Nicholas Cage of “Knowing” Continues Predicted Oilspill Saga With Amnesty International

Of course Nicholas Cage has to be the one now finding Amnesty International worthy of saving us. Could it be any more blatant than convincing us to look at a channel controlled by the United Nations to save the people? Read below:

Nicolas Cage with Amnesty International call for Americans to support voice of Gulf people
Photo: Wikipedia

Human rights standards guarantee the right of people to be informed of and to participate in the decisions that may affect their rights. Gulf residents have a right to participate not only in decisions pertaining to the recovery process, but also in assessing the potential impacts of future projects on health, access to clean water and livelihoods. – Amnesty International

Amnesty International and Nicolas Cage are working to prevent the Gulf Coast peoples’ voice from drowning in the crime against humanity. They are calling for self-determination through community councils, a democratic way to address the crisis instead of the present non-democratic, top-down military method of controlling the crime against humanity. For them to succeed, they need readers here to contact respective representatives and ask that they give Gulf Coast residents a voice in rebuilding their own future.

Below is today’s Amnesty International message from Jason Opeña Disterhoft, A1′s Demand Dignity Campaigner calling on the nation to support people of the Gulf.
The Gulf oil spill brought an already vulnerable region to its knees.
After spending the last 5 years picking up the pieces from the worst hurricane to ever hit the United States, survivors are now cleaning up after one of the worst environmental disasters in history.

But residents can’t help the Gulf fully recover when they don’t even have a seat at the table. Decisions are being made that will have an enormous impact on long-term health, on coastal wetlands and wildlife, and on two major industries in the Gulf Coast: fishing and tourism.

Congress can ensure that these kinds of decisions aren’t just being made with the community in mind, but that residents are actively engaged in the decision-making process.
Empower Gulf Coast residents during the Gulf spill clean-up by giving them a voice in the recovery process!

After the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska, a citizens’ advisory council was created to provide community oversight of the clean-up efforts and prevent future oil spills. This council is considered by many to have played a critical role in leveling the discussions between the company responsible for the damages and the people adversely affected.

A citizens’ advisory council in the Gulf Coast would guarantee representation for communities of color and low-income communities – groups disproportionately impacted during crises, as evidenced in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the Gulf spill.

Seen here …

Founded in London in 1961, Amnesty draws attention to human rights abuses and campaigns for compliance with international laws and standards. It works to mobilise public opinion to exert pressure on governments that perpetrate abuses.[2] The organisation was awarded the 1977 Nobel Peace Prize for its “campaign against torture”,[3] and the United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights in 1978.[4]

Wikipedia

Appears to me Nick is doing what he is ordered to to ensure nobody goes to any other channels than the ones ready to use the oil spill to their advantage. United Nations all the way.

Read also:

Could the oil spill actually be staged?

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