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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
23 May 2012
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GOP House Chooses Big Oil Over Granny

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Now, let's check today's sports scores: 4, 10.7 and 21-and-a-half.

Those tallies are from the oil league, and the winner, of course, is the league's powerhouse, ExxonMobil.

Four, as you might have guessed, is the $4 that Exxon is siphoning out of your wallet these days for 1 gallon of its petrol.

Next comes 10.7. That's the $10.7 billion in profits that this oil giant has soaked up in just the first three months of this year — a new record, not achieved by any managerial genius, increased productivity or improvement in customer service, but solely by the jack-up in gasoline prices.

Finally, 21-and-a-half. This is the big score made by Rex Tillerson, Exxon's CEO. The chief pulled down $21.5 million in personal compensation last year, making him the highest paid executive in the oil league and one of the most richly paid CEOs in the entire country.

Wait ... this late-breaking score is just in: 0. That's from the special tax game that ExxonMobil consistently wins in Washington. Last year, ExMo powered through loopholes created by its slick lobbying team to pay an income tax of zero on the $19 billion it had racked up in profits the year before. But, wait again, here's a surprising update on that score: Exxon's taxes were actually less than zero! How's that possible? Because Big Oil's lobbyists have so skewed the tax system that Exxon was able to extract a $156 million rebate from us taxpayers last year.

So Exxon is soaking us at the gas pump and sacking our public treasury to gain record profits for itself, while bestowing a royal fortune on its CEO. It wins, we lose.

With a record like that, you wouldn't think the oil league would need more handouts from government — but then, you're not a Republican congressperson.

The GOP recently pushed its appropriations priorities through the House, touting the bill as a revolutionary, politically responsible, tax-saving piece of legislative art.

Well, art is in the eye of the beholder. The Repubs "saved" money by essentially killing Medicare and drastically slashing Medicaid, Head Start, EPA, food stamps, and dozens of other popular and effective programs that Americans overwhelmingly support. Having taken their blunt budget ax to these programs that support our nation's notion of the common good, GOP leaders then scampered to save one of the least popular and least effective federal programs on the books: the annual taxpayer subsidy for Big Oil.

As gasoline prices were rising toward $4 a gallon and higher, House Republicans voted unanimously to let the oil giants continue siphoning $4 billion a year out of our public treasury. All 241 of the Republican/tea party House members — with not even one dissenter in the bunch — declared that in this time of a supposed budget "crisis," the neediest among us are not the elderly and the poor, but the little waifs of Big Oil.

As Casey Stengel once asked of the bumbling New York Mets team he was managing, "Can't anyone here play this game?"

Meanwhile, ExxonMobil just announced a 69 percent leap in profits this year, while Chevron, ConocoPhillips and others are enjoying similar jumps in theirs. Guess what percentage of those enormous profits the corporations are likely to pay in taxes?

Zilch. Last year, ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhilips each banked multibillion-dollar profits, yet far from paying even a dime in taxes, all three worked the loopholes to get multimillion-dollar refunds from us.

Republican lawmakers had a clear choice in dealing with the deficit. So why did they choose to cut off your granny's health care, while helping these corporate billionaires make off like bandits? I guess it's a matter of who you really love.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
Blame Bush (as you did previously). If consistent, you would have to blame the sitting president. Confused.!?
Comment: #1
Posted by: Bucky
Tue May 3, 2011 10:20 PM
If you are going to claim that Exxon is "siphoning" $4 a gallon, then wouldn't the $0.48 per gallon in federal, state, and fuel taxes count as taxes paid by Exxon??? Seriously, the Government makes a bigger profit per gallon than the oil companies, and they don't even have to drill, transport, or refine anything.

Blaming the Republicans alone for continued oil subsidies makes no sense when some of the tax breaks come from laws and regulations from 1913 and the 1950s. Both sides have had plenty of time to end them and haven't.

Furthermore, calling Medicare, Medicaid, Head Start, EPA, food stamps programs "effective" is laughable at best. Do you have any support for your claim that they are effective?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Jon
Wed May 4, 2011 5:11 AM
I've been searching for the exact amount of profits the oil companies make per gallon. The figures I found ranged from $0.02 to $0.10 per gallon. That's a pretty big range, but even if we go with the highest figure, the government still collects 5x more than that in taxes per gallon (average of $0.48)!! Why aren't we outraged that the government is collecting $0.48 for every gallon we pump but it still can't manage to keep up with the infrastructure of our roads & bridges?

Also, if you're so outraged about the profit they make ... why don't you buy some shares of their stock? Actually if you have a pension or IRA there's a pretty good chance you ALREADY have some of it. The owners of Exxon are its stockholders. Nobody is stopping you from becoming one of them and benefiting from what you define as "greedy" profits.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Kim
Wed May 4, 2011 8:46 AM
Jim Hightower likes to throw around big numbers to justify his envy of rich people. Tearing down "the rich" seems to give him great pleasure. Would that he recognized that, without rich people, he would be nothing. Actually, he's not much.
Comment: #4
Posted by: David Henricks
Wed May 4, 2011 11:40 AM
Re: David Henricks
The Repugs tell us we can no longer support the working people and the middle class. What the world can no longer support are the rich. It is time for a Revolution and the first to go must be the uber-rich. The leeches have lived off the public long enough.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Randy O
Thu May 5, 2011 5:20 AM
RE: David Henricks
David, based on this and previous comments, does not seem to notice that the wealth of our nation is being concentrated more and more in the hands of the few. That top few percent, of course, bought and paid for congress and seem to be getting their money's worth. The class warfare being waged by the few on the middle class is stunning. You can see the control they exert on the GOP by the results of the last election. They ran on Jobs, Jobs, Jobs. And once in office, their priority shifted to tax cuts to their patrons, disenfranchising democratic voters, and culture war crap to distract the base.
Keep up the good work, Jim. If you keep committing truth, some are bound to be awakened to the truth of what is being done to them by the ruling class.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Mark
Fri May 6, 2011 12:32 AM
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