Apr 17 2005, 01:06 PM
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Super Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 14081 Joined: 16-December 03 From: Worthing, Sussex Member No.: 7 |
I thought I would start a thread where people couple speculate about the motive the conspirators had for killing JFK. I will start the ball rolling with the case for the Texas Oil Industry.
The most prolific oil reserves in the United States was not discovered until October, 1930. The East Texas Oilfield included Rusk, Upshur, Gregg and Smith counties. The first small company to find oil in East Texas was Deep Rock Oil Company. The first investor to take advantage of the discovery was Haroldson L. Hunt. He bought 5,000 acres of leases and an eighty-acre tract for $1,335,000. Hunt soon owned 500 wells in East Texas. The discovery of oil in Texas made a small group of men a great deal of money. They decided to join together in order to maintain their profits. This included strategies for keeping the price of oil as high as possible. The rich East Texas field caused problems as it initially caused the price of oil to fall. Ross Sterling, the former owner of Humble Oil, was elected governor of Texas and took office on 20th January, 1931. The Texas Railroad Commission, under the control of the large oil producers, attempted to limit the production of oil (prorationing) in the new fields of East Texas. On 31st July, 1931, the federal court in Houston sided with a group of independent oil producers and ruled that the Texas Railroad Commission had no right to impose prorationing. Large oil companies in Texas such as Humble Oil were in favour of prorationing and Sterling came under great pressure to intervene. On 16th August, 1931, Sterling declared martial law in Rusk, Upshur, Gregg and Smith counties. In his proclamation Sterling declared that the independent oil producers in these counties were "in a state of insurrection" and that the "reckless and illegal exploitation of (oil) must be stopped until such time as the said resources may be properly conserved and developed under the protection of the civil authorities". Sterling now ordered the commander of the Texas National Guard, Jacob F. Wolters, to "without delay shut down each and every producing crude oil well and/or producing well of natural gas". Wolters who was the chief lobbyist of several major oil companies in Texas, readily agreed to this action. Wolters used more than a thousand troops to make sure that the oil wells in East Texas ceased production. The Texas Railroad Commission was now in firm control of the world's most prolific oil fields. It now controlled the supply of the oil in the United States. As a result, the price of oil began to increase. The courts ruled that Sterling had exceeded his authority by the declaration of martial law and he was easily defeated by Miriam A. Ferguson when he attempted to be elected for a second term as governor. When Franklin D. Roosevelt gained power he attempted to push a bill through Congress that would give his Secretary of the Interior, Harold Ickes, the authority to regulate domestic oil production. However, Sam Rayburn, a politician from Texas, as chairman of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, was able to kill the bill. It was left to another powerful Texan, Tom Connally, to sponsor the Connally Hot Oil Act. This gave the Texas Railroad Commission the authority to proration oil. Texas oil millionaires also fought hard to maintain its tax concessions. The most important of these was the oil depletion allowance. It was first introduced in 1913 and allowed producers to use the depletion allowed to deduct just 5 per cent of their income and the deduction was limited to the original cost of their property. However, in 1926 the depletion allowance was increased to 27.5 per cent. As Robert Bryce pointed out in his book, Cronies: Oil, the Bushes, and the Rise of Texas, America's Superstate (2004): "Numerous studies showed that the oilmen were getting a tax break that was unprecedented in American business. While other businessmen had to pay taxes on their income regardless of what they sold, the oilmen got special treatment." Bryce gives an example in his book how the oil depreciation allowance works. "An oilman drills a well that costs $100,000. He finds a reservoir containing $10,000,000 worth of oil. The well produces $1 million worth of oil per year for ten years. In the very first year, thanks to the depletion allowance, the oilman could deduct 27.5 per cent, or $275,000, of that $1 million in income from his taxable income. Thus, in just one year, he's deducted nearly three times his initial investment. But the depletion allowance continues to pay off. For each of the next nine years, he gets to continue taking the $275,000 depletion deduction. By the end of the tenth year, the oilman has deducted $2.75 million from his taxable income, even though his initial investment was only $100,000." Such a system was clearly unfair and only benefited a small group of businessmen in Texas. It seemed only a matter of time before Congress removed this tax loophole. However, these oilmen used some of their great wealth to manipulate the politicians in Washington. 1932 several politicians from Texas assumed important positions of power in Washington. John Nance Garner became Speaker of the House of Representatives. Texans also became the chairmen of some very important committees. This included Samuel Rayburn (Interstate and Foreign Commerce), Joseph J. Mansfield (Rivers and Harbors Committee), Hatton W. Sumners (Judiciary Committee), Marvin Jones (Agriculture Committee) and Fritz Lanham (Public Buildings and Grounds Committee). As the historian, Robert A. Caro has pointed out in Lyndon Johnson: The Path to Power (1982): "Texans were elected on December 7, 1931, not only to the Speakership of the House but to the chairmanship of five of its most influential committees, Lyndon Johnson's first day in the Capitol was the day Texas came to power in it - a power that the state was to hold, with only the briefest interruptions, for more than thirty years." Sam Rayburn as chairman of the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, played an important role in the establishing the and the Federal Communications Commission. In 1937 Rayburn became majority leader and held the post for the next three years. Several of these Texas politicians became involved in the Suite 8F Group, a collection of right-wing political and businessmen. The name comes from the room in the Lamar Hotel in Houston where they held their meetings. Members of the group included George Brown and Herman Brown (Brown & Root), Jesse H. Jones (multimillionaire investor in a large number of organizations and chairman of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation), Gus Wortham (American General Insurance Company), James Abercrombie (Cameron Iron Works), William Hobby (Governor of Texas and owner of the Houston Post), William Vinson (Great Southern Life Insurance), James Elkins (American General Insurance and Pure Oil Pipe Line), Albert Thomas (chairman of the House Appropriations Committee), Lyndon B. Johnson (Majority Leader of the Senate) and John Connally (Governor of Texas). Alvin Wirtz and Edward Clark, were two lawyers who were also members of the Suite 8F Group. Suite 8F helped to coordinate the political activities of other right-wing politicians and businessmen based in the South. In this way they were able to prevent the oil depletion allowance removed. This sometimes meant that they supported the Republican Party in elections. For example, Dwight D. Eisenhower received considerable funds from Texas oilmen in the 1952 presidential elections. Soon after being elected, Eisenhower stopped a grand jury investigation into the “International Petroleum Cartel” citing reasons of “national security”. Eisenhower had already starting paying back the generous support he had received from the oil industry. In 1954 Paul Douglas began making speeches in the Senate about the need for tax reforms in order to eliminate special privileges such as the oil depletion allowance. Douglas attempted to join the important Finance Committee. He held seniority priority and should have been given one of the two available seats on the committee. Johnson had to apply considerable pressure on Harry Byrd, the chairman of the Finance Committee, to stop this happening. In 1955 LBJ became majority leader of the Senate. LBJ and Richard Russell now had complete control over all the important Senate committees. This was proving to be an expensive business. The money used to bribe these politicians came from Russell’s network of businessmen. These were men usually involved in the oil and armaments industries. According to John Connally, large sums of money was given to LBJ throughout the 1950s for distribution to his political friends. “I handled inordinate amounts of cash”. A great deal of this came from oilmen. Cornel Wilde worked for the Gulf Oil Corporation. In 1959 he took over from David Searls as chief paymaster to LBJ. He testified that he made regular payments of $10,000 to Walter Jenkins. In 1956 there was another attempt to end all federal price control over natural gas. Sam Rayburn played an important role in getting it through the House of Representatives. This is not surprising as according to Connally, he alone had been responsible for a million and a half dollars of lobbying. Paul Douglas and William Langer led the fight against the bill. Their campaigned was helped by an amazing speech by Francis Case of South Dakota. Up until this time Case had been a supporter of the bill. However, he announced that he had been offered a $25,000 bribe by the Superior Oil Company to guarantee his vote. As a man of principal, he thought he should announce this fact to the Senate. LBJ responded by claiming that Case had himself come under pressure to make this statement by people who wanted to retain federal price controls. LBJ argued: “In all my twenty-five years in Washington I have never seen a campaign of intimidation equal to the campaign put on by the opponents of this bill.” LBJ pushed on with the bill and it was eventually passed by 53 votes to 38. However, three days later, Eisenhower, vetoed the bill on grounds of immoral lobbying. Eisenhower confided in his diary that this had been “the most flagrant kind of lobbying that has been brought to my attention”. He added that there was a “great stench around the passing of this bill” and the people involved were “so arrogant and so much in defiance of acceptable standards of propriety as to risk creating doubt among the American people concerning the integrity of governmental processes”. Senators called for an investigation into the lobbying of the oil industry by Thomas Hennings, the chairman of the subcommittee on Privileges and Elections. LBJ was unwilling to allow a senator not under his control to look into the matter. Instead he set up a select committee chaired by Walter F. George of Georgia, a member of the Southern Caucus. Johnson had again exposed himself as being in the pay of the oil industry. Drew Pearson of The Washington Post picked up on this story and wrote a series of articles about LBJ and the oil industry. Pearson claimed that LBJ was the “real godfather of the bill”. Pearson explored LBJ’s relationship with George Brown and Herman Brown. He reported on the large sums of money that had been flowing from Brown & Root, the “big gas pipeline company” to Johnson. He also referred to the large government contracts that the company had obtained during the Second World War. Pearson also quoted a Senate report that pointed out there was “no room for a general contractor like Brown & Root on Federal projects”. Nevertheless,LBJ had helped them win several contracts including one to build air-naval bases in Spain.” LBJ was now in serious trouble and sought a private meeting with Pearson. He offered the journalist a deal, if Pearson dropped the investigation, he would support Estes Kefauver, in the forthcoming primaries. Pearson surprisingly accepted this deal. He wrote in his diary: “I figured I might do that much for Estes (Kefauver). This is the first time I’ve ever made a deal like this, and I feel unhappy about it. With the Presidency of the United States at stake, maybe it’s justified, maybe not – I don’t know.” The decision by Eisenhower to veto this bill angered the oil industry. Once again Sid Richardson and Clint Murchison began negotiations with Eisenhower. In June, 1957, Eisenhower agreed to appoint their man, Robert Anderson, as his Secretary of the Treasury. According to Robert Sherrill in his book, The Accidental President (1967): "A few weeks later Anderson was appointed to a cabinet committee to "study" the oil import situation; out of this study came the present-day program which benefits the major oil companies, the international oil giants primarily, by about one billion dollars a year." During the 1960 presidential election JFK gave his support for the oil depletion allowance. In October, 1960, he said that he appreciated "the value and importance of the oil-depletion allowance. I realize its purpose and value... The oil-depletion allowance has served us well." However, two years later, JFK decided to take on the oil industry. On 16th October, 1962, JFK was able to persuade Congress to pass an act that removed the distinction between repatriated profits and profits reinvested abroad. While this law applied to industry as a whole, it especially affected the oil companies. It was estimated that as a result of this legislation, wealthy oilmen saw a fall in their earnings on foreign investment from 30 per cent to 15 per cent. On 17th January, 1963, JFK presented his proposals for tax reform. This included relieving the tax burdens of low-income and elderly citizens. Kennedy also claimed he wanted to remove special privileges and loopholes. He even said he wanted to do away with the oil depletion allowance. It is estimated that the proposed removal of the oil depletion allowance would result in a loss of around $300 million a year to Texas oilmen. After the assassination of JFK, LBJ dropped the government plans to remove the oil depletion allowance. Richard Nixon followed his example and it was not until the arrival of Jimmy Carter that the oil depletion allowance was removed. |
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John Simkin Who Killed JFK?: Texas Oil Industry Apr 17 2005, 01:06 PM
Tim Gratz At the outset I should note a caveat that the pers... Apr 18 2005, 05:53 AM
Pat Speer QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 18 2005, 05:53 AM)At t... Apr 18 2005, 09:14 AM
Tim Gratz Pat wrote:
The entire argument that Castro would ... Apr 18 2005, 09:30 AM
Larry Hancock Tim, two follow up observatins on Pat's remar... Apr 18 2005, 03:01 PM
Mark Stapleton QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 18 2005, 09:30 AM)Pat ... Apr 18 2005, 04:25 PM
Mark Knight I believe that perhaps the three most common motiv... Apr 18 2005, 01:58 PM
Jim Root I tend to agree with some of the remarks made by M... Apr 18 2005, 03:55 PM
Tim Gratz Mark, a number of things suggest themselves in an... Apr 19 2005, 06:17 AM
Mark Stapleton
Tim,
Thanks for your reply. When you say ... Apr 19 2005, 09:41 PM
Don Roberdeau Good Day John.... IMHO, the primary motives were m... Apr 19 2005, 05:00 PM
Jim Root Tim
While I read with interest many of your posts... Apr 19 2005, 06:03 PM
Pat Speer QUOTE (Jim Root @ Apr 19 2005, 06:03 PM)I agr... Apr 21 2005, 08:31 PM
Tim Gratz Mark wrote:
It's fine to use one's own ag... Apr 20 2005, 05:38 AM
Tim Gratz Eccl. 1:9 RSV : What has been is what will be, an... Apr 20 2005, 08:14 AM
Mark Stapleton QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 20 2005, 08:14 AM)Eccl... Apr 20 2005, 11:41 AM
Tim Gratz Mark, I meant, of course, any assassination other ... Apr 20 2005, 11:52 AM
Mark Stapleton QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 20 2005, 11:52 AM)Mark... Apr 21 2005, 03:55 AM
Mark Knight My understanding of the way that the tax code is c... Apr 20 2005, 01:20 PM
John Simkin QUOTE (Mark Knight @ Apr 20 2005, 12:31 PM)I ... Apr 20 2005, 04:14 PM
Tim Gratz Mark wrote:
Also, where's your proof that JFK... Apr 21 2005, 06:32 AM
Mark Stapleton QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 21 2005, 06:32 AM)Mark... Apr 21 2005, 06:37 PM
Tim Gratz And by the way Mark (and John) it is recorded hist... Apr 21 2005, 10:37 AM
John Simkin QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 21 2005, 09:37 AM)And ... Apr 21 2005, 11:58 AM
Jim Root Pat
Dimestore psychology perhaps but hey that is ... Apr 21 2005, 09:27 PM
Tim Gratz John wrote:
What is wrong with the LBJ example? W... Apr 22 2005, 04:49 AM
Tim Gratz "The Texas Connection" by Zirbel claims ... Apr 24 2005, 07:26 AM
John Simkin QUOTE (Tim Gratz @ Apr 24 2005, 06:26 AM)... Apr 24 2005, 09:16 AM
Jim Root John
John J. McCloy was partner in the law firm M... Jan 9 2006, 08:44 PM
Mark Stapleton QUOTE (Jim Root @ Jan 9 2006, 08:44 PM) J... Jan 10 2006, 02:44 AM
Nathaniel Heidenheimer QUOTE (Jim Root @ Jan 9 2006, 09:44 PM) J... Jan 14 2006, 10:44 PM
Robert Howard Since the thread mentions the Texas Oil Industry, ... Jan 29 2006, 10:58 PM
Tim Gratz Interesting post, Mark. Jan 10 2006, 05:20 AM
Tim Gratz Jim wrote:
I tend to believe that McCloy was a ma... Jan 10 2006, 12:03 PM
Jim Root Mark
On the Amherst College website is an outline... Jan 10 2006, 04:45 PM
Mark Stapleton QUOTE (Jim Root @ Jan 10 2006, 04:45 PM) ... Jan 11 2006, 10:11 AM
John Simkin QUOTE (Jim Root @ Jan 10 2006, 03:45 PM) ... Nov 18 2006, 06:43 PM
Jim Root Howdy Tim
"Sorry, Jim, no evidence for that ... Jan 10 2006, 06:07 PM
Tim Gratz Thank you for the explication, Jim. I will attemp... Jan 11 2006, 05:25 AM
Tim Gratz Jim wrote (to prove McCloy a major conspirator):
... Jan 11 2006, 11:23 AM
Jim Root Tim
You ask and state:
"Do you have any inf... Jan 11 2006, 07:56 PM
John Simkin People like Rupert Murdoch argued that the main re... Apr 26 2006, 06:42 PM![]() ![]() |
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