in regard to a similar case in Ecuador against Chevron-Texaco. The racist comment was made by "protocol rv" and can be found here...
Comment 36
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=405x30994-----------------------------
A typical purpose of racism--treating people of another race as your inferior and even as subhuman, worthy only to be your slave--is to defend the rights of the rich. This motive has almost always been at work in white racism against the brown and the black. The racism was fomented in order to steal their lands or to live off their slave labor. Protocol rv is a Chevron-Texaco apologist, and that attitude--that, because an "Indian" presented the charges against Chevron-Texaco, the charges should be questioned--was no doubt the racist attitude that caused the horrible pollution in Ecuador in the first place, caused Texaco to do a lousy, cosmetic cleanup, and caused the corporate shuffle by which Chevron bought out Texaco and is trying to shed its liabilities and get away scot free from the worst oil disaster in history, bar none. (--a spill the size of Rhode Island that dwarfs the Exxon-Valdez and has been commonly referred to as "the rainforest Chernobyl"). What does it matter if 30,000 "Indians" are poisoned, their fisheries decimated, their water undrinkable with pollution streams that reach all the way to Peru? They are not powerful. They are not rich. They are brown. They eke out a subsistence living in the rainforest. They don't count. This was no doubt Texaco's attitude and the attitude of the rightwing government that let Texaco get away with it. And it is no doubt Chevron-Texaco's attitude today. Chevron-Texaco reportedly hired 12 P.R. firms to discredit the testimony of "the Indians" and their experts.
In Ecuador, the Indigenous tribes who filed suit, and have hung in there for more than a decade, through the ups and downs of their liability suit, have a friendly government--the very popular leftist government of Rafael Correa--which wants this horror cleaned up and the health problems that it has caused (high incidence of cancer, spontaneous abortions and other grave health problems) paid for. Correa has said that he sides with the Indigenous. (And, of course, Chevron has tried to use that against him--as if he didn't have a right to an opinion.)
In Peru, the Indigenous have a horrible rightwing government--Alan Garcia's--which has a 25% approval rating, and which open fired from a helicopter gunship on Indigenous people who were trying to prevent the rape of another part of the Amazon forest. He is extremely corrupt and a U.S. puppet. It should further be noted that one of the corporate interests that the U.S. is defending in Colombia--with $7 BILLION of our tax dollars and the U.S. military, which is now occupying Colombia--is Occidental Petroleum. So, if the trial is remanded to Peru, by the 9th Circuit here, it can be more easily influenced--with bribes, threats, political deals and other corrupt practices. In fact, that is what happened in Ecuador in the first round of that suit.
This isn't to say that politics can't influence the courts here, God knows. And since we now have a Corporate Ruler Supreme Court--which might influence the 9th Circuit--and no anti-corporate, pro-people advocates in our political establishment (the result of privatized, 'TRADE SECRET' voting systems in the U.S., in my opinion), and since the U.S. government is virtually a subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum, it is by no means certain that the Indigenous will get a fair hearing in the U.S. Perhaps what will happen will parallel the Ecuador case, that is, that the 9th Circuit will send it to Peru, which will be welcomed by Occidental Petroleum, but the by the time the case is heard there, Garcia will be out and a new day will have dawned, with the election of a leftist government and the hope that the Indigenous can win such a case--that it won't be won by skulduggery.
I fervently hope that, some day, Latin America will have its own "common market" and an integrated legal system, by which matters like this can be taken to an objective forum when the government is too corrupt to handle the matter fairly.