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View Article  Rising Gasoline Prices Aren't Wholly Caused by Hurricane Katrina
Rising Gasoline Prices Aren’t Wholly Caused by Hurricane Katrina

by Public Citizen
www.citizen.org

What is it going to take before the American people start demanding accountability? Why should the people be the only ones to sacrifice in tough times? While gas prices continue to soar, Exxon-Mobil is raking in record profits! It stands to reason that these guys should also be required to make the necessary sacrifices. If that means sacrificing some of the billions of dollars in profits they make each quarter in order to lesson the impact on the rest of the country - so be it! Instead of doing that, our elected representatives are giving them additional subsidies to pad their pockets at our expense!

The word is, as soon as Rita makes landfall, the price at the pump will double so make it a point to fill your tanks now while you can still afford it! In the meantime, please, please, take a few minutes out of your busy days to contact your elected representatives and demand an end to this rampant price-gouging by the petrochemical industry. We may live in a capitalist country, but what they are doing to us is immoral! This is all the more reason to pursue renewable and environmentally friendly energy sources.

Consumer Group Says Corporate Mergers Are Partly to Blame for Price-Gouging of Consumers at the Pump

WASHINGTON, D.C. – High gasoline prices cannot be blamed entirely on natural disasters, but rather on unchecked corporate behavior, Public Citizen will tell a Senate committee today. At a hearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, Tyson Slocum, research director, Public Citizen’s energy program, said that recent oil company mergers are partly responsible for gasoline price spikes. He listed steps the government should take to alleviate high gasoline prices. Slocum’s testimony is available at http://www.citizen.org/cmep/SenateOilTestimony.

The government should restore competitive markets by enforcing antitrust laws that make it illegal for companies to intentionally withhold an energy commodity from the market for the sole purpose of creating a shortage and driving up prices, Slocum said. The government also should re-regulate energy trading exchanges, boost fuel economy standards and force the divestiture of assets to remedy the problem of too few companies controlling too much of the market.

Despite Hurricane Katrina’s reported impact on gasoline prices, gasoline and oil prices have been creeping up for two years, in large part because of a wave of mergers in the oil industry. Last year, the top five U.S. oil refining companies controlled 56.3 percent of domestic oil refinery capacity. A decade ago, the 10 largest U.S. oil refining companies controlled 55.6 percent of refining capacity — which means that, due to mergers, the five largest oil refiners today control more capacity than the 10 largest did a decade ago. This consolidation makes it easier for oil companies to gouge consumers at the pumps. The five largest oil refiners — ConocoPhillips, Valero, ExxonMobil, Shell and BP — have seen profits of $228 billion since President Bush took office in 2001.

Despite government reports issued in 2001 and 2004 that directly link corporate mergers to high gasoline prices, no action has been taken to aid consumers who are suffering from a volatile market where prices spike day by day. Meanwhile, oil industry profits are at record highs, largely due to record refinery profit margins. While in 1999, U.S. oil refiners earned 22.8 cents for every gallon of gasoline they refined, that profit margin increased 80 percent by 2004, to 40.8 cents per gallon.

"We have every meteorologist in the country monitoring hurricanes, letting us know exactly when the next one is going to hit and where. But who is monitoring the companies that are jacking up gasoline prices for consumers under the guise of natural disasters?" Slocum said. "We need the government to protect us from dangerous weather, but we also need to be protected from price-gouging every day when we heat our homes, drive our cars or fly somewhere."

(Source)


View Article  Rural Communities Hit Hardest By Hunger
Rural Communities Hit Hardest By Hunger


The 2005 Annual Report of the charity Bread for the World shows something that we might consider to be surprising:  90% of the poorest counties in America are rural and 20% of rural children live in what is considered to be a "food insecure" household.


Strengthening Rural Communities, Bread for the World Institute’s 15th annual report on the state of world hunger shows that rural America and rural areas around the world are especially hit hard by hunger and political neglect.

“America’s rural communities and rural people around the world have one thing in common-they are more likely to be hungry and poor than other people in their country,” said Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World. “Our report shows that people in rural areas are cut off from opportunity. Governments regard them as a low priority.”

The current system of U.S. agricultural subsidies is not doing the job it needs to do to help struggling families and communities in rural areas. 70 per cent of the subsidies go to 10 per cent of the largest growers. 60 per cent of our farmers receive no subsidies at all. The system needs to be changed. Farm payments need to be redirected to provide credit, small business opportunities, and better services to help our struggling families and communities in rural areas in this country.


Bread for the World suggests, amongst other things, that American subsidy policy needs to be focused on helping smaller farmers make a living from agriculture, not on helping larger farmers and agribusinesses maintain profit margins.

Read the Executive Summary and Report Here

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First responders to biased, imbalanced or factually inaccurate media coverage


Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


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*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


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*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


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*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


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*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media