Premium Only Content
"FLOW: For Love Of Water" (2008) 💧 by Irena Salina
The film features interviews with water and community activists Maude Barlow, Peter Gleick, Ashok Gadgil, William Waterway, Rajendra Singh, and Vandana Shiva. The film won the Grand Jury Award at the Mumbai International Film Festival and the Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary at the United Nations Film Festival.
The film opens up and discusses the world water crisis. Nearly two million people die each year from water-borne diseases worldwide. The root causes of this crisis range from pesticide and chemical runoff, to simply not having access to clean water due to economic or political factors.
As of 2008, 70% of the world’s water was used for agricultural needs. With agricultural upkeep comes heavy pesticide and chemical use. As the land drains, these chemicals flow into the river systems and alter ecosystems. Altrazine and its health effects on mammals and amphibians is discussed briefly while mentioning its ban in the European Union, however, it is still used in the U.S.
The film also spends a lengthy amount of time on the topic of privatization of water infrastructure. Major businesses depicted in the film are Nestle, The Coca-Cola Company, Suez, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). While tap water has gained a great stigma over the years, the FDA cannot confirm that bottled water is any safer. Tap water passes through water treatment plants and has to abide by set regulations, however, bottled water has less stringent regulations because there is no primary monitoring agency designated for the industry. Ethical dilemmas arise from the conversation of water privatization because water is a natural and common resource that companies are capturing for free to build a large profit. This constant pumping of water has changed the natural infrastructure of land and has caused water shortages in areas near pumping facilities. In 2008, the U.N. estimated that it would require funds of $30 billion a year to provide clean, accessible, drinking water to the entire planet while in the previous year, the world spent $90 billion on bottled water.
It competed in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival.[1]
FLOW launched a Right To Water campaign to add a 31st article to the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights, Article31.org. FLOW was released theatrically by Oscilloscope Labs in September, 2008, and then invited to screen for the UN General Assembly on the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, where the first 50,000 signatories to Article31 were presented to the President of the General Assembly, Father Miguel D'Escoto Brockmann. As of February 2016, the proposed article has upwards of 83,000 signatures.
𝙍𝙚𝙨𝙚𝙖𝙧𝙘𝙝 𝘼𝙪𝙙𝙞𝙤 + 𝙋𝘿𝙁𝙨: https://bit.ly/PDFdump
-
27:28
Glenn Greenwald
6 hours agoGlenn Reacts to Trump's Gaza Take Over: System Update Special
100K216 -
LIVE
Melonie Mac
2 hours agoGo Boom Live Ep 36!
670 watching -
1:02:11
Sarah Westall
2 hours agoFreezing USAID & its Operations in Ukraine: A Massive Money Laundering Organization? w/ Sam Anthony
18.9K5 -
LIVE
Space Ice
6 hours agoSpace Ice & Redeye: Neil Breen's Pass Thru
109 watching -
1:00:23
The StoneZONE with Roger Stone
2 hours agoRoger Stone Talks Trump’s Electric First 100 Day Agenda | The StoneZone w/ Roger Stone
6.82K4 -
DVR
Redacted News
5 hours agoBREAKING! EPSTEIN LIST INCOMING UNDER AG PAM BONDI? DEMOCRATS FREAKING OUT, PRINCE ANDREW NERVOUS
145K199 -
52:02
Candace Show Podcast
8 hours agoBecoming Brigitte: An Inaccessible Past | Ep 2
128K189 -
2:07:26
2 MIKES LIVE
6 hours ago2 MIKES LIVE #176 News Breakdown Wednesday!
13.1K2 -
1:39:11
I_Came_With_Fire_Podcast
7 hours agoGAZA TAKEOVER | USAID EXPLAINED | TARIFF TAKEDOWN
32.9K5 -
37:14
The Based Mother
7 hours ago $0.71 earnedFULL OF IT! Crooked politicians say they care about children. Their actions tell a different story.
18K4