Remove and Replace, Alter or Abolish

This tyrannical form of government

joebanana

joebanana
Location
w. covina, California, Califukya.THE DIVIDED STATES OF AMERISTAN
Birthday
February 15
Company
sure, it's lonely here
Bio
Stop this insane "war on drugs", stop paying billions on a failed idea. Stop the terrorist campaign against "medical marijuana" Act like a sensible government of a free people, not a tyrannous government of the controlled.

JANUARY 24, 2010 2:13AM

What a friggin' joke...

Rate: 2 Flag

Los Angeles steals a total of $6.53 BILLION from it's citizens every year. And, they're BROKE. $3.6 billion in property tax alone. An excess of $5.2 billion over what they owe, to who ever. Now that's a whole lot of extortion, and to be broke after that kind of a take is rediculous. Every damn year. I'm so begining to hate this government. Nothing but crooks and lyers, bottom feeding toilet scum. As soon as an elected official's term is over, it should be manditory that they spend the rest of their miserable lives in jail, because we all know that orginized crime is the whole reason for running for office.

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Yep. Incarcerate them all and burn them!!!!!

By the way, I heard a rumor that Chevron may be closing their Richmond reifinery.
Rated

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SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 20 (Reuters) - Chevron Corp (CVX.N) is
likely to close its oldest refinery, in Richmond, California,
in a wider restructuring of downstream operations, the local
newspaper's business editor wrote in a column on Wednesday.
The second-largest U.S. oil company halted work on a $1
billion upgrade of Richmond last July after a state judge
ordered it, agreeing with environmentalists who brought a
lawsuit that the refinery's environmental impact report was
incomplete. The company later filed an appeal. [ID:nN20122859] Chevron said on Tuesday it planned to cut refinery jobs and
exit some markets, and the Contra Costa Times business editor,
Drew Voros, expects details to be unveiled in March to include
the closure of the 108-year-old refinery. "If Chevron had been allowed to complete the retrofit in
Richmond, there would be a strong fiscal argument to keep it
open. Instead, there is a strong fiscal argument to close it,"
Voros concluded in his column for the paper, serving the county
that is home to Richmond and Chevron's San Ramon headquarters. Chevron spokesman Lloyd Avram said the company had not yet
made any announcements on assets, jobs or markets. "We've operated in Richmond for more than 100 years, and we
would hope to continue operating," he said of the San Francisco
Bay refinery, which has capacity to refine more than 240,000
barrels of crude a day, ranking it 21st in the United States. A Richmond closure would be only the latest response by
refiners to a devastating squeeze on margins due to demand
weakened by the economy, coupled with high crude oil prices. Leading U.S. refiner Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) said in
November it would close its plant in Delaware City, Delaware,
three months after indefinitely shutting its Aruba refinery.
Sunoco Inc (SUN.N) has idled its plant in Eagle Point, New
Jersey. Chevron said last week it expected to report sharply lower
refining earnings for the fourth quarter, and highlighted a $4
drop in U.S. West Coast refining margins. Stricter regulations in California, in particular,
historically have contributed to relatively fatter margins for
refined products in the state, but the West Coast premium over
the U.S. Gulf Coast disappeared last quarter. Chevron's largest U.S. refinery is on the Gulf Coast, in
Pascagoula, Mississippi, while its second-largest is about 400
miles down the coast from Richmond, in El Segundo, California. Voros cited sources at Chevron who said last year that the
company had talks with Chinese buyers who would have dismantled
and shipped the Richmond refinery to China, while the land
would be kept as an offloading facility for refined products. Just this month, larger rival Royal Dutch Shell Plc
(RDSa.L) said it would transform its Montreal East refinery
into a fuel terminal. Richmond sits at the southern end of a water artery that
gives tankers direct access from the Pacific Ocean to smaller
refineries in Rodeo, owned by ConocoPhillips (COP.N); Benicia,
owned by Valero; and Martinez, where one is owned by Shell and
the other by Tesoro Corp (TSO.N).
(Reporting by Braden Reddall, editing by Gerald E. McCormick)
Wow, bad news. I used to work at the Chevron research facility in Richmond. Just another example of how government is driving jobs out. There also thinking of closing califs. last auto manufacturing plant too. It wont be long before we're jumping the border for work, I've heard all (a lot) the illegals are going back, cause there is no work here. Yeah, go Obama.
And, I like the "burn" idea.
man oh man do I have a story for you.
Well, fernsy, let's have it.