Los Angeles Times

Eyeing profit change

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Re “Big Oil braced for warming while it fought regulation­s,” Dec. 31

Plaudits to The Times for its series illuminati­ng the gap between Exxon Mobil’s public position and its internal planning on the issue of climate change.

Perhaps the most outrageous element of this institutio­nalized hypocrisy in the 2000s before 2010 was the millions of dollars Big Oil donated to organizati­ons championin­g climate- change skepticism; that’s not to discount huge sums it spent securing politician­s’ support.

It’s as if the petroleum industry’s titans, as captains of the foundering Titanic, proclaimed that the ship wasn’t sinking while they readied lifeboats to save themselves.

How nice that Big Oil now concedes the harsh, far- reaching realities of global warming. Trouble is, the politician­s they bought off remain well ensconced in Washington, intent on rearrangin­g the Titanic’s deck chairs. Gloria Martel

Los Angeles

“Big Oil” is a loaded term focus- group tested for maximum pejorative effect, truth be damned. Can someone even define what it means?

In economic terms, all oil is a fungible commodity, so this term Big Oil is meaningles­s. Nobody sets prices except markets. While oil companies want to sell their product for the most they can get, so does the shoe company and the carrot farmer.

Oh, and don’t deny it: We throw around terms like Big Oil because they reinforce the simple ways in which we categorize the world. Like “assault weapon,” “women’s health,” “rich” and other nebulous terms, Big Oil gets regurgitat­ed by fawning media propaganda offices.

Michael J. McKinney

Cerritos

These companies are complicit in the climate change- related deaths of hundreds of thousands per year, the vast majority of which are children, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Deniers in Congress strive to cripple our national efforts to pivot to clean energy even today, aided by the “cheerful recklessne­ss,” to use Pope Francis’ term, of the voters.

Like pharmaceut­ical companies that consciousl­y hide crucial safety data that endangers the public but cuts into profits, this is clearly immoral at best, criminally negligent at the worst. Jan Freed Los Angeles

 ?? Morten Hval Associated Press ?? SHELL OIL announced in 1989 that it was raising this North Sea natural gas platform in anticipati­on of climbing sea levels caused by climate change.
Morten Hval Associated Press SHELL OIL announced in 1989 that it was raising this North Sea natural gas platform in anticipati­on of climbing sea levels caused by climate change.

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