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If loving the earth isn't enough, hating Chevron will do

Chevron runs ad attacking Goldman Prize winner

Posted by Adam Browning (Guest Contributor) at 4:07 PM on 15 Apr 2008

I attended the Goldman Prize presentation last night, and it was, per usual, a spectacular celebration of uncommonly dedicated individuals working to make this world a better place. The stories of their struggles and triumphs wetted every eye in the house, and they serve as a beacon of inspiration to all who care about the future of planet Earth.

Unless you are Chevron.

This morning, Chevron ran a full-page ad in the San Francisco Chronicle attacking one of the recipients, Pablo Fajarado. "Mr. Fajarado is a front man for a group of Ecuadorian and American trail lawyers pursuing a claim against Chevron."

No! Not trial lawyers! Chevron would prefer that anyone bringing suit against them be represented by fishmongers, not trial laywers. Or something.

I've met those trial lawyers -- and they are, as you might expect, incredibly overworked and underpaid individuals doing this work not for love of lucre but desire for justice. And, if I may project some of my own feelings at this very moment, righteous anger against asshole oil companies.

The rest of the ad is unforgivable character assassination and innuendo.

Some things the Chevron ad negelected to mention: shortly after beginning his work, Mr. Fajarado's brother was brutally murdered, and the case has never been resolved. Luis Yanza, a co-worker and co-recipient of the Goldman Prize, has a young daughter, and an attempt was made to kidnap her when she was 9 years old. Fajarado's and Lanza's office have been burglerized, and both the U.N. and the InterAmerican Commission on Human Rights have intervened to try to stop a systematic pattern of intimidation against the plantiffs and their legal team.

Read a Vanity Fair article about Mr. Fajarado here [PDF]. Yep, reads like the bio of a typical hack frontman.

Amazon Watch does a lot of great work highlighting and helping the struggle. Get involved here.

Update [2008-4-16 11:9:56 by Adam Browning]: Animation to tell the story from our friends at Amazon Watch.

Chevron Is The Monestary of the 21st Century


In some sense, Chevron and other corporations have become the new monasteries.   They are the beacons of truth in a sea of ignorance spawned by Al Gore, during this, the Dark Age of Climatology.

Eventually, as people wise up and do the real science, scholars may re-emerge from the oil companies to start a new Renaissance.

J. Bailo Participant Texeme.Construct()

typical

That takes some guts, or a complete lack of perspective, to attack these Prize winners.

This award will only turn the heat further up on Chevron, and they obviously don't like it. But to draw even further interest to their untenable position boggles the mind.

Erik

The Orion Grassroots Network: 1,200+ grassroots groups working for conservation & more

Chevron's Amazon abu Ghraib

Marke Fiore just created a great new flash animation about chevron:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdJ9W39HdDU

Chevron just hired a lawyer who worked for the Dept. of Defense who resigned after it was clear he "crafted policies" that led to the abuse at Abu Ghraib. Can they get any worse, really?


so why did Commondreams play along yesterday?

I clicked on a link out of curiosity, labled "Goldman Prize Marred by Controversy" only to find this story. Where is the controversy in the fact that one of the recipients has powerful enemies? Correction--ALL Goldman prize winners have powerful enemies. They don't give out that prize for highway beautification projects. So that headline made sense from only one perspective: that of the Chevron PR office. Wonder if they somehow got that story onto Commondreams and other outlets.
It's so tempting to respond with anger, contempt, disgust, moral approbation. But that's the rub: such responses are appropriate in reaction to reprehensible human choices, but corporations are not human and they are not like humans. They are like machines. They are designed to maximise profits and that's what they will continue to do, like a car with primitive radar and the gas pedal wired to the floor, oblivious to the consequences, until either we destroy them like Frankenstein's monster and the sorceror's apprentice, or they destroy the human habitat so completely that they are no longer able to parasitize their human host.

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