilTree My remark wasn't about the Yanks, it's about you! |
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| Originally posted by Magnetonium Enlighten me then. |
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