Nestle Believes Water Is Not a Basic Human Right
According to the former CEO and now Chairman of the largest food
product manufacturer in the world, Nestle, corporations own every drop
of water on the planet …
There are few things as fundamentally crucial to the
existence of human beings and, indeed, all life on Earth as water. It
is difficult to believe any human being thinks water is privately-owned,
a commodity, to use for profit at the expense of human life, but
Americans know there are entities that will go to any lengths to feed
their corporate greed. In several states in this country, climate change
is wreaking havoc on the people in the form of severe, multi-year
droughts. So, with extreme water shortages, what do two industries do
with the vanishing precious resource? They either mix it with deadly
carcinogens and pump it, under extremely high pressure, back into the
ground, often directly over active earthquake faults, or draw it out of
the ground, bottle it, and sell it for profit. It is a wealthy
corporations’ ideal business model; free raw materials and a product no
human being can survive without.
California, like many states primarily in the
southwestern United States, is facing one of its most severe droughts on
record. The conditions are so severe that in January Governor Jerry
Brown declared a drought state of emergency in preparation for water
shortages that are especially dangerous during the summer months. The
critically severe drought has entered its third year of a projected
decade (at least) long drought, and throughout California water
restrictions are having a profound impact on agriculture. In fact, the
water shortage is so severe that farmers in some of the most
agricultural-rich areas of the country are being forewarned there may be
no water within two years at best; that is if the extreme conservation
measures work.
However, while the rest of the state is attempting
to conserve what little life-sustaining water California has left, the
Nestle Company ignores the emergency measures the state adopted because
its water bottling plant is conveniently located on a Native American
reservation. Like all N.A. reservations, it is considered a sovereign
nation by the US government. It is a water-theft enterprise any greedy
corporation would lust after because unlike farmers, individual
Californians, and every municipality in the state, Nestle is exempt from
complying with any water-saving state or federal regulations. To make
matters worse, Nestle is depleting what precious water reserves lie deep
underground in the aquifer and pumping it directly to its bottling
plant and selling it for profit. This is not a new endeavor for Nestle,
and their blatant disregard for Californians’ need for basic survival
was best expressed by Nestle’s CEO and Chairman.
According to the former CEO and now Chairman of the
largest food product manufacturer in the world, Nestle, corporations own
every drop of water on the planet, and because he believes water
is not a basic human right; if human beings get thirsty, they have to
pay or die. It is the ultimate privatization insult to mankind, and
worse because Nestle is intent on privatizing water the world over; a
natural resource that falls from the sky and seeps into the Earth for
man to use for survival. In the case of California, and other regions
around the world, what precious little water remains for basic survival
is being stolen by a filthy corporation to sell to those who can afford
to survive, and they are being assisted by Native Americans claiming to
be good stewards of the Earth. Maybe this is Native American vengeance
on the white man for invading their sovereign land, massacring them, and
sending the survivors to permanent interment camps with high-sounding
names like “sovereign nations.” But that is another story altogether;
this is about Nestle draining California’s water.
The Nestle Arrowhead Mountain Spring Water bottling plant is located
on the Morongo Band of Mission Indians reservation and drains water
from a Mojave Desert oasis at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains
85 miles from Los Angeles where just three inches of rain falls each
year. Their little enterprise prevents water from seeping downhill to
fill aquifers of nearby towns struggling for water during the drought,
and prior to 2009, about when the drought began, Nestle submitted annual
reports to local water districts detailing how much groundwater they
were extracting for profit. Since the drought began, neither Nestle nor
the Morongo tribe submitted any forms; likely because it would be bad
for business to tell local residents how much of their precious water
they are being forced to buy to increase Nestle’s profits.
Nestle already has a history of showing blatant
disregard for the human race according to Corporate Watch. The company
regularly barges into struggling rural areas and extracts groundwater to
sell in bottles “completely destroying the water supply without any
compensation,” and in fact “actually makes rural areas in the United
States foot the bill.”
However, Nestle is not focusing only on Americans’ water as reported by
Corporate Watch that has documented Nestle and former CEO Peter
Brabeck-Letmathe’s long history of disregarding public health and
abusing the environment for profit to the tune of $35 billion annually
from water bottle sales alone. Corporate Watch states
that “NestlĂ© 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.”
One wonders if when the Morongo Band of Indians runs
out of water themselves and is forced to buy water they allowed Nestle
to deplete for profits, they will still consider themselves good
stewards of the Earth or that Nestle is a “valued partner.” California
is home to the largest Nestle water bottling operation near Mount Shasta
that is suffering the drought as much as any other part of the state
with nearby Shasta Lake unrecognizable as a lake. Still, the piece of
human filth, Nestle CEO, condemned non-governmental organizations like
the United Nations and other humanitarian organizations for perpetuating
the “extremist idea that drinking water is a human right” that should
not have a market price to enrich the Nestle corporation.
Although the extreme California drought is just one
reason to take action against Nestle, the point is the giant corporation
is pillaging a basic necessity for human life all over the world with
little opposition and relative impunity. The company touts job creation
as validation for draining the water supply dry and selling it back to
thirsty Americans, but when they have exhausted the water supply, no
amount of jobs or money will sustain life devoid of water. There is no
end to the disregard for human life that corporations have made their
overriding mission after profit taking, and at least in one California
region, there is no possibility of holding a truly vile and inhumane
corporation accountable for a crime against humanity; stealing their
dwindling water supply and selling it back for profit because they set
up shop in a sovereign nation inside drought-stricken California.
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