Home / Unlabelled / Nestle CEO: Water Is Not A Human Right, Should Be Privatized Nestle CEO: Water Is Not A Human Right, Should Be Privatized
Is water a free and basic human right, or should all the water on the
planet belong to major corporations and be treated as a product? Should
the poor who cannot afford to pay these said corporations suffer from
starvation due to their lack of financial wealth? According to the
former CEO and now Chairman of the largest food product manufacturer in
the world, corporations should own every drop of water on the planet —
and you’re not getting any unless you pay up.
The company notorious for sending out hordes of ‘internet warriors’ to defend the company and
its actions online in comments and message boards (perhaps we’ll find
some below) even takes a firm stance behind Monsanto’s GMOs and their
‘proven safety’. In fact, the former Nestle CEO actually says that his
idea of water privatization is very similar to Monsanto’s GMOs. In a
video interview, Nestle Chairman Peter Brabeck-Letmathe states that
there has never been ‘one illness’ ever caused from the consumption of
GMOs.
The way in which this sociopath clearly has zero regard for the human race outside of his own wealth and the development of Nestle, who has been caught funding attacks against
GMO labeling, can be witnessed when watching and listening to his talk
on the issue. This is a company that actually goes into struggling rural
areas and extracts the groundwater for their bottled water products,
completely destroying the water supply of the area without any
compensation. In fact, they actually make rural areas in the United
States foot the bill.
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:
“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.”
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, NestlĂ© 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.