SocraticGadfly

July 08, 2026

Strangeabbott hires the Schatz to give Texas elections the Schitz

Strangeabbott hires nutter Nate Schatzline to somehow try to fuck around with elections and do T-Rump's bidding. That's what it means, Kuff. NOT hiring him to replace Jane Nelson as secretary of state is kind of a tell. Outside of fucking around with elections, as the story notes, he'll be Strange's point man on trying to get the Lege to OK closed primaries. Note that Schatz pushed a bill to that end in 2025 but it never got out of committee, meaning Strange is going to probably have to do a fair bit of strongarming.

Schitz — yeah, let's just go there — is also a 2020 election falser and more.

And, in re that Trib piece, as I said on Kuff's posting of it:

Once again, the Trib tries to erase third parties. I don’t know who the Libertarians might be running or not, but I know the Greens have a practicing Muslim, Shehla Fahzi for comptroller, who promises to trash all anti-BDS language in the Comptroller’s office, a pledge I am unaware of Dem Sarah Eckhardt making. (I’m going in part on an interview the Observer had shortly before primaries, when it never raised that issue with her.)

Shock me. 

Eckhardt? She is sympathetic to pro-Palestinian protestors, but has not made a specific pledge like that. 

TIme for another round of Substack blocks

This follows on my previous one, published in April.

We start with likely racialist if not actual racist, and Zionist fellow traveler, Stetson. He reads both racist Richard Hanania AND a second Substack where Hanania coauthors, and Zionist genocidalist Bari Weiss, along with Jesse Singal of the Harper's letter bullshit. Oh, and Sully, Andrew Sullivan the rac(ial)ist. He also follows at least one COVID contrarian, plus Freddie De Boer and others. Oh, and yes, Hanania is still a rac(ial)ist. Jamelle Bouie has the goods.

Racist, genocidalist, homophobe and more (language like "sandfaggots") Chet S

No More Lies? Rothschild comments, especially with claims the US went bankrupt in 1871 and was refounded as a corporation with Rothschild help? We've gone from anti-Zionism to antisemitism, and into conspiracy theory. Also a COVID denialist. And a climate change denialist. Also, his URL is "No More Lies 1"; gack, is there another? Also also, he has a Jeebus picture as his icon.

Silvia Rousseva? Saw No More Lies as a climate change denial restack by Silvia. Even more of a COVID denialist; follows naturalist fallacian Mike Adams, among others. Calls Charles III "lizard king" and quite possible means it in the Icke sense. Also a Bulgarian nationalist, I guess, who says that Bulgaria joined NATO "under Foreign Minister Solomon Passy (no, this is not a Bulgarian name, in case you’re wondering)." I guess a Rumanian name like Silvia Rousseva, if real, also isn't a Bulgarian name. (It is interesting that Adams seems to loathe MAGAts. Does he loathe MAHAts too?) For right now, he's just muted.

Among those he follows? Don Jeffries. He's a Trump assassination conspiracy theorist, a "ZOG" person, and via his self-published level books on Goodreads, a JFK assassination conspiracy theorist and a COVID conspiracy theorist. (He's blocked there, too.) He's also a flat racist, per this piece. AND also, GACK, a "crisis actor" conspiracy theorist, per this piece.

Another followed? Vigilant Fox. COVID conspiracy theorist, presumably an antivaxxer if they're "MAHA" as well as MAGA. Claims to have been a "healthcare worker" during COVID, which as we anti-COVID conspiracy theorists know, can mean about anything. Even if you're "licensed."

"Dr." Wojak. Quotes are deliberate scare quotes. COVID denialist and even a "hoaxer." Ebola denialist. Tick conspiracy theory promoter. (Don't even bother asking if you haven't heard.) Measles epidemic denialist. 

These above all came directly (Rousseva) or indirectly via this piece at The Dissident. Dood remains good on rounding up stuff tangentially or directly related to Israel, and personally has not crossed THAT line, but he sure attracts a lot of people who do. 

The Truth About Cancer? Rod Dreher-level religious nuttery, combined with pseudomedicine, including touting ivermectin (natch) for cancer. And contrails! And false claims about glyphotate. (Via Mike Adams of course.)

Scott Carney for promoting things like Trump assassination conspiracy theories. And, although she didn't write this one, Nina Burleigh is part of the listed team at that Substack. Also, no dood, Trump is not in any literal sense the (nonexistent) antichrist. Nor did he steal the 2024 election through a device of inventing fake counties. Yes, Carney, you admitted you got p'wned. You didn't admit you're a sucker enough to get p'wned.

Another Dissident post, about Zelensky's state funeral for Nazi and former OUN leader Andriy Melnyk, has led to more blocks.

Via Zionist "Pickles" in his feed I hit Zionist  "JTexaynes," full of Zionist drivel. Pickles comes off as a less-than-fully-odious conservative Zionist.

Binky LaRue: Antisemitic, not anti-Zionist, if he's talking about how ALL the Jews in Israel aren't semites (on a modified version of the Khazar hypothesis, still, most Ashkenazi have some semitic ancestry, and certainly Mizrahi, Sephardi, etc., and also talking about what Henry Ford said about the "Protocols." Later claims the Protocols are true.  Also a conspiracy theorist, claiming Patton was killed by "them" (natch) because he claimed we were fighting the wrong war. Has other "them" notes.

Off him, Tariq Acknickulous, who's antisemitic, anti-anti-Zionist with strawmanning to boot, clueless about why many people join the US military and sounds like "privilege" himself, and more. 

Also off Binky? SRK.

Off SRK? The Dutchess, with a "truth about Hitler" post. And "Freedom Fighter." Avowed National Socialist. Fraktur / Gothic font. "1488" part of name.  Actually reported that one, too. Hertz with funky letters. Another Nazi.

Off the second of two Dissident posts about Larry Johnson claiming Iran already has one or more nukes, pseudo-leftist Tedder 130. Muted first. Now blocked. Between bitching that he hasn't informed himself better in comment to a comment by me (why bitch? get started!) to reading non-leftists like Taibbi, Tracey, and the antisemitic-flirting John Helmer, that's not anti-imperialist in a principled sense, it's a grab bag of shit.

Pickles? Small-grade generic Zionist liar. But, more and more time on social media makes me quicker to pull the block trigger. 

Someone followed by a commenter there, Dude? White Rabbit. Also Nazi with the Gothic font. Runs not just one but two shithole Nazi sites. And, Zyklon Bee (duh) whose home page of activity says "Jews, Jews, Jews." Off that person, blocked NatSocToday and Aryan Revolutionary (who looks awfully dark to be one), Right Winger Austin (also has "1492" in name) for general racism and virulent sexism, off him, the regularly restacked Ben L (with the @ of "peniszone"), off Ben L the guy named Randall Flagg (@ of "reinesblut") off HIM the Pragmatic Prognosticator (who is anything but).  Blocked again directly off Dood? Debarelli, antisemitic, chemtrails. Off her, SiriusRex (antisemitic, Masonic coonspiracy theories and what I'll call volkish ideas about biology) and Die Welt gehört uns (complete with Nazi logo and slogan), Phantom Pain (one of several people with the fake quote from JFK 1939 about Jews in Israel blowing up their own telephone lines as a false flag, and talking about "Rothschilds").

Off Dude, in a different direction? Meryl Nass is a COVID conspiracy theorist, climate change conspiracy theorist and more, connected with Dr. Malone, too, on her website, even nuttier than her Substack. She got her medical license suspended in Maine and has since then engaged in false representation. Of course, I blocked Dude himself.

Rolf Kvalik? JFK assassination conspiracy theorist, of the new Israel did it breed. An 8-part series, 6 of them paywalled, claiming the "new" 2025 document dump was a smoking gun. He goes further and laughably claims someone "most Americans have never heard of," Meyer Lansky, was the fixer in all th is, which of course brings in the Mob.

Never Trust a Wizard. 9/11 truther and COVID denialist. I had subscribed to him without realizing all that. 

David Carroll? Zionist trying to reverse troll. 

==

On something else? I'll block Kevin Levin as soon as I can block him after his immediate block or autoblock of me for having the temerity to mention Lincoln and colonization on his Civil War History site. (The subject is never discussed by him.)

July 07, 2026

San Marcos says "no" to data centers; what's next?

San Marcos is Texas' first incorporated city to essentially ban data centers. Sen. Paul Bettencourt, invoking the Lege's 2023 "death star" law, says this is an illegal moratorium. Others note that reconfiguring zoning laws is not a moratorium. Expect Lege wingnuts to push a new law next year, followed by ignoring the state and US constitution's prohibition on ex post facto laws, and then to go after San Marcos. This will be justified under the idea of the new law simply "clarifying" the 2023 death star bill. The story notes that some smaller cities have already followed a "lite" version of San Marcos' idea.

Then, there are cities that don't have zoning, like Alvin, mentioned in the story, and of course, Helltown. Like unincorporated areas in places like Hood County that considered incorporation to hold off either data centers or crypto-mining sites, maybe this will spark a change of mind.

Or maybe not. That Hood County incorporation election fairly soundly lost last fall. Those who voted it down will continue to bitch, continue to not look in the mirror, and continue to vote for Rethuglicans for the Lege, gov and lite gov. Once again, contra Kuff, this won't be a Democrat wedge issue, in part,

Because ... 

==

Strangeabbott has called for a ban on data centers in rural areas. Treat this as a worried midterms election stunt/pledge until proven otherwise. 

Pro Publica offers up a trio of climate change stories that speak truth

First, carbon capture doesn't work, which I have long known, but needs to be told again and again and again, versus the lies of Big Oil and the companion lies of Big Neoliberal Government. 

Pro Publica has a great piece. It notes that projections for how much carbon capture and storage can do have increased even as the world fiddles while the planet burns more and more, and we get more and more behind the curve of serious action.

THIS:

Right now, globally, we’re permanently burying less CO2 than a single large power plant can emit in a year.

Is the bottom line. 

That's followed by the lies of Big Oil and Big Neoliberal International Government being exposed:

Some experts point to the CO2 that gets pumped into the ground to help extract oil as proof CCS works. But that process, called enhanced oil recovery, isn’t designed to function the same way and isn’t monitored as stringently. 
Global leaders are betting on carbon capture working now more than ever. 
The models used in the latest United Nations assessment presume the technology succeeds. 
IEA representatives and U.N. modelers say their projections reflect what the world has to do to achieve its goals of averting extreme warming.

There you are. 

The story then crunches the math.

On carbon-capturing plants? We'd have to plant THREE Texases or a bit more; or one Mexico, which is that same size. You see that happening? 

Plus, we'd need to be building countless injection sites — after doing proper geological study to determine each one works — AND monitoring all of them. You see that happening? 

And the price tag:

[B]y 2050, the world could be spending half a trillion dollars — more than China’s military budget, and 10 times more than the U.N.’s humanitarian and development aid budget — each year.

To coin a phrase: You see that happening? 

Related? Pro Publica does a deeper dive of how Big Oil, and specifically BP (stands for "Bullshitting about Petroleum") specifically bought off Princeton scientists in its "Wedges" study 22 years ago, and bought them off on ... carbon capture.

Yes, bought them off:

While its chief executive, John Browne, was rebranding his company as Beyond Petroleum, BP sought out researchers who were already thinking about how to address climate change without replacing fossil fuels. The company found them at Princeton University, where it set about amplifying their work by donating $15 million to start the Carbon Mitigation Initiative. The research program was framed around finding solutions to climate change while keeping fossil fuels in play, focusing heavily on carbon capture.

What else is there to say? 

Maybe this:

BP executives were deeply involved throughout the paper’s creation, according to an investigation by ProPublica and Drilled. [Robert] Socolow and [Stephen] Pacala, the authors of “Wedges” and the new center’s co-directors, not only discussed ideas with the company but, in a departure from academic norms, passed drafts back and forth and welcomed extensive feedback. 
Like a book publisher shaping a clunky early draft into a bestseller, an executive at the company suggested the scientists punch up the language, which they did. Browne himself suggested wording that became a part of the title. Together they helped make wonky scientific ideas more digestible for popular consumption. BP even tried — unsuccessfully — to revise a version of it. 
“Chaps, I have had a go at rewriting the paper,” Browne’s climate adviser wrote the researchers at one point.

THERE's the smoking gun. 

The two scientists of course deny anything nefarious:

Socolow and Pacala say they were sincere in their intent to solve climate change in the best way they believed possible, at a time when it was not obvious that wind and solar would succeed the way they have today. The researchers say BP had no control over the scientific content of the paper. They rejected the view that technologies didn’t exist to start solving climate change immediately and hoped carbon capture offered, as Pacala said, a way to make fossil fuels “climate safe.”

OK, well, do I totally believe that? 

Not really. 

Per his Wiki, post-retirement, Socolow has been a big pusher of the "personal carbon footprint." You know who else pushes that? Big Oil. "Guiltwashing" is a form of "greenwashing." 

You know what else Socolow does, per a link on his Wiki? He continues to push carbon capture, and that's as of a 2024 Washington Post op-ed. In other words? He's a liar.

That said, BP wasn't alone, of course. It was simply the most aggressive oil major, in part as the biggest non-American, non-national, oil company. 

That said, not only was BP not alone, Princeton was also not alone.

In the trifecta? As described by Pro Publica in detail in another story,  just like Big Tobacco, is Big Oil buying off scientists to do its bidding.  

This:

Corporate funders sponsored entire centers, paid the salaries of researchers, kept offices on campus and in some cases had veto power over projects.
Companies maintain they are supporting innovation and needed science. Universities say that with safeguards, sponsorship enhances research programs while preserving academic independence. 
Still, the impact of funding constitutes a pattern that Benjamin Franta, an associate professor of climate litigation at University of Oxford, called the “colonization of academia.”

Is just right. 

July 06, 2026

Once again, fuck off Blue Anon Mother Jones

Mojo blames Trump for Social Security's looming issues.

Reality?

As I told Kuff, where I saw the link on a recent "weekend link dump":

Uhh, Social Security's problems are driven by both hands of the duopoly. No president this century of either party has made a proposal to increase the FICA income tax cap. No Congress led by either party has done that, either. 
But Biden's expanding Social Security to federal employees without adding money? That bill came from Congress, and had been kicked around by both parties since 2013

You could extend that to a lot of other things.

Let's take COLAs. Why doesn't the FICA tax cap have a COLA, like income tax brackets, or like Social Security payments?

For that matter, why didn't Pelosi COLA what turned out to be the last minimum wage increase bill, in 2007, which I called for at this site at that time?

Hell, per Mojo, why do we have a separate FICA tax?

Cuz FDR said Social Security "mustn't have a dole." And so:

Almost alone among advanced industrial societies, the United States thus defined old-age pension support not as a civil right but as a property right, and built the Social Security system on a private-insurance model.

Just like health care. 

Why did it not go to farmers and domestic workers originally? In part to cut out the self-employed, but even more, to cut out Black folks; without that, I think FDR was afraid he didn't have the votes. But it got all but 33 votes in the House and all but 6 in the Senate. As with Jews, maybe he just was that much more conservative than Eleanor. (Per Wiki's page, 65 percent of Black Americans were excluded.) 

But Mojo's duopoly-tribalist at end and that's that. 

 

July 04, 2026

Tad Stoermer's McResistance™: A steaming pile of shit

A Resistance History of the United States

A Resistance History of the United States by Tad Stoermer
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

GACK. 

And, per the header, I can't think of a better piece to post on the Semiquincentennial. I said "McResistance™" in the header; it's like The Resistance™carried over from Trump 1.0 to Trump 2.0.

Full of seemingly mendacious framing, what I'll call lies by omission and more. And, probably all in the nature of grifting at the left edge of BlueAnon.

A few preliminary notes.

First, I follow Stoermer on Substack. (That will be changing, though.) I had not seen anything wrong with what he says, while noting that everything is paywalled and usually the paywall is pretty quick, as in, within 100 words or so. Boy, is the reality different.

Second, I am not sure that I noticed there that he is a former staffer to a US Member of Congress, maybe because I didn't click the "about" and was otherwise fooled. Since we have no third-party members (sit down Bernie Sanders) that means he’s a Democrat, and hence, as a talker about “resistance,” almost surely a member of The Resistance™. His personal website has more. Very “conventional,” even insider-ish on background. Owns two houses per that, and per IMDB, also does time in the Bahamas. Teh Google does not tell me what Congresscritter he worked for; I am curious and “goes to motive, your honor.” Scratch that; he has an older Wordpress, with an about page and it was for Mary Landrieu. Maybe that's just because he was in Louisiana, in law school at Tulane. But, she was a clear ConservaDem, on about anything other than civil rights.

(Side note: I find it interesting he went by "Taylor Stoermer" earlier. And his IMDB has the Danish "Størmer." Interestingly, that's not his

The first section? Rejecting Edmund Morgan’s late 20th century interpretation of Bacon’s Rebellion when many historians both Black and White used that as their framework for criticizing the 1619 Project (my links?) is a bold move — and contrarian. I've discussed, and critiqued, critics of the project and the project itself here

The second? Yes, even if Giles Corey didn’t say “more weight,” it was resistance to authority. Stoermer doesn’t even explain why he remained silent, for one thing. He also doesn’t note that 1692 Salem still had a “state church” and that none of the people there had fled for the religious freedom confines of Rhode Island. Salem 1692 has little relevance for today, other than to remind people what the First Amendment is all about, or to remind them what hysteria and sociogenic disorder or functional neurological disorder (the old conversion disorder) are about.

Speaking of? He doesn’t seem to mention the First Amendment here. I don’t know that for sure because there’s no index, always a ding.

Related on the issue of relevance? Per a 3-star reviewer, I bet a lot, a lot of people were expecting events more modern than this. While I doubt a 1-star reviewer’s claim that this is AI, a prescheduled book tour and other events does make it look like Tad Stoermer, like many others, is trying to make a buck off the semiquincentennial.

But, by 100 pages in, I’m figuring this is probably 2-star, and I’m not willing to totally reject the AI idea, and I know that I am not likely to read every word and that I am likely to unfollow him on Substack.

But wait, it gets worse!

Lightly grokked chapter 3. I already know what Somerset is, and contra some of the 1619 Project’s critics, said it DID play a part in the Revolution. Stoermer also ignores that it was a wartime policy, as Britain maintained slavery in the Caribbean until the 1830s, and that Black Americans who fled to Nova Scotia faced degrees of racism there. He also has a subsection, “Why we weren’t told this story,” which implies that “they” hid the story.

Chapter 4? Madison, the man who opposed chaplains in Congress, did not write the Bill of Rights for largely, let alone purely, cynical reasons. In an era where all New England states had state churches, the First Amendment alone was far from cynical. Stoermer also knows, but won’t tell you, that in 1787, the “Virginia Plan” DID want to federalize the constitution. And, Virginia's state-level Bill of Rights had both a religious freedom section and a freedom of conscience section.

In the same chapter, we get a WHAT THE FUCK moment. “Zuinglius”? The man commonly known as the Reformed movement reformer “Zwingli”? Nobody spells it in fully Latinized version. It comes off as snooty, when you recognize he's talking about Zwingli, or so it does to me, as if he's trying to shove erudition down your throat. And Stoermer doesn’t tell you that, mixing church and state, to use modern American terms, he was killed in battle. (And, he was more than "just a chaplain"; don't believe any claims to that end.) So, in this chapter, we have multiple lies by omission, and I am thinking he’ll be lucky to be above 1 star.

He also doesn’t tell you that, in 1776, Washington reversed his stance on banning new Black soldiers. Indeed, Blacks were fighting in the Virginia Battalion under Lafayette in 1781.

Patrick Henry as a McResistance model? The man who, unlike Washington, freed ZERO of his slaves at his death? Uh, sure.

If you want an anti-Federalist who took a pass on national office under the Constitution? Why not Sam Adams, who owned zero slaves in the first place?

That said, I’m puzzled otherwise. With this degree of talk about resisting the Constitution, for its flaws, with THIS DEGREE of talk, is Stoermer saying that he thinks the Articles of Confederation were better? Or, is this a chapter for McResistance as cosplay? Neither idea is good, nor palatable.

Chapter 5 on Oney Judge? Washington’s scheme was indeed illegal. I had always before thought the six months were consecutive, but that’s not true. That said, the original 1780 law, and the new in 1788, did not apply to members of Congress. Washington avoided seeking a ruling as to whether executive officials were covered or not.

Chapter 6 on Thoreau? Learned nothing new other than his grandfather resisted patriots in the Boston area and spent a night or two in jail as well.

Chapter 7 on the Underground Railroad and Fugitive Slave Act trials? From a book I recently read, “Freedom Ship,” I know now that, to coin a phrase, more enslaved Blacks freed themselves via The Underwater Submarine than via The Underground Railroad. I had not heard of Chloe Cooley before, or Upper Canada’s 1793 Act Against Slavery. That said. Stoermer oversells it. It’s no different than New York State’s law for gradual emancipation. It did not abolish slavery for any currently enslaved people, it allowed them to be sold within Upper Canada, and back into the US. And, it did nothing to save Cooley. She was taken across the Niagara River and Wiki’s page on her says her fate after that is unknown. (Her page ends by saying New York State’s emancipation act was very similar to that of Upper Canada.) See? Mendaciousness and lies by omission.

And, on history books, feeling the need to repeatedly look shit up, stuff that I'm not sure is less than fully true but about which I have suspicions, is guaranteed to piss me off. I skipped the rest of the chapter because I’ve read books about the Underground Railroad as well as “Freedom Ship,” two bios of Charles Sumner and more.

Chapter 8: I’ve read a bio of John Brown, a dual bio of Brown and Lincoln and other material about Brown’s funders. Largely skimmed.

Chapter 9: Reconstruction. Nothing new.

I then have the insight, after seeing no index at the end, but a “Resistance toolkit,” that he’s like the Indivisible dudebros of the first Bernie Sanders campaign. My thoughts about them and their grifting here.

And yes, grifting is the word, and it’s the word I’m ready to use about Stoermer by the 100-page mark.

I mean, think about it. Book officially comes out in June, tour already lined up. (I’m shocked his website doesn’t have a “merch” page.)

A quote from my Indivisible takedown is relevant:

What's also "funny" is that the sheepdoggers, per Ted Rall, seem to talk more about resisting than about proposing specific ideas. Maybe because they know that today's national Democratic Party, with its neoliberal foundations, is largely bankrupt. And we haven't mentioned foreign policy.

But wait, beyond my Goodreads review, I'm not done kicking Stoermer in the nads.

Per the last sentence of the pull quote?

What’s his stance on Gazans resisting Israel? Russia resisting US-NATO imperialism (while expanding its own)?

Back domestically, what does this former Army officer and son of a Navy officer think of “large standing armies” and whether ours today is too big, not too small?

Otherwise, typical of McResistance, he’s on Instagram, but not Book of Face, even though Hucksterman owns both. He’s of course on Blue Sky and of course not on Shitter. 

Scratch that! Actually, he WAS on there. Academia.edu and one other site both sent me that link, with one calling him “History Doctor” before the link. Further per the three-star reviewer calling him an armchair revolutionary, his LinkedIn lists him as living in Denmark. Guess that armchair came from across the Kattegat direct from Ikea in Sweden? And yes, we’re very much in the land of snarkin’ not cotton. And, per the “shape-shifting” feeling I’m getting — “Taylor” to “Tad,” “Stoermer” vs “Størmer,” etc.? That LinkedIn also says he got his Tulane law degree back in the middle 1990s. Say, age 25 in 1996, and thus, 55 now? Interesting that he’s never landed a tenure-track academic position. Maybe he just didn’t want one. But, even if tenure in a place like Tex-ass has less security than it did in the past, nonetheless, in general, tenure offers a degree of financial security.

Beyond that, actually looking through his Substack? A post that, before the paywall, excoriates any “Hang more [sic, we hung about none] Confederates” ideas? Lost me right there. I’ve long said the biggest thing wrong with Reconstruction’s military force was that we needed 100,000 troops for a generation instead of 20,000 for a decade on occupation duty. Contra Spielberg’s myth-making, Abe Lincoln’s rosewater wouldn’t have been that much better than Andy Johnson’s rosewater + open racism.

Beyond that, actually looking through his Substack? A post that, before the paywall, excoriates any “Hang more [sic, we hung about none] Confederates” ideas? Lost me right there. I’ve said the biggest thing wrong with Reconstruction’s military force was that we needed 100,000 troops for a generation instead of 20,000 for a decade on occupation duty.

As for who he reads? Largely left hand of the duopoly types. The Minnesota nicely odious Garrison Keillor is one.

Per a three-star reviewer on Goodreads, he's an armchair revolutionary, if any. Besides that, even within nonviolence, does he do anything? I mean, like BDS? I check the label all the time on olive oil to make sure none of it's Israeli. I don't buy any Unilever products because of their "tireless" effort to silence the actual Ben and Jerry. I don't buy Coke products. 

Ditto on oil. We have to have gasoline from somewhere, if we don't own electric vehicles, but I still can, and do, boycott eXXXon by brand. 

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