I'm unclear about your question.
Do you mean:
Why does my drinking water smell bad?
Why is sewage collected to a central location?
Why are some communities recycling sewage plant effluent?
2006-10-02 04:39:39
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answer #2
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answered by Hal 5
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I don't think we should drink it YUK YUK
industry should use it they waste heaps of drinking water
plus we all should have tanks & there will be no problem
They made everyone get rid of them in the sixties i think or late 50s as they said they breed mosquitos & the lead off the roofs were a hazard with drinking it.
& council should fix all their pipes that keep breaking
& the dam walls should be made a bit higher
also they can have a better toilet that takes no water because the loo wastes heaps of water.
2006-10-02 05:58:01
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answer #3
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answered by ausblue 7
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Water is involved in all bodily functions: digestion, assimilation, elimination, respiration, maintaining temperature (homeostasis) integrity and the strength of all bodily structures. Today, the water is polluted with hundreds of toxins and impurities. Authorities only test for a small number of them. Your body, being primarily water, requires sufficient daily water replacement in order to function efficiently. Water treatments, that are aimed to render our drinking water bacteriologically safe, have been proven ineffective and the presence of certain pathogenic bacteria like giardia and cryptosporidium recently found in Sydney water is just one of the many examples. Viewing the effects of individual chemicals, inorganic minerals and their by-products, you can see a link to today's major diseases. If you drink devitalised, impure water how can you expect vitality and health. Dehydration, due to the offensive taste of the water and the introduction of commercial sugar loaded beverages, has become another contributing factor to dis-ease. The advice of Dr Batmanghelidj to stop treating thirst with medications holds lots of merit. Mineral water may be wonderful to bathe in, however, the presence of inorganic minerals makes it undesirable. Tap water has been proven unsuitable even for showering7. In an article published in the magazine New Scientist, by Ian Anderson 18/9/86, he writes "Showers pose a risk to health". Pure water may become the medicine of the future. 'Oxygen enriched and free of radioactive and chemical compounds' may read on the label of our bottle water in the next millennium.... At this stage Reverse Osmosis and C.M.D water are our best available options.
2006-10-02 04:55:10
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answer #4
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answered by eidderf 2
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