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151 votes
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‘Unhappy hour’: UK pub chains adopt surge pricing for pints
23 votes -
China set to overtake Japan as world’s biggest car exporter
13 votes -
Norway wealth tax pushes the rich to move to Switzerland – millionaire prime minister has embarked on a push to tax the wealthiest for social justice
41 votes -
Executive summary - Elsevier’s acquisition of Interfolio: risks and responses
5 votes -
Local governments aren't businesses – so why are they force-fed business software?
31 votes -
Spotify is pulling select advertising privileges for white noise podcasts in a bid to boost the audio streaming company's annual profits
34 votes -
Netflix landing Anna Kendrick’s ‘Dating Game’ serial killer tale ‘Woman Of The Hour’ for $11 million in first big TIFF 2023 deal
5 votes -
How Barstool built an empire by swiping sports highlights and music clips online
14 votes -
Toyota takes its biggest US port off the grid with hydrogen system
35 votes -
The IRS plans to crack down on 1,600 US millionaires to collect millions of dollars in back taxes
48 votes -
Analyst Hubert Horan on Uber's first reported profit
5 votes -
Disney’s wildest ride: Iger, Chapek and the making of an epic succession mess
23 votes -
Novo Nordisk, the maker of weight-loss drug Wegovy has become Europe's most valuable firm, dethroning the French luxury conglomerate LVMH
20 votes -
Tech billionaires launch California ‘utopia’ website
55 votes -
The billion-dollar business of ABBA: A statistical analysis
13 votes -
Diamond prices are in free fall in one key corner of the market
31 votes -
Two former executives of a Swedish oil company have gone on trial in Stockholm, accused of complicity in war crimes in Sudan
11 votes -
Donald Trump inflated net worth by more than $2 billion in one year, New York attorney general alleges
15 votes -
How were modern companies allowed to get so big in spite of antitrust laws? The mythology of horizontal merger efficiencies
20 votes -
US President Joe Biden: Don't give Wall Street control of our public water systems
New advisory report pushes disastrous privatization schemes Link to the article This week, President Biden’s National Infrastructure Advisory Council issued a report recommending the privatization...
New advisory report pushes disastrous privatization schemes
This week, President Biden’s National Infrastructure Advisory Council issued a report recommending the privatization of the nation’s water systems.
The chair of the advisory council is the CEO of Global Infrastructure Partners, an infrastructure investment bank with an estimated $100 billion in assets under management that targets energy, transportation, digital and water infrastructure.
The report recommends, among other things, that the federal government “[r]emove barriers to privatization, concessions, and other nontraditional models of funding community water systems,” and open up all federal grant programs to support privatized utilities.
Food & Water Watch Public Water for All Campaign Director Mary Grant issued the following response:
Water privatization is a terrible idea. President Biden should have never appointed an investment banker to chair an advisory council for the nation’s infrastructure. Wall Street wants to take control of the nation’s public water systems to wring profits from communities that are already struggling with unaffordable water bills and toxic water.
Privatization would deepen the nation’s water crises, leading to higher water bills and less accountable and transparent services. Privately owned water systems charge 59 percent more than local government systems, and private ownership is the single largest factor associated with higher water bills — more than aging infrastructure or drought.
Instead of relying on Wall Street advisers, President Biden should support policies that will truly help communities by asking Congress to pass the Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity and Reliability (WATER) Act (HR 1729, S 938). After decades of federal austerity for water, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law was a step forward, but it provided only about seven percent of the identified needs of our water systems. The WATER Act would fully restore the federal commitment to safe water by providing a permanent source of federal funding at the level that our water and wastewater systems need to ensure safe, clean and affordable public water for all.
Certain resources/commodities/services like water, food, electricity and health should remain in public domain. I don't understand the askance that is associated with this view.
Once these fall to the profiteering domain, we will be sucked dry and forced to accept abnormal standards as normal to gain access to these which in first place should be in public domain protected in public interest by public representatives.
These resources will be and are used by IMF and sister organisations that are usually called "banks" as leverage to get their debts serviced or sold as AAA+ securities.
They tried that with real estate but that burst since a physical house doesn't just disappear which leads to emergence of derelict patches within the estates. This would certainly destroy the demand and the dead estate would translate into toxic securities by just being there and not disappearing. Similarly things that are too volatile will also not be accepted as essential by the public as was the case with electronics/net. So that's not worth it.
But what if the resource or commodity is essential, which means it has sustained demand, as well as it is volatile enough which means it vanishes after its monetary utility. Now that's "gold". Theoretically its value will not only be retained but it may even increase with no downside. Perpetual profitability.
55 votes -
How unused gift cards power Delaware's economy
7 votes -
Maiden Pharmaceuticals: Fury in The Gambia over India cough syrup deaths
8 votes -
US money from the Climate-Smart Commodities program, designed to reduce agriculture emissions, is going disproportionately to multinationals
4 votes -
The wallet event: Crypto startup company tells bankruptcy judge it has lost the password to a 38.9 million dollar physical crypto wallet
17 votes -
Buy now, pay later firm Klarna reports first month of profit in three years, as calls grow for sector to be regulated
6 votes -
Ørsted shares fall 25% after it reveals troubles in US business – £7bn wiped off value of world's largest offshore wind company over possible £1.8bn write-down
8 votes -
TSMC blames struggle to build Phoenix plant on skilled labor shortage but workers cite disorganization and safety concerns
31 votes -
Novo Nordisk, the Danish company behind two popular obesity medications, is reaping huge profits and is now responsible for most of the country's economic growth
6 votes -
Centene to sell GP clinics and hospitals in exit from UK market
14 votes -
Los Angeles is exploring banning cashless businesses, following the example of New York City, Philadelphia, Massachusetts, Colorado, New Jersey, Rhode Island and Washington, DC
59 votes -
Gorilla Tuning of Rexburg, Idaho, pleads guilty to criminal conspiracy to violate the Clean Air Act, will pay $1 million in criminal fines, while its owner faces up to two years in jail
30 votes -
Zoom CEO reportedly tells staff: Workers can't build trust or collaborate... on Zoom
52 votes -
Mom’s Meals discloses data breach impacting 1.2 million people
17 votes -
Ugly numbers from Microsoft and ChatGPT reveal that AI demand is already shrinking
91 votes -
Walt Disney Pictures VFX workers move to unionize
50 votes -
Most of my Instagram ads are for drugs, stolen credit cards, hacked accounts, counterfeit money, and weapons
41 votes -
Huawei accused of building secret microchip factories to beat US sanctions
19 votes -
Apple formally endorses right to repair US legislation after spending millions fighting it
67 votes -
NVIDIA announces financial results for second quarter fiscal 2024
19 votes -
“Going shopping” is dead: How stores sucked the fun out of an American pastime
62 votes -
Why streaming services are pushing subscribers to ad tiers
27 votes -
Lego is to begin selling bricks coded with braille to help blind and partially sighted children learn to read the touch-based alphabet
29 votes -
Chip company Arm files for Nasdaq listing in IPO anticipated to be this year’s biggest
20 votes -
Microsoft to sell off Activision cloud gaming rights to Ubisoft in bid for UK approval
25 votes -
Pornhub parent MindGeek changing its name as new owners seek ‘fresh start’
33 votes -
How one company owns color
18 votes -
Permanent US injunction and $650,000 civil penalty imposed on Experian Consumer Services for allegedly sending commercial emails
15 votes -
TikTok’s plan to take on Spotify and Apple Music
13 votes -
Bosses dislike work-from-home but suspect they’re stuck with it
72 votes