02-18-2014, 07:00 AM
Fracking is good for business , it's a 2fer 1 kinda thing, corporations get to make obscene amounts of money,and usually they get the peasants to pay for their own demise , while readily destroying underground water supplies which insure that the peasants living in the area will have to pay for water that by anyone's (anyone who is still a human being) standards, should be a natural God given right, and we haven't even mentioned the rights of flora & fauna. Oh yeah , then their is the earth quake thingy , um, That's just paranoia right ?
[url][/url]http://earthlawcenter.org/news/headline/profiting-from-your-thirst-as-global-elite-rush-to-control-water-worldwide-/
[url]http://www.naturalnews.com
/040026_nestle_water_supply_domination.html[/url]
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2013/09/vi...-sept.html
The jist of above links: The second disturbing trend is that while the new water barons are buying up water all over the world, governments are moving fast to limit citizens’ ability to become water self-sufficient (as evidenced by the well-publicized Gary Harrington’s case in Oregon, in which the state criminalized the collection of rainwater in three ponds located on his private land, by convicting him on nine counts and sentencing him for 30 days in jail). Let’s put this criminalization in perspective:
Billionaire T. Boone Pickens owned more water rights than any other individuals in America, with rights over enough of the Ogallala Aquifer to drain approximately 200,000 acre-feet (or 65 billion gallons of water) a year. But ordinary citizen Gary Harrington cannot collect rainwater runoff on 170 acres of his private land.
[url][/url]http://earthlawcenter.org/news/headline/profiting-from-your-thirst-as-global-elite-rush-to-control-water-worldwide-/
[url]http://www.naturalnews.com
/040026_nestle_water_supply_domination.html[/url]
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2013/09/vi...-sept.html
The jist of above links: The second disturbing trend is that while the new water barons are buying up water all over the world, governments are moving fast to limit citizens’ ability to become water self-sufficient (as evidenced by the well-publicized Gary Harrington’s case in Oregon, in which the state criminalized the collection of rainwater in three ponds located on his private land, by convicting him on nine counts and sentencing him for 30 days in jail). Let’s put this criminalization in perspective:
Billionaire T. Boone Pickens owned more water rights than any other individuals in America, with rights over enough of the Ogallala Aquifer to drain approximately 200,000 acre-feet (or 65 billion gallons of water) a year. But ordinary citizen Gary Harrington cannot collect rainwater runoff on 170 acres of his private land.