ROTFLM M/F AO!

washingtonpost.com

At the Pentagon Citgo, Price Trumps Patriotism

By Tomoeh Murakami Tse
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 30, 2006; D01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/29/AR2006092901469.html

He may have insulted the commander in chief, but President Hugo Chavez
of Venezuela does his part to keep the U.S. military's men and women
fueled up.

The gas station next to the Pentagon serving government workers pumps
fuel from Citgo Petroleum Corp., owned by the Venezuelan state oil
company. Still, men in dark suits and earpieces and women in military
uniform streamed into the Citgo station yesterday, a week after Chavez
depicted President Bush in a speech before the U.N. General Assembly as
a certain horned character with a pointy tail and a pitch fork.

"It usually depends on how low I am on gas and how convenient it is,"
said Eric Hommel, who works for the Air Force, as he refueled his
vehicle. The price, he explained, was also an important factor.

On that point, some agreed, suggesting that when it comes to gasoline,
it's cost over country, price tag over patriotism.

"Everyone has their opinion of" Bush, said Raymond Folks, 30, a
government contractor. "The bottom line is cheap gas prices."

Said his colleague, Todd A. Armstrong: "Aren't most things in the U.S.
owned by someone else?"

"It's gas -- it makes the cars go," Folks added.

And so it went yesterday morning at the gas station. One after another,
those who might have been expected to be most offended by Chavez's fiery
rhetoric largely greeted it with a shrug.

"It doesn't matter. I'm indifferent," said one Army man who did not want
to give his name, as the pump shut off with a clang.

Only current and retired military personnel and those driving government
vehicles can fuel up at the station, whose prices generally are 10 to 20
cents less than the competition.

Several said they had no idea their actions were profiting the
Venezuelan government. But when informed of the connection, one Defense
Department employee expressed his displeasure with Chavez and declared
that this was going to be the last time he would fuel up at any Citgo
station.

"I don't like him. I don't like his philosophy. He's a dictator," said
Oscar, who immigrated from the Philippines and equated Chavez with that
country's dictator, Ferdinand Marcos, who died in 1989. He wouldn't give
his full name.

Chavez's comments have been denounced by Democrats and Republicans
alike, and prompted a fury of calls in the blogosphere for a boycott
against Citgo.

Robert Turcios, an employee at the Pentagon Citgo, said it was difficult
to gauge whether international politics was hurting the station's bottom
line because the gas pumps had been closed much of the week for
maintenance. They reopened yesterday.

"We've been busy the whole day," Turcios said.

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