The Price of Corruption

June 17, 2008

The CBC News site reports that 16 Canadian lakes are slated to be officially but quietly “reclassified” as toxic dump sites for mines. The excuse that lots of fun new slave labour jobs will be created is insufficient explanation for the callous destruction of fish habitats across the country. To say that I am outraged would be a considerable understatement. Whether a Liberal government under Celine Stephan Dion would be any better on some fronts is questionable, but given his past record on environmental issues, I don’t think this would be happening on his watch.

Another example of disgusting pandering to industry with no view of the short- or especially long-term consequences. What is particularly sickening is the fact that nothing will happen as a result. Nothing. No amount of outrage or sheer human decency will alter this decision as the Nazis Conservatives march us, ignorant and grinning, into environmental disaster.

This country, if you’ll pardon the “Blevkog“-like language, is fucking broken.


The Water Front: If it can happen in Michigan….

June 11, 2008

Liz Miller’s documentary on fighting water privatization in Highland Park, Mi, just illustrates the ease with which we can all be faced with corporation-generated water woes. 


“water symbolizes wealth.” – the future of water privatization.

June 4, 2008

In countries like Canada, we seem to have an inexhaustable supply of fresh water. Having to fight for access to enough drinking water to live may seem like a remote possibility. But there are lessons to be learned from the third world.   As climate change advances, and we begin to face challenges to water-sovereignty under NAFTA, we would do well to pay closer attention to the plight of many people in the poorest parts of the world.  It CAN happen here… it already IS happening here! 


Whose water? ‘Yes!’ Magazine’s primer on water rights

June 4, 2008

Here’s a short batch of articles that should start anyone thinking about the right to potable water, and the dangers that water privatization holds. Water belongs to the earth, not to the corporations. If the average person doesn’t speak up on this issue, we have another ‘tragedy of the commons’ in the making.


Water privatization in Uruguay? No way!

June 4, 2008

At least some folks have recognized the danger of having a basic human need commodified. Is it because these folks have already been on the dirty end of the corporate prod? Or, are North Americans just too lazy and complacent to recognize looming threats posed by corporate greed?


When will the US and Canada learn not to pee in their own pool?

June 4, 2008

As Maude Barlow points out here, All canadians should be embarrassed that our government is one of only two  in the world that are blocking the international effort to have potable water recognized as a basic human right.  You cannot LIVE without drinkable water, people! The corporate a**holes want you to pay for what they won’t have to, if they get their way. 


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