#MorningMonarchy: January 17, 2018
Manchego disputes, vitamin sellouts and the weed world order + this day in history w/the Gulf War I premiere and our song of the day by Parliament on your Morning Monarchy for January 17, 2018.
Manchego disputes, vitamin sellouts and the weed world order + this day in history w/the Gulf War I premiere and our song of the day by Parliament on your Morning Monarchy for January 17, 2018.
Fast food nihilism, CRISPR kits and dead head transplants + this day in history w/the murder of Natalie Wood and our song of the day by Ty Segall on your Morning Monarchy for November 29, 2017.
Taco demolition, left coast lawsuits and baby food blackmail + this day in history w/Jim Bakker indicted and our song of the day by And So I Watch You From Afar on your Morning Monarchy for October 4, 2017.
Press TV – September 28, 2017 The United Nations human rights office has reportedly threatened to blacklist nearly 150 Israeli and international companies for operating in the Israeli occupied territories, including the West Bank, East Jerusalem al-Quds and Golan Heights. Israeli daily Haaretz cited anonymous Israeli officials as saying on Wednesday that UN High Commissioner […]
(ANTIMEDIA) — Soft drink giant Coca-Cola is mired in controversy over wells installed in Southern Mexico that are causing water shortages for local communities there, Truthout reports.
A Coca-Cola plant is said to be taking up copious amounts of water to manufacture its signature soda, in turn, drying up the wells in southern Mexico.
A report in Truthout says supplies are disappearing in San Felipe Ecatepec, an Indigenous town three miles outside of San Cristobal de las Casas in the state of Chiapas.
The Mexican FEMSA-run bottling company operating the plant in the region is said to have consumed at least 1.08 million liters of water per day in 2016 and has affected many neighboring communities.
This week on the New World Next Week: Wikileaks opens Vault7, but what will be the "solution?"; Indian Coke boycott is taking off; and 3D printed homes are now a thing.
This week on the New World Next Week: Wikileaks opens Vault7, but what will be the "solution?"; Indian Coke boycott is taking off; and 3D printed homes are now a thing.
A man walks past a truck that distributes Coca Cola in Mumbai, India. (AP/Rajanish Kakade)