HUMAN WATER RIGHTS
"WATER IS SO MUCH A PART OF US WE HAVE NOT NOTICED THAT WE'VE BEEN SEPARATED FROM IT"....... 'LADY J'....
I just received this article from a very dear friend who knows JGERARD / "PEACE GALLERY's" stand on HUMAN WATER RIGHTS....so
here we go: please read every word in this article!!!!.... If we don't
deal with this issue as a united human race, we won't live long enough
to enjoy global warming!!!!!
PEACE.....Julia 'Lady J' Gerard......
Like most Americans, I always took the clean water running out of my tap
for granted. That changed in January, when West Virginia American Water
(WVAW) sent out an all points alert to stop drinking, cooking, washing,
or doing anything else with the H₂O flowing into my home, except flush
the toilet.
Thus began the biggest fouling of a public water supply in our nation’s history. Thanks to the negligence of Freedom Industries —
a supplier of chemicals to the coal industry — all schools,
restaurants, hotels, and other public facilities in our nine-county
region closed immediately.
Everyone
in my community had become water refugees.State lawmakers, who had just
started the legislative session in Charleston, were sent home from the
capital city. Many businesses didn’t open their doors again for a full
week and then had to post “we use bottled water” signs in their windows
to lure their customers back.
This
is more than a problem afflicting one in six West Virginia residents.
It’s a national health issue that could harm any of our 54,000 public
water supply systems.
Six months later, here in Charleston, we’re still dealing with the
spill’s aftermath. We’ve come to realize that clean tap water is a
precious commodity.
A recent National Geographic article catalogues
various ways our public drinking water sources are threatened. The
perils include coal ash from utilities, farm feedlot waste lagoons, oil
pipelines, and motor or rail transport of oil and other chemicals.
Thanks to these weak regulations, we’ve turned into involuntary guinea pigs in an enormous science experiment.
Jason Myer, a Charleston filmmaker, is marketing “test subject”
T-shirts emblazoned with the symbol for MCHM. Proceeds will fund a
documentary he’s making about the spill and its impact on our lives.
Other
states need to take heed of what’s going on in West Virginia. This
should be a wakeup call that gets them to look around and assess the
potential for the same kind of disaster in their own backyards.
The
estimated 10,000 gallons of MCHM that spilled here comprise about the
same volume of that poison as one large semi tanker truck totes around. A
similar accident could happen anywhere.
You’d
hope that Congress would act to be sure that more Americans don’t
become unwilling test subjects. But according to the Safer Chemicals,
Healthy Families coalition, which is fighting for stricter regulations
on these chemicals, you would be wrong.
In
the House, Republican leaders want to keep its chemical industry
campaign donors happy and generous. The Senate is struggling with
competing industry and consumer bills.
We
can’t let them carry on like this. And the “it can’t happen here”
mentality must go. These chemicals are everywhere — traveling down our
highways, rails, rivers, and pipelines. They’re being stored in old
tanks up the river from lots of population centers, not just in West
Virginia.
Don’t let this happen in your state. We don’t need a bigger market for “test subject” t-shirts.
_______________________________________________________________________
THESE "WATER KANJI" LOGOS HAVE BEEN DESIGNED BY JGERARD / "PEACE GALLERY" AS THE OFFICIAL SYMBOL OF
"THE HUMAN WATER RIGHTS" MOVEMENT".....
The Kanji is the Japanese symbol for water.... It is also the Chinese symbol for water and control..
.....PEACE.....'LADY J'.....
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