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Aside of the fact that I will not be voting for her unless she wins the primary (provided someone like Hagel wins it for the Republicans), her comments are a bit funny not just for the reason that you mentioned, but the fact that she's by far the BIGGEST beltway candidates who's getting corporate donations hand over foot for her campaign.
Besides, as I've said before, she has such a gigantic target on her back for the Right Wing Noise Machine, just waiting to slime her with every ounce of muster they've got. You think Kerry and the '04 election was slimy, this sucker will leave that in the dust. Actually I think any Pres. election will be slimy and a smearfest, but it'll be a downright shitfest if she wins the primary.
Anyway, I do think that she has a rather small point to be made about these record corporate profits from our oil folks. While I applaud any company for making such profits as it's a definite sign of company success, what I don't appreciate is the obvious bullshit rhetoric that they give the public to which most folks either shrug or buy into. For example, this op-ed by Chris Edwards at the Cato Institute stated the following:
| quote: | That is great news because it means the company will have more funds to reinvest in exploration, refinery expansion, drilling platforms, chemical plants, and all those other brilliant machines that American families benefit from every day.
The firm invested $20 billion in exploration, structures, and equipment in 2006...
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2007...ay-for-profits/ |
So $20 billion got invested in exploration, structures, and equipment for the purpose of this:
| quote: | | High profits are a signal to ExxonMobil management, other energy companies, and Wall Street to feed this industry more capital and to continue increasing energy production. That’s good news for U.S. energy security and U.S. consumers. |
All this is supposedly good for our economy and the American consumer, right?
Well a funny thing happened on the way to reading ExxonMobile's latest quarterly earnings:
http://yahoo.brand.edgar-online.com...00021&Type=HTML
You see, in there we see that a natural gas production increase to 9,334 mcfd, only 83 mcfd from 2005 or about 1%. Furthermore, petroleum sales of "7,247 kbd decreased from 7,519 kbd in 2005, primarily due to lower refining throughput and divestments."
Can someone explain how a company like ExxonMobile is somehow using their profits to increase energy production when their latest quarterly report clearly indicates otherwise? According to that quarterly report, ExxonMobile produced and processed LESS oil in refineries in 2006, yet still managed to ironically have the biggest profit for any company in American history.
Something else was interesting to note as well. In that quarterly report we see that "gross share purchases in 2006 were $29.6 billion which reduced shares outstanding by 6.6%." Which if I'm reading that correctly, that means that there was almost $30 billion invested in buying back its own stock, compared to the reported $20 billion spent on capital investment for equipment and stuff for energy production. This would appear to indicate that ExxonMobile believes its stock is a better investment than additional production capacity. Can anyone explain why this is so, especially if they are supposedly so invested in increasing energy production?
Lastly, this was interesting as well to note:
| quote: | | Earnings outside the U.S., excluding special items, were $21,062 million, $4,533 million higher than 2005 |
and the total profits were only up from $36.1 billion to $35.5 billion, or 3.4 billion, meaning that ExxonMobile's U.S. profits actually fell by about $1.1 billion. Can someone explain how that's somehow good for the U.S. economy?
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Whence September dusk grows crisper still,
with leaves all crimson conquered,
I yearn to shout,
and dance about,
and stick pickles in my honker...
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