Rockefeller Family Fables

On April 30th, reporters flocked to the penthouse suite of a Midtown Manhattan hotel where fifteen representatives of the Rockefeller dynasty were holding court. There, the Rockefellers chastised oil giant Exxon-Mobil for failing to invest in “alternative energy” sources, invoking their own moral authority as Exxon-Mobil’s longest standing shareholders.

Family spokesperson Neva Rockefeller Goodwin sanctimoniously recalled the memory of her great-grandfather, John D. Rockefeller, founder of Standard Oil and originator of the family fortune. “Kerosene was the alternative energy of its day when he realized it could replace whale oil,” she argued. “Part of John D. Rockefeller’s genius was in recognizing early the need and opportunity for a transition to a better, cheaper and cleaner fuel.”

But the indignation of today’s generation of Rockefellers — who inherited their own exorbitant wealth from Standard Oil, Exxon-Mobil’s parent corporation — is aimed more at ensuring the continued financial health of the family’s trust funds than concern for the future of the world’s population. As Peter O’Neill, great-great-grandson of John D. Rockefeller, commented at the press conference, “I have a world of respect for what the company has done well. In fact, if the next 20 years of the energy business were just going to be about oil and gas, we probably wouldn’t be here today.”

Nevertheless, the corporate media obediently described the Rockefellers as concerned environmentalists. The New York Times ran the headline, “Can Rockefeller Heirs Turn Exxon Greener?” News outlets quoted freely from the Rockefellers’ press release, which described John D. Rockefeller as “one of the first major philanthropists in the U.S. and the World” and the family’s Rockefeller Foundation’s mission as “promot[ing] the well-being of mankind throughout the world.”

The family fable concocted above warrants a rebuttal. Standard Oil was the world’s first oil monopoly, and Rockefeller’s greed was insatiable. Indeed, the Rockefeller family legacy is deeply entangled with the U.S.’ current reliance on oil — and automobiles. Moreover, the family’s “philanthropic” pursuits include a peculiar preoccupation with lowering the birth rates of the world’s black and brown populations throughout the twentieth century—highlighting the absurdity of their claim to be promoting the well being of humankind. Mainstream journalists could easily uncover these unsavory aspects of the family history but instead report the Rockefellers’ self-sanitized version, with all its glaring omissions.

Indeed, the family’s selective memory of its patriarch, John D. Rockefeller, as a saintly philanthropist stands in sharp contrast to his role as a nineteenth-century robber baron. “God gave me my money,” he said. “Having been endowed with the gift I possess, I believe it is my duty to make money and still more money and to use the money I make for the good of my fellow man according to the dictates of my conscience.”

Rockefeller’s conscience apparently did not dictate paying his employees more than a starvation wage. His admirers praise him for making gasoline affordable to average Americans, and he did indeed aim to produce large amounts of “cheap and good” gasoline for mass consumption, successfully lowering the price of gas from 58 cents to 8 cents a gallon. But he achieved this goal through ruthless union busting, hiring his own private militias to crush workers who dared to go on strike to demand higher wages.

The private armies of the Rockefeller-owned Colorado Fuel & Iron Company carried out the infamous Ludlow Massacre, one of the bloodiest episodes in U.S. labor history. On the morning of April 20, 1914, Rockefeller’s armies joined forces with state militias, opening fire on thousands of striking miners and their families as they slept in their makeshift tents — where they had been forced to live since they were expelled from company housing at the start of the strike. The militias later drenched the tents with oil and set them on fire. Thirteen women and children were burned to death, and three strikers were executed on the spot. Other charred bodies were discovered in the following days.

Rockefeller was a cutthroat capitalist who built his oil monopoly in the decades after the Civil War using methods more in keeping with the bribery, blackmail and back stabbing of a mafia family than an honest entrepreneur. As he once proclaimed, “I would rather earn 1 percent off a [sic] 100 people’s efforts than 100 percent of my own efforts.” This credo made him the richest man in the world.

As he quietly bought up his smaller oil competitors with these methods, Rockefeller entered into secret—and illegal—agreements with railroad magnates that gave discounts as off-the books rebates to his growing oil monopoly, easily driving smaller refiners out of business. By 1879, Standard Oil controlled 90 percent of the oil refining business in the U.S. When the Supreme Court finally forced Rockefeller to formally disband Standard Oil as a monopoly trust in 1911, the damage was done. Indeed, the breakup doubled the value of his stock and gave birth to oil conglomerates Esso and Mobil (now Exxon-Mobil), Arco and Amoco (now BP), Pennzoil (now Shell), Chevron and Conoco. Rockefeller spent his remaining decades playing golf.

John D. Rockefeller’s descendents have happily carried on in the robber baron’s tradition, alongside a public relations machine that routinely airbrushes the family history. These heirs have never needed to work a day in their lives to afford the best of everything money could buy. The Rockefeller name ensures each generation a ten-figure trust fund and a guaranteed spot at an elite university, enabled by the Rockefeller family’s generous donations. The many chapels, libraries, museums and other buildings bearing the Rockefeller name on private campuses across the U.S. bear testament to the family’s self-serving approach to gift giving. Most recently, David M. Rockefeller, Sr., former chairman, president and CEO of Chase Manhattan Bank, and former chairman of the board of the Rockefeller Group, donated a record $100 million to Harvard University, citing his fond memories as part of the class of ’36.

By design, the Rockefellers have received no blame for their pivotal role in destroying the vast trolley car system that dominated U.S. cities before the 1940s, thereby increasing city dwellers’ dependency on automobiles and gas-fueled bus lines. Yet the Rockefellers’ Standard Oil of California joined General Motors, Firestone Tire, Standard Oil of California and Phillips Petroleum to form the National City Lines holding company, which bought out and dismantled more than 100 trolley systems in 45 cities (including New York, Detroit, Baltimore, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, Tulsa, Minneapolis and Los Angeles) between 1936 and 1950.

In 1949, these corporate defendants were acquitted of conspiring to monopolize transportation services. Indeed, the corporations behind National City Lines were each fined just $5,000—while each of their directors paid a mere $1 fine—a small price to pay for the windfall in profits they all enjoyed in the decades that followed. Congress offered up tax dollars to build the enormous highway infrastructure that encouraged automobile travel in the 1950s, while federal investment in mass transit and train systems languished. As Noam Chomsky noted, “By the mid-1960s, one out of six business enterprises was directly dependent on the motor vehicle industry.”

No Rockefeller family history would be complete without highlighting their central role in shaping twentieth century population control policy, aimed explicitly at curbing birth rates among the non-Caucasian poor. Beginning in 1910, Rockefeller money flowed into organizations such as the Race Betterment Foundation and the Eugenics Section of the American Breeders Association, which spearheaded the eugenics movement — the “science” of “improving heredity.” These organizations, also funded by the upstanding Carnegie, Harriman and Kellogg families, sponsored academics claiming that those at the top of the social ladder had proven their racial superiority, while those at the bottom were biologically incapable of success. The eugenics movement encouraged the “superior” races to marry each other and have lots of children, while promoting forced sterilization, racial segregation and deportation of immigrants of those deemed “unfit” to reproduce.

The “superior” races so admired by the eugenics movement were “Nordic,” with blond hair and blue eyes, and the movement soon gained an admirer in Adolph Hitler. In 1924’s Mein Kampf, Hitler noted, “There is today one state in which at least weak beginnings toward a better conception (of immigration) are noticeable. Of course, it is not our model German Republic, but the United States.” By the 1920s, the Rockefeller Foundation was already providing hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund eugenics research in Germany; in 1929 alone, $317,000 of Rockefeller money went to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Brain Research, according to Edwin Black, writing in the San Francisco Chronicle in 2003. Although the Rockefellers had withdrawn all funding to German research by the onset of the Second World War in 1939, Black argued, “[B]y that time, the die had been cast. The talented men Rockefeller and Carnegie financed, the great institutions they helped found, and the science they helped create took on a scientific momentum of their own.”

By the 1930s, the wheels for forced sterilization were also in motion inside the U.S. Laws were enacted in 27 states in 1932, calling for compulsory sterilization of the “feeble-minded, insane, criminal, and physically defective.” In 1939, the Birth Control Federation of America, as historian Dorothy E. Roberts described, “planned a ‘Negro Project’ designed to limit reproduction by blacks ‘who still breed carelessly and disastrously, with the result that the increase among Negroes, even more than among whites, is from that portion of the population least intelligent and fit, and least able to rear children properly.’” In 1974, an Alabama court found that between 100,000 and 150,000 poor black teenagers had been sterilized in that state alone.

After World War Two, population control agencies set their sights overseas. In the 1960s, the International Planned Parenthood Foundation, heavily funded by the Rockefellers alongside the U.S. government, played a key role in a coercive sterilization programs targeting Third World populations. By 1968, one-third of women of childbearing age in Puerto Rico — still a U.S. colony — had been permanently sterilized, often without their knowledge or consent. Rockefeller-funded programs sterilized 40,000 women in Colombia between 1963 and 1965, according to feminist author Bonnie Mass. These are just two examples among many.

The self-righteous claims of the current generation of Rockefellers must be viewed in this context. They have kept silent since the 1989 Exxon-Valdez Alaskan oil spill, even as Exxon-Mobil has refused to pay court-ordered compensation to the nearly 33,000 Alaskans who won a lawsuit against Exxon in 1994 for the company’s “reckless” behavior. Nor have they uttered a word of protest following news that growing numbers of employed workers across the U.S. are lining up at food pantries due to the skyrocketing price of food and gasoline. As Bill Bolling, founder of the Atlanta Community Food Bank, told CNN, “People are giving up buying groceries so that they can pay rent and put gas in the car.”

Today’s Rockefellers praise Exxon-Mobil for its current status as the most profitable corporation in U.S. history, having raked in a record $40.6 billion in profits in 2007. They are merely watching out for their own parasitical futures.

Sharon Smith is the author of Women and Socialism and Subterranean Fire: a History of Working-Class Radicalism in the United States. She can be reached at: sharon@internationalsocialist.org. This article first appeared on the SW website. Read other articles by Sharon, or visit Sharon's website.

5 comments on this article so far ...

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  1. Chris Crass said on May 8th, 2008 at 11:26am #

    Yeah, but if a reporter were to tell the truth about anything their paper or tv station would lose advertising revenue and fire them. So we get gushing stories about those wonderful, selfless Rockefellers and “Wars for Democracy.”
    Inspiring, isn’t it?

  2. Brian Koontz said on May 8th, 2008 at 4:12pm #

    Truth is relevant in a society ruled by money only insofar as truth produces money. Given the condition of the United States, obviously truth is a hobo.

    “Truth lacks entertainment value”.

    Advertisers want the media they buy to serve as propaganda outlets for themselves, and the media happily obliges.

    “What has the truth ever done for me? Can I raise my kids on truth? No – but I can raise my kids on this job as a “journalist”

    It is a War for Democracy in a way. It’s a war so that the meaning of Democracy is whatever the propagandists say it is. It’s a war so that whatever the ruling class says the victims (consumers) either believe or understand and not oppose.

    Even progressives are brainwashed into believing that wealth equals success. Nearly all progressives laud the educational system – which is not a system of education but a system of accreditation by which the participant bows before the ruling class in exchange for a good paying job.

  3. Don Hawkins said on May 9th, 2008 at 5:16am #

    CO 2
    1978 8 1978.625 334.37 334.37 335.85
    1978 9 1978.708 332.27 332.27 335.39
    1978 10 1978.792 332.41 332.41 335.65
    1978 11 1978.875 333.76 333.76 336.04
    1978 12 1978.958 334.83 334.83 335.77
    1979 1 1979.042 336.21 336.21 336.32
    1979 2 1979.125 336.64 336.64 336.07
    1979 3 1979.208 338.12 338.12 336.44
    1979 4 1979.292 339.02 339.02 336.36
    1979 5 1979.375 339.02 339.02 336.10
    1979 6 1979.458 339.20 339.20 336.76
    1979 7 1979.542 337.58 337.58 336.70
    1979 8 1979.625 335.55 335.55 337.01
    1979 9 1979.708 333.89 333.89 337.02
    1979 10 1979.792 334.14 334.14 337.40
    1979 11 1979.875 335.26 335.26 337.50
    1979 12 1979.958 336.71 336.71 337.66
    1980 1 1980.042 337.81 337.81 337.84
    1980 2 1980.125 338.29 338.29 337.65
    1980 3 1980.208 340.04 340.04 338.36
    1980 4 1980.292 340.86 340.86 338.21
    1980 5 1980.375 341.47 341.47 338.59
    1980 6 1980.458 341.26 341.26 338.92
    1980 7 1980.542 339.29 339.29 338.47
    1980 8 1980.625 337.60 337.60 339.11
    1980 9 1980.708 336.12 336.12 339.28
    1980 10 1980.792 336.08 336.08 339.29
    1980 11 1980.875 337.22 337.22 339.40
    1980 12 1980.958 338.34 338.34 339.26
    1981 1 1981.042 339.36 339.36 339.49
    1981 2 1981.125 340.51 340.51 339.84
    1981 3 1981.208 341.57 341.57 339.89
    1981 4 1981.292 342.56 342.56 339.89
    1981 5 1981.375 343.01 343.01 339.95
    1981 6 1981.458 342.47 342.47 340.01
    1981 7 1981.542 340.71 340.71 339.91
    1981 8 1981.625 338.52 338.52 340.03
    1981 9 1981.708 336.96 336.96 340.19
    1981 10 1981.792 337.13 337.13 340.44
    1981 11 1981.875 338.58 338.58 340.75
    1981 12 1981.958 339.89 339.89 340.87
    1982 1 1982.042 340.93 340.93 341.01
    1982 2 1982.125 341.69 341.69 341.00
    1982 3 1982.208 342.69 342.69 341.10
    1982 4 1982.292 -99.99 343.75 341.11
    1982 5 1982.375 344.30 344.30 341.12
    1982 6 1982.458 343.43 343.43 340.98
    1982 7 1982.542 341.88 341.88 341.18
    1982 8 1982.625 339.89 339.89 341.40
    1982 9 1982.708 337.95 337.95 341.18
    1982 10 1982.792 338.10 338.10 341.44
    1982 11 1982.875 339.27 339.27 341.42
    1982 12 1982.958 340.67 340.67 341.61
    1983 1 1983.042 341.42 341.42 341.50
    1983 2 1983.125 342.68 342.68 341.96
    1983 3 1983.208 343.46 343.46 341.86
    1983 4 1983.292 345.10 345.10 342.50
    1983 5 1983.375 345.76 345.76 342.66
    1983 6 1983.458 345.36 345.36 342.96
    1983 7 1983.542 343.91 343.91 343.19
    1983 8 1983.625 342.05 342.05 343.52
    1983 9 1983.708 340.00 340.00 343.26
    1983 10 1983.792 340.12 340.12 343.47
    1983 11 1983.875 341.33 341.33 343.42
    1983 12 1983.958 342.94 342.94 343.85
    1984 1 1984.042 343.87 343.87 343.93
    1984 2 1984.125 344.60 344.60 344.01
    1984 3 1984.208 345.20 345.20 343.75
    1984 4 1984.292 -99.99 346.58 343.98
    1984 5 1984.375 347.36 347.36 344.21
    1984 6 1984.458 346.74 346.74 344.29
    1984 7 1984.542 345.41 345.41 344.61
    1984 8 1984.625 343.01 343.01 344.43
    1984 9 1984.708 341.23 341.23 344.49
    1984 10 1984.792 341.52 341.52 344.88
    1984 11 1984.875 342.86 342.86 344.94
    1984 12 1984.958 344.41 344.41 345.26
    1985 1 1985.042 345.09 345.09 345.18
    1985 2 1985.125 345.89 345.89 345.40
    1985 3 1985.208 347.49 347.49 346.12
    1985 4 1985.292 348.00 348.00 345.41
    1985 5 1985.375 348.75 348.75 345.51
    1985 6 1985.458 348.19 348.19 345.64
    1985 7 1985.542 346.54 346.54 345.74
    1985 8 1985.625 344.63 344.63 346.03
    1985 9 1985.708 343.03 343.03 346.19
    1985 10 1985.792 342.92 342.92 346.26
    1985 11 1985.875 344.24 344.24 346.40
    1985 12 1985.958 345.62 345.62 346.50
    1986 1 1986.042 346.43 346.43 346.44
    1986 2 1986.125 346.94 346.94 346.34
    1986 3 1986.208 347.88 347.88 346.44
    1986 4 1986.292 349.57 349.57 346.98
    1986 5 1986.375 350.35 350.35 347.16
    1986 6 1986.458 349.72 349.72 347.24
    1986 7 1986.542 347.78 347.78 347.09
    1986 8 1986.625 345.86 345.86 347.36
    1986 9 1986.708 344.84 344.84 348.00
    1986 10 1986.792 344.32 344.32 347.62
    1986 11 1986.875 345.67 345.67 347.82
    1986 12 1986.958 346.88 346.88 347.74
    1987 1 1987.042 348.19 348.19 348.16
    1987 2 1987.125 348.55 348.55 347.99
    1987 3 1987.208 349.52 349.52 348.15
    1987 4 1987.292 351.12 351.12 348.57
    1987 5 1987.375 351.84 351.84 348.79
    1987 6 1987.458 351.49 351.49 349.13
    1987 7 1987.542 349.82 349.82 349.05
    1987 8 1987.625 347.63 347.63 349.05
    1987 9 1987.708 346.38 346.38 349.47
    1987 10 1987.792 346.49 346.49 349.66
    1987 11 1987.875 347.75 347.75 349.87
    1987 12 1987.958 349.03 349.03 349.91
    1988 1 1988.042 350.20 350.20 350.13
    1988 2 1988.125 351.61 351.61 350.99
    1988 3 1988.208 352.22 352.22 350.93
    1988 4 1988.292 353.53 353.53 351.04
    1988 5 1988.375 354.14 354.14 351.11
    1988 6 1988.458 353.62 353.62 351.31
    1988 7 1988.542 352.53 352.53 351.75
    1988 8 1988.625 350.41 350.41 351.77
    1988 9 1988.708 348.84 348.84 351.89
    1988 10 1988.792 348.94 348.94 352.06
    1988 11 1988.875 350.04 350.04 352.16
    1988 12 1988.958 351.29 351.29 352.23
    1989 1 1989.042 352.72 352.72 352.67
    1989 2 1989.125 353.10 353.10 352.42
    1989 3 1989.208 353.65 353.65 352.21
    1989 4 1989.292 355.43 355.43 352.83
    1989 5 1989.375 355.70 355.70 352.60
    1989 6 1989.458 355.11 355.11 352.79
    1989 7 1989.542 353.79 353.79 353.11
    1989 8 1989.625 351.42 351.42 352.92
    1989 9 1989.708 349.81 349.81 352.97
    1989 10 1989.792 350.11 350.11 353.28
    1989 11 1989.875 351.26 351.26 353.37
    1989 12 1989.958 352.63 352.63 353.57
    1990 1 1990.042 353.64 353.64 353.57
    1990 2 1990.125 354.72 354.72 353.93
    1990 3 1990.208 355.49 355.49 353.93
    1990 4 1990.292 356.09 356.09 353.43
    1990 5 1990.375 357.08 357.08 353.91
    1990 6 1990.458 356.11 356.11 353.72
    1990 7 1990.542 354.70 354.70 354.07
    1990 8 1990.625 352.68 352.68 354.33
    1990 9 1990.708 351.05 351.05 354.38
    1990 10 1990.792 351.36 351.36 354.63
    1990 11 1990.875 352.81 352.81 354.91
    1990 12 1990.958 354.22 354.22 355.14
    1991 1 1991.042 354.85 354.85 354.76
    1991 2 1991.125 355.66 355.66 354.91
    1991 3 1991.208 357.04 357.04 355.52
    1991 4 1991.292 358.40 358.40 355.73
    1991 5 1991.375 359.00 359.00 355.79
    1991 6 1991.458 357.99 357.99 355.57
    1991 7 1991.542 356.00 356.00 355.36
    1991 8 1991.625 353.78 353.78 355.44
    1991 9 1991.708 352.20 352.20 355.55
    1991 10 1991.792 352.22 352.22 355.51
    1991 11 1991.875 353.70 353.70 355.81
    1991 12 1991.958 354.98 354.98 355.88
    1992 1 1992.042 356.09 356.09 356.02
    1992 2 1992.125 356.85 356.85 356.01
    1992 3 1992.208 357.73 357.73 356.06
    1992 4 1992.292 358.91 358.91 356.15
    1992 5 1992.375 359.45 359.45 356.13
    1992 6 1992.458 359.19 359.19 356.72
    1992 7 1992.542 356.72 356.72 356.21
    1992 8 1992.625 354.79 354.79 356.60
    1992 9 1992.708 352.79 352.79 356.22
    1992 10 1992.792 353.20 353.20 356.57
    1992 11 1992.875 354.15 354.15 356.29
    1992 12 1992.958 355.39 355.39 356.28
    1993 1 1993.042 356.77 356.77 356.70
    1993 2 1993.125 357.17 357.17 356.38
    1993 3 1993.208 358.26 358.26 356.59
    1993 4 1993.292 359.16 359.16 356.31
    1993 5 1993.375 360.07 360.07 356.66
    1993 6 1993.458 359.41 359.41 356.92
    1993 7 1993.542 357.44 357.44 356.98
    1993 8 1993.625 355.30 355.30 357.18
    1993 9 1993.708 353.87 353.87 357.35
    1993 10 1993.792 354.04 354.04 357.44
    1993 11 1993.875 355.27 355.27 357.39
    1993 12 1993.958 356.70 356.70 357.55
    1994 1 1994.042 358.00 358.00 357.86
    1994 2 1994.125 358.81 358.81 357.91
    1994 3 1994.208 359.68 359.68 358.02
    1994 4 1994.292 361.13 361.13 358.50
    1994 5 1994.375 361.48 361.48 358.36
    1994 6 1994.458 360.60 360.60 358.19
    1994 7 1994.542 359.20 359.20 358.61
    1994 8 1994.625 357.23 357.23 358.98
    1994 9 1994.708 355.42 355.42 358.80
    1994 10 1994.792 355.89 355.89 359.20
    1994 11 1994.875 357.41 357.41 359.55
    1994 12 1994.958 358.74 358.74 359.63
    1995 1 1995.042 359.73 359.73 359.61
    1995 2 1995.125 360.61 360.61 359.78
    1995 3 1995.208 361.58 361.58 360.04
    1995 4 1995.292 363.05 363.05 360.43
    1995 5 1995.375 363.62 363.62 360.61
    1995 6 1995.458 363.03 363.03 360.79
    1995 7 1995.542 361.55 361.55 360.83
    1995 8 1995.625 358.94 358.94 360.45
    1995 9 1995.708 357.93 357.93 361.23
    1995 10 1995.792 357.80 357.80 361.04
    1995 11 1995.875 359.22 359.22 361.32
    1995 12 1995.958 360.44 360.44 361.38
    1996 1 1996.042 361.83 361.83 361.70
    1996 2 1996.125 362.95 362.95 362.10
    1996 3 1996.208 363.91 363.91 362.26
    1996 4 1996.292 364.28 364.28 361.53
    1996 5 1996.375 364.94 364.94 361.71
    1996 6 1996.458 364.70 364.70 362.31
    1996 7 1996.542 363.31 363.31 362.71
    1996 8 1996.625 361.15 361.15 362.86
    1996 9 1996.708 359.40 359.40 362.87
    1996 10 1996.792 359.34 359.34 362.76
    1996 11 1996.875 360.62 360.62 362.75
    1996 12 1996.958 361.96 361.96 362.82
    1997 1 1997.042 362.81 362.81 362.65
    1997 2 1997.125 363.87 363.87 363.03
    1997 3 1997.208 364.25 364.25 362.66
    1997 4 1997.292 366.02 366.02 363.38
    1997 5 1997.375 366.46 366.46 363.47
    1997 6 1997.458 365.32 365.32 363.11
    1997 7 1997.542 364.07 364.07 363.37
    1997 8 1997.625 361.95 361.95 363.48
    1997 9 1997.708 360.06 360.06 363.46
    1997 10 1997.792 360.49 360.49 363.84
    1997 11 1997.875 362.19 362.19 364.24
    1997 12 1997.958 364.12 364.12 364.93
    1998 1 1998.042 364.99 364.99 364.77
    1998 2 1998.125 365.82 365.82 365.03
    1998 3 1998.208 366.95 366.95 365.39
    1998 4 1998.292 368.42 368.42 365.85
    1998 5 1998.375 369.33 369.33 366.57
    1998 6 1998.458 368.78 368.78 366.63
    1998 7 1998.542 367.59 367.59 366.71
    1998 8 1998.625 365.84 365.84 367.28
    1998 9 1998.708 363.83 363.83 367.21
    1998 10 1998.792 364.18 364.18 367.47
    1998 11 1998.875 365.34 365.34 367.38
    1998 12 1998.958 366.93 366.93 367.70
    1999 1 1999.042 367.94 367.94 367.76
    1999 2 1999.125 368.82 368.82 368.11
    1999 3 1999.208 369.46 369.46 367.96
    1999 4 1999.292 370.77 370.77 368.17
    1999 5 1999.375 370.66 370.66 367.86
    1999 6 1999.458 370.10 370.10 368.04
    1999 7 1999.542 369.08 369.08 368.27
    1999 8 1999.625 366.66 366.66 368.04
    1999 9 1999.708 364.60 364.60 367.92
    1999 10 1999.792 365.17 365.17 368.44
    1999 11 1999.875 366.51 366.51 368.49
    1999 12 1999.958 367.89 367.89 368.62
    2000 1 2000.042 369.04 369.04 368.81
    2000 2 2000.125 369.35 369.35 368.55
    2000 3 2000.208 370.38 370.38 368.77
    2000 4 2000.292 371.63 371.63 369.04
    2000 5 2000.375 371.32 371.32 368.40
    2000 6 2000.458 371.53 371.53 369.27
    2000 7 2000.542 369.75 369.75 369.10
    2000 8 2000.625 368.23 368.23 369.89
    2000 9 2000.708 366.87 366.87 370.25
    2000 10 2000.792 366.94 366.94 370.27
    2000 11 2000.875 368.27 368.27 370.30
    2000 12 2000.958 369.64 369.64 370.31
    2001 1 2001.042 370.46 370.46 370.19
    2001 2 2001.125 371.44 371.44 370.60
    2001 3 2001.208 372.37 372.37 370.78
    2001 4 2001.292 373.33 373.33 370.83
    2001 5 2001.375 373.77 373.77 370.97
    2001 6 2001.458 373.09 373.09 370.94
    2001 7 2001.542 371.51 371.51 370.92
    2001 8 2001.625 369.55 369.55 371.18
    2001 9 2001.708 368.12 368.12 371.37
    2001 10 2001.792 368.38 368.38 371.59
    2001 11 2001.875 369.66 369.66 371.66
    2001 12 2001.958 371.11 371.11 371.76
    2002 1 2002.042 372.36 372.36 372.14
    2002 2 2002.125 373.09 373.09 372.34
    2002 3 2002.208 373.81 373.81 372.27
    2002 4 2002.292 374.93 374.93 372.43
    2002 5 2002.375 375.58 375.58 372.82
    2002 6 2002.458 375.44 375.44 373.31
    2002 7 2002.542 373.86 373.86 373.20
    2002 8 2002.625 371.77 371.77 373.32
    2002 9 2002.708 370.73 370.73 373.94
    2002 10 2002.792 370.50 370.50 373.66
    2002 11 2002.875 372.18 372.18 374.14
    2002 12 2002.958 373.70 373.70 374.37
    2003 1 2003.042 374.92 374.92 374.83
    2003 2 2003.125 375.62 375.62 374.79
    2003 3 2003.208 376.51 376.51 374.85
    2003 4 2003.292 377.75 377.75 375.16
    2003 5 2003.375 378.54 378.54 375.50
    2003 6 2003.458 378.20 378.20 375.98
    2003 7 2003.542 376.68 376.68 376.24
    2003 8 2003.625 374.43 374.43 376.05
    2003 9 2003.708 373.11 373.11 376.33
    2003 10 2003.792 373.10 373.10 376.40
    2003 11 2003.875 374.77 374.77 376.78
    2003 12 2003.958 375.97 375.97 376.70
    2004 1 2004.042 377.03 377.03 376.85
    2004 2 2004.125 377.87 377.87 377.04
    2004 3 2004.208 378.88 378.88 377.27
    2004 4 2004.292 380.42 380.42 377.71
    2004 5 2004.375 380.62 380.62 377.47
    2004 6 2004.458 379.70 379.70 377.44
    2004 7 2004.542 377.43 377.43 376.90
    2004 8 2004.625 376.32 376.32 377.93
    2004 9 2004.708 374.19 374.19 377.54
    2004 10 2004.792 374.47 374.47 377.88
    2004 11 2004.875 376.15 376.15 378.26
    2004 12 2004.958 377.51 377.51 378.28
    2005 1 2005.042 378.43 378.43 378.15
    2005 2 2005.125 379.70 379.70 378.84
    2005 3 2005.208 380.92 380.92 379.37
    2005 4 2005.292 382.18 382.18 379.51
    2005 5 2005.375 382.45 382.45 379.30
    2005 6 2005.458 382.14 382.14 379.86
    2005 7 2005.542 380.60 380.60 380.10
    2005 8 2005.625 378.64 378.64 380.34
    2005 9 2005.708 376.73 376.73 380.10
    2005 10 2005.792 376.84 376.84 380.21
    2005 11 2005.875 378.29 378.29 380.41
    2005 12 2005.958 380.06 380.06 380.79
    2006 1 2006.042 381.40 381.40 381.12
    2006 2 2006.125 382.20 382.20 381.34
    2006 3 2006.208 382.66 382.66 381.11
    2006 4 2006.292 384.69 384.69 382.02
    2006 5 2006.375 384.94 384.94 381.79
    2006 6 2006.458 384.01 384.01 381.73
    2006 7 2006.542 382.14 382.14 381.64
    2006 8 2006.625 380.31 380.31 382.01
    2006 9 2006.708 378.81 378.81 382.17
    2006 10 2006.792 379.03 379.03 382.40
    2006 11 2006.875 380.17 380.17 382.29
    2006 12 2006.958 381.85 381.85 382.58
    2007 1 2007.042 382.94 382.94 382.66
    2007 2 2007.125 383.86 383.86 383.00
    2007 3 2007.208 384.49 384.49 382.94
    2007 4 2007.292 386.37 386.37 383.70
    2007 5 2007.375 386.54 386.54 383.39
    2007 6 2007.458 385.98 385.98 383.70
    2007 7 2007.542 384.36 384.36 383.86
    2007 8 2007.625 381.85 381.85 383.55
    2007 9 2007.708 380.74 380.74 384.10
    2007 10 2007.792 381.15 381.15 384.52
    2007 11 2007.875 382.38 382.38 384.50
    2007 12 2007.958 383.94 383.94 384.67
    2008 1 2008.042 385.39 385.39 385.11
    2008 2 2008.125 385.69 385.69 384.83
    2008 3 2008.208 385.91 385.91 384.36
    2008 4 2008.292 387.19 387.19 384.52

    January 1988 we passed 350 ppm. We must go back to that level it can be done

  4. Claude said on May 10th, 2008 at 3:43am #

    Wow! Thanks for that illumination about the Rockefellers. Also, I didn’t realize that Carnegie was involved in all of this. Isn’t he the guy that argued against prevailing views of Social Darwinism?

  5. Stephen said on May 11th, 2008 at 7:38pm #

    Re: Dan Hawkins rising CO2 levels

    If it weren’t for carbon dioxide, there would be no life on this planet. All plant life is dependent on CO2 for respiration, while “breathing out” ozygen. If CO2 levels are reduced, plant life will be reduced, which will in turn reduce available oxygen for humans and animals to breathe. This is to mention nothing about plants being the source of all the food we eat.

    The fact is that at least 98% of all climate change is caused by normal fluctuations in the sun’s activity – something totally beyond the ability of humans to influence. While CO2 levels are correlated with temperature, they do NOT cause it, but are instead the RESULT of rising temperatures. Man-made global warming is a myth promoted by pseudo-scientists to fulfill a totally different agenda – that of taxing what remains of industrialized countries to render them powerless under a UN-dominated world government, an idea which ironically has been heavily promoted by the Rockefellers. It was, after all, the Rockefellers who donated the land for the United Nations building in New York City, a point I found curiously absent in this article.

    To set the record straight, read what real scientists have to say about climate change and not what globalist one-worlders like Al Gore want you to believe: http://tinyurl.com/3yop6n