Created: Mar 05, 2008
Updated: Mar 05, 2008
Page Status: active

Bechtel wants to outlaw rain barrels and water catchment in Bolivia

Resource Info   Edit

Type: Website, Blog or Other Internet Resource
Website: http://takomagardener.typepad....
Author: Naomi Klein
Date published: Wed, Mar 05, 2008
Keywords: water rain shock-doctrine
Country: United States
Scale of activity: Global

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Areas of Focus  [Edit]

Land Stewardship  |  Water Pollution  |  Global Pollution  |  Electric Power  |  Agricultural Water Conservation and Management  |  Coastal and Marine Human Impacts  |  Ethnobotany  |  Environmental Ethics  |  Water Rights  |  Natural Resource Conservation  |  Marine Ecology and Conservation  |  Coastal and Marine Pollution  |  Globalization Impacts  |  Aquarium Trade  |  Land Restoration  |  Water and Sustainable Development  |  Water and Energy  |  Groundwater  |  River-Lake Ecology and Biodiversity  |  Lakes and Ponds  |  Rivers and Creeks  |  Global Governance  |  Coastal and Marine Invasive Species  |  Coastal and Marine Law and Policy  |  World Marine Fisheries  |  Hunger and Food Security  |  Mangrove Conservation  |  Toxic and Hazardous Substances  |  Sustainable Living  |  Precautionary Principle  |  Riparian Ecology and Conservation  |  Restoration Ecology  |  Hydrology and the Global Water Cycle  |  Inland Aquatic Ecosystems  |  Plant Ecology  |  Indigenous Lands  |  Aquaculture  |  Endemic Plant Species Protection  |  Dams  |  Water Supply and Conservation  |  Climate Change  |  Sustainable Fishing  |  Coral Reef Conservation  |  Water Law and Policy  |  Ecosystem Services  |  Ecological Footprint  |  Endangered Plant Species Protection  |  Coastal Ecology  |  Wetlands  |  Watershed Management  |  Water Quality and Health  |  Acid Rain  

About  [Edit]

Making it illegal to collect rainwater

In The Shock Doctrine, journalist Klein trains her sharp investigator's eye upon the flaws of neoliberal economics. This meticulously researched alternative history, ranging from economist Milton Friedman's "University of Chicago Boys" to George W. Bush, brings Klein's argument into the present. Using stirring reportage, she shows the ways that disasters— unnatural ones like the war in Iraq, and natural ones like the Asian tsunami and Hurricane Katrina—allow governments and multinationals to take advantage of citizen shock and implement corporate-friendly policies: Where once was a Sri Lankan fishing village now stands a luxury resort. The Shock Doctrine aims its 10-foot-long middle finger at the Bush administration and the generations of neocons who've chosen profits over people in war and disaster; the effect is to provide intellectual armor for the now-mainstream anticorporatist crowd.


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