Tiny Bubbles

Author: mphoPublished: Apr 25, 2005 at 2:19 am 7 comments

"Nothing without water/Water has no enemy”
—"Water No Get Enemy" lyics by
Fela Kuti

Besides tea, my other beverage of choice these days is good old fashioned water—without the gas. Carbonated water tastes like aspirin to me so that would leave plain old tap as the source, but I live in San Francisco. No matter what they say about the Hetch Hetchy water system, filtered by Yosemite—I ain’t doin’ it straight from the tap. And forget about those Britta water pitchers. I don’t have all day to wait for them to drip drip fill. I’ll take my chances with the already bottled water, though there doesn’t appear to be a consensus on the risk of dixoin (and other carcinogen) contamination attributed to plastic containers.

While scholarly opinions vary, I’m pretty skeptical of the purity of most water, especially for urban dwellers. (I was surprised to see that Detroit’s water is better than San Francisco’s, which is a bit frightening). It’s even been suggested that prescription drugs, such as Prozac are making it into the water supply. Crimeny, we can't even agree on how much water to drink each day let alone what's in it. One thing's for sure, though: easy access to water will one day be the stuff of myth. Water gets more scarce day by day.

You can laugh and take it as a joke if you wanna
But it don't rain for four weeks some summers
And it's about to get real wild in the half
You be buying Evian just to take a fuckin bath...
Used to have minerals and zinc in it (New World Water)
Now they say it got lead and stink in it (New World Water)
Four carbons and monoxide
Push the water table lopside
Used to be free now it cost you a fee
…The rich and poor, black and white got need for it (That's right)
And everybody in the world can agree with this (Let em know)…
Go too long without it on this earth and you leavin it (Shout it out)
Americans wastin it on some leisure shit (Say word?)
And other nations be desperately seekin it (Let em know)
Bacteria washing up on they beaches (Say word?)
Don't drink the water, son they can't wash they feet with it (Let em know)…
Epidemics hopppin up off the petri dish (Let em know)
Control centers try to play it all secretive (Say word?)
To avoid public panic and freakiness (Let em know)
There are places where TB is common as TV
'Cause foreign-based companies go and get greedy
The type of cats who pollute the whole shore line
Have it purified, sell it for a dollar twenty-five
Now the world is drinkin it...
The cash registers is goin to chink for it
—"New World Water" lyrics by Mos Def

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  • 1 - Aaman

    Apr 25, 2005 at 8:04 am

    According to the WTO, and most other laws, water is a 'product' not a need - there's the irony

  • 2 - SFC SKI

    Apr 25, 2005 at 8:16 am

    Syria and Turkey have had some very heated disputes over water rights in the past few years, up to using troops, IIRC. Not quite a water war, but foreshadowing perhaps? IN the US it is going to become an issue sooner rahter than later, but we do have some really good programs in place to recycle water to a level of purity that allows it to be used as drinking water.
    If I really wanted to get enviro ranting, I could point out things like Americans using lots lots water to make their lawns green in Phoenix and other places, but that is only one small piece of a much larger puzzle.

    Some say that if people were actually charged water water was worth, conservation would be taken more seriously. I have had to haul the water I needed for daily use 10 gallons at a time, that is all the lesson I need.

  • 3 - mpho

    Apr 25, 2005 at 11:07 am

    Oh god, the WTO--don't get me started. Thanks for that tidbit Aaman; I didn't know that they had categorized or defined water in that way, but it doesn't surprise me. Arrrgh.

    Foreshadowing? For sure, SFC SKI. I think some of us do have to learn the hard way though. It wasn't until about five years ago, when I visited a friend in Arizona, just outside of Flagstaff, that I really got a taste of what this is all about. As you say, a week of drawing water from the well and rationing for showers that I realized the gluttony most of us have for water. But it seems like it's a lesson we'll all learn sooner rather than later.

  • 4 - Aaman

    Apr 25, 2005 at 1:02 pm

    "No water for oil" :)

  • 5 - mpho

    Apr 25, 2005 at 11:51 pm

    Nice!

  • 6 - James

    Apr 26, 2005 at 9:22 am

    Water is one of the only resources that cannot be transported long distances economically. That makes most water problems very localized, and regionalized. For instance, if we have excess water in the US from conservation, we cannot transport that economically on a large scale to other regions (disaster relief is the exception, but it is at very high cost and is mostly bottled water).

    Our conservation will help the health of our rivers, and probably benefit Mexico, which would be a good thing. But given the rate of growth, conservation will mostly go to more growth.

    There is a very striking relationship between standard of living and water use. Countries with a higher standard of living use more water per person. That is not going to change anytime soon, if ever. It has been that way since the Romans at least. Having water on demand and a green lawn is what makes living in this country great.

    What really makes sense is water reuse and recycling, which is going on in florida and other places to keep the landscape green without using "drinking quality water". Ultimately though, new sources of water are going to have to be found (desalination, once it gets cheap enough), or a redistribution of our farming, which uses the most water. However farmers are very politically connected, and guard their water rights very closely. It should be interesting to watch in the coming years.

  • 7 - bstani

    Apr 26, 2005 at 2:51 pm

    Most disaster relief is a disaster. Will conservation be enough to stop totally world crisis. Not if, as James says, the rich get to have water and the poor don't. I really like your use of lyrics. Creative! Now just put your talent to creative solutions.

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