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The results are in! Corporate Hall of Shame 2007
Nearly 8,600 voters have voiced their choice, and the 2007 inductees are ExxonMobil, Halliburton and Wal-Mart. Here are the results:
Here’s why the new inductees led the voting:
For more on the Hall of Shame, click here. Thank you to our allies who helped spread the word about the Hall of Shame and who are working to make the nominees more accountable.
Here are some of the comments you posted on the inductees on ExxonMobil... “Exxon is gouging America with unreasonably high fuel prices while spending millions to prevent better fuel efficiency.” – Austin, TX “Exxon, for it’s flagrant destruction of environment and greedy avoidance of it’s responsibility.” – Seattle, WA “Exxon has spent huge amounts of money to confuse ordinary people and governments into inaction, through funding of climate change ‘skeptics.’ If Exxon had used the money it wasted on funding skeptics to clean up its act, the world would be well on the way to reducing global greenhouse gases now.” – Alberta, Canada “Being from Louisiana, I know all too well how Exxon has weaseled its way into local communities, does as little as possible even if it means compromising worker safety, and release of chemicals due. They have record profits and are eliminating jobs that are vital to the safety of their refineries.” – Greenwell Springs, LA “Exxon endlessly appeals the court decisions that find them culpable for the 1989 oil spill — some of the defendants have died while Exxon's phalanx of lawyers refuses to take responsibility for their disaster.” – Fairbanks, AK “Exxon wins hands down for causing the greatest potential harm to the most people. Their actions, if unabated, will contribute directly to the extinction of thousands of species and perhaps billions of people as weather patterns shift, seas rise, deserts encroach upon farmland and habitat is lost through global warming.” – Atlanta, GA on Halliburton... “Halliburton is the worst offender for it’s practices in the middle east. Our soldiers deserve far better!” – Ocean Shores, WA “Halliburton has ripped off the American people with its padded government contracts.” “Halliburton is so obviously criminal in its practices and performance. This company is the archetype of the worst kind of company in the U.S.” “Halliburton is ripping off ALL American taxpayers and undermining U.S. troops in Iraq.” “Halliburton (profit first, then cut and run) is cheating the American taxpayers in every possible way and making the misery in Iraq even worse.” on Wal-Mart... “They have set the pattern for predatory merchandising, using foreign labor (sometimes, even forced labor), and paying low wages to their employees, etc.” – Vacaville, CA “Wal-Mart is the symbol of what's wrong with America. Wal-Mart is shameful.” “After 15 years as a Wal-Mart customer, I stopped shopping there six months ago. What enrages and grieves me is their treatment of Third World workers, paying desperate people, even small children, 17 cents an hour while their CEO makes nearly $8,500 an hour.” “Wal-Mart demands tax and infrastructure abatements by states and local governments for the ‘honor’ of opening new stores. This ‘honor’ has the effect of [putting] local, independently owned, and especially family businesses, out of business. There is no community that Wal-Mart enters that, within three years or less, is not markedly economically worse off.” – Baltimore, MD “Wal-Mart is directly and indirectly responsible for more pollution, unhealthy labor practices, sweatshops, anti-environmental action, and detriment to our nation’s economy than any other corporation.” – Los Angeles, CA “Despite a forceful PR push to position themselves as ‘sustainable,’ the company continues to sell cypress mulch that is destroying the Gulf Coast. Entire cypress forests, our best natural storm protection and important habitat for wildlife, are being clear-cut just to make garden mulch, and Wal-Mart is distributing the product throughout the country. They need to live up to their claims and stop selling this unsustainable and unnecessary product.” – New Orleans, LA
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