Started By
Message

NY Times Opinion Piece: Exxon Mobil’s Pioneer Acquisition Is a Direct Threat to Democracy

Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:25 am
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21207 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:25 am
quote:

Last week, Exxon Mobil agreed to buy Pioneer Natural Resources for $59.5 billion, in a move widely expected to set off a wave of consolidation throughout the oil sector. Combined, Exxon and Pioneer would be the largest producer of oil and natural gas in the Permian Basin, the field that produces more than 40 percent of America’s oil. If the deal goes through, other companies like Chevron could soon follow suit, buying up smaller companies as they come under pressure from investors to match Exxon’s size.

That consolidation would undermine democracy in the United States, mislead investors and weaken market competition. It should be stopped for all our sakes.

The democratic argument against the proposed deal is simple. In politics, concentrated interests, like rich corporations, have powerful advantages over diffuse interests, like voters, that can distort outcomes and thwart progress. Take climate legislation. A majority of Americans want to see the environment protected, but big companies that pollute heavily have an interest in watering down legislation that might reduce their profits. As a result, progress on energy policy has been agonizingly slow.

Exxon has also taken steps to shape the way voters think about the environment by sowing public misinformation and funding conservative groups disguised as grass-roots organizations.


quote:

Allowing Big Oil to become Bigger Oil means more money for this kind of research, plus more money for lobbyists, industry interest groups and media advertising, all of which undermines efforts to pass legislation strong enough to meet the world’s climate goals. The cumulative effect of it all on democracy would be so significant that regulators ought to be paying close attention.

A second reason for concern is the yawning gap between what Exxon says to investors and what it actually does. The company said as recently as August that it continues to support the Paris climate agreement. But it also said that the world isn’t on track to reach the targets of the agreement. The Pioneer deal not only seems to be a huge bet to take advantage of that expected failure; it is also a commitment to contribute to the failure.


quote:

Authorities should also be concerned because the proposed deal could hurt Americans economically. Larger, consolidated oil companies have incentives to restrain production, restricting supply to artificially sustain high prices. Higher oil prices would mean higher gasoline prices at the pump — a classic antitrust concern.


quote:

Even with these clear democratic and economic concerns, the legal path to blocking the deal could be difficult. In recent decades, the courts have not taken kindly to antitrust cases rooted in environmental or democratic arguments. But there are, nonetheless, a number of avenues open to regulators.


quote:

The Securities and Exchange Commission should consider whether Exxon has misled its investors with regard to climate change. And Congress could also hold hearings on the proposed deal. If legislators want to build the political momentum required to enact the policies the United States needs to cut its emissions meaningfully, then it will be essential to expose the oil companies’ lack of credibility on this issue and to curtail their overwhelming political influence.

It didn’t have to be this way. If Exxon were serious about preventing climate change, it could use its record $56 billion in net income from last year to invest more seriously in renewable energy, carbon capture and storage or other technologies that are compatible with long-term environmental sustainability. The Federal Trade Commission would surely allow Exxon to acquire a major solar company, for instance.

There’s nothing wrong with wanting to turn a greater profit, but there are more ways than one for a company as large and powerful as Exxon to do so. By doubling down on fossil fuels, it’s choosing the way most harmful to the rest of us. Now it falls to the government to protect its people from corporate self-interest that’s detrimental to democracy and the global environment. This deal endangers the world, and it should be stopped.


quote:

By Jeff D. Colgan
Dr. Colgan is a professor of political science and the director of the Climate Solutions Lab at Brown University.


LINK

Of course this “expert’s” job is a college political science professor at a university that’s charging undergrads and/or their parents a 65k per year tuition bill. $260k in just tuition alone if one graduates in four years.

And Congress should hold hearings on this?
Posted by Kingpenm3
Xanadu
Member since Aug 2011
8960 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:26 am to
quote:

That consolidation would undermine democracy in the United States, mislead investors and weaken market competition. It should be stopped for all our sakes.



Yep, companies this size should be forced to break into smaller pieces, not merge into larger ones.
Posted by Tantal
Member since Sep 2012
13943 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:29 am to
quote:

Larger, consolidated oil companies have incentives to restrain production, restricting supply to artificially sustain high prices.

This is the only sentence in the entire piece that's even somewhat true.
Posted by Klark Kent
Houston via BR
Member since Jan 2008
66782 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:30 am to
quote:

Take climate legislation. A majority of Americans want to see the environment protected


Posted by GeauxTigerTM
Member since Sep 2006
30596 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:30 am to
quote:

That consolidation would undermine democracy in the United States, mislead investors and weaken market competition. It should be stopped for all our sakes.


Yup...uh-huh.

LINK
Posted by LSUBFA83
Member since May 2012
3325 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:31 am to
Why are you wasting your time reading NYT opinion pieces?
Posted by nes2010
Member since Jun 2014
6757 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:33 am to
quote:

Why are you wasting your time reading NYT opinion pieces?


To learn about the next piece of bullshite they are going to foist on us?
Posted by SantaFe
Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2019
6554 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:33 am to
Google, Microsoft, facebook, Apple ?

Are they a threat to a Constitutional Republic ?
Posted by DesScorp
Alabama
Member since Sep 2017
6484 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:35 am to
This Weimar shite is how you get you-know-who.
Posted by 3rdPart Tiger
Member since Oct 2007
6196 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:36 am to
quote:

undermine democracy


They must all use the same Magic 8-Ball for their talking points.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21207 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:36 am to
quote:

Why are you wasting your time reading NYT opinion pieces?


David Blackmon discussed it in one of his recent articles, so I wanted to read it to know exactly what he was talking about.

It also doesn’t hurt to actually read/listen to exactly what opposing views are espousing, rather than just taking Tucker Carlson or Gateway Pundit’s word for it.
This post was edited on 10/19/23 at 8:40 am
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
120243 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:37 am to
Our massive bloated federal govt is what is undermining our democratic republic
This post was edited on 10/19/23 at 8:37 am
Posted by Jake88
Member since Apr 2005
68134 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:37 am to
quote:

 In politics, concentrated interests, like rich corporations, have powerful advantages over diffuse interests, like voters, that can distort outcomes and thwart progress
Did the left react like this to Google?
Posted by When in Rome
Telegraph Road
Member since Jan 2011
35540 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:40 am to
This entire article made me lol

How do people like this take themselves seriously?
Posted by NotoriousFSU
Atlanta, GA
Member since Oct 2008
10202 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:40 am to
Everyday I’m reminded more and more how absolutely, undeniably correct McCarthy was all along. Shoulda have nuked Russia off the map after WWII.
Posted by IAmNERD
Member since May 2017
19206 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:43 am to
quote:

Exxon has also taken steps to shape the way voters think about the environment by sowing public misinformation and funding conservative groups disguised as grass-roots organizations.

Like democrats and ACORN?

The hypocrisy of the political class in this country is truly astounding.
Posted by Larry_Hotdogs
Texas
Member since Jun 2019
1333 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:44 am to
quote:

Larger, consolidated oil companies have incentives to restrain production, restricting supply to artificially sustain high prices.


Like an oil cartel?

Large oil companies don’t want to engage in the primary activity that is necessary to produce revenue?
Posted by IAmNERD
Member since May 2017
19206 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:48 am to
quote:

quote:
Larger, consolidated oil companies have incentives to restrain production, restricting supply to artificially sustain high prices.

This is the only sentence in the entire piece that's even somewhat true.

Maybe, but over the last few years, the WH policies have done a fine job at restricting supply to inflate prices for the oil companies.
Posted by JOJO Hammer
Member since Nov 2010
11919 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:54 am to
Do liberals even know what democracy means?
Posted by I20goon
about 7mi down a dirt road
Member since Aug 2013
12892 posts
Posted on 10/19/23 at 8:57 am to
The left has never figured out that their energy policies are awesome for the bigger players/companies in the oil industry... not so much for the medium and smaller companies. Or the American people.

Or maybe they have? hmmmmm....
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 4Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram