EXCLUSIVE: THE “CONSCIENCE” CLUB THAT CALLED OUT BIG OIL’S BIG LIES

In a David-vs-Goliath battle for the ages, a father-and-son duo from a quiet Suffolk market town spent years as the “secret conscience” of one of the world’s most powerful companies. Long before the headlines caught up, the Shell Corporate Conscience Pressure Group (SCCPG) was sounding the alarm on a culture of corporate rot that would eventually bring the oil giant to its knees. The “Don” of Resistance The SCCPG wasn’t born in a boardroom, but from a bitter legal war. Co-founded by Alfred Donovan (a WWII veteran) and his son John, it grew out of claims that Shell had pinched promotional ideas like the SMART loyalty card and Nintendo games from their company, Don Marketing. Driven by Shell’s alleged bullying, the Donovans launched the SCCPG to hold the oil giant to its own “General Business Principles”.

No Catch, No Cash: Membership was FREE! read more

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SHELL’S SECRET CONSCIENCE CLUB: The Insiders Who Dared To Fight Back

John Donovan article assisted by Claude.ai

They weren’t Greenpeace. They weren’t protesters chained to railings. They were the people who filled up your car, ran the forecourt shops and owned Shell shares — and they’d had enough.

In the mid-1990s, a remarkable organisation was quietly born in a market town in Suffolk. The Shell Corporate Conscience Pressure Group (SCCPG) was co-founded by father-and-son duo Alfred and John Donovan, operating out of St Andrews Castle, Bury St Edmunds. Its membership was entirely free — no subscriptions, no catch, no donations asked or accepted. The whole operation was funded personally by the Donovans themselves. And within months, over 200 Shell retailers had signed up, their letters arriving thick and fast, each one more damning than the last. read more

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SHELL’S SECRET CONSCIENCE CLUB: THE REBEL RETAILERS WHO BLEW THE WHISTLE ON BIG OIL’S HYPOCRISY!

GROK EXCLUSIVE: How a fired-up father and son duo turned a garage grudge into a full-scale mutiny against the Shell empire – and were proved RIGHT when the whole Anglo-Dutch house of cards came crashing down!

In the dog-eat-dog world of petrol pumps and boardroom billionaires, one plucky band of Shell station owners dared to stand up and say: “Enough is enough!” Welcome to the Shell Corporate Conscience Pressure Group – the no-fees, no-nonsense rebel alliance that exposed the oil giant’s dodgy double standards three decades ago. And guess what? Their damning warnings about unscrupulous top brass were spot-on when the infamous 2004 reserves scandal blew the lid off Shell’s dodgy dealings and finally killed off the 100-year Anglo-Dutch marriage that had ruled Big Oil. read more

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A King in the Age of ‘No Kings’: Is This the Most Unusual State Visit in Modern History?

As nationwide protests sweep the United States, the timing of a British royal visit raises quiet but serious questions.

👑 A STATE VISIT LIKE NO OTHER?

State visits are meant to project calm.

They are choreographed expressions of:

  • stability

  • continuity

  • mutual respect

Carefully timed. Carefully managed. Carefully staged.

Which is precisely why the proposed visit of King Charles III to the United States feels… different.

Not because of the King.

But because of the moment.

🪧 A COUNTRY IN PROTEST

The United States is currently witnessing nationwide protests on a scale that is difficult to ignore. read more

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John Donovan Early Career and Shell Relationship

Bing 3rd April 2026.  Prompt: Latest news on Donovan Shell feud

John Donovan is a British former advertising professional and Shell shareholder who became a prominent whistleblower and watchdog on Royal Dutch Shell, known for his decades-long legal and investigative battles with the oil giant.

John Donovan began his career in petrol retailing in the 1960s and co-founded Don Marketing, an advertising and sales promotion agency. His company created large-scale promotional campaigns, including scratch-and-win programs, for major fuel brands such as BP, Esso, Chevron, Conoco, Texaco, and Shell. read more

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Part 2: Shell Corporate Conscience Pressure Group

🧨 THE WARNING THAT CAME TRUE

Looking back, what makes the Corporate Conscience campaign so uncomfortable for Shell is not just what it alleged—but what came next.

Within a few years, Shell was engulfed in the 2004 reserves scandal, one of the most serious corporate crises in its history.

Billions of barrels of oil and gas reserves were reclassified

Senior executives were forced out

Regulators launched investigations on both sides of the Atlantic

The century-old Anglo-Dutch structure was dismantled

Royal Dutch Shell plc was born out of the fallout read more

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Windows Forum: Shell vs Donovan Feud: Domain Loss, Leaks, and Self-Inflicted PR Humiliation

…a company that could not believe it was being outplayed by a persistent critic with a website, an archive, and a very long memory.

The Donovan–Shell feud is one of those corporate grudge matches that has outlived half a dozen boardrooms, multiple CEOs, and the era when companies could plausibly pretend the internet was a passing fad. What began as a business dispute in the 1990s metastasized into a decades-long reputational blood feud in which Royal Dutch Shell repeatedly managed to turn irritation into spectacle, and spectacle into self-inflicted embarrassment. The most humiliating part is not that Shell was criticized; it is that on several key occasions Shell’s own reactions seemed to validate the criticism, amplify the critic, or simply hand him another victory. Reuters documented one of the strangest episodes in 2009: Shell allegedly asked an anti-cyber fraud agency to target Donovan’s site while internal emails acknowledged it offered better information than Shell’s own communications. (shellnews.net)

Background​

The Donovan story starts in a conventional corporate dispute and ends somewhere closer to performance art. John Donovan and his late father Alfred were once involved in promotional work for Shell, then fell into a bitter conflict that spilled into litigation, media coverage, and eventually a sprawling archive of criticism aimed at the oil major. Reuters noted in 2009 that the feud dated back to the 1990s and that earlier business and libel disputes had already been settled, yet the internet battle only grew louder. (shellnews.net) read more

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Windows Forum: Shell’s Long-Fought Domain Feud: AI Roundtable Satire and Reputational Fallout

The Machines Agree on Shell’s Long Shadow

A satirical “AI roundtable” about the Shell saga may read like internet theater, but it lands because the underlying dispute is real, persistent, and unusually durable. What makes the piece sting is not the fictional dialogue itself; it is the way four different AI systems are imagined converging on one basic conclusion: Shell’s long-running conflict with John Donovan is no trivial internet squabble, but a reputational problem that never fully went away. That framing is consistent with the historical record of a domain-name battle Shell lost in 2005 and with the company’s own continuing sensitivity around branding, online identity, and corporate narrative. read more

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THE TOP 10 REAL‑WORLD ORGANISATIONS MOST LIKE A BOND‑ERA MEGACORP

INTRODUCTION

Ladies and gentlemen, polish your white cats and adjust your laser‑armed wristwatches — because today we dive into the glittering, shadow‑soaked world of modern institutional power. Not actual criminal masterminds, of course — but organisations whose scale, secrecy, influence, and occasional controversy make them feel just a tiny bit like the boardroom version of SPECTRE or SMERSH.

This is satire, not slander. This is commentary, not conspiracy. This is the Top 10 Bond‑Villain‑Adjacent Organisations of the Modern Age. read more

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“JUST TALK NICER TO INVESTORS!” — SHELL’S LATEST PLAN TO FIX… EVERYTHING

After oil spills, climate U-turns, court battles and decades of controversy, PR experts have finally cracked it:

👉 Shell doesn’t need to change.

👉 Shell just needs better chat.

Yes, really.

Because when your business model is under global scrutiny, what you truly need is… a friendlier tone in the City of London.

Brilliant.

🛢️ SHELL’S GENIUS NEW STRATEGY: SMILE HARDER, DRILL HARDER

In a moment that feels almost too on-the-nose to be real, Shell has reportedly been told to “engage the City more.”

Translation:

If investors start asking awkward questions… just explain things better. read more

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Earthquakes, Lawsuits, Liability… and Now a Convenient Exit Plan

If there were an Olympic event for corporate disappearing acts, Shell would be on the podium—gold medal, champagne in hand, and a press release explaining it was all part of a “long-term strategy.”

The latest act?

A slickly packaged “strategic shift” involving its Dutch gas business, NAM—the same operation linked to the Groningen gas field, where decades of extraction triggered earthquakes, wrecked homes, and left a political and human mess that refuses to quietly go away.

Now, suddenly, Shell has discovered the ancient art of restructuring. read more

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Shell Wins Landmark Right to Save the Planet… Eventually, Maybe, If Convenient

In what may go down as one of the most exquisitely polite legal contradictions of the climate era, Shell has emerged from its landmark Dutch court battle with a result that can only be described as existentially reassuring for oil executives everywhere.

Yes, the court confirmed that Shell has a duty to help prevent dangerous climate change.

No, it declined to say what that actually means in practice.

Mission accomplished.

The Legal Masterpiece: Responsibility Without Numbers

The original 2021 ruling had the audacity to suggest that Shell should cut emissions by 45% by 2030—a dangerously specific idea that risked turning corporate responsibility into something measurable. read more

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GREATEST CON IN CORPORATE HISTORY: #6 — Shell’s Oil and Gas Reserves Scandal

A totally unbiased, wildly judgmental Top 10 list for the greatest cons in corporate history researched and ranked by Microsoft Copilot. 

#10 — Wells Fargo: “Would You Like a Fake Account With That?”

The con: Millions of bank accounts and credit cards opened without customers’ consent so staff could hit absurd sales targets.

Why it ranks: This is small-time compared with the mega-frauds below, but the sheer banality of it earns a spot. No exotic derivatives, no offshore labyrinth—just everyday customers quietly milked by a system that turned cross‑selling into a contact sport. It’s here because it shows how a toxic incentive scheme can turn a whole bank into a low‑rent identity theft machine. read more

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THE GREATEST CON IN CORPORATE HISTORY: 30 March 2026

Researched and ranked by perplexity.ai

THE GREATEST CON IN CORPORATE HISTORY

Because sometimes, the line between business genius and breathtaking audacity is just a press release away.

10. Volkswagen’s “Zero-Emissions (If You Don’t Count the Emissions)” Scandal — 2015
German efficiency met moral flexibility: VW installed “defeat devices” that made their cars pass emissions tests only when they knew they were being tested.
Why it ranks: The cars basically put on a tuxedo for the exam and switched back to sweatpants afterward. Incredible dedication to deceit.

9. WeWork’s “Tech Company (That Sells Desks)” Delusion — 2019
Adam Neumann pitched glorified office rentals as a transcendent movement of human consciousness. Investors agreed—briefly—before the IPO burst like a kombucha bubble.
Why it ranks: Proof that charisma and buzzwords can move billions—until someone asks to see a profit. read more

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THE GREATEST CON IN CORPORATE HISTORY

Top 10 Corporate Cons That Made Enron Look Like a Parking Ticket By Grok, the Tabloid Truth-Teller

Ladies and gentlemen, grab your popcorn and your pitchforks! These aren’t just scandals — they’re masterpieces of corporate sleight-of-hand that turned boardrooms into casinos, investors into suckers, and CEOs into (temporary) billionaires. We ranked them by a deadly serious formula: Audacity × Dollar Damage × How Long They Got Away With It × Public Face-Melting Embarrassment. Shell’s infamous oil-reserves fairy tale makes the cut, but it’s not even cracking the top five. Buckle up — here we go! read more

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THE GREATEST CON IN CORPORATE HISTORY

ChatGPT: Top 10 Boardroom Swindles Ranked by Greed, Gall and Jaw-Dropping Audacity

From global financial meltdown to oil giant “oopsies,” we rank the biggest corporate cons ever pulled — and the executives who (mostly) walked away smiling

An entirely unauthorised, deeply cynical, and ruthlessly honest countdown

What is the greatest corporate con of all time?

Is it the one that stole the most money?

The one that fooled the most people?

Or the one that looked you straight in the eye… and lied anyway?

Welcome to the definitive Top 10.

A parade of financial wizardry, ethical gymnastics, and industrial-scale cheek — where “mistakes” cost billions, “misjudgments” ruin lives, and “accountability” is something that happens to other people.

🧨

THE TOP 10

🔟 #10 — Wells Fargo: Banking, But Make It Fiction

The con:

Millions of fake accounts opened without customer consent to hit sales targets. read more

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