ExxonMobil supremo Lee Raymond has retired with a payout  of something like $400,000,000 (I can't begin to make sense of all the details  of his package, so it might really be more or less), including a check for  $98,400,000 instead of annual pension payments. But, hey, this was only 1.1% of  Exxon Mobil's $36,000,000,000 profits last year. Mr. Raymond worked for Exxon  for 43 years, so his retirement package is less than $10 million per year, which  seems quite fair. And his annual pay in 2005 of something like $50,000,000,000  was only 0.13% of profits. Quite a bargain!
And, since Mr. Raymond was responsible for orchestrating the vast global  conspiracy that drove oil prices so high last year in order to generate Exxon  Mobil's colossal profits, he clearly deserves every penny. Oh, wait a minute ...  he testified to Congress that he didn't have anything to do with oil prices  being so high. So, then, what exactly did he do to deserve this? Did he  outcompete his rivals? Well, it sounds like his main accomplishment was merging  Exxon with Mobil in 1999, which isn't exactly outcompeting them. Why did the  Clinton Administration approve the merger of Exxon and Mobil in 1999? Were they  going to both go out of business if they didn't merge?
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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