http://chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/business/3335685i knew Bush and his buddies would eventually get the better end of the deal in this disaster
9/5/2005 1:05:09 AM
storm cleanup at Navy bases, if you read it. It stays in the system.
9/5/2005 1:07:13 AM
i remeber back in the day when people deciding if we should go to war werent allowed to personaly profit from the defense contracts from said war... what an innocent time.[Edited on September 5, 2005 at 1:11 AM. Reason : -]
9/5/2005 1:11:24 AM
9/5/2005 1:57:15 AM
^post a source or stfu
9/5/2005 2:04:19 AM
either way that company got hired which means it will get paid for the servicesso either way whether KBR is dragging the company down or not "bush and his buddies" are still getting paid for this job
9/5/2005 2:08:32 AM
^^If I don't post a source, maybe that's because any fuckhead with Google can find it instantly?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HalliburtonChoice quotes:
9/5/2005 2:12:14 AM
^ so growth isnt so great. still -- i think 2% of a few billion is some nice cash.
9/5/2005 2:16:03 AM
9/5/2005 2:17:00 AM
^^Halliburton is a public company. That means it's traded on the stock market. That means its investors, which include its executives (and, purportedly, Dick Cheney) get paid when its stock price goes up.Stock prices go up because profitability increases. Because "growth isn't so great" for KBR, it's been dragging down the stock price of Halliburton as a whole, which is a much bigger company than KBR. A lot of people lose a lot of money when a biz unit drags down the share price, especially the CEO and his direct charges (and, therefore, Dick Cheney).If KBR were a good deal for Halliburton, you can damn well bet they would not be thinking of selling it off. The people involved are selling it off because it's costing them money.2% of a few billion is some nice cash indeed, except when you could be getting 5% of a few billion instead.
9/5/2005 2:26:39 AM
9/5/2005 3:34:44 AM
http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=346841
9/5/2005 4:38:53 AM
^^ And if he didn't, what were they going to do to him? Sue him for failure to produce results? And how do you differentiate the millions they gave him to the millions they give every executive that leaves a company? As for the other bullshit, Dick Cheney sold all his stock before becoming vice president. And 1% to 2% return on a corporate investment is horrible! That barely covers the cost of putting it into the bank. The opportunity costs associating with having billions of dollars locked up in a business that barely produces is just horrible. They could have, instead, taken that money and purchased treasury bills and earned several times that amount. It sounds to me like Haliburton is doing Bush a favor here, not the other way around.
9/5/2005 9:12:49 AM
9/5/2005 9:23:46 AM
9/5/2005 9:27:05 AM
Someone's prolly shoved their pockets full of cash. I won't be surprised if Halliburton=Enron.
9/5/2005 9:32:17 AM
^^ yeah, like that nutso, poor-ass businessman steve jobs!
9/5/2005 9:50:26 AM
exactly like him.thats a better example than you might think
9/5/2005 11:28:28 AM
wikipedia. the source of all true and unbiased news.
9/5/2005 11:31:40 AM
hey, don't bash Wiki
9/5/2005 11:41:33 AM
yea - millions of people can't be wrong
9/5/2005 1:25:48 PM
And thus we see why the administration really doesn't give a damn anymore.From the article:
9/5/2005 2:06:05 PM
OMF Bush conspiracy!!11!!1
9/5/2005 2:44:14 PM
Will someone name one company, other than Halliburton, that is capable of organizing and contracting the building and repair of large amounts of infrastructure?
9/5/2005 10:23:58 PM
9/5/2005 10:28:08 PM
^^Parsons Corporation, for example, is one of KBR's competitors. There are other companies in the infrastructure biz. I dunno what relative capabilities are.[Edited on September 5, 2005 at 10:30 PM. Reason : foo]
9/5/2005 10:29:50 PM
^^Doubt it. It's a high-level business decision that deals with KBR's earnings history. Not to mention its bad press, which this will surely engender.
9/5/2005 10:30:37 PM