You'd better have a box of Kleenex handy, 'cause this will make you cry.
This blog exists to expose and keep track of Chevron's ongoing effort to obfuscate the truth and control the conversation regarding their genocide in Ecuador.
You'd better have a box of Kleenex handy, 'cause this will make you cry.
David R. Baker, Chronicle Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
An Ecuadoran judge today fined Chevron Corp. $8 billion in a bitter, 18-year-old lawsuit over oil-field contamination in the Amazon rain forest.
The judgment, however, does not mark the end of the marathon court case, closely watched by environmentalists and oil executives worldwide...
He alleged that the uprising was not just a dispute over benefits.
"There were lots of infiltrators, dressed as civilians, and we know where they were from," the president said.
"The people of Lucio Gutierrez were there, provoking, inciting to violence," he added, referring to the leader of the opposition Patriotic Society Party (PSP).
"If you want to kill the president, here he is! Kill me!"
Read the whole story here:
What does all of this mean?
Well, I want to be the first person to publicly go on record as saying I sense the hand of Chevron working behind the scenes.
We know Chevron is guilty of playing all manner of illegal, dirty tricks in their effort to undermine the lawsuit in Ecuador (see my previous blog entry about Chevron's attempt to recruit a Mexican journalist to spy on the plaintiffs for one small example of the company's ruthless criminality).
We know the vast, overwhelming majority of Ecuadorians love and cherish their president, who they regard as a hero.
We know Chevron does not like Ecuador's president at all, because he has been uncompromising in his commitment to the victims of Chevron's genocide.
We know Chevron got the lawsuit relocated from North America to Ecuador because they felt they had a much better chance of corrupting the process and undermining the suit if they were dealing with a third world legal system, as opposed to a US court of law.
What, therefore, are the ramifications for the lawsuit against Chevron, if the country in which the suit is to be heard is thrown into a state of instability, chaos, and possible regime change?
And what wouldn't Chevron do to promote such insurrection and upheaval?
Pray for Ecuador.
Pray for her president.
"The courts have said, 'You didn't follow the law. You are going to be polluting communities a whole lot more than you are disclosing," said Tina Andolina, legislative director for the Planning and Conservation League, a Sacramento environmental group. "This company broke the law, and now they are coming to ask for an exemption to the law they broke."
"A recent delegation led by the Amazon Defense Front traveled to Louisiana in attempt to draw a parallel between a lawsuit backed by U.S. trial lawyers against Chevron and the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
There is no question that the people of Oriente face difficulties. However, there is no valid comparison with the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and the trial that is currently taking place in Ecuador. It is disappointing that the Amazon Defense Front (the named financial beneficiary in the Ecuador trial) and its supporters would take advantage of the people of the Gulf and their tragedy in an attempt to legitimize their fraudulent lawsuit against Chevron..."
Here's a little something I created in Photoshop to illustrate the Orwellian level of control which Chevron currently exerts over the public discourse regarding their destruction of the Amazon rain forest.
This Photoshop manipulation is based on a Wikimedia Commons image, and is being used under the GNU Free Documentation License. The original image can be found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ball_gag1.jpg and is the work of JBC Productions/Aussie Rope Works http://www.aussieropeworks.com/
"Critically Endangered is the highest risk category assigned by the IUCN Red List for wild species. Critically endangered means that a species' numbers have decreased, or will decrease, by 80% within three generations."