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The madness of drinking bottled water shipped halfway round the world. We can’t get enough of it, but the long-term environmental impacts of bottling and transporting water across countries are doing more damage than we realize.
Colorado shies from big fix as proliferating people seek more water. It looks like the ultimate water fix: Build a huge reservoir by Dinosaur National Monument and divert much of the Yampa River, then pump back 97 billion gallons a year through a 250-mile pipeline across the Continental Divide to Colorado’s increasingly thirsty Front Range.
It’s not your imagination, there’s a drought in Portland. Federal scientists reported this week that the water situation in parts of the Northwest had significantly deteriorated.
I have an idea…javascript:grin(‘:idea:’) How about restrictions on Nestle, Walmart and the other corporations that are pumping all the reservoirs dry? How about, not sending the water to China or any other country other than America until the drought is over? How about changing the chemical composition of the chem-trails to make it rain? If they can make it rain and storm here in the south… Why can’t they make it rain in California, Arizona and all of the other drought stricken areas? Clearly, they have the ability to make it rain or not…
I have an idea… How about restrictions on Nestle, Walmart and the other corporations that are pumping all the reservoirs dry? How about, not sending the water to China or any other country other than America until the drought is over? How about changing the chemical composition of the chem-trails to make it rain? If they can make it rain and storm here in the south… Why can’t they make it rain in California, Arizona and all of the other drought stricken areas? Clearly, they have the ability to make it rain or not… So, why not let it rain?