Sunday, February 04, 2007

21st Century Propagandists: Looking At You, Exxon

Much like the debate and the skepticism over the harmful causes of tobacco smoke in the 20th century, the "doubts" and "uncertainty" surrounding the issue of global warming today are entirely manufactured by those who have a monetary stake in the political and social reaction to the threat. Were the public to actually know how dire the implications may be if something isn't done, multi-national corporations, more powerful than most nation-states, would be very negatively affected. The companies who are now propagating misinformation on global warming take their cue from the R.J. Reynold's and Philip Morris's of the past. These new propagandists of the 21st century include: Conoco, BP, Shell, and most importantly ExxonMobil.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had a great post today on Exposing Exxon. Here are some important excerpts:

Using phony think tanks like the Competitive Enterprise Institute, scientists-for-hire called biostitutes, slick public relations firms, and their indentured servants in the political process, they have intentionally defrauded the public by promoting the notion that global warming is a hoax or a sketchy theory that requires more study.

Exxon has dished out at least $19 million dollars since the negotiation of the Kyoto Protocol (1997) to fund an elaborate network including over 75 industry front groups mobilized in a misleading campaign to cloud the public's understanding of global warming. Their objective has been to counter balance the overwhelming scientific evidence of man-induced climate change with pseudo scientific denials to derail reforms that might effect corporate profits. In 2005, ExxonMobil paid over $3.5 million to 49 different front groups, according to the company's own records, which are collected each year by ExxonSecrets.org and the ExxposeExxon coalition. A report released earlier this month by the Union of Concerned Scientists traces the roots of this fraudulent propaganda broadside - and many of its prime actors - back to the tobacco industry's tactical war on science.
I wrote about this one in a post several months ago, but there's an update:
A 2002 Exxon memo recently obtained by Greenpeace through FOIA coaches one of the President's top environmental advisers Philip Cooney, chief of staff at the White House Council on Environmental Quality on how to "improve" administration research on climate change by emphasizing "significant uncertainties" in the science. The New York Times later revealed that Cooney, a former lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute which is generously funded by Exxon, made myriad changes to government climate studies designed to weaken their strong conclusions about the need to act on global warming. Typically Cooney would insert the words "significant and fundamental" before "uncertainties" in the reports. Cooney, a non scientist, helped suppress or alter several major taxpayer funded scientific studies on global warming including a decade-long study commissioned by this President's father. Cooney resigned two days after the Times broke the story. But don't feel badly. Within a week ExxonMobil announced it had hired him.
As further evidence of the company's insincerity, Exxon's chief executive and CEO Rex Tillerson, on Friday told world leaders in Davos that oil companies should not be held responsible for global warming. The blame, he argued, rests instead with the very consumers and government officials his company has spent millions of dollars manipulating and defrauding.
Read the rest of the post here.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home