Ties to Putin Are Nothing Compared to Rex Tillerson's Vast Climate Crimes
In a scene straight from a “dystopian movie script,” President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday officially tapped Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson to be his Secretary of State, thus elevating someone whose “lifelong mission is to crash the climate” to one of world’s most influential and powerful government positions.
While many pundits and mainstream media outlets are objecting to Tillerson due to his business dealings and reported friendliness with Russian President Vladimir Putin, environmentalists and social justice advocates made it clear the threat posed by his nomination is far more menacing.
In the official press statement, Trump’s transition team says that as head of the State Department, the career oil tycoon “will be a forceful and clear-eyed advocate for America’s vital national interests, and help reverse years of misguided foreign policies and actions that have weakened America’s security and standing in the world.”
Paired with the incoming president’s pledges to dismantle global climate agreements and open up vast areas to more oil and gas drilling, those words rang ominous to the many environmental groups who were aghast over Tillerson’s nomination.
“Donald Trump made it clear during the campaign that he wants to ‘take the oil’—and in Rex Tillerson, he’s found his man,” said Stephen Kretzmann, executive director of Oil Change International (OCI), referring to Trump’s oft-repeated campaign pledge to “take the oil” from Iraq.
“Trump has spotlighted what most of the world already knows: U.S. foreign policy is governed by the myopic, perceived need to access and control oil,” Kretzmann added. “The honesty and naked truth of the revealed petrostate is actually quite refreshing.”
Indeed, Tillerson began his career with Exxon in 1975 and eventually rose to the position of CEO, where he has served for the past 10 years. During his tenure, and with his help, the oil giant vastly expanded its global holdings. At the same time, it also suppressed scientific evidence that the burning of fossil fuels would drastically impact the Earth’s climate and funded a massive campaign to prevent solutions to the crisis.
Many have argued that Exxon’s actions amounted to one of all-time worst crimes against mankind. “In its greed Exxon helped—more than any other institution—to kill our planet,” 350.org co-founder Bill McKibben wrote last year.
Since those revelations came to light, Tillerson as CEO has overseen efforts to quash investigations by state attorneys general into whether the company improperly deceived consumers, investors, and the public about the dangers posed by climate change.
“At this moment in time, choosing a man who knows the world through the single frame of the oil and gas industry may actually be more dangerous than picking somebody with no understanding of the world at all.”
—Annie Leonard, Greenpeace
But as the news of the nomination spread on Tuesday, most of the outrage has been focused on Tillerson’s ties to Russia.
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