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WEF: “Water for Me, but Not for Thee.”

Written by Bryan Lutz, Editor at Dollarcollapse.com:

 

The World Economic Forum has a new Führer.

 

Klause Schwab is out, and Peter Brabeck-Letmathe is in.

 

Brabeck-Letmathe is the former CEO of Nestle, who is famous for arguing for the commodification of water in the 2010s. In other words, water is only a fundamental human right when it comes this…

 

Here’s what he said in 2012, while he was still CEO of Nestle:

 

 

Now, this may sound familiar…

 

That’s because it sounds a lot like carbon consumption credits, CO2 management, and the fight against global warming.

 

It’s classic Evil Genius modus operandi.

 

He says, water is only a fundamental human right when you consume 25 litres per day (about 6.25 gallons).

 

That includes cleaning, drinking, washing, cooking, and sanitation…

 

After that, water is a commodity.

 

So if you want to have a longer shower, or fill up your swimming pool, water your grass, or even water your home garden, you got another thing coming.

 

Just how much was Nestle paying to extract water while their CEO was arguing for pay-to-play water?

 

In California, Nestlé extracted water using pipelines, horizontal wells, and water collection tunnels, paying just $524 annually to the U.S. Forest Service.
The company claimed rights dating back to 1865, but a 2017 investigation found it lacked legal permits for much of the water, extracting an average of 62.6 million gallons annually from 1947 to 2015.

 

Then in Michigan, Nestlé paid a $200 annual fee for one permit, extracting over 2.5 billion gallons between 2005 and 2015 from the Sanctuary Springs well, raising questions about the adequacy of regulatory oversight and the balance between corporate profits and public water access.
250 million gallons of water per year is a pretty good deal for a mere $200 annual fee.

 

It is no doubt they will suggest to solve the water scarcity problem they are creating by the same solution the WEF suggests to solve things like Cybersecurity issues, food scarcity issues, and global warming issues…

 

They will suggest private-public partnerships as the only solution to manage the water the supply, and really, your life.

 

Private-public partnerships pretend the public play roles in deciding their own prison.

 

Whatever the electorate decides is what everyone gets.

 

Then private companies implement and enforce those policies at lightning speed.

 

Remember, 25 Litres is all you need.

 

It’s all you’ll be allowed.

 

But for the Elites, it’ll once again be…

 

“Water for me, but not for thee.”

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