71
What's the craziest thing we just take as granted?
(sh.itjust.works)
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
I'm not USian either.
There is no sense in allowing a private profit from a natural monopoly with no risk attached (we're never going to decide we can live without clean water and water is supplied geographically, you don't get to choose the provider). Demand will always be there and, as a society, we are much better off doing all the work you describe at cost. Lining the pockets of shareholders does not make any sense. But that is exactly what is happening.
I'm in the UK. It is an extremely sore point here: Water firms’ debts since privatisation hit £54bn as Ofwat refuses to impose limits
Note the £54bn in debt they're charging us 20% to cover (first para) compared to the £65.9bn they've doled out to idle shareholders (last para), mostly via tax havens, just to add insult to injury.
And the sewage they are spilling into our waterways because they have not invested in infrastructure. Why would they when they can hand the money to shareholders and rely on the govt not to make them meet even the most minimal of standards?
People are not stupid. There are overwhelming majorities in the UK for nationalising water (and rail, mail, energy, all the stuff that it makes no sense to privatise). But democracy does not mean shit when there's profit to be extracted. And the profiteers do their very best to make us stupid by insisting there is no other way and wearing everyone down until they believe it. Which is easy, because they own all the media so even if we don't entirely buy their bullshit, it's very hard to hear anything else above the din they're making.