[P2P-F] Fwd: Nestlé's evil plan
June Gorman
june_gorman at sbcglobal.net
Mon Dec 2 15:08:50 CET 2013
I am so glad that someone else caught this and is acting on it. I myself saw the video and was astonished at how easily the human mind justifies commoditizing everything, even basic living necessities and resources (most people die without water in 3 days!) and basic human rights to essential human needs -- as just another "thing" to make a profit on, and only thus available to humans who can pay!
But again, understanding this process and how it is cultivated in the human mind disconnected from the human heart -- ie this is a cheerful, happy-seeming man who truly doesn't understand what people are complaining about? -- is my biggest interest in order to "transform" that result. His life is good and I honestly think he no longer knows how to "see" and certainly "feel" anything else that might be true for the great majority of "others". Not understanding how we create and educate for this very empathy-disconnect, is to not truly understanding how to change it at its roots, imho and the key idea to deconstruct and re-educate in any path of education to again, "transform" that result.
At any rate, once I saw the video I am immediately reactivated my own "boycott" of anything Nestle despite being a chocolate lover and support all you are doing, Team SumofUs!
I'll spread the word,
June
June Gorman, Educator and Educational Theorist
Co-founder, Transformative Education Forum (website in transition)
Education Advisor, UN SafePlanet Campaign
Board Project Director for Outreach, International Model United Nations Association
Steering Committee, (UNESCO/Global Compact) K-12 Sector for Sustainability Education
Member, UN Education Caucus for Sustainable Development
Member, UN Commons Cluster
________________________________
From: Michel Bauwens <michel at p2pfoundation.net>
To: p2p-foundation <p2p-foundation at lists.ourproject.org>
Sent: Sunday, December 1, 2013 5:57 PM
Subject: [P2P-F] Fwd: Nestlé's evil plan
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Francois Houtart <houtart at hotmail.com>
Date: Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 8:41 PM
Subject: RE: Nestlé's evil plan
To: Michel Bauwens <michel at p2pfoundation.net>
Un autre réseau.
FH
François
Houtart
Email:houtart at hotmail.com
Fundación
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B-1150 BruxellesTel. (32) 476.31.50.53
________________________________
Subject: Nestlé's evil plan
From: us at sumofus.org
To: houtart at hotmail.com
Date: Thu, 28 Nov 2013 16:48:20 +0000
François,
Nestlé's chairman has been caught on camera saying that water isn't a human right, calling this view "extreme". Instead, he wants water sold on the open market like anything else, for those who can afford to buy it -- and his company is working harder than ever to make sure it happens.
Its business model is clear: privatize and commodify our public resources -- under the leadership of a man who says a CEO's "biggest social responsibility" is to ensure corporate profits. From Pakistan to Canada, Nestlé is busy draining millions of liters of our fresh water -- often without paying a cent! -- in order to sell back to the public at record prices.
Here's the thing: ifwe don't stand up to Nestlé, no one will. The world's largest food company already has governments and regulators in its back pocket, and has cowed others with its aggressive PR campaigns.
They have billions in corporate profits and influence. But we are two million people strong, and we have the public on our side. And when people stand together, we can win. In Canada, an ambitious lawsuit stopped Nestlé from extracting millions more liters liters of fresh water during a drought. And in Pakistan, Nestlé was even sponsoring fake 'public health seminars' to tell people that non-bottled water was dangerous, until public outrage forced them to stop.
Can you commit to stand up to Nestlé, and pledge just $1 now to stop Nestlé's plan to commodify nature for profit?
Together, we're powerful. We've already shown that we can win, but the truth is we need to do much more if we're to seriously challenge the agenda of Nestlé and its corporate friends. Here's some of the things our community could do together -- if we all chip in:
* Fight lawsuits against Nestlé and win -- just like the case run by the Council of Canadians and others that prevented Nestlé from taking even more water to bottle during drought conditions;
* Hold rallies outside key Nestlé events to make sure that the most powerful executives and shareholders know that we’re watching them -- just like we've already done against Bayer in our campaign to save the bees;
* Purchase advertisements that target key Nestlé customers to ask them to stop stocking Nestlé products -- we know the US State Department heard us loud and clear when we spoke out against KXL using this tactic;
* Act quickly to build media interest when further Nestlé misbehaviours come to light -- perhaps producing viral videos that will expose their chairman’s claim that water is not a human right;
* Run Facebook ads directly targeting Nestlé employees to remind employees that they too have the power to change Nestlé from within the company.
People like us have shown time and time again that when we come together, we can defeat Nestlé. Back in the 1970s, Nestlé aggressively marketed a breastmilk substitute that didn't provide the nutrients babies actually need, and contributed to the suffering and deaths of thousands of babies in poor communities around the world. But a years-long boycott over Nestlé's campaign against breastfeeding was a historic success in corporate campaigning -- reversing the company's policies.
Today, Nestlé is feeling the pressure more than ever. It knows that around the world, people are starting to see its agenda for what it is -- and that we're coming together like never before to stand up to them. That's why Nestlé has invested millions in a corporate "mission control" dedicated to protecting the company's reputation online.
We need to keep up the pressure on Nestlé -- in Pakistan, in Nigeria, in North America and around the world, we are seeing Nestlé’s growing efforts to commodify our natural resources only to sell them back to us. We can stop Nestlé evil ways -- we have the community and the tools to do it -- all we need now is more resources to keep this pressure going.
Can you pledge just $1 now to stand together and stand up to Nestlé, and keep our community strong for the fight ahead?
Thanks for all your support,
Angus, Paul, Taren, and the team at SumOfUs.org
SumOfUs is a worldwide movement of people like you, working together to hold corporations accountable for their actions and forge a new, sustainable path for our global economy.
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