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20 votes
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The US government spends millions to open grocery stores in food deserts. The real test is their survival.
35 votes -
US targets surging grocery prices in latest probe
30 votes -
Sweden and Finland have moved to relax strict laws that govern the sale of alcohol, while preserving wider state monopolies
9 votes -
California junk fee ban could upend restaurant industry
39 votes -
Florida is the first state to ban lab grown meat - Ron DeSantis
37 votes -
New Brexit checks will cause food shortages in UK, importers warn
25 votes -
Joe Biden criticises US snack makers for ‘shrinkflation rip-off’
32 votes -
US grocery stores should cut prices as costs ease, Joe Biden White House says
29 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 -
Schoolkids in eight US states can now eat free school meals, advocates urge Congress for nationwide policy
85 votes -
No Meat Required - Alicia Kennedy’s new book explores the tensions and triumphs of leaving meat behind
21 votes -
Applying taxes to beef products could be one way to reduce CO2 emissions, says the Danish Government
26 votes -
Norway to spend $6 million a year stock-piling grain, citing pandemic, war and climate change – will start storing 15,000 tons of grain yearly until 2028 or 2029
54 votes -
Wisconsin’s dairy industry relies on undocumented immigrants, but the state won’t let them legally drive
20 votes -
Why India's rice ban could trigger a global food crisis
44 votes -
Waging war on the Jamaican patty: Canada’s bizarre beef with the delicious snack | Patty vs Patty
6 votes -
Making the 2000 year old "pizza" from Pompeii
13 votes -
Reality deflates the NDP’s Big Grocery conspiracy theory
7 votes -
Mondelez, facing widening corporate boycotts in the Nordics over continued presence in Russia, has asked to meet the Norwegian government to protect its local business
14 votes -
Absolut Vodka will stop exporting its products to Russia after a backlash in its home country, Sweden
4 votes -
How the sugar industry makes political friends and influences elections
2 votes -
Helsinki City Council says it will no longer serve meat at seminars, staff meetings, receptions and other events to reduce capital's carbon footprint
6 votes -
Why the Philly cheesesteak can swing a presidential election
8 votes -
Farmers and animal rights activists are coming together to fight big factory farms
4 votes -
UK food standards hang in balance ahead of crucial Lords vote
7 votes -
China has imposed a massive eighty per cent tariff on Australian barley imports from today, saying the product has been imported against trade rules
11 votes -
China has imposed an import ban on four Australian abattoirs in an apparent escalation of Beijing's trade war tactics
7 votes -
Famine is a choice. One billion people are now food-insecure. But starvation is not an inevitability
5 votes -
Shake Shack, Ruth's Chris and other chain restaurants got big PPP loans when small businesses couldn't
12 votes -
Imported cheese prices are about to double due to proposed US tariffs
12 votes -
Socialist People's Party wants a debate on whether it should be legal to produce and sell French delicacy foie gras in the EU
8 votes -
Are your tinned tomatoes picked by slave labour?
8 votes -
Why I’m no longer vegan™ (an argument for political veganism)
4 votes -
The rise of Calamari, fueled by Rhode Island’s dirty politics
6 votes -
For these vegans in the Palestinian territories, food is a form of protest
7 votes -
The provocations of chef Tunde Wey
3 votes -
Should there be a tax on red meat?
23 votes -
These are all the foods being affected by Donald Trump’s US trade war
4 votes