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			July 30, 2012from 
			ActivistPost Website
 
			  
				
					
						
							
							  
							Water, water, 
							everywhere - Nor any drop to drink.*
 
							* 'Rime 
							of the Ancient Mariner' by Samuel Taylor 
							Coleridge. Mariners are surrounded by a sea of water 
							they cannot drink. 
							
 
			  
			 
			  
			  
			A case of the government seeking money 
			and bondage from rural residents by purposely misconstruing an old 
			law & bending definitions.
 Gary Harrington had no idea that he was a water criminal under an 
			obscure 1925 law until 2002 when state bureaucrats told him that his 
			three reservoirs were illegal collection devices that were a crime 
			against his community.
 
 At first, Harrington complied and legally filed for three permits to 
			keep the rainwater run-off within his 170-acre property, including 
			one that had been on the property for 37 years.
 
			  
			However, it appears 
			that the Oregon government is adamantly against its citizens storing 
			and using their own source of water.  
			  
			Although his permits were approved in 
			2003, the state court arbitrarily reversed their decision and was 
			subsequently backed up by a county Circuit Court judge who ruled 
			that he had illegally, 
				
				“withdrawn the water at issue from 
				appropriation other than for the City of Medford.”  
				(Source) 
			Even if the city of Medford did 
			legitimately own all the water, Harrington has good standing when he 
			points out that the law mentions only streams and tributaries, not 
			water run-off formulated from the clouds.
 
 
			  
			  
			  
			Clearly, the Oregon government is sending the message that if a 
			resident wants water, it had better be with their approval and by 
			their means. But Oregon isn't the only place instituting rainwater 
			tyranny.
 
				
				Western states such as Utah, 
				Colorado, and Washington have long outlawed the practice, 
				basically invoking the collectivist notion that the rainwater is 
				ultimately communal, and to store it (hoard it) is a crime.
				 
				(Source) 
			Other countries have had uprisings over 
			this issue. In 1999 mega corporation, 
			
			Bechtel, the largest 
			construction contractor in the United States and winner of 
			rebuilding contracts after the leveling provided by Katrina and the 
			invasion of Iraq, privatized the public water system in Cochabamba - 
			Bolivia's third largest city.  
			  
			As reported at the time: 
				
				This is a country where indigenous 
				farming communities previously had their own water rights, but 
				their water sources were converted into property to be bought 
				and sold by international corporations.    
				When the company refused to lower 
				rates, the people began to rise up and revolt against this 
				injustice; they confronted Bechtel during five months of 
				mobilization and managed to defeat them, breach the contract and 
				change the law. 
 A 17-year-old boy named Victor Hugo Daza was killed in the 
				protests along with four indigenous people from El Alto, while 
				hundreds were injured. It was this popular uprising in 
				Cochabamba that led to the election of their new president Evo 
				Morales, the first ever indigenous head of state in Bolivia.
 
 So 
				
				Bechtel was thrown out of Bolivia, but months later they 
				moved to do the
				
				exact same thing in Ecuador‘s largest city of 
				Guayaquil. And in November 2001, they filed a lawsuit against 
				Bolivia demanding $50 million, an amount which is just short of 
				what the corporation makes in a day.
   
				The case will be decided behind 
				closed doors in a secret trade court at the World Bank 
				headquarters in Washington; it will tell whether the people of 
				South America’s poorest country will have to pay $50 million to 
				one of the world’s most wealthy corporations. 
 Update: In 2006, Bechtel dropped their case against Bolivia.
 
				(Source) 
			In the case of Ecuador, thousands showed 
			up to protest the corporate takeover of their innate right to use 
			the water that falls upon their land. 
			  
			In some ways, what is happening in 
			Oregon and other Western states is even worse than the privatization 
			led by corporations like Bechtel.
 Not only are resources and populations being exploited for financial 
			gain, but as Mike Adams correctly points out for NaturalNews:
 
				
				sunlight and air also fall on your land, so where will this end if 
			people don't stand up in defense of their most basic rights? 
			It is the very spirit of American ownership of private property and 
			the right to self-determination that are being threatened. The 
			
			ideology of collectivism is seeking in myriad ways to upend the 
			foundation of America and criminalize independence.  
			  
			Hat's off to Harrington who embodies the 
			spirit of true freedom and vows never to end the fight if his rights 
			continue to get trampled. 
				
				“When something is wrong, you just, 
				as an American citizen, you have to put your foot down and say, 
				‘This is wrong; you just can’t take away anymore of my rights 
				and from here on in, I’m going to fight it.”  
			There are several lines in the sand that 
			should not be crossed within any country claiming to be rooted in 
			freedom.
 Revolt has happened in other nations subjected to the same level of 
			tyranny who recognized that even without an American Constitution, 
			this is a human rights issue that in fact has no boundaries.
 
			  
			The words of water criminal Gary 
			Harrington ring clear that we'd do well to stand our ground on 
			fundamental issues, unless we wish to give away our spirit along 
			with our land: 
				
				They’ve just gotten to be big 
				bullies and if you just lay over and die and give up, that just 
				makes them bigger bullies. So, we as Americans, we need to stand 
				on our constitutional rights, on our rights as citizens and hang 
				tough.  
				  
				This is a good country, we’ll prevail.  
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