Memo to Steve Bannon: solve the water-shortage problem |
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Memo to Steve Bannon: solve the water-shortage problem
Out of the box
By Jon Rappoport
To Steve Bannon, Trump's inside man for policy and innovation.
The subject: actually solving the water-shortage problem in California and other places.
Government bureaucrats and leaders are psychotically obsessed
with maintaining their tight grip on a problem, massaging it, adoring
it, arguing about it, figuring out how they can enhance their
reputations by funding unworkable solutions---you know, the usual.
This is why, in California, it's taken 15-20 years to start
building a desalination plant in Carlsbad that will take the salt out of
seawater. Are these politicians idiots? Is the Pope Catholic?
So, Steve, I point you to an October 29, 2015 article in
Fortune, "This billionaire wants to solve California's water problem,"
by Brittany Shoot:
"Manoj Bhargava, the man behind 5-Hour Energy, believes his
affordable desalination technology can equally help wealthy Californians
and poor Indians."
"Take the Rain Maker, a desalination unit roughly the size of
a flatbed truck that relies on a conventional power source to distill
seawater into freshwater well beyond Environmental Protection Agency
guidelines. A single Rain Maker can be placed in a town with a
wastewater plant. In a crisis, hundreds could be stacked on an ocean
barge to process seawater. Coastal desalination facilities typically
cost billions to construct and require massive amounts of energy. Could
the Rain Maker, produced at industrial scale, pull California back from
the brink of disaster? The forecast looks promising. Regulators at the
Brackish Groundwater National Desalination Research Facility, a testing
facility administered in New Mexico by the Department of the Interior,
have given it a stamp of approval."
Getting the picture, Steve? Doesn't this sound worth exploring?
Your man, Trump, has sent signals that he wants to introduce,
into moribund gridlocked government, solutions that bypass the official
structure of embedded morons who keep finding new ways to get nothing
done.
Well, here's one. Contact Manoj Bhargava, the 5-Hour Energy
owner, and work something out. Find out if his system really operates
without glitches. Looking into his method, I believe Mr. Bhargava and
his technicians are prepared to a) answer any and all questions about
the validity of their work and its cost-effectiveness, and b) provide
demonstrations that can be checked and analyzed by independent
scientists.
If the Bhargava method does work, and California Governor
Jerry Brown comes up with a way to try to stop you, I would favor
sending in the DHS. They might actually do something helpful in the way
of "securing the homeland." I think the untold numbers of farmers in
California who've seen their growing operations collapse deserve
immediate help. I'm sure you could act as an intermediary between a
group of these growers and Mr. Bhargava.
Think of it. Horrible drought problem. No rain. Crops dying.
Farmers going out of business. The state government of California does
nothing about it except moan and whine and avoid and warn and cut water
usage.
---Then, assuming Bhargava's system works, you step in and solve the whole thing.
The horrible case of bureaucratic depression you'd engender by this act would be worth the price of admission.
And simultaneously, the upward surge of positive emotion
across the country would send a message that your administration means
business---and all is not lost. Far from it.
***Face it, Steve, the powers-that-be and their little
government helpers are determined to SHOWCASE drought as an inevitable
consequence of "manmade global warming." They want to keep shoving
drought into people's faces to prove their fraudulent climate-change
"science" is valid. Their prime agenda involves continued water
shortages.
Suppose you, on the other hand, can move in and make the
shortage go away, help the farmers, and all the people who eat what the
farmers grow?
And suppose, as you do this, Trump live-streams info direct
to the American people, bypassing media, and details the efforts to
block getting water to California farmers? He names names, he shows how
they don't actually want to solve the problem.
That would be a win-win.
Except for the bureaucratic losers, who richly deserve their fate.
Show a bureaucrat a real solution to a serious problem and he
feels naked and afraid. He's unaccustomed to true answers. He feels as
if his life is threatened.
But that's his issue, not ours.
We don't have to grant any value to his mindset.
Why can't abundance, rather than scarcity, compose the foundation of a better future?
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Jon Rappoport
The
author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM
THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US
Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a
consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the
expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he
has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles
on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin
Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and
Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics,
health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world.
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