Gun control may be
a hot topic, but what about water control? Recent comments from Nestle CEO
Peter Brabeck imply that the world's water will soon come under the control of
corporations like his. Brabeck makes the astonishing claim that water is not a
human right, but should be managed by business people and governing bodies. He
wants water controlled, privatized, and delegated in a way that sustains the
planet.
Water
control hitting the United States
All of this means
that Brabeck's future plans include monitoring and controlling the amount of
water people use. One day, cities and towns may be forced by international law
to limit each household to a set amount of water. People may have to obtain
permits to dig wells or pay fines for collecting rainwater. Laws like these are
already in motion in the United
States .
Nestle's
CEO thinks all water should have a price
In the interview,
Brabeck touts that his company is the largest foodstuff corporation in the
world with over $65 billion in profit each year. He proudly claims that
millions of people are dependent on him and his company. Does this guy
think he is a god?
He calls water a "foodstuff" that needs an assigned value. Who controls the price of water? Brabeck bases his sustainability projects on the fact that a third of the world's population may face water shortages within 15-20 years. By price controlling water, Brabeck believes he may save the planet from food and water shortages in the coming years.
With the threat of future water shortages, is it necessary to strip all humans of their natural liberty to water, as Brabeck suggests?
What might happen if international controls are placed on water sources as a select few corporate dictators rule over the water supply?
Can a free and thriving people find better ways to conserve and respect water with their own liberty, rather than allow global corporations to control it?
He calls water a "foodstuff" that needs an assigned value. Who controls the price of water? Brabeck bases his sustainability projects on the fact that a third of the world's population may face water shortages within 15-20 years. By price controlling water, Brabeck believes he may save the planet from food and water shortages in the coming years.
With the threat of future water shortages, is it necessary to strip all humans of their natural liberty to water, as Brabeck suggests?
What might happen if international controls are placed on water sources as a select few corporate dictators rule over the water supply?
Can a free and thriving people find better ways to conserve and respect water with their own liberty, rather than allow global corporations to control it?
Nestle
CEO applauds GMO farming and criticizes organic practices
Putting a person
like Brabeck in control of water would create a tyrannical monopoly on
something that was meant to be free. If influential corporations put a lock on
the water tap, then they could dictate which farms received water. Nestle could protect GMO
farming. In fact, in the interview, Brabeck said organic food is "not the
best" and he went on to say that genetically modified food is perfectly
safe and causes no disease. With this philosophy, a Brabeck economy would cut
off organic farming from the water supply and allow genetically modified food
to reign over the people.
Working
together to preserve our right to water
Free people
everywhere must work together to preserve their natural right to water. If one
wants to dig their own well and tap the ground water, so be it. They are
responsible for their keep. If one wants to collect their own rain water to
sustain their own garden, then so be it. If one wants to purify their own water
trough charcoal gravity fed filters and ditch bottled water companies
altogether, then they will be better off for doing so. Is it time to reject a
bottled water industry that is brainwashing people to submit to
price controlled water? Humans can self sustain and work together, managing
their own water. Greedy corporate CEOs are not the answer. No one is dependent
on them. Water should remain unadulterated, free and available as a right to
all.
Sign a petition to stop Nestle from dominating the world's water supply.
http://stopnestlewaters.org/about
Sign a petition to stop Nestle from dominating the world's water supply.
http://stopnestlewaters.org/about
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