Who'll Win the 2010 "Icky" Award?
Wednesday 19 May 2010
by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: World Economic Forum, Lulu-belle Ramsbottom)
It's not nearly as well known as an Emmy or Grammy, but the annual awarding of the "Icky" often produces high drama, fierce competition and gasps of surprise. This coveted corporate prize goes to the group of CEOs whose performances in the past 12 months exhibit the best combination of greediness, goofiness and grossness.
Of course, top Wall Street Bankers were heavily favored to win the 2010 Icky hands-down, having claimed the prize for two years running and continuing to perform at a breathtaking level of hubris and narcissism. Their assertion early this year that they "deserved" the $140 billion in executive bonuses they grabbed for themselves was a stunner, causing even some of Wall Street's former chieftains to gag at the excess. They looked like sure winners.
Last month, however -- from out of nowhere -- an upstart challenger for the Icky literally erupted onto the scene. On April 20, the Deepwater Horizon offshore oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, and the top executives of BP, Halliburton and Transocean suddenly made themselves contenders.
For example, BP's dapper, boyish-looking chief executive, Tony Hayward, has shown a depth of cluelessness that is making him a star performer on Team Oil. On May 14, with the out-of-control well still barfing massive amounts of oil and gas from four miles deep under the Gulf floor, and with the billowing slick threatening the shores of four states, Tony stepped onstage to announce that this blowout is really not that big of a deal. Indeed, chirped the boss of the world's largest oil corporation, the blotch is "relatively tiny."
Tiny? Yes, he explained: "The Gulf of Mexico is a very big ocean. The amount of volume of oil and dispersants we are putting into it is tiny in relation to the total water volume."
What a boffo performance! No wonder this guy was paid $4,595,453.31 last year.
But, in going for the Icky, BP and the whole Deepwater Horizon group are a team. On May 11, they were confronted with a U.S. Senate hearing into their oily mess, and the group played it like the pros they are. Tony Hayward couldn't make the gig, but BP America Chairman Lamar McKay slid effortless into the role. At the start of the hearing, he showed his stuff by candidly conceding blame for the catastrophe: Not BP's blame -- it was Transocean's fault, he said, pointing to the corporation that owned the drilling rig.
Then Transocean stepped forward to assure the senators that, in fact, the fault lay with Halliburton, pointing to the notoriously slipshod outfit that was supposed to cap the well a mile down on the Gulf floor. In turn, and not missing a beat, Halliburton professed that its work on the disastrous project had conformed precisely to specifications set by BP, which was drilling the well.
So there it was for the public to see -- a perfect circle of jerks pointing at each other. Bravo! This is the high standard of corporate ethics that the Icky celebrates.
But Team Oil did not quit with this bold triple play. Led by Transocean, the culprits have already begun the lobbying and legal ploys to avoid paying for what they did. Last week, Transocean lawyers filed a petition in a Houston federal court asserting that its financial liability -- for 11 dead workers, destruction of the livelihoods for countless fishing families and other businesses, and for the unfathomable ecological damage still occurring -- comes to (ka-ching!) $27 million.
This amount is set in stone, the lawyers claim, by the "Limits of Liability Act." When was it enacted? In 1851. Before the first industrial oil well was drilled in the U.S.
Transocean didn't mention that it has already collected a $400 million payout from its disaster insurance policy. Yes, this means that this Swiss-based oil-drilling giant could make $373 million profit from the Gulf blowout.
Meanwhile, Transocean executives announced last week that it was rewarding its shareholders (including themselves) with a billion-dollar dividend. Wall Street bankers can only genuflect in admiration of such selfishness.
So this year's Icky is up for grabs.
National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.
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Comments
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Please also note the strong
Wed, 05/19/2010 - 10:33 — Anonymous (not verified)Please also note the strong support for the Icky from our Republican senatorial friends, led by the redoubtable Ms Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Ms Murkowski and the party of personal responsibility has decided who is truly to blame, and have submitted a bill to raise the gas tax by $1 cent per gallon to pay for this and future spills, showing that the American people, not BP, Halliburton or Transocean, are to blame.
Socialism for the rich,
Wed, 05/19/2010 - 13:21 — FR Tothus (not verified)Socialism for the rich, free-market discipline for everyone else. Why, it's as American as apple pie.
"In many respects, we now live in a society that is only formally democratic, as the great mass of citizens have minimal say on the major public issues of the day, and such issues are scarcely debated at all in any meaningful sense in the electoral arena. In our society, corporations and the wealthy enjoy a power every bit as immense as that assumed to have been enjoyed by the lords and royalty of feudal times."
(Robert W. McChesney)
"Only corporate America enjoys representation by the Congresses and presidents that it pays for in an arrangement where no one is entirely accountable because those who have bought the government also own the media."
(Gore Vidal)
"Capitalism is the extraordinary belief that the nastiest of men for the nastiest of motives will somehow work for the benefit of all."
(John Maynard Keynes)
Since I'm sure the taxpayers
Wed, 05/19/2010 - 19:09 — Anonymous (not verified)Since I'm sure the taxpayers will eventually pick up the bill for most of this mess (they did for the Exon-valdez mess too although that is a point not recognized--Exon had a lot of the fines negated later on), why don't we make a bet on what percentage we will actually pay on this new one--and offer a prize to the winner! It would be just great if BP would donate the prize money too.
Mr. Hightower, you neglected
Wed, 05/19/2010 - 21:29 — NoOneYouKnow (not verified)Mr. Hightower, you neglected to mention that Transocean is headquartered in Switzerland solely for the tax benefits--yes, they're another American corporation that's rented an office offshore for the purpose of not paying their taxes.
Just an extra helping of (perfectly legal!) sleaze, enabled by the Corporate Party that runs our nation.
You can not charge the
Wed, 05/19/2010 - 23:09 — Anonymous (not verified)You can not charge the culprits too much.
\They will undoubtedly get everything back by raising
the price of gasoline.
It was the the big boy, he
Thu, 05/20/2010 - 03:33 — Long Ben Avery (not verified)It was the the big boy, he done it and run away!
I'd definitely vote for
Thu, 05/20/2010 - 16:45 — radline9 (not verified)I'd definitely vote for Hayward for the icky ickiest oil slick.