Archive for 2010

Historic Moment in Chevron-Ecuador Case: Judge Closes Evidence Phase, Ponders Ruling

By Mike G.
Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

This post originally appeared on Amazon Watch’s Chevron In Ecuador blog.

Agua Rico Pit

Change Chevron campaigner Ginger Cassady examines toxic waste in Aguarico 4, one of the 356 well sites formerly operated by Chevron (then Texaco). Photo by Maria Lya Ramos.

Friday, December 17th was a momentous day in the long struggle of the people of Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest region ravaged by oil giant Chevron, formerly Texaco.

On Friday — more than 17 years since Ecuadoreans filed a lawsuit demanding cleanup of Texaco’s oil contamination — the judge declared a close to the evidentiary phase of the trial, paving the way for a judgment in the historic case. Sucumbios Provincial Court Judge Nicolas Zambrano declared autos para sentencia — the end of the evidence phase of the trial and the beginning of his deliberations over the massive case record, some 215,000 pages of relevant documents.

The judge told Reuters on Friday: “The proof phase has been concluded. I have to read what there is in these proceedings and, based on this criteria, issue the corresponding decision.”

A Wall Street Journal article reported what many observers believe, that a ruling from the judge is “expected to be ready in the first quarter of next year.” Of course, many predictions have been made over the years, and others close to the case say that a judgment could come anytime between February and next fall. Regardless, it means a judgment is finally coming in the case, despite Chevron’s myriad, creative, and cynical attempts to delay a ruling indefinitely.

Karen Hinton, a spokeswoman for the Amazon Defense Coalition, which represents the Ecuadorian communities suing Chevron, released a simple statement:

“This decision should put an end to Chevron’s continued abusive litigation tactics intended to perpetually delay the resolution of claims that affect the lives of thousands of innocent people.”

Texaco barrel Photo by Caroline Bennett

Thousands of Texaco's oil barrels still litter Ecuador's Oriente region. Photo by Caroline Bennett

Pablo Fajardo, lead lawyer for some 30,000 Indigenous and campesino plaintiffs in Ecuador, told Pleiteando.com, “These 17 years of trial have shown sustained damage to those who have seen their water supplies, land and air polluted by Chevron-Texaco. Many of them have already died of cancer and those who survive live in inhumane conditions. At last I see a light at the end of this dark tunnel.”

Pablo spoke to Amazon Watch’s Mitch Anderson in Quito on Friday, just minutes after the judge gave his order. See the video below (sorry about the vertical alignment and black bars on the side — it was shot, inexpertly, on an iPhone):

So now, as Pablo explains, even with the evidentiary phase in the trial over, it’s important to continue to keep a spotlight on this case, as Chevron has deployed extraordinary resources to delay and disrupt the trial. With a new scorched earth legal strategy designed by its attack dog lawyers from corporate behemoth law firm Gibson Dunn, they have been successful at creating chaos and forcing the plaintiffs lawyers to defend themselves against all kinds of accusations. But with a judgment on the horizon, the plaintiffs have also brought on a major new ally in the form of their own corporate law behemoth, Washington DC-based firm Patton Boggs.

Responding to Chevron’s well-worn accusations about the case, James Tyrell at Patton Boggs told American lawyer magazine’s Michael Goldhaber, “I’m certainly not here to join in any fraudulent effort. We cannot be exposed to liability when we have been hired to do the opposite: to make sure that the final judgment is free of fraud. My mission is to see that a judgment on the merits, warranting international respect, is entered in Ecuador, and, if we win, to enforce it.

Enforce it? Yes, this is critical.

It’s important to remember that Chevron left Ecuador in 1992, and no longer has assets there. So, even if all goes well for the Ecuadorians, and a judge awards them billions from Chevron to remediate the company’s widespread pollution, and provide clean water and health care infrastructure to affected communities, the plaintiffs will have to take that judgment to the courts in places where Chevron does have assets and lay claim to them there.

That’s where big guns like Patton Boggs come in. Unfortunately, that also takes time, while people continue to suffer. Watching this saga unfold over the years, it’s hard to imagine Chevron shifting gears. I expect that the company will continue to try to shift the blame, attack the plaintiffs lawyers, try to evade a judgment through arbitration and other “end-runs” around the legal process, and whatever other tricks may still be up their sleeve.

For the sake of the communities living around the company’s former oil sites, I hope I’m wrong, and that Chevron’s honchos will decide it’s time for them to stop fighting this losing and dishonorable battle, and finally do the right thing.

This New Spoof Chevron Video Is Funny Because, Sadly, It’s All Too True

By Mike G.
Thursday, December 16th, 2010
Chevron is lame still

Click this image to go to FunnyOrDie.com and keep the video's "funny" rating at 100%.

The hits just keep on coming! This new spoof Chevron TV ad is absolutely hilarious.

It’s too bad our contest is over, because this new video, created by Trouble and Maker in association with Smart Bubble Society, would have been a strong contender.

Unfortunately, much of the humor falls in the “it’s funny because it’s true” category.

Chevron loves to tout its investments in renewable energies, but conveniently leaves out the fact that those investments are seriously small potatoes compared to the $26 BILLION the company plans to invest in its oil business next year. Nor does the company usually mention that the energy produced by its Project Brightfield solar plants is used to power its Kern River Heavy Oil Extraction Facility one — in other words, Chevron is using solar energy to power one of the most expensive, polluting, and energy-intensive types of oil extraction around.

Just as the fake Chevron PR hack says in the video, Chevron is leading the deepwater drilling charge in our post-BP oil spill world. It was recently announced that Chevron will spend $7.5 billion on one of the largest deepwater drilling projects in U.S. history. The Houston Chronicle described the project as “a massive floating city” of drilling rigs, all located about 280 miles southwest of New Orleans in the Gulf of Mexico. This is especially troubling because we’re talking about Chevron, a company that was recently responsible for three oil spills in the space of one week.


CHEVRON is lame
– watch more funny videos

All of which points out just why this new video — so aptly titled “Chevron is lame” — is such brilliant satire. It’s up on FunnyOrDie.com right now, and has a 100% funny rating so far. Why not click on over and help keep it that way?

Don’t Take Our Word For It: Chevron’s “We Agree” Campaign One of 2010’s Worst

By Mike G.
Tuesday, December 14th, 2010
Spoofed Chevron posters on a fence in San Francisco

Spoofed Chevron posters on a fence in San Francisco

Rather than take responsibility for its toxic mess in the Ecuadorean Amazon, Chevron launched a fancy new $90 million ad campaign to convince us all that the company really cares about the environment. And it might have worked, too, if it hadn’t been for those meddling activists.

As you have probably seen, Chevron’s ad campaign completely backfired thanks to all of the activists and artists out there who decided enough was enough with the corporate greenwash.

And now it’s official: Chevron’s ridiculous new “We Agree” ad campaign has just been named one of the top 10 “Biggest Branding and Marketing Fiascoes” of 2010!

That places them in the gloriously ill-conceived company of Christine “I am not a witch” O’Donnell and her run for Senate; the whole Jay Leno/NBC debacle; and the Apple employee who left his iPhone 4 prototype in a bar. Not an illustrious cadre of PR champs, if you know what I mean.

AdAge magazine gives out this dubious distinction, and had this to say about Chevron’s ad campaign:

CHEVRON HIJACKED BY THE YES MEN

When Ad Age received a call from a Chevron spokesman miffed about our coverage of its new campaign, we were puzzled — we hadn’t covered the campaign. After some digging, it turned out that activist group The Yes Men, along with Rainforest Action Network and Amazon Watch, had hijacked Chevron’s brand, its ads and its PR push. Not only did the group send out convincing fake press releases, it set up very convincing fake Chevron sites and even a fake Ad Age site with fake coverage. Much to the consternation of Chevron, a number of real news outlets fell for the ruse.

Thanks for being such good sports about that fake AdAge.com article, guys.

And thanks for recognizing a truly colossal PR blunder when you see it.

This is exactly the type of recognition Chevron’s shameful business practices deserve. When it comes to corporate shame, Chevron absolutely deserves top honors. Luckily, you can vote right now to send Chevron to the Corporate Hall of Shame!

If you want to do even more, we’re looking for folks to help us take our Chevron-spoofing to new heights by putting up spoof Chevron posters in your town, sign up for our street teams now.

Oil Spills Are Just Business As Usual for Chevron

By Mike G.
Friday, December 10th, 2010
Chevron's Toxic Legacy in Ecuador's Amazon

Crude oil contaminates an open toxic pool in the Ecuadorean Amazon rainforest. It was abandoned by Texaco (now Chevron) after oil drilling operations ended in 1990 and was never remediated.

Oil is a dirty business. There’s just no way around it. Drilling for oil, transporting it across the globe, refining it into fuel – every step of the process is as dirty and destructive as can be. And that’s even when things go right.

Of course, as we’ve all witnessed far too often, things don’t always go right, and oil spills are as inevitable as the rest of the pollution caused by the oil business.

In just the past week, for instance, a Chevron pipeline spilled about 500 barrels in Salt Lake City, Utah; Chevron’s Richmond, CA refinery spilled 1,300 barrels; and it was revealed that Chevron’s North Burnaby refinery in British Columbia, Canada is still leaking oil into the Burrard Inlet seven months after it was first discovered.

(It’s not just oil, either. Chevron’s Pascagoula, Mississippi refinery reported a release of Benzene, a known carcinogen, earlier this week.)

What has also become abundantly obvious is that Chevron just seems to regard oil spills as a normal course of doing business. The company’s chief concern when a spill occurs is to minimize the impact to its bottom line, not to people or the environment — just as we’ve seen in Ecuador, where the company refuses to take responsibility for its 18 billion gallons of toxic oil waste in the Ecuadorean Amazon.

There are many more cases to illustrate this point. The pipeline spill in Salt Lake City was the second in the past six months, for example. The first spill occurred back in June and resulted in some 33,000 gallons of crude oil being dumped into Red Butte Creek. Thankfully, this second spill has prompted federal regulators to finally step in and do what Chevron should have done back in June: shut down the 60-year-old pipeline, which travels through sensitive watersheds, until a thorough investigation has been done and the integrity of the pipeline is assured.

When Chevron does pretend to take environmental safety seriously, you can feel the insincerity radiating from every official statement. A recent forecast by Chevron showed that a spill off the coast of the Shetland Islands, where it is operating a deepwater well, could reach the coasts of England, Norway, and Greenland within two weeks of the spill. That’s as far ahead as the company could project the impacts of a spill, however, because the computer spill modeling software the company uses constantly crashes when set to make projections further out. But hey, what can they do? According to Chevron, this is the same software the whole industry uses. Feel safer?

This is why the trial to hold Chevron accountable for its oil pollution in Ecuador is not just about Ecuador. It’s not even just about Chevron. For far too long, Big Oil, Big Coal, and other extractive industries have been poisoning our planet and making a killing in the process. Ecuador needs to be the line in the sand. Companies like Chevron cannot continue to poison our planet with impunity — they must be held accountable for every bit of environmental destruction, every human rights violation, every impacted community.

And the winners are…

By Mike G.
Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

The votes have been counted and the winners of our Punk Chevron contest have been announced.

Congratulations to Jamie Way, of Denver, CO for creating this 1st place design:

Chevron spoof poster: Destroying communities shouldn't be profitable, but it is!

Jamie will be receiving a framed copy of the poster signed by the Yes Men.

Along with the winning design, the second and third place designs will be mass-produced and sent out to our street team members, who will be putting these posters up everywhere and anywhere they can.

2nd place:

Chevron spoof poster: Oil companies should end the wars they helped start

3rd place (and one of my personal favorites):

Chevron spoof poster: If we got a nickel for everything we killed

Sign up for our street teams now if you want to help spread these posters far and wide!

And of course there’s our winning video, made by Joseph Thayer, which will be featured on the home page of FunnyOrDie.com!

Congratulations to all of our winners!

Plus, just wanted to give an honorable mention shout out to Farrell McLaughlin for his Chevron website-spoofing entry.

All of the entries were absolutely amazing. Thanks to everyone who devoted their creative energies to spoofing Chevron’s campaign, or their time to vote and spread the word! We couldn’t have done it without you all.

Chevron And The Bittersweet California Election Results

By Mike G.
Friday, November 12th, 2010

November 3rd was a bittersweet day. The day after the midterm elections, we found out that Prop 23 — the so-called “Dirty Energy Proposition” that was funded by Texas oil companies Valero and Tesoro along with the billionaire oilmen Koch brothers — had gone down in flames, which was most certainly good news. But Prop 26, Chevron’s stealth attack against California’s environmental regulations, had snuck through.

Chevron spoof poster: Oil companies should respect democratic institutions, not run them

Have you voted for your favorite spoof Chevron ad yet?

There’s room for debate about what Prop 26 will mean for California’s global warming law, AB32. There was some fear before the election that it could be even more damaging than Prop 23, which would have suspended implementation of the state’s landmark climate bill indefinitely. On the other hand, Mary Nichols of the California Air Resources Board has since said that all plans and regulations under AB32 are “on track” despite passage of Prop 26.

But one thing is indisputable: Prop 26 will make it harder to hold California’s biggest polluters accountable in the future — and that’s exactly what Chevron was counting on when donating $4 million to help pass it. The company’s California refineries in Richmond and El Segundo are two of the top ten biggest emitters of industrial carbon pollution in the state.

Currently, these types of dirty, polluting operations are charged fees by the government in order to pay for the social and environmental damage they cause. Prop 26 reclassified all those fees as taxes, however, so they now require a two-thirds vote in the state Senate in order to be passed. And as we all know, there is no getting certain legislators to vote for anything called a “tax” no matter how necessary it may be to ensure clean air, drinkable water, and healthy communities.

This is exactly the reason why Chevron tried to keep its support for Prop 26 quiet — the company knew damn well that Californians would reject its attempt to evade paying its fair share for its pollution. Because not only does Prop 26 make it harder for the state to hold Chevron accountable for its pollution, it also ensures that the taxpayers of California are now going to have to foot the bill Chevron refuses to pay.

For the record, this is a company that made $167 billion in profits last year. Of course, the company also pollutes. A LOT. Its Richmond and El Segundo refineries emitted nearly 4.8 and 3.6 million tons of greenhouse gas pollution in 2008, respectively, making them the 6th and 9th biggest industrial sources of emissions in the state.

The Richmond refinery emits the equivalent of the carbon emitted annually by 926,725 cars, the El Segundo refinery the equivalent of 696,863.0324 cars (based on this conversion rate). And the fine people of California will now be paying for the impacts those emissions have on the environment, because Chevron refuses to clean up after itself in California, just as it refuses to clean up its mess in Ecuador.

But there is still reason to find some comfort in the election results. Defeating Prop 23 wasn’t the only victory on November 2nd: Richmond’s Green Party mayor, Gayle McGlaughlin, was returned to office despite a million-dollar smear campaign run against her by — you guessed it! — Chevron. Given the amount of pollution Chevron’s Richmond refinery is responsible for, it’s probably no wonder that McGlaughlin, the Richmond Progressive Alliance, and other allies were able to beat back the Big Oil behemoth.

The election results were most definitely a mixed bag. But we can all take heart from the successful mobilizations against Big Oil’s attempts to railroad California’s energy and environmental policies. The local mobilization against Chevron in Richmond and the statewide mobilization against Prop 23 show that the people still have the power when they choose to exercise it.

Chevron’s $4 million support for Prop 26 really puts the lie to their bogus new greenwash campaign. The company thinks we’re stupid enough to believe it’s a responsible corporate citizen even while it refuses to take responsibility for its pollution in Richmond and Ecuador and is actively seeking to forestall any attempts to make the company pay for the environmental damage it has done.

Luckily we have just the place for you to vent your frustration with Chevron’s greenwash.

Vote early, vote often (for your favorite punked Chevron ads)

By Mike G.
Thursday, November 4th, 2010
Chevron spoof ad: Your mom doesn't live here
View the spoof Chevron ad gallery and vote for your favorites!

We have now fully entered the contest phase of our spoof “We Agree” ad campaign — meaning now is your chance to stick it to Chevron and be entered to win some fabulous prizes all at the same time!

We’ll be rewarding the creator of the best punked Chevron print ad with a framed copy of their creation signed by the Yes Men, and the top three will all be mass-produced and distributed to activists across the globe. The winner in the video category will have their punked Chevron TV ad featured on the homepage of FunnyOrDie.com. Resources and submission form can be found on our “How you can punk Chevron” page.

Our voting system is in place and ready to start tabulating the most-beloved of the nearly 150 spoof ads that have been submitted so far. A few of my favorites adorn this very post, as you might have noticed, but these are a mere taste of the brilliance that awaits you in our gallery of spoof Chevron ads.

The best part is that our voting system uses Facebook’s “Like” tool, so you’ll not only be helping the creators of your favorite ads reach unimaginable heights of fame and glory, but you’ll also be spreading the word about our campaign to push back on Chevron’s outrageous attempts to gloss over its horrible environmental record.

Here are a few more of my favs to thoroughly whet your appetite:

Chevron spoof ad

Chevron spoof ad

Chevron spoof ad

Does Chevron Think We’re All Stupid?

By Mike G.
Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

This post is by RAN’s executive director, Becky Tarbotton. It was written for the launch of our new website, ChevronThinksWereStupid.org, where you can get materials to remix Chevron’s “We Agree” ad campaign and enter our contest for the best spoof ad.

Have you seen the way big oil has tried to rebrand itself since the BP oil disaster started six months ago? Each company wants us to believe it is the good oil company, the exception to the rule — not at all like BP. A few months ago, Shell launched its “Let’s Go” campaign, where it touts itself as providing cleaner energy for the next generation. And last week Chevron pulled out all the stops with its multi-million dollar “We Agree” ad campaign.

Chevron’s ads seek to address the current critiques of oil companies with affirming statements like “Oil companies should support the communities they’re part of” and “Oil companies should put their profits to good use.” All the ads feature “real people” saying what they think about oil companies while Chevron employees earnestly state, “We agree.”

Excuse my language, but what a bunch of hogwash. Chevron’s new ad campaign is an appalling display of hubris and greenwashing. It’s also ripe for the hoaxing. And that is exactly what’s happening. Chevron’s “We Agree” ad campaign is so rife with bitter but mock-worthy irony, in fact, that the comedic geniuses at Funny Or Die spoofed it today:

Chevron’s advertising scheme to win over its critics backfired when it was launched. But the campaign actually started going south from the moment of production.

The oil company initially attempted to hire green bloggers, political street artists and activists for its ad campaign — presumably thinking these folks would somehow forget that the company pulls in around $167 billion a year in revenues by drilling for, refining and selling one of the dirtiest fossil fuel sources around.

Apparently Chevron thought it could throw some money at environmentalists and get them to help clean up the company’s image. Instead, those environmentalists had another idea — they would tip-off some of their close friends and launch Chevron’s campaign for them.

The fun started last week when, as the New York Times put it, “pranksters” lampooned Chevron’s ad campaign. Or, to put it another way, the fun started when the advertising strategy for one of the biggest oil companies in the world was officially punk’d.

Hours before Chevron went live with its $90 million dollar “We Agree” ad campaign, Rainforest Action Network and Amazon Watch partnered with famous corporate pranksters The Yes Men and came out with our own version. We altered Chevron’s “We Agree” ads ever-so-slightly to highlight the company’s greenwashing efforts as well as its role in dumping 18 billion gallons of toxic oil pollution in the Ecuadorean Amazon. For the first few days of the company’s ad launch, our fake press release, ads and website dominated the news and drowned out Chevron’s corporate greenwashing.

Mock chevron ads also started showing up in the streets of San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, DC. And a contest was launched to see who could create the best-spoofed Chevron ad. My personal favorite has a sneering picture of Jack Nicholson with the tagline, “We lie because you can’t handle the truth.”

Our intention is not to trick reporters or play a practical joke on Chevron. Our intention is to highlight the egregious distance between Chevron’s rhetoric and reality. A company that wreaks havoc in communities across the globe has a lot of nerve coming out with ads featuring actors saying, “Oil companies should support the communities they’re part of.” It is hubris incarnate.

The question is, did Chevron think these ads would actually be compelling to critics? Do they really think we’re that stupid?

I think the answer may have been, yes. Instead of trying to clean up its mess, the company thought it could run a $90 million dollar ad campaign cleaning up its image.

Message to Chevron: We’re not that stupid.

This post originally appeared on Huffington Post.

Solar Good, Chevron’s Business Bad

By Mike G.
Friday, October 22nd, 2010

Change Chevron: Oil-covered hand in Ecuador
A hand covered in crude contaminates from an open toxic pool in the the Ecuadorean Amazon rainforest near Lago Agrio. It was abandoned by Texaco (now Chevron) after oil drilling operations ended in 1990 and was never remediated. View more pics of Chevron’s toxic legacy in the Ecuadorean Amazon.

A few weeks ago, the British government granted Chevron the first deepwater drilling permit it has approved since the BP oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico began back in April.

At virtually the same time — and with little to no fanfare — Chevron finished drilling the first deepwater oil well to be completed in North America since the tragedy in the Gulf started. Some 260 miles northeast of Newfoundland, Chevron’s well is the deepest ever drilled off of Canada’s coasts.

Now we’ve got news that Chevron will spend $7.5 billion on one of the largest deepwater drilling projects in US history. The Houston Chronicle describes it as “a massive floating city about 280 miles southwest of New Orleans.”

Chevron is leading the charge to recklessly exploit the world’s dwindling oil supplies in the post-Gulf oil spill world, but the company prefers to keep that fact quiet. Why? It’s one of those pesky facts that would spoil Chevron’s efforts to recast itself as a responsible, environmentally conscious oil company (despite the obvious fact that “environmentally conscious oil company” is an oxymoron that would require mass-cognitive dissonance to take hold in the public consciousness).

As part of its easy-to-spoof PR efforts, Chevron likes to highlight its projects that don’t actually involve enormous risks to sensitive ecosystems or contribute to global warming. One of those is the Chevron Lucerne Valley Solar Project, which will produce up to 45 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 13,500 – 33,750 homes. There’s definitely a certain poetic justice in Chevron’s dirty oil money being used to help bring more clean, green solar energy into the mix. But don’t go changing your opinion of the company just yet.

Chevron has no intention of changing its core business from dirty fossil fuels to clean renewable energy. That’s just window dressing, meant to mask the supremely dirty business going on inside the shop. In fact, between January 2009 and June 2010, Chevron spent over $28 million on lobbying and PAC contributions to federal candidates in order to protect its oil business, according to the Center for American Progress. The positive benefits of the Chevron Lucerne Valley Solar Project will easily be negated by Chevron continuing its dirty business as usual.

This isn’t the first time Chevron used a solar project as a means of greenwashing its otherwise dirty oil business. We posted about Chevron’s Project Brightfield earlier this year, a solar project the company will use to power its Kern River Heavy Oil Extraction Facility, once again defeating the purpose of green energy by charging full steam ahead with its dirty oil business. See a pattern here?

While all new solar capacity added to the national mix is undoubtedly a good thing, Chevron is plowing millions of dollars into efforts to protect its fossil fuels business, and the company’s own CEO has admitted that he hopes it will take generations to phase fossil fuels out altogether. Meanwhile, the company is aggressively pursuing unprecedented deepwater drilling operations that imperil precious ecosystems and wildlife.

Until Chevron stops working to keep us hooked on the dirty stuff for as long as possible in its blind quest for profits, it cannot credibly claim to be responsible or environmentally conscious. In other words, the company will continue to be ripe for the punking. Download our spoof Chevron ads and get to punking today by putting them up in your town!

Get in on the action: We need you to punk Chevron!

By Mike G.
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Are you offended and/or frustrated that companies like Chevron think we’re stupid enough to fall for their blatant greenwash? We agree.

That’s why we just had to punk Chevron’s new ad campaign. And we’ve had so much fun doing it that we just have to share.

Rainforest Action Network - Change Chevron - spoof ad

We’ve posted high-res PDFs of our posters spoofing Chevron’s new ad campaign on our fake Chevron marketing site. If you want to help us punk Chevron, download the posters now and put them up all over your township, city, municipality, community, or wherever-the-heck-you-live.

Then, just as importantly, post your handiwork for the world to see. Post it on Change Chevron’s Facebook wall, twitpic it with the hashtag #weagree, upload to Flickr with the tag “weagree,” or email/YouSendIt to us at changechevron@ran.org and we’ll get it out there.

If your punking juices are really flowing, though, perhaps you want to design your own spoof poster. If so, you’re in luck! We’re having a bit of a contest, along with the Yes Men and Amazon Watch, to see who can come up with the best punked Chevron ad. Pick a photo, write your own slogan, and send it along. The Yes Men have all the details about how to enter the contest on their blog: “Help us keep Chevron’s campaign on the skids!

So far, activists in Washington, DC, LA, and San Francisco have wheatpasted spoof Chevron posters around their cities and sent us pics:

Get us yours so we can include it in this slideshow!

Happy punkin’!