@locemm_99: Phú Long thất thủ rồi ạ 😔 #xyzbca #viralvideo #xh #lulut

𝐋𝐨̣̂𝐜𝐜 𝐄𝐦 💎
𝐋𝐨̣̂𝐜𝐜 𝐄𝐦 💎
Open In TikTok:
Region: VN
Friday 31 October 2025 05:09:10 GMT
77447
3100
248
108

Music

Download

Comments

danh.in.c
DANH ĐIỆN CƠ.ĐĂKLĂK CAO NGUYÊN :
2 năm nay đất cao nguyên Đăk Lăk sốt kinh..các dân miền khác đổ về Đăk Lăk mua đất kinh..toàn đại gia mua lần mấy hét
2025-11-02 04:19:13
0
dvdl.viet.nguyen
dvdl viet nguyen :
NAM MÔ A DI ĐÀ PHẬT
2025-10-31 10:42:04
0
tuannguyen0986
♡𝒯𝓊𝒶𝓃 𝓃𝑔𝓊𝓎𝑒𝓃 ^;^ 🦟 :
muốn tên bình thuận thôi
2025-11-29 17:26:49
0
kellyfising
Kelly :
khỗ ghê e hơ
2025-10-31 09:21:39
1
vi12047
Kieu vi :
Thương quá Bình Thuận oi chua bao giờ nghĩ quê mình sẽ bị như này
2025-11-01 10:49:44
1
quang_kham199x
♥9✘Khăm 75 Hilux🇻🇳❤️🇱🇦 :
năm nay 3 miền chia nhau ăn 😂😂
2025-10-31 11:56:54
0
bao96thfkm
Bảo idol 1306 :
mưa gió là khổ☺
2025-11-06 23:51:21
0
tranthien1x
Trần Thiện 92 :
E ở phú long àk
2025-11-02 01:05:52
0
hqc002
Huỳnh Quang Chánh :
Chúc mọi người bình an 🥰
2025-10-31 11:21:44
0
vovinam33
Bảo thịnh vovinam :
Bình thuận k còn nữa 😆😆😆
2025-11-01 22:53:33
0
nguyenngocthanh678
Thành  86B3 ✈️🔥 :
chìu xã nx
2025-10-31 06:53:36
0
becar0705
Bé Car :
Bình yên Thuận hoà nay còn đâu, người con xa quê nhìn đứt ruột gan 🥲
2025-11-01 15:17:28
1
hoaichau2222
Võ Hoài Châu :
Hàm Tân đang ổn định chưa có gì xãi ra
2025-10-31 19:28:33
0
holychinduoi2409
Thỷ🕊️ :
cầu phú long hả bn. mình trên ham đức mà năm nay nhìn thấy khổ quá tr
2025-11-16 14:23:25
0
useramema1
Tiền Hay Buồn :
Bữa chạy qua cầu Cà Ty Nhìn Xuống Nó Ngập Mún hết cầu
2025-11-06 17:24:46
0
xuanha75
hiển nè :
29 năm mới thấy lại mới đúng đó em
2025-10-31 17:10:58
0
suliii9x
H 🩷 :
Thương 😌
2025-10-31 11:53:18
1
ngochung180202
Ngọc Hùng :
Nuoc rut bot dc mot it roi á
2025-10-31 05:49:49
1
mytu8150
Lãng quênn :
cùng quê
2025-10-31 07:50:08
1
ditimhuongtichcuc21
Mochi review🌷 :
Thương dân mình quá 😭
2025-11-01 12:46:30
0
levankhoa1995
levankhoa1995 :
Mạnh mẽ lên người ơi 💪💪💪
2025-10-31 09:45:51
1
baohan4571
baohan98 :
năm nay bình thuận mình khổ cho dân mình quá
2025-11-01 08:52:22
0
mrtuan1007
M.Tuấn. :
Cầu phú long
2025-10-31 07:58:55
1
tuan4142
tuấn :
Ngày trước còn bình thuận thì bình yên … nay chuyển qua lâm đồng thành lâm nợ vì lũ luôn !!!
2025-11-06 03:35:56
0
To see more videos from user @locemm_99, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, the former CEO and later Chairman of Nestlé, in a 2005 documentary called We Feed the World, argued against the idea that all water should be a free human right. In the documentary, Brabeck-Letmathe called the belief that water should be entirely free “extreme,” and pushed the idea that water should be treated like any other food product with a market value. Critics pointed out that when a corporation worth tens of billions argues water should be something you pay for, that puts vulnerable communities at risk.  By 2013, he publicly softened his stance. He said every person should have a guaranteed amount of water for drinking and hygiene — about 25 liters a day — but anything beyond that should be priced and regulated. When it comes to bottled water, Nestlé’s extraction practices have been criticized for years. In Michigan’s Muskegon River watershed, for example, Nestlé has pumped more than 4 billion gallons of groundwater since 2001 from just a few wells while paying only modest fees. Environmental groups argue this gives the company massive private profit from a shared public resource. In Florida, reports have estimated that Nestlé Waters extracted roughly 3 million liters of spring water per day — close to 800,000 gallons — to turn into bottled water. Globally, the company reported withdrawing 98 million cubic meters of water in 2021 across all operations. That’s about 25.9 billion gallons. Not all of that becomes bottled water, but it shows the scale. As for the money: bottled water is a relatively small slice of Nestlé’s total empire, but still enormous.  In 2024, Nestlé made about CHF 3.2 billion in sales from its bottled water division alone. What they don’t release is the exact profit per gallon or how much of their global water withdrawal ends up in bottles. Those numbers are shielded behind broad product categories and global accounting. What we do know from industry analysis is that bottled water has some of the highest profit margins in the beverage world, because the raw ingredient often costs almost nothing when drawn from public aquifers. #water #groundwater #drinkingwater #nestle #humanrights
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, the former CEO and later Chairman of Nestlé, in a 2005 documentary called We Feed the World, argued against the idea that all water should be a free human right. In the documentary, Brabeck-Letmathe called the belief that water should be entirely free “extreme,” and pushed the idea that water should be treated like any other food product with a market value. Critics pointed out that when a corporation worth tens of billions argues water should be something you pay for, that puts vulnerable communities at risk. By 2013, he publicly softened his stance. He said every person should have a guaranteed amount of water for drinking and hygiene — about 25 liters a day — but anything beyond that should be priced and regulated. When it comes to bottled water, Nestlé’s extraction practices have been criticized for years. In Michigan’s Muskegon River watershed, for example, Nestlé has pumped more than 4 billion gallons of groundwater since 2001 from just a few wells while paying only modest fees. Environmental groups argue this gives the company massive private profit from a shared public resource. In Florida, reports have estimated that Nestlé Waters extracted roughly 3 million liters of spring water per day — close to 800,000 gallons — to turn into bottled water. Globally, the company reported withdrawing 98 million cubic meters of water in 2021 across all operations. That’s about 25.9 billion gallons. Not all of that becomes bottled water, but it shows the scale. As for the money: bottled water is a relatively small slice of Nestlé’s total empire, but still enormous. In 2024, Nestlé made about CHF 3.2 billion in sales from its bottled water division alone. What they don’t release is the exact profit per gallon or how much of their global water withdrawal ends up in bottles. Those numbers are shielded behind broad product categories and global accounting. What we do know from industry analysis is that bottled water has some of the highest profit margins in the beverage world, because the raw ingredient often costs almost nothing when drawn from public aquifers. #water #groundwater #drinkingwater #nestle #humanrights

About