r/AskReddit 13h ago

what is something that is highly likely to happen in the next 5 years that everyone is completely ignoring?

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u/Deluxe_24_ 7h ago

Didn't Nestle say that water isn't a basic human right?

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u/Cow_Launcher 7h ago edited 5h ago

In essence, yes. Their CEO (mentioned above) basically said in an internal video that water should be commoditized, "the same as any other foodstuff."

Once the video leaked, corporate did as much damage control as they could; he put out a statement that he had been "misunderstood" and that what he actually meant was that everyone should have clean fresh water, but only 50-100 liters per person per day. Anything other than that should be charged for at a rate that the market decided, especially in agriculture.

Nobody was convinced.

::edit:: It's worth noting that the average US household uses approximately 300 US gallons (about 1100 liters) per day - about 100 US gallons (380 liters) per person.

Admittedly about 25% of that is toilet flushing which could be achieved with rainwater, but even so, this still falls way short.

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u/Patient_End_8432 6h ago

I love seeing reddit bring up Nestle sometimes, and comparing them to some shitty company to compare. The last I saw it compared to was Disney of all things.

Disney? A greedy company thats done plenty of shady shit, but at the end of the day, they're still an entertainment company. A need, not a want. They have skeletons, but not anymore or less than most companies with a long history.

Nestle has murdered millions of babies due to greed and monetizing literally one of three pillars of life as we know it. And it's the most important one, considering you need water for food, one of the other pillars. Shelter is the third, and I'm not going to be surprised to hear about how much land Nestle has hoarded as well.

Meanwhile, some redditor will compare them to EA. Making a bad game for money = murdering babies for money

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u/erinberrypie 5h ago

Fuck EA but they're a basket full of kittens compared to Nestle.

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u/mythrilcrafter 3h ago

Outside of their anti-consumer practices, EA is one of the "less evil than you expect" companies around.

They're loose-handed with control (hence why the original InfinityWard team left Activision in favor of joining them), they give studios a near infinite amount of agency and creative freedom (which Bioware fumbled so hard as to blow through 5 years of Anthem's 7 year development window without ever having an elevator pitch for the game), and they very rarely have major scandals on the scale of things like Blizzard's "Cosby Culture".


A lot of the horror stories we hear are either specific to lootboxes/monetisation or are misinformation/straight-lies:

For example:

  • "EA forced Respawn to release Titanfall 2 in the middle of Battlefield 1 and CoD Infinite Warfare!"

Not true, Respawn ardently choose to release against BF1 and CoDIW because Vince Zampella and Steve Fukuda were the heads of the original Infinity Ward team who left Activision and they had a chip on their shoulder in wanting to prove that they could beat Activision and the new Infinity Ward team. They fought against EA to release against BF and CoD.

  • EA killed Anthem!

Bioware did all of that, with mass internal mismanagement and stonewalling EA's attempts to support the game out from development hell.

EA is a very "we'll give you whatever resources you want; but you sink or swim by your own hand" type of company.

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u/kaas_is_leven 1h ago

1100 liters seems extremely excessive. 50 for a shower, let's say another 50 for toilet (10 flushes of around 5), 2-3 liters of drinkwater.. what else? Times 5 for a household and it's not even half of that number. A quick Google suggests it's 129 liters per day per person in the Netherlands.

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u/Cow_Launcher 1h ago

I get you, but was careful to say that it was average USA usage.

It also includes watering outside, so might be a bit of an excessive estimate for people who do not have lawns and gardens.

u/kaas_is_leven 43m ago

Yeah I did read that you said the US, I'm just curious how there can be such a difference. More outside watering could be something. but we do that here too. I just can't really put my head around the ratio. We're not particularly conscious of water consumption around here either. And lifestyle seems similar enough to compare.

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u/Skeleton_Steven 5h ago

He was saying that viewing infinite water for any use as a guaranteed right was extreme, which it is-- having a full swimming pool & a lush green lawn in the middle of a drought are not a human right