>When I brush my teeth I turn off the water. I pay attention to other small details, I prefer the shower to the tub,” says one Italian citizen.
What a great writing /s
We just spent 10 million to rename the Serie A in serie A Made In Italy, we don’t have a lot of money left
How can you waste water? You can use it sure, but the water is not getting wasted it doesent escape this planet it stays here
Because as everything else in Italy, since probably ever, we took everything for granted: economic boom, population growth, high tech industries, water in this specific case.
And guess what, we slowly but steadily crumbled everywhere because we didn’t do shit to improve or invest for the last probably 40 years and it’s gonna bite us down the road but “nobody could have see it coming” as always.
“Too big to fail” philosophy ain’t gonna apply at some point, and it’s not gonna be fun.
If it does, where will those 43 million people get their water from then?
Italian here:
Short answer: no.
Long answer: still no.
Jokes aside, the political will to fix the issue is nearly non-existant.
6 comments
>When I brush my teeth I turn off the water. I pay attention to other small details, I prefer the shower to the tub,” says one Italian citizen.
What a great writing /s
We just spent 10 million to rename the Serie A in serie A Made In Italy, we don’t have a lot of money left
How can you waste water? You can use it sure, but the water is not getting wasted it doesent escape this planet it stays here
Because as everything else in Italy, since probably ever, we took everything for granted: economic boom, population growth, high tech industries, water in this specific case.
And guess what, we slowly but steadily crumbled everywhere because we didn’t do shit to improve or invest for the last probably 40 years and it’s gonna bite us down the road but “nobody could have see it coming” as always.
“Too big to fail” philosophy ain’t gonna apply at some point, and it’s not gonna be fun.
If it does, where will those 43 million people get their water from then?
Italian here:
Short answer: no.
Long answer: still no.
Jokes aside, the political will to fix the issue is nearly non-existant.