A friend asked on the dreaded book of face, "Is it wrong that I'm still buying gas at BP? i kinda see it as a donation to the clean-up effort? and the zoom zoom takes premium, which i know i can always get at a bp station."
So I wrote a response, but it was too long, so I put it on my profile as a note.
On boycotting British Petroleum
Share
Today at 10:06pm | Edit Note | Delete
There are lots of "news" stories these days about how BP gas stations are independently owned and people shouldn't boycott them because they'll hurt the small business owner.
A few thoughts:
First off, the simultaneous appearance of these stories across all sorts of media platforms is not coincidental. It is part of a big time public relations effort by British Petroleum designed to limit the damage to their reputation, and more importantly, damage to their revenue stream. In other words, It is nothing but BP PR, and in my humble opinion, it is BS. BTW, this PR campaign is using money that could be spent on cleaning up oil, but BP has already decided they've spent too much and is trying to cut costs while we are still early in this disaster.
For more information on that subject, google "Kindra Arnesen."
Secondly, while it may be true that BP stations are owned independently, and while I, too, don't want to hurt my local businesses, these gas station owners have chosen to do business with BP. Obviously, they didn't know this was coming, but they made their choice, and supporting them with gas purchases means supporting BP. Besides, if you really want to support the station, buy something other than gas ; that's where they make their profit anyway. I've always been told gas stations make little to no profit on the fuel; the $2 hot dogs and $1.50 sodas are where they derive profit.
Finally, an analogy may help put into perspective the self-serving circular logic BP is using in this expensive PR attack:
Imagine a five year old child dies after eating a hamburger tainted with e-coli bacteria from a national or international restaurant chain. Then other people start getting sick. Some of them die. It turns out this fast food chain has sent e-coli tainted meat all across the country. Someone at corporate headquarters even knew about the danger before the first death, but didn't order a recall because they were trying to cut costs, hoping everything would turn out OK. One of these chain restaurants is located in your town. It is independently owned by a franchisee. Would you continue eating at the restaurant chain that knowingly distributed deadly, tainted burgers in order to "support local business?"
I won't.
That's not the vent. This is the vent:
One of her other FB friends, whom I do not know, posted this in response to my friend's question, and I became enraged. The fact that his profile picture makes him appear to be one of the many young urban professionals prostituting themselves for the likes of Wells Fargo did not help.
He said:
My fidelity 401k international diversified fund thanks you. Its been a bad 80 some days.
I usually don't pick fights, but I felt a need to respond to this. I tried to be pithy with my point and avoid an aggressive stance, but what I really wanted to do was quote Bill Hicks from one of the performances I have on disc, with Bill screaming at the audience, "Is it all fucking money to you people!!!!!!?"
Between anger and despair over what is happening and the deeply-ingrained ignorance and selfishness of the my 'peers' in this nation, I just don't know what to do or say.