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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsUnderstanding South American anger at the United States
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Other countries have had uprisings over this issue. In 1999 mega corporation, Bechtel, the largest construction contractor in the United States and winner of rebuilding contracts after the leveling provided by Katrina and the invasion of Iraq, privatized the public water system in Cochabamba Bolivias third largest city. As reported at the time:
This is a country where indigenous farming communities previously had their own water rights, but their water sources were converted into property to be bought and sold by international corporations. When the company refused to lower rates, the people began to rise up and revolt against this injustice; they confronted Bechtel during five months of mobilization and managed to defeat them, breach the contract and change the law.
A 17-year-old boy named Victor Hugo Daza was killed in the protests along with four indigenous people from El Alto, while hundreds were injured. It was this popular uprising in Cochabamba that led to the election of their new president Evo Morales, the first ever indigenous head of state in Bolivia.
So Bechtel was thrown out of Bolivia, but months later they moved to do the exact same thing in Ecuadors largest city of Guayaquil. And in November 2001, they filed a lawsuit against Bolivia demanding $50 million, an amount which is just short of what the corporation makes in a day. The case will be decided behind closed doors in a secret trade court at the World Bank headquarters in Washington; it will tell whether the people of South Americas poorest country will have to pay $50 million to one of the worlds most wealthy corporations.
Update: In 2006, Bechtel dropped their case against Bolivia. (Source)
In the case of Ecuador, thousands showed up to protest the corporate takeover of their innate right to use the water that falls upon their land. In some ways, what is happening in Oregon and other Western states is even worse than the privatization led by corporations like Bechtel.
Not only are resources and populations being exploited for financial gain, but as Mike Adams correctly points out for NaturalNews: sunlight and air also fall on your land, so where will this end if people dont stand up in defense of their most basic rights?
It is the very spirit of American ownership of private property and the right to self-determination that are being threatened. The ideology of collectivism is seeking in myriad ways to upend the foundation of America and criminalize independence. Hats off to Harrington who embodies the spirit of true freedom and vows never to end the fight if his rights continue to get trampled.
When something is wrong, you just, as an American citizen, you have to put your foot down and say, This is wrong; you just cant take away anymore of my rights and from here on in, Im going to fight it. There are several lines in the sand that should not be crossed within any country claiming to be rooted in freedom.
Revolt has happened in other nations subjected to the same level of tyranny who recognized that even without an American Constitution, this is a human rights issue that in fact has no boundaries. The words of water criminal Gary Harrington ring clear that wed do well to stand our ground on fundamental issues, unless we wish to give away our spirit along with our land:
Theyve just gotten to be big bullies and if you just lay over and die and give up, that just makes them bigger bullies. So, we as Americans, we need to stand on our constitutional rights, on our rights as citizens and hang tough. This is a good country, well prevail.
leftstreet
(39,511 posts)Even the Rain (2010)
"También la lluvia" (original title)
As a director and his crew shoot a controversial film about Christopher Columbus in Cochabamba, Bolivia, local people rise up against plans to privatize the water supply.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1422032/
think
(11,641 posts)by Ted Kahl May 9th 2009
This is one of those articles that is filled with so much info -- it's impossible to highlight. I mostly focus here on the Iraqgate-Saddam-Reagan-Rumsfeld dealings. But there is more in this article about Bechtel's partnerships with Bin Laden Construction, plus their long history with the CIA, especially through executives such as John McCone, who later became CIA Director.
Jeffrey St. Clair writes:
On the second anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, Bechtel, the gargantuan global construction firm based in San Francisco, issued its revenue numbers for 2005. While the situation continued to deteriorate for the US military forces in Iraq, Bechtel reported more fragrant news.
Although the privately-owned company doesn't disclose its profits, Bechtel did announce that its income was soaring to new heights not seen since the 1960s when the company was damming some of the world's most glorious canyons, building some of the most dangerous nuclear plants and constructing military bases for the staging of the war on Vietnam.
For the year 2004, Bechtel brought in more than $17.4 billion, a record haul for the company. That makes two record years in a row. Last year Bechtel earned more than $17 billion for the first time. Both peaks were all the more impressive given the senescent condition of the economy....
~Snip~
http://www.democrats.com/node/4534
