Just 128 miles from Flint, Nestlé pays the state of Michigan just $200 per year to extract millions of gallons of clean water.


A Tale of Two Cities tells the story of two very different Michigan communities—picturesque, small town Evart and gritty, industrial Flint— who have found their futures inextricably linked by a threat to the one thing that all life requires: water.
The film explores the growing threat of water privatization and what happens when the government runs a critical function, like providing clean drinking water, as if it were a business.
After years of progressively damaging cost-cutting measures that favor corporate interests throughout the state of Michigan, Flint’s water crisis made international news. Four years later, many still rely on bottled water for their everyday needs and have some of the highest water rates in the country.
Despite the state’s failure to protect its people’s access to water in Flint — and its intentional deprivation of water to thousands in Detroit — the multinational corporation Nestlé nets massive profits from of the state’s abundant water sources. Nestle pumps mere hours away from Flint, outside of Evart, paying only a $200 annual permit fee and nothing for the water itself.
Here’s the CEO of Nestlé arguing for the privatization of world water supplies
Another example:

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In 1997, the World Bank made privatization of the public water system of Bolivia’s third largest city, Cochabamba, a condition of the country receiving further aid for water development. That led, in September 1999, to a 40-year concession granted to a company led by Bechtel. Within weeks of taking over the city’s water, Bechtel’s Bolivian company, Aguas del Tunari, raised rates by more than 50 percent and in many cases much higher.

SOURCE
Or, read Blue Gold: The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World’s Water
In summary: Global institutions like the WMF are conspiring with multinational corporations like Nestlé to turn us all into serfs and wage slaves while they profit from our labor and shared natural resources. That is THE conspiracy.
 
 
h/t GraniteRambler

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3 thoughts on “Just 128 miles from Flint, Nestlé pays the state of Michigan just $200 per year to extract millions of gallons of clean water.”

  1. How much was the Michigan DNR & Governor Snyder BRIBED to allow this. How much money, how many dollars were they given to allow this? BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES BRIBES
    That Nestle operation is a Criminal Diversion of Water fro the Great Lakes. On top of just palin robbing the local people of safe ground water.
    CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION CORRUPTION

    Reply
    • Apparently the libs in California didn’t get BRIBED enough so they left…..to invade Michigan. Ever wonder WHY the rain always inundates Lake Michigan and the snow inundates Lake Michigan? It’s to replenish the water sold or stolen by Nestle and CHINA.

      Reply
  2. Gosh….maybe Nestle will erect a crappy swingset in the town square so their kiddies can enjoy swinging while the rest of Michigan goes thirsty…..this is what Nestle did to a town in Pennsylvania so they could suck millions of gallons of water out of the ground and bottle it and pay practically NOTHING so you, the consumer, can pay for their bottled water at exorbitent prices!!!!! Gosh how lucky can one city get!!!???

    Reply

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