Wednesday, May 31, 2006

The Mouse on Steroids

I've really come to admire Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, a man who puts his money where his mouth is and really sets out to help the poor - even the poor of a country thats leadership seems to find him the root of all evil.

I'm, of course, referring to his work through the gas company, Citgo, that has been supplying discounts of up to 60 per cent on heating oil to poor communities in the U.S. So far he is supplying Maine, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Vermont, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.

New York now plans to allow Citgo to supply Upper Manhatten.

Citgo now says it has supplied over 180,000 of America's poor with discounted heating.

Chavez also announced that the program will be doubled next year from its current level of 40 million gallons. "No one should believe that this is just a momentary interest," Chavez told the group. "Leave at ease and tell your neighbors of the communities you represent that the program will continue; it has just begun," he said.

Chavez insisted that the program was not designed to buy support in the US, as many critics claimed, but is rather an example of corporate responsibility, because Citgo, which is now making large profits in the US, is now giving back to communities in which it does business.

"Citgo has done good business in the US. We believe companies, along with making a profit. need to have social responsibilities for the people they sell to," said Chavez.

Chavez pointed out that in the 20 years Venezuela has owned Citgo, it never paid dividends to the Venezuelan state. Only in 2004 and 2005 has it begun to repatriate some of its profits to Venezuela, he said.

He also cited the program as "an example of his government's efforts to move towards socialism, in which countries relate to each other on the basis of cooperation, solidarity, and complementarity."
None of this is likely to win him any new friends in the White House, especially as he refers to President Bush as a "terrorist", however, what no-one could have foreseen is that certain Republicans would object to what he was doing.
Enter Congressman Joe Barton, the powerful Texas Republican who is chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. This stalwart recipient of some $2 million in campaign contributions from the energy industry announced he would launch an investigation into possible antitrust violations by a major oil company.

No, not ExxonMobil or Chevron, but - wait for it - Citgo.
So at a time of skyrocketing fuel bills they have chosen, rather to take affirmative action that might bring prices down, to take task with "a charitable donation of heating oil to relieve the suffering of a few thousand American families."

You couldn't make that up.

Oh, and Congressman Barton recieved $2 million in campaign contributions from the energy industry. But I'm sure that's got nothing to do with his impending investigations.

Full marks to Chavez for exposing them as the partisans that they are and, more importantly, for engaging in the kind of misty eyed old Socialism that no politician in the US would ever dare aspire to.

Click title for full article.

Related Articles:

MUST READ - Chicago Says No to Chavez Offer

7 comments:

fc said...

Good post... Chavez is doing what this country should be doing if we were not ruled by a madman in the white house... Keep up the effort... You may want to look at joining the Impeach Bush Coalition when you have the time. I will fill out the form to join the blogs against torture when I am finished here. I have posted several times on the subject...

Impeach Bush...

Imprison Rove...

Regards
- fc ( fatcat politics )

p.s. Thanks for linking to me...

Kel said...

Thanks FC. And thanks for your link also.

I'll head over to the Impeach Bush Coalition as soon as I finish typing this.

Kel.

theBhc said...

Kel,

Did you ever see this story from back in December:

Chicago Says No to Chavez Offer

At the time, when winter was just kicking in, Chavez was embarassing the Congress and the White House, both of which had refused any increase in aid to poor families for heating assistance. This so-called "investigation" is a natural out growth of that embarrasement by these worthless, craven toads.

Though I have heard mixed things about Chavez (authoritarian hand), it is very hard to get a good picture of what the guy is really like, and that is especially true in the US, where he is portrayed as a grandstander who is only doing all this to embarrass the Bush. Frankly, who cares if that is his motivation? If I had the clout to do that, man, I'd be going at it 24/7.

But I also know that Chavez does put his country's natural resource revenues back into social programs, schools and hospitals. A majority of the profits of PDVSA go back into the country.

Kel said...

BHC, Thanks for that. No I didn't see your article at the time - I'm very new to blogging as you no doubt know - but I've linked to it in related articles. That simply takes my breath away.

I'm all for these old style Socialists doing their very best to help people escape poverty, especially in Latin America. I happen still to believe in a sense of community where we are not all out simply for ourselves and that we owe it to people to ensure that they have a certain living standard if for no other reason than that there is enough food on Earth to ensure that no-one need starve.

And I think all members of a society should somehow share in that society's wealth. I am a top rate tax payer in the UK, and I am happy that my taxes ensure that there is such a thing as free health care, that housing benefit ensures that all British people have an entitlement to be housed, even if society as a whole has to contribute to the cost of their rent. Britain has the fourth largest economy in the world, all of it's citizens should benefit, not just people like myself who do all right, thank you very much.

Likewise, I think citizens of the US should share in that country's enormous wealth, rather than it be consigned to the richest few. I believe that no member of the US - the richest country in the world - should ever have to live in a trailer park.

There's plenty of wealth to go around, it's the redistribution of that wealth that's the problem.

I am reminded of the comment of Henry Ford, who started the production line, "There is one rule for the industrialist and that is: Make the best quality of goods possible at the lowest cost possible, paying the highest WAGES possible."

The last part of Ford's theory has been conveniently erased from modern capitalism.

It was Thatcher and Reagan who made society slaves to "the shareholder economy", the most short sighted and immoral economic policy I can think of.

The best critique of this is Will Self's "The World We're In".

Get your hands on it. If you can't find it anywhere, email me your address to ostermanuk@blueyonder.co.uk and I'll buy you a copy and post it to the states!

theBhc said...

Kel,

That would be great. I've not heard of this but, based upon your recommendation, it sounds well worth reading.

i'll pop you an email shortly.

cheers.

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