Posted on 01/31/2011 8:29:38 AM PST by Feline_AIDS
"Of all the water on the planet, only 1% of it is suitable for human use. That's it. 1%. For everyone. And there's no new water coming into the system. The water we drink today is the same water that the dinosaurs had to drink."
You know, because we're overpopulated and stuff. Say, we should probably get more abortions so we don't have to compete with all those babies suckin down our planet's water!
Thank you, CC, for posting a map of 20% of the world’s supply of fresh water, although the US congress, for political reasons, also includes Lake Champlain.
And that water had the same problem that W.C. Fields noted years ago: "I don't drink water -- fish copulate in it."
Just as impressive are the massive underground lakes — the aquifers — that underlie parts of the country. When you take into account desalination, water is plentiful, even though we should not use it profligately.
By the way, one of the worst hydrological offenders on earth is the City of Los Angeles, where many of these dimwits make their homes.
See, there is this thing called “the water cycle”
As we use water, it becomes waste and then it goes to a treatment plant where it is cleaned up (mostly) and then it goes back into the environment where it is evaporated into the atmosphere and becomes rain.
All water flows to the sea..... rivers, lakes, ground water.... if that was all she wrote, then we would have been out a long time ago.
Also, this new fandangled technology we have called Desalination allows us to use salt water and guess what? over 70% of the earths surface is water....
running out of water is about as likely as running out of air.
Cheers!
Yes. I have been posting for a long time that part of the solution to the “energy crisis” and the “water crisis” is to build nuclear powered desalination plants on the coasts. Makes too much sense, I guess.
I long ago stopped buying Levis. When they decided that they were activists who occasionally made blue jeans, I decided to purchase jeans from someone else. Over 20 years have passed and I do not miss Levis.
I was thinking how water is a renewable - I drink it, I make it. I contribute back to the eco system. What’s the problem?
NO. The water we drink today IS NOT the same water the dinosaurs drank.
To say so reveals a flaw in understanding basic biology and the water cycle.
Respiration by aerobic life forms (most all surface and aquatic life forms) combines hydrogen with oxygen at the tail end of metabolizing ‘food’ energy. That’s why we fog a mirror - ‘cuz we constantly CREATE water molecules as we respire. The O2 we breathe acts as a hydrogen acceptor. Animals AND PLANTS do this. The net effect is that trillions of ‘new’ water molecules are ‘created’ every day.
Secondly through a process commonly know as photosynthesis, H2O and CO2 are chemically re-arranged into carbohydrates - and thus ‘old’ water molecules are broken apart for ‘food’ synthesis. Trillions or more every day.
Thirdly through a process called hydrolysis (literally water splitting) life forms and chemical processes employ H2O to split apart large molecules into smaller ones — dissociating the hydrogen atoms from the oxygen atom.
Fourthly via an assortment of geologic, anthropogenic, solar and biological processes, new oxygen and hydrogen atoms/molecules enter the biome ALL THE TIME — from previously ‘trapped’ sources.
Harrumph. Now that I have ranted, I *WILL* agree however with much of the premise of this article that in the future we will run out of potable water before we run out of fuels. Once we ‘solve’ the fossil fuel issue, we’ll end up having huge fights with the developing world over access to fresh water.
It is populist bafflegab to say it’s the same water today as for the dinosaurs, or even our parents.
Same here.
Yup. This is the new concern, now that global warming has been pretty well debunked.
It would probably be more accurate to say that the water we drink is made of the same atomic and sub atomic particles that made the water the dinosaurs drank.
Oh I agree. I would surmise that over 99% of the same atoms/ions are in play.
But that’s NOT what it says or implies on the Levi’s web site.
To me clearly the author lacks a fundamental understanding of science.
But doesn't sucking babies down a sink use water? Maybe Levi's could come up with a waterless abortion.
< /massive sarcasm intertwined with sorrow and dry heaves >
What about desalination plants? Can’t they convert salt water into usable, potable water fit for human consumption?
Yes. The DEVELOPED Middle East exists because of these.
Much of the middle east drinks and cooks with water we wouldn’t water our house plants with.
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