Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: [ANN] [BEN] Benjamins ◄ SHA-256 ►◄ BOUNTY AVAILABLE to make BEN merge mineable!!
by
itsunderstood
on 19/06/2014, 17:04:14 UTC
Oh and for those who ask, "Sir, just what is a Benjamin WORTH?"

I would say this:  Benjamins are maybe 50% off their reasonable value, or maybe 300% off their peak value (where the main dumper acted) --But most importantly I would respond with a question:

How much is a bottle of water worth, when Nestle(tm) sucks your country and then sells you your water back?

And how much is a cup of water worth when Detroit uses the right to water, to call in UN troops, as if Water has ever been protected by any government or politicians or army?

No my friends, the value of a Benjamin is no more than the water I have stored and which I live near.  Value is determined when supply is restricted.  And a worldwide restriction of all supplies, seems in the offing. 

So, mine Benjamins and store water and protect water with me.  Protect the river you live near, do not litter and smack anyone you see dumping oil in it or gross stuff like that.

I live near a river which is sublime, there are tiny baby fish swimming all around, and children chasing them.  How can the UN bring such paradise to regions like Detroit?  I ask you to examine the full spectrum of dominance that is being foisted, and to somehow make a stand for Liberty.  That is all I am doing, in the face of this madness.

Quote
http://www.intellihub.com/groups-appeal-un-humanity-detroit-shuts-water-thousands/

'[...] the human right to water’

As thousands of people in Detroit go without water, and the city moves to cut off services to tens of thousands more, concerned organizations have taken the unusual step of appealing to the United Nations to intervene and protect the “human right to water.”

“After decades of policies that put businesses and profits ahead of the public good, the city now has a major crisis on its hands, said Maude Barlow, founder of Blue Planet Project and board chair of Food & Water Watch, in a statement. “By denying water service to thousands, Detroit is violating the human right to water.”

The Submission to the Special Rapporteur was released Wednesday by the Detroit People’s Water Board, the Blue Planet Project, the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization and Food & Water Watch.

It calls for the “state of Michigan and U.S. government to respect the human right to water and sanitation” and for shut-offs to be halted, services restored, and water to be made accessible and affordable.

The report comes on the heels of the Detroit’s city council’s Tuesday approval of an 8.7 percent increase in water rates, part of a long-standing trend that, according to Food & Water Watch, has seen prices increase 119 percent over the past decade.

Haha and will the UN act on US water problems --BY INVADING NESTLE??

Let's hope so.