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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
23 May 2012
Snarling Banks

We're sick and tired of being bullied and stomped on by the Powers That Be in Washington, and by gollies, we'… Read More.

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Why Not "Drink Local"?

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In a triumph of marketing over reasoning, the bottled water industry has turned us into conspicuously silly consumers.

Controlled by a handful of global conglomerates (such as Coca-Cola and Nestle), the water industry has created the fantasy that if it's in a bottle, it's purer than what comes out of the tap.

But wait — the Environmental Protection Agency stringently regulates the public water systems, requiring tests several times a day for bacteria and other contaminants, and these test results are public information. The corporate bottlers, on the other hand, are overseen by the more lackadaisical Food and Drug Administration, which requires them to test their water sources only once a week — and the results are kept secret by the corporations.

One group that is beginning to rebel is one you might not expect: upscale restaurants. Such places profit handsomely from offering Perrier, San Pellegrino, Fiji or other designer waters, paying a dollar or two for each bottle and selling them for eight or 10 bucks. Yet, Chez Panisse in Berkeley, Calif., and Del Posto in New York City are among the pioneers who are foregoing this profit center, substituting free filtered tap water or house-made sparkling water that's also drawn from the tap.

Why would they do this? Because they are part of a growing sustainable food movement that prides itself in using local, seasonal ingredients for their menu items. Think about it: In terms of energy, environment and sustainability, it makes no sense to load cargo ships with millions of bottles of water, haul them thousands of miles to our shores, truck them hundreds of miles to our restaurants, then chuck the bottles into our overloaded landfills — when the local public water system supplies perfectly good water available at the turn of a faucet.

Just as it makes economic and environmental sense to "eat local," it also makes sense to "drink local."

UNFRIENDLY SKIES

Travel in some primitive parts of the world is a nightmare — passengers are treated like livestock, service is surly, rules are ridiculous, delays are common and the whole experience is dreadful.

Luckily, here in sophisticated America, we have modern airlines — on which passengers are treated like livestock, service is surly, rules are ridiculous, delays are common and the whole experience is dreadful.

Airline executives publicly blame everything from the impact of 9-11 to bad weather, but when these executives talk to shareholders and the business media, they gleefully confess that they have deliberately created such unpleasantness as a crude way to jack up their stock prices and profits.

For example, while the public demand for air travel has steadily increased, airline honchos have intentionally decreased the number of flights. That's the opposite of how a free market economy is supposed to work — if consumer demand is up, companies theoretically respond by increasing supply.

But air travel is a monopolistic market, with one or two airlines controlling nearly all airports. So, by cutting the number of available seats, not only can the monopolists create an artificial shortage that raises ticket prices, but they also create overbooked flights that have all the charm of cattle cars.

Meanwhile, they've also made drastic cuts in staff, leading to more breakdowns and flight delays ... as well as to less service for customers. The staff that remains has had its wages and benefits slashed, which doesn't help morale. And to make employees even more surly, CEOs have started paying themselves millions of dollars in bonuses.

Based on these manipulations, one airline president enthusiastically told shareholders, "We see an encouraging revenue environment." Sure, boss — and we passengers see a discouraging decline into primitive levels of travel. Thanks for nothing.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Good to see a voice of reason in the arena! The subject here is timely, the opinion valid. For people like me, in Michigan, surrounded by Great Lakes and with a water table that is much higher than most western states will ever have, it's easy to forget that water is a problem. Those who are watching closely know that lake levels are down, water tables are shrinking, and that if we continue to allow corporations to pump water out of the state at an unsustainable rate, trouble will come. It might get you money to maintain local roads or balance a troubled budget, but there's nothing in the contract about replacing thousands of wells that won't be deep enough to draw from a reduced water table in our lifetime. One guess as to who won't be footing the tab for all those consumer wells...it won't be Coca Cola or Nestle. Thanks for putting a good word in where people can see it!
Comment: #1
Posted by: Samayel
Sat Apr 19, 2008 7:22 PM
Hey, I'm from Michigan too; and I like water too, and isn't it remarkable that in this great land blessed with an abundance of fresh water, that water can be sold for a dollar a drink? It is like selling refrigerators to Eskimos, and it is only possible because in this country, everything worth having has a price tag on it, and even if it is fresh air, fresh water or sunshine; and it does not have a price tag on it, -then any sob can turn it into so much of a free toilet that any we have left when they are done we will pay for. We don't buy water in Michgan. We pay capitalists to destroy our environment one piece at a time so they can properly price the priceless. I need a drink.
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Apr 19, 2008 9:29 PM
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