Tag: Journalism

From Detroit to Cochabamba…
The Crisis of World Water Rights

Originally published in The Independent at NEIU under the title Detroit and the Crisis of World Water Rights on September 9th 2014. I’ve since lightly edited the piece here and there, most notably adding (lol) after a certain sentence near the end.

There is no greater affront and no greater threat to human rights than water deprivation and privatization. Say what you will about terrorist threats, oil tycoons, militarized police, surveillance or big government—there is no substitute for water—and whoever controls water has unprecedented power over the populace at large.

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Into the Garbage Patch

I was given the opportunity, early in 2014, to travel to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch to investigate the possibility that groups of American migrants had begun to settle there. What follows is a sordid look into one of the most ravaged and polluted locales on the Earth, a place as inhospitable as the Atacama desert and as merciless as the jaws of Everest.

Note From the Author: Because of certain national and international legal issues I cannot reveal the names of the people who brought me to the Garbage Patch, their method of transport, or for that matter any information that might identify them in a court of law.

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