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World's Water Crisis Makes the Big Screen

Posted by Tara Lohan, AlterNet at 3:00 PM on March 4, 2008.


Forget the Oscar winners, check out the new documentary "Flow: For Love of Water."
Flow film clip 2

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If you want to see what the global water crisis looks like -- in the U.S., in China, in Mexico, in India, in Bolivia, in South Africa ... -- then start with FLOW: For Love of Water, the new documentary from French filmmaker Irena Salina.

The film kicked off to rave reviews at Sundance and I was able to catch its New York debut last week at a sold out screening held by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. In a nut shell, the film dramatically captures the water crisis, the current push for privatization from corporations, and the growing water justice movement that is fighting back.

Here's what the film's website says:

With an unflinching focus on politics, pollution and human rights, FLOW: For Love of Water ensures that the precarious relationship between humanity and water can no longer be ignored. While specifics of locality and issue may differ, the message is the same; water, and our future as a species, is quickly drying up. Armed with a thirst for survival, people around the world are fighting for their birthright; unless we instigate change, we face a world in which only those that can pay for their water will survive. FLOW: For Love of Water, is a catalyst for people everywhere: the time has come to turn the tide and we can't wait any longer.

While the film attempts to cover a lot of ground, one of the main points is really about privatization and drawing the link between corporate take over of municipal water systems, the lack of government funding for public water, and the bottled water industry -- all topics that are being covered in campaigns by groups actively engaged in the water justice movement -- Food & Water Watch, Corporate Accountability International, and Polaris Institute, to name a few.

One the most frequent faces seen on the film is that of Maude Barlow, an international water guru from Canada who I interviewed recently for AlterNet about her new book Blue Covenant and who also spoke with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now! last week.

The film is really a great tool for water justice activists to help educate the masses, but it is also, quite simply, a beautiful film, worth seeing for its directing merits alone. One of the other amazing things is the incredible cast of people that were interviewed: Peter Gleick, William Marks, Dr. Ashok Gadgil, Shri Rajendra Singh, Jim Schultz, Vandana Shiva, and a whole bunch more.

Check out their website for information about up-coming screenings. And for more information about water privatization, there's a great resource list at Waterblogged.Info.

Digg!

Tagged as: water, water privatization, water crisis, water pollution, flow

Tara Lohan is a managing editor at AlterNet.


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A related point of interest...
Posted by: asilsfable on Mar 4, 2008 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another film-- The Future of Food by Deborah Garcia. All about GMO foods and the hyper-corporatization of agriculture.

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RE:receeding water
Posted by: donl51 on Mar 5, 2008 1:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Geez America,guess we won't be taking 2-3 showers a day,like no one else on the planet does,and I guess we'll be right along side those we cut up so much!...It's amazing I've been in a lot of foreign countries for fun ..and not,they don't go nuts like we do,and they're plenty clean and even still have that bacteria we're supposed to have!,we're nuts over here but not all the time,that is ,it's only been maybe 25-30 years tops!we drink alot more water than our body really needs ,''hydrate ''thats all I hear ,hell even the milatary's doin' it,150lb .packs 75lb's of it water!,just kidding there I've no idea how much they carry but our milatary drinks more than we need,the more you drink the more you want/need ,what happens out there where there isn't any.....read a lot of mil.history,was in the mil. in a war no less!get used to it folks ,''the times they are a changing''!

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There's just as much water as there always was.
Posted by: PJAW on Mar 6, 2008 5:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem is the way we're using it. We're befouling it and putting it back into the cycle at a rate that is overwhelming the natural processes that return it to a condition that is once again suitable for our use.

We may be both the smartest and dumbest species to ever dominate this planet. Though I'm not sure "dominate" is the right word, since it looks like the planet will ultimately win the struggle. Proliferating may be a more accurate description of what we're doing. Like bacteria in a petri dish. And just like those bacteria, once we proliferate beyond the capacity of the growth medium to sustain us, we're going to begin to die off. Unlike the petri dish, however, the planet is a large enough ecosystem and there are enough alternative forms present for "life" to probably continue. Whether life will ever again manifest in "human" form may be open to question. So, enjoy it while it lasts, but don't expect it to go on forever because we're on an unsustainable course and the will to change is not immediately apparent. At least not in sufficient magnitude to really matter.

That's not to say we should all give up. Have you seen the new "green" SUV's. Yeah, that's going to make a diference.

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Since I was a child
Posted by: Pirate1 on Mar 11, 2008 1:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have always found it strange that we were the only land animal I could think of that went out of it's way to poop into its water supply. I was assured that it all got cleaned up and trusted that for a long time but when I look at the world today and even water in high altitude mountain streams contain giardia bacteria, I feel it's like everything else we try to "fix"...

Before Crapper built his flush toilet, our poop and industrial waste was mainly a problem for crowded places like cities where it was largely dumped in the gutters where most of the biology that does break down waste had been trampled to death, burned, grazed to dust by our herds of ungulates, overwhelmed by quantity of waste or otherwise eradicated. So his solution was to send it into the rivers and streams and ultimately the ocean which I'm sure in his time seemed infinite and thus uncorruptible by mere human endeavor. So here we are, literally in a world of sh#t; we routinely dump a toxic soup into the waterways every day when we use bleach in the laundry and ammonia to clean glass and the latest poorly tested miracle solvent to remove those stains or that grease, not to mention all the body products for skin and hair and then flush them all together into the water supply along with our poop and In-Sinkerator garbage... and that's not including what horrors industry injects into it.

Now everywhere in towns and wannabe cities needing another source of fees I hear calls for more sewer systems so that more homes that are now doing fine with septic tanks are mandated to "hook up" and start paying those huge monthly fees to pay the salaries of the sewer district bureaucracy.

How did the smartest animal in the forest become so dumb?

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Since I was a child
Posted by: Pirate1 on Mar 11, 2008 1:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have always found it strange that we were the only land animal I could think of that went out of it's way to poop into its water supply. I was assured that it all got cleaned up and trusted that for a long time but when I look at the world today and even water in high altitude mountain streams contain giardia bacteria, I feel it's like everything else we try to "fix"...

Before Crapper built his flush toilet, our poop and industrial waste was mainly a problem for crowded places like cities where it was largely dumped in the gutters where most of the biology that does break down waste had been trampled to death, burned, grazed to dust by our herds of ungulates, overwhelmed by quantity of waste or otherwise eradicated. So his solution was to send it into the rivers and streams and ultimately the ocean which I'm sure in his time seemed infinite and thus uncorruptible by mere human endeavor. So here we are, literally in a world of sh#t; we routinely dump a toxic soup into the waterways every day when we use bleach in the laundry and ammonia to clean glass and the latest poorly tested miracle solvent to remove those stains or that grease, not to mention all the body products for skin and hair and then flush them all together into the water supply along with our poop and In-Sinkerator garbage... and that's not including what horrors industry injects into it.

Now everywhere in towns and wannabe cities needing another source of fees I hear calls for more sewer systems so that more homes that are now doing fine with septic tanks are mandated to "hook up" and start paying those huge monthly fees to pay the salaries of the sewer district bureaucracy.

How did the smartest animal in the forest become so dumb?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]