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A storm of greed.


After hurricanes comes the cold, and with heating oil prices leaping up 30 percent in the Northeast, you better have a winter survival strategy in place.

Put the toddlers to bed in double layers of bunny suits, with mittens attached.

Ramp up Ramp Up

To increase a company's operations in anticipation of increased demand.

Notes:
A company might 'ramp up' operations if they just signed a contract creating substantially more demand for their product.
See also: Demand, Economies of Scale
 grandma's chondroitin sulfate chondroitin sulfate /chon·dro·i·tin sul·fate/ (kon-dro´i-tin)
1. a glycosaminoglycan that predominates in connective tissue, particularly cartilage, bone, and blood vessels, and in the cornea.

2.
 dose and hope the fifty-degree nights don't inflame her arthritis.

Or invest in one of those new fireplaces that move heat into the room instead of sucking it up the chimney.

For fuel, you can always burn the Williams-Sonoma catalogs that have been arriving in bulk. I'm sure you weren't ordering $600 table settings for Christmas anyway.

I had, in my innocence, thought it was the hurricanes that were driving up energy prices. But no, it turns out, as usual, that the flip of misery is gluttony Gluttony
See also Greed.

Belch, Sir Toby

gluttonous and lascivious fop. [Br. Lit.: Twelfth Night]

Biggers, Jack

one of the best known “feeders” of eighteenth-century England. [Br. Hist.
. The top five oil companies--ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, BE and Royal Dutch/Shell--reported total earnings last quarter of nearly $33 billion. According to Senator Barbara Boxer's website, the average pay of energy company CEOs has soared by 215 percent since 2002. Lee Raymond, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of ExxonMobil, will be raking in $26 million in salary, bonus, and stock gains. Forget hurricanes, this is a greed-storm.

What are they going to do with all the money? There are things they could have done, and still might do, that would have been brilliant PR for petro-capitalism. They could donate a chunk of that $33 billion to the victims of Katrina and Rita, for example. Or, as Senators Charles Schumer, Democrat of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, and Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, are urging, they could start helping to pay this winter's school heating bills. It's hard to hold a pencil when your hand is frozen into a claw shape.

Or the oil companies could reach into their pockets to help people with fixed incomes, low incomes, and no incomes stay warm this winter. Not that the oil executives are totally unaware of the problem. When CNN's Soledad O'Brien posed it to one such executive, he kindly suggested that it was "the responsibility of government" to help the needy
''For other organizations named Help the Needy, or some variation thereof, see Help the Needy (disambiguation).
Help the Needy was a charity front set up by Rome New York oncologist, Rafil Dhafir.
. And we thought all those CEOs hated "big government"! But he wasn't offering to pay windfall profit Windfall profit

A sudden unexpected profit uncontrolled by the profiting party.
 taxes to help the government--already strapped by war and tax cuts for the wealthy--in this mission of mercy.

No, I suspect that much of the $33 billion extracted from the pockets of drivers this fall will go to the usual items of conspicuous consumption favored by the $10-million-a-year-and-up demographic.

The interesting thing is that more and more of these feature extravagant wastage wastage

a loss of product or productivity; in terms of animal production includes losses due to deaths of animals, lowered production from survivors, including reproduction, and lost opportunity income.

wastage Fetal wastage, see there
 of energy--not just private jets and Hummer limos, but frigid indoor summertime temperatures. Last summer, an enterprising New Fork Times Style section reporter measured the temperature inside various Manhattan stores. Strangely, from a pure comfort perspective, the classier the joint, the colder it was-ranging from 68 in Bergdorf-Goodman up to 80 in Old Navy. "The more ritzy ritz·y  
adj. ritz·i·er, ritz·i·est Informal
Elegant; fancy.



[After the Ritz hotels, established by César Ritz (1850-1918), Swiss hotelier.
 the establishment is trying to be," he concluded, "the colder the air conditioning is kept"--even if it discourages the casual shopper in T-shirt and shorts.

When voluntary discomfort becomes a sign of status, you burn up all the BTUs you can. Expect joules to start replacing jewels as a key marker of wealth.

So maybe this winter guys like Lee Raymond will be displaying their earnings with ungodly hot indoor temperatures. How hot could you make your house, even a 10,000-square-footer, on $26 million a year? It shouldn't be that hard to achieve blast furnace conditions. In fact, if you're a top oil company executive, you have earned the right, in more ways than one, to burn in your own personal hell.

Barbara Ehrenreich is a columnist for The Progressive. Her latest book is "Bait and Switch A deceptive sales technique that involves advertising a low-priced item to attract customers to a store, then persuading them to buy more expensive goods by failing to have a sufficient supply of the advertised item on hand or by disparaging its quality. : The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream."
COPYRIGHT 2006 The Progressive, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Flip Side; high prices of heating oil, greedy oil companies
Author:Ehrenreich, Barbara
Publication:The Progressive
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2006
Words:626
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