aging hippie chick

aging hippie chick
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Nevada City, California, US
Birthday
June 02
Title
Horticultural Goddess
Bio
Aging, yet immature, hippie chick. Married, musical, compulsively creative and scattered. Still trying to make sense out of life via Buddhism, composting, etc.

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Salon.com
OCTOBER 14, 2009 1:01AM

Time to get off the bottle.

Rate: 13 Flag

FACT:  Americans spent over $15 billion on bottled water last year.  That's 50 billion plastic bottles being produced from fossil fuels, shipped full across the country or world, and mostly discarded in landfill.

FACT:  In Fiji, from whence come 1 million bottles daily of the grooviest bottled water EVER, half of the population has no safe drinking water.  Hence the periodic typhoid outbreaks.

FACT:  Fiji water, touted as coming from "one of the last pristine ecosystems on earth", requires a bottling plant that runs 24 hours a day on 3 large diesel generators.  So much for pristine.  Sorry, Fiji, but there might be traces of chlorine in our tap water.  (I won't EVEN go into what those plastic bottles are putting into our bottled water.)

FACT:  Our tap water is among the safest in the world, and is often what we're drinking in those bottles (about 1/4 of 'em).

FACT:  1000-3000 children die daily from tainted drinking water.  In 2000, 10 million died of malnutrition, according to Lancet.

FACT:  $15 billion could provide solar panels to power 2.5 million homes a year, buy 750 million electric cars, or pay the salaries of half a million public school teachers.

FACT:  The UN Food and Agriculture Organization estimated that, for $30 billion a year, agricultural systems could be set up to end world hunger.

How did we get so damned self-absorbed?  May I suggest that, instead of buying more bottled water, we all refill a few of the 50 billion bottles floating around, put them in the fridge, and put the money we would have spent into a mayonnaise jar on the kitchen counter to send to Oxfam or Heifer International?  

This is the shame of our nation.

 

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Comments

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Great post! I truly am amazed that people pay $2.00 for a bottled water that comes out of a tap for free! rated
It's mass insanity. But don't get me started, because with only the slightest encouragement I'll start spazzing out over plastic grocery bags. (I grew up running all over Banner Mountain.)
Cool! Banner Mountain! I'm guilty of using too many plastic bags, although I reuse them to pick up after my dog. Is there a green alternative, when he's chronically indiscreet as to where he does such things? Thanks for the comments, kids. AHC
Thank you for posting this!
Thanks for posting this. I've always thought buying bottled water was one of the most asinine things a person can do, for all the reasons you list here and more.
I agree 100% with this. Alot of bottled water is a scam, saying it comes from here or there, which actually it comes from a municipal source. For some reason it does taste better though. I switched to a filtered pitcher that I bought for twenty dollars, and the quality of water is just as good as bottled water. I use to buy bottled water by the case, around 5 bucks a pop. So the savings is great, but even better I am not contributing any longer to filling the landfills with my plastic bottles.
I reuse my bottles, fill them up with pristine 'Nawbany H20' and sell them to the tourists.

:)

Excellent article!

Rated.
Great subject and great advice!
I have a couple of bottles that I carry with me everywhere for water instead of popping over a dollar in a machine for water. How crazy is that? Over a dollar for a drink of water?
I like the way you think.
Oh, and P.S. If you fill a bottle halfway and lay it diagonally in the freezer, you can still add water and it cools quickly, and stays cool on a trip. So you aren't tempted by the nice cold, new bottles when you're out and about.

Thanks, all, for comments. I think I'll go to bed, now, like a sensible person.
This is so true-I think I read about this very issue in Mother Jones recently. I carry a Sigg or something similar to refill and try to limit consuming from the plastic. I'm not perfect but I am trying!
Thanks for this.
Get yourself a PPM (parts per million) meter for twenty bucks and stick it in your favorite bottled water. Oh, my. Not half as pure as you thought, eh?

Save up your pennies and buy a reverse osmosis setup. Live happily.
AHC,
I love articles like this. There are few finer uses of the written word than to nudge us in a better direction.

Thanks for your fine and gentle “prodding”.

Rated and appreciated.
the university i attend just went bottle-free. one of the on-campus enviro groups pushed for it. all new students were given non-disposable water bottles and new fountains were installed.
access to drinking water is a human right. water is not a commodity.
in our society, we have so many obscurations that keep us from seeing what is going on in the world. bottle drinking water is one of them. :-)
My sister has started a crusade about this and also those plastic bags you get in grocery stores.

I'll forward this post to her. She'll be delighted.
R
I don't drink bottled water; I'm a real buckaroo, and drink it from the tap, from drinking fountains, etc.