Why Big Oil backed the fuel protests in Europe

NAOMI KLEIN
http://archives.theglobeandmail.com
The Globe and Mail, Toronto, Canada
Wednesday, September 20, 2000

When I arrived in London on Sunday, the city was
like a jittery heroin junkie who had just shot up.
The panic that gripped Britain when a coalition of
truckers and farmers blockaded the nation's oil
refineries had been replaced with an unreal calm.
The gas was flowing again and, at the stations,
dazed customers injected their tanks with rivers of
unleaded.

As is the case with any powerful addiction, the
fuel crisis hasn't disappeared; it has been,
momentarily, sated. Protests against oil taxes are
cropping up across Europe and they may well
return to Britain after the moratorium called by the
truck drivers expires in two months. Canadian
truckers are even threatening to mount copycat
actions.

Watched from a distance, the oil blockades in
Britain look like spontaneous popular uprisings:
regular working folk, frightened for their
livelihoods, getting together to say, "Enough's
enough." But before this David and Goliath story
goes any further, it deserves a closer reading.

There's no doubt that the fuel protests began when
a couple hundred farmers and truckers formed
blockades outside the oil refineries. But the
protests became effective only when the
multinational oil companies that run those
refineries decided to treat those rather small
barricades as immovable obstacles, preventing
them from delivering oil to gas stations.

The companies -- Shell, BP, Texaco et al. --
claimed they wouldn't ask their tanker drivers to
drive past the blockades because they feared for
their "safety." The claim is bizarre. First, no
violence was reported. Second, these oil
companies have no problem drilling pipelines
through contested lands in Colombia and political
revolts directed against them in Nigeria. When it
comes to extracting oil from the earth, there seems
to be no danger, including warfare, that oil
multinationals are unwilling to risk. Third, the
truckers' "pickets" were illegal blockades since
the protesters were not members of trade unions --
unlike the cases in which union members form
legal pickets and companies hire scabs to cross
them anyway.

So why would the oil companies tacitly
co-operate with anti-oil protesters? Easy. So long
as attention is focused on high oil taxes, rather
than on soaring oil prices, the pressure is off the
multinationals and the OPEC cartel. The focus is
also on access to oil -- as opposed to the more
threatening issue of access to less polluting, more
sustainable energy sources than oil.

Furthermore, the oil companies know that, if the
truckers get their tax cut, as they did in France, oil
will be cheaper for consumers to buy, which will
mean more oil will be sold. In other words, Big
Oil stands to increase its profits by taking money
out of the public purse -- money now spent, in
part, on dealing with the problems created by Big
Oil.

More mysterious has been the government
response to the illegal trucker protests. While
Tony Blair has not caved in to demands for lower
taxes (yet), he didn't clear the roads either, a fact
all the more striking considering the swift police
crackdowns against other direct-action protests in
Britain and around the world.

The oil blockades in Britain and France were
enormously costly. Final figures aren't in, but the
protests likely caused more real economic damage
than every Earth First!, Greenpeace and anti-free
trade protest combined. And yet, on Britain's
roads last week, there was none of the pepper
spray, batons or rubber bullets now used when
labour, human-rights and environmental activists
stage roadblocks that cause only a small fraction
of the fuel protest's disruption. "We need to
maintain the rule of law," the police invariably
say as they clear the roadways, stifling the
protesters' messages while painting them as
threats to our collective safety.

Not this time. William Hague, leader of Britain's
Conservative Party, characterized the men who
closed Britain's rural schools and partially
immobilized its hospitals as "fine upstanding
citizens." Perhaps the only "upstanding" way to
protest these days is not out of concern for the
broader good but out of pure self-interest.

What happened last week was a tax revolt on the
roadway. The participants wanted a break on their
taxes and happened to park big pieces of
machinery in the middle of the road. That's not
political activism. It's vigilante capitalism.
**********End
_________________________________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com.

Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at 
http://profiles.msn.com.


_______________________________________________
Crashlist resources: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.wwpublish.com/mailman/listinfo/crashlist

Reply via email to