Anonymous ID: 0c2d25 April 26, 2021, 8:23 a.m. No.13516820   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>filibuster

if nancy's hr[C]1 passes..

if biden bills pass..

so what is our position re filibuster?

what is their position re filibuster?

what are other important positions?

Anonymous ID: 0c2d25 April 26, 2021, 9:10 a.m. No.13517134   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>7171

>>13517123

https://sharylattkisson.com/2021/04/will-water-soon-be-traded-like-oil/

'Is water becoming a commodity to be bought, sold and traded by Wall Street firms and hedge funds?

 

Thatโ€™s the concern of some as America fights out water wars across the country.

 

The Colorado River cuts through the Grand Canyon, providing water for about 40 million people and 5 and a half million acres of farmland. To some, the water is as valuable as oil.

 

In 1922, the seven U.S. states through which the river flows signed onto The Colorado River Compact, a water sharing agreement that divvies up the riverโ€™s annual flow.

 

The water must be shared equally between Upper Basin states: Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and New Mexico; and the Lower Basin: California, Arizona and Nevada. Thereโ€™s been infighting ever since.

 

One example is in Arizona where the battle is over a proposal to move water from the Colorado River to a community hundreds of miles away outside Phoenix called Queen Creek.

 

The owner of the water rights is a hedge fund group that has bought farmland along the Colorado River. The prospective buyer, Queen Creek, says it can put the water to better use.

 

If both buyer and seller want to close the deal, who objects?

 

It turns out when it came to public comments on the proposal, there was overwhelming opposition.

 

Arizona state representative Regina Cobb is among those fighting the water transfer, in large part because of who owns the farmland thatโ€™s selling the water rights: a multi-national hedge fund.

 

โ€œI would say it is commoditizing water and is picking winners and losers,โ€ says Cobb. โ€œThis will be the first case that that water has been able to be transferred from the Colorado river internally into urban Arizona.โ€

โ€ฆ'