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As reported on by Corporate Watch, Nestle and former CEO Peter Brabeck-Letmathe have a long history of disregarding public health and abusing the environment to take part in the profit of an astounding $35 billion in annual profit from water bottle sales alone. The report states:
“Nestlé production of mineral water involves the abuse of vulnerable water resources. In the Serra da Mantiqueira region of Brazil, home to the “circuit of waters” park whose groundwater has a high mineral content and medicinal properties, over-pumping has resulted in depletion and long-term damage.”
Nestle has also come under fire over the assertion that they are actually conducting business with massive slavery rings. Another Corporate Watch entry details:
“In 2001, Nestlé faced criticism for buying cocoa from the Ivory Coast and Ghana, which may have been produced using child slaves.[58] According to an investigative report by the BBC, hundreds of thousands of children in Mali, Burkina Faso and Togo were being purchased from their destitute parents and shipped to the Ivory Coast, to be sold as slaves to cocoa farms.”
So is water a human right, or should it be owned by big corporations? Well, if water is not here for all of us, then perhaps air should be owned by major corporations as well. And as for crops, Monsanto is already working hard to make sure their monopoly on our staple crops and beyond is well situated. It should really come as no surprise that this Nestle Chairman fights to keep Monsanto’s GMOs alive and well in the food supply, as his ideology lines right up with that of Monsanto.
2013-04-23 11:00:39
Source: http://gibiru.com/index.php/uncensored-news/78-news/34001-nestle-water-should-not-be-a-human-right
Even the idea of total complete water privatization, is absolutely devoid and utterly lacking of any discernable trace of humanity. Whoever advocates that notion should burn, and whilest burning, they should be reminded of why water, fresh clean, non-fluoridated, non-contaminated, non-laced with psychotropic drugs, water is and should ever be among the most basic of human rights. The intentional deprivation of which should be considered a crime against humanity. What kind of sick twisted piece of garbage comes up with ideas like that, and how screwedin the head are they to actually think that its a good idea that will be accepted?
I will never buy another Nestle product as long as I live. I am going to find out which companies are owned by Nestle, so I can never buy those brands again either…Nestle does not deserve my business, they certainly havent earned it.