40 Million People Rely on the Colorado River, and Now It's Drying Up

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  • čas přidán 13. 08. 2021
  • The first-ever official shortage on the Colorado River is expected to be announced on Monday, Aug. 16. A shortage will mean mandatory cutbacks to some users in the Southwest and offers a stark warning of what's to come if conditions don't improve.
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Komentáře • 14K

  • @GTM9164
    @GTM9164 Před 2 lety +11280

    farmers don't have water but I bet all those AZ golf course still do...

    • @hmu958
      @hmu958 Před 2 lety +476

      Pay to play. Food is so undervalued that farmers can't pay for water rights, use, or trucking that golf courses can.

    • @MatthewBaran
      @MatthewBaran Před 2 lety +879

      Definitely stop the stupid golf courses. I like to golf but they're parasitically leeching water

    • @nyx7842
      @nyx7842 Před 2 lety +478

      This is gonna cause violence.
      When you have rich golfers take up most water while you are left to rot, doesn't seem like a recipe for success.
      Doesn't matter what your political leanings, it'll still piss you off.

    • @Eidelmania
      @Eidelmania Před 2 lety +126

      Stupid meme. Golf courses use recycled toilet water.

    • @MatthewBaran
      @MatthewBaran Před 2 lety +236

      @@nyx7842 eat the rich.

  • @JupiterRadio
    @JupiterRadio Před 2 lety +589

    I'm from the Navajo reservation, a community 2 miles south of Page, AZ. Lake Powell has been low for a long time and it's only getting worse. But a lot of people from Page or other "civilized" communities around here make fun of us Navajo for not having grass or pools. This is a desert. Water needs to be reserved for crops, plumbing, and drinking water. Not golf courses, pools, and "lawn of the month".

    • @frenchonion4595
      @frenchonion4595 Před rokem +1

      The white man has always been materialistic

    • @christopherd.337
      @christopherd.337 Před rokem +24

      Maybe PGA golf course should look into installing artificial turf on parts of their course's. The way football and most baseball stadium do. Just a thought. But these golf course should be regulated on how much water they are allowed to use. But won't happen because money talks.

    • @lelandthomosoniii4743
      @lelandthomosoniii4743 Před rokem +5

      Smart

    • @christopherd.337
      @christopherd.337 Před rokem +3

      @Sheps true true.

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 Před rokem +1

      @@christopherd.337 many use reclaimed water- do you know what THAT is??

  • @garldeenlinche1418
    @garldeenlinche1418 Před rokem +40

    Abuse, not storing and plain polluting it has brought us to this point like Egypt Nile rive .
    Pumping water for golf courses, hotel water false, private pond for housing complexes, water for filthy rich to squander, easter for pools or for just anything not relevant to drinking or farming or bathing really isn't necessary .

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 Před rokem

      and all those floods- you forgot to mention the floods.....

    • @axelramirez6730
      @axelramirez6730 Před rokem

      Its funny how you make really good points that make sense but there will always be that person in the comments and in life committed to fighting the cold hard truth out of pure denial. instead of fighting the problem itself

    • @llibressal
      @llibressal Před rokem +2

      @@axelramirez6730 Farms use 80% of the Colorado flow. The problem isn't golf courses and swimming pools in the desert.

    • @axelramirez6730
      @axelramirez6730 Před rokem

      @@llibressal " I will fight these hard facts to the death! Because depleting water and dehydration is democratic propaganda!!"
      Lol ok bro

  • @khakicampbell6640
    @khakicampbell6640 Před rokem +20

    "All of us are concerned, but I also have a lot of faith in the people working on the problem." lol 🤣🙄
    I've long since lost faith in those people!

  • @burgrboyontheroof
    @burgrboyontheroof Před 2 lety +3059

    It's almost like, building cities in the desert and then filling them with millions of people is counter intuitive, or something.

    • @ronandpatd5980
      @ronandpatd5980 Před 2 lety +42

      Exactly!

    • @hanovergreen4091
      @hanovergreen4091 Před 2 lety +8

      :D :D :D

    • @navajodoll6320
      @navajodoll6320 Před 2 lety +177

      This is why natives wouldn’t create huge cities. Unsustainable. Wasteful . Bad for the ecosystem .

    • @yoshi450gmail
      @yoshi450gmail Před 2 lety +118

      This is why natives collected rain water and didn’t waste more water in each flush then they would drink in an entire day.

    • @fatguy6153
      @fatguy6153 Před 2 lety +120

      @@navajodoll6320 No, natives most definitely had large cities, I don’t get why people assume that they were too primitive to establish their own civilizations. It is either racism, ignorance, or even both.

  • @JWhisp
    @JWhisp Před 2 lety +3725

    Golf courses and monoculture grass lawns especially in such a hot and arid climate is just an absolutely idiotic waste of water. Water for drinking and farming is much more important

    • @pudanielson1
      @pudanielson1 Před 2 lety +150

      70% of water is used for farming, in the middle of the desert

    • @russcollar5353
      @russcollar5353 Před 2 lety +131

      Not farming alfalfa or cotton or anything except vegetables. The very idea that someone would grow alfalfa or cotton in a desert is ludicrous I hope they all go bankrupt sooner rather than later. Poor idiots.

    • @nunya2954
      @nunya2954 Před 2 lety +120

      @@russcollar5353 - WHY are we growing anything in a desert/arid region?

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před 2 lety +26

      It is always someone else's problems. Conserve water yourselves.

    • @marcussurleyadventures1928
      @marcussurleyadventures1928 Před 2 lety +116

      To have a farm in the middle of the desert is plain dumb

  • @gladegoodrich2297
    @gladegoodrich2297 Před rokem +23

    Looking down at the river from the north rim I'm amazed how small it is. How can it supply water for all those people and farms?

  • @mcdirtywork
    @mcdirtywork Před rokem +5

    I'm 43 years old from Philadelphia, PA and I have never, I mean ever, seen the Delaware River so low. Between Trenton New Jersey and Morrisville pennsylvania, at low tide you can literally see halfway across the river. I mean like the riverbed. I remember noticing about 4 months ago the jet stream which usually for the most part flows west to east, and mostly along the north of the US/ south of Canada. I don't know when it started but it was around 4 months ago that I noticed the jet stream still obviously flowing from west to east, but dipping and Diving like a roller coaster in ways I've never seen it, also dragging from Southern California into phoenix, New Mexico, Texas then shooting straight up. This is we barely ever drop of rain in the Northeast us while at the same time the folks in the Ozarks are being flooded, then again, then again. Controlling the weather to justify and fortify the global warming I've Been Told since 5th grade in 1992 would swallow Florida whole in 10 years, then in the year 2000 in college, then 10 years after that when 24-hour news/propaganda became a thing, and of course the following 10 years on your "smart" 📱...

  • @erwinbolink
    @erwinbolink Před 2 lety +718

    The lady at the hoover dam sums up perfectly what is wrong with our perception. At 6:50 she says it has never been this bad but at 8:50 she doesn't think it is going to be a problem meanwhile the dam is getting closer to its minimum level. Thinking it won't be a problem in the future is exactly what got us in this situation in the first place.

    • @Herr2Cents
      @Herr2Cents Před 2 lety +9

      Thanks for the time stamps. The dam is a tool that seems to be doomed to stop working.

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 Před 2 lety +55

      She's completely delusional. She will still be thinking it all will recover. It won't.

    • @xxsoulpatchxx3362
      @xxsoulpatchxx3362 Před 2 lety +28

      Denial and Hopium. Hell of a mix. LOL

    • @horus7732
      @horus7732 Před 2 lety +14

      I had the exact thought, the problem has been building up for years but it will magically be resolved and things will go back to what they were, magic!

    • @nicolea8205
      @nicolea8205 Před 2 lety +19

      @@yvonneplant9434 it’s how most Arizonans react when I tell them that I’m leaving this state before the water wars start.

  • @squid_fish
    @squid_fish Před 2 lety +520

    People move to AZ and all they want is AC, water, paradise green grass and “freedom”…it’s a desert.

    • @crowlsyong
      @crowlsyong Před 2 lety +35

      Exactly. The problem is not the golf courses, it's the decision to actually live in a desert. It's literally drying up and they still won't accept defeat. Those who stay in Arizona will suffer the consequences of their actions. I feel bad for the children and wildlife.

    • @NevadaSmith2
      @NevadaSmith2 Před 2 lety +20

      My in laws left for Arizona ten years ago for said fReEdOm and it just baffles my mind. They have to get in their RV and head to the Oregon Coast every summer for 4-5 months because it’s simply uninhabitable in the summer in AZ.

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 Před 2 lety +4

      According to the Census 2020 Phoenix has by-passed Philadelphia as the 5th largest city. Although Philly and its "collar" counties also grew ,the city still fell short. But, Phila. isn't going to go dry like Phoenix will. There are climate change concerns though. Parts of Phila. will likely be underwater sometime in the future.

    • @nosomnesmentitisunt2043
      @nosomnesmentitisunt2043 Před 2 lety +3

      FREEDOM should be first on that list without this you have nothing!

    • @johnbeh9795
      @johnbeh9795 Před 2 lety +9

      Most of that water is used in California not arizona.

  • @daniel.478
    @daniel.478 Před rokem +16

    She said "she has faith in the people that are working on the problem" and that its a "concern"? Lady, we're screwed! Let's not brush it under the rug until it's too late because it's already to late! A dry and grim future awaits!

    • @reggieabdullahcarter8162
      @reggieabdullahcarter8162 Před rokem

      You’re correct

    • @SuperBlueeyes89
      @SuperBlueeyes89 Před rokem +1

      Oh yea 100% im in the thinking this world wont be here in 25 years might not even make it 10 years the way its looking. They seem to fix things but this is something that cant be fixed and not to mention the glaciers are melting at a fast rate. Were fucked to say tge least.

    • @johnlux6635
      @johnlux6635 Před rokem

      @laughing Atyou I read your comment. I'm laughing Atyou.

  • @Joverlordify
    @Joverlordify Před rokem +49

    I love how she is just not allowed to say what she really thinks. we will not get 4 years of snow. that's not how climate change works. has the earth heats up wet places get more rain and dry places get less. we won't ever see snowpack like we did only 20 years ago

    • @jakehildebrand1824
      @jakehildebrand1824 Před rokem +3

      Sure we will, just waot for the climate cycle to come full circle.

    • @ceirwan
      @ceirwan Před rokem +1

      ​@@jakehildebrand1824 We've disrupted the cycle. Right now we should be in a glaciation period, not a warming one.

    • @jakehildebrand1824
      @jakehildebrand1824 Před rokem +5

      @@ceirwan wrong.
      The earth is still warming up from the last ice age, meaning a warming process.
      Yes this process is accelerating, however if you look at history, that is not something that humanity has had any influence over.
      The last ice age marks the beginning of this acceleration, lasting significantly shorter than previous ice ages, and rate of acceleration has constantly and consistently increased at an exponential rate. Why? We don't know why, but we do know that we had absolutely nothing to do with it.
      Blaming ourselves for things that we are not responsible for is not going to solve anything.
      In order to solve climate related problems, we should instead be asking questions like; If humanity isn't causing this then what is?, what does the acceleration of the climate cycle actually mean? Will the process ever stop accelerating?will it ever decelerate?
      Or more theoretical questions like; Does the acceleration of the climate cycle mean that the cycle will end? And if it does end, does that result in a constant unchanging climate, or an unstable unpredictable and rapidly changing climate?.
      The most important question we should be asking thought is; How do we prepare ourselves to better adapt to the changing climate?

    • @jakehildebrand1824
      @jakehildebrand1824 Před rokem

      @@ceirwan technically you're not entirely wrong though, because if the cycle hadn't started to accelerate we would still be in a glaciation period, and that the fact that the process is accelerating does technically mean that SOMETHING had disrupted the process, so you are right in those regards.

    • @neal.karn-jones
      @neal.karn-jones Před rokem +7

      @@jakehildebrand1824 It is ridiculous to say that we have no effect on the climate. Yes, there was a little ice age, recently, and yes we could be seeing a normal fluctuation that is not totally caused by us. But to deny that we have any effect on the planet is just ignorant and dangerous. There is plenty that we can do to help - regardless of who or what is to blame.

  • @xotiic4229
    @xotiic4229 Před 2 lety +540

    if you’re aware of everything going on around the world, and then see how fast this river is drying up, anybody with common sense can see how fucked we are

    • @LxneWxlf702
      @LxneWxlf702 Před 2 lety +48

      Lot of people dont see it...some people thinks its whatever, " they're going to resolve it "....in reality we are fucked and theres no point of return.

    • @theaustinomaster
      @theaustinomaster Před 2 lety +53

      As someone doing a chemical engineering degree with focus on environmental sustainability it's sad to see a lot of ppl similar age to me thinking there's really nothing we can do to alter the course of climate change when that isn't the case, it just sucks because the large corporations that are responsible for so much of the emissions are part of huge lobbying groups with a lot of influence on government policies

    • @laurenz4528
      @laurenz4528 Před 2 lety +9

      Nah US water usage is just beyond mad

    • @xotiic4229
      @xotiic4229 Před 2 lety +28

      @@theaustinomaster if it doesn’t become an inconvenience for the big polluters and the rich, very little will change

    • @theaustinomaster
      @theaustinomaster Před 2 lety +11

      @@laurenz4528 it compounds to make the problem a bunch worse, the Colorado is dammed so much which doesn't help the water levels but you'd have to be living under a rock to not notice the rise in global temperatures and how frequent extreme weather events are becoming

  • @oldcountryman2795
    @oldcountryman2795 Před 2 lety +464

    Given that the Colorado river can’t support 40 million people *and* turn the deserts green, well DUH!

    • @markbrophy5454
      @markbrophy5454 Před 2 lety +14

      The river can easily support 40 million people, the farmers are using nearly all the water.

    • @kittenritty7959
      @kittenritty7959 Před 2 lety +14

      Especially since the petrified forest here and mass farming in the 30’s helped fuel the dust bowl and were getting rid of natural vegation for houses that will use more water. When it rains it’s gonna flood no natural barriers to stop the flow and take in the moisture.

    • @charleslindsay3201
      @charleslindsay3201 Před 2 lety +17

      golf courses and swimming pools in the desert-what's wrong with that picture?

    • @thedonketh3894
      @thedonketh3894 Před 2 lety +7

      @@markbrophy5454 obviously it cant support 40 million people. how do you think you feed all those people? through farmers

    • @crowlsyong
      @crowlsyong Před 2 lety +8

      @Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Camacho farmers farming in the desert. Golf course or not, these farmers are silly for trying to farm here. They had it coming, their intelligence is correlated to their suffering. Irrigation, killing soil, using pesticides, torturing animals, karma is catching up

  • @shazalishaharuddin7220

    Pls update to the recent situation...
    We are observing your plight....

  • @willa1699
    @willa1699 Před 3 měsíci +1

    950….the water is currently at 1,087?? Why is this not front page news? 😢

  • @randomguy1017
    @randomguy1017 Před 2 lety +274

    It's crazy to think that in just 200 years this dam will be the site of the largest battle seen between the New California Republic and Caesar's Legion

    • @nearby222
      @nearby222 Před 2 lety +5

      Nice

    • @hollow6189
      @hollow6189 Před 2 lety +1

      lol

    • @Bergen98
      @Bergen98 Před 2 lety +14

      Is this a *Fallout New Vegas* reference? Very nice

    • @TarkovFleaMarketSeller
      @TarkovFleaMarketSeller Před 2 lety +2

      Do you like the site of your own blood?

    • @kenthanna
      @kenthanna Před 2 lety +5

      It could be long dried up by that time. I'd expect the war to be fought over the Great Lakes.

  • @hedleykerr3564
    @hedleykerr3564 Před 2 lety +403

    "When the well is dry you will know the worth of the water" Benjamin Franklin!

    • @TermlessHGW
      @TermlessHGW Před 2 lety +5

      Also they should seriously consider doing something about people, in NYC only in the black neighborhoods, who open up fire hydrants and let tons of fresh water just run down the streets sometimes days at a time.
      Thinking about it what a paradox. Millions of people in the mother continent are without fresh water and yet here they are so wasteful...

    • @Mk101T
      @Mk101T Před 2 lety +3

      @@TermlessHGW Chances are the water of the fire hydrant would have flowed through there naturally .
      You need to get hydrolically educated ... before you start thinking you can make water decisions. Geeologee baybee

    • @doobidoo095
      @doobidoo095 Před 2 lety +1

      CO2 at 0.04% is a 2,500th of the atmosphere. That means to warm the climate by just 1"C carbon dioxide molecules must capture 2,500"C of heat energy. That is impossible. It also breaks the fundamental laws of thermodynamics.
      Methane at 0.00017% is a 600,000th of the atmosphere so it's even more impossible.
      However, the climate is changing. This is because of deliberate geoengineering programmes, in particular ozone thinning away from the poles. Though largely unreported ozone thinning effect is directly observable, this summer you can see a unnaturally bright sun just as we did last year. Under these conditions the pain felt when looking at the sun is not only from the increase in visible light but the much larger increase in infrared. (Look up at the sky and you will see a range of geoengineering operations in progress, these include chemtrail induced cloud or hazing, ripple patterns caused by HAARP installations, bizarre and unnatural cloud formations).
      Climate change is a programme to force change in accordance with the implementation of Agenda 21 /2030. Current events demonstrate this transition is well underway and will involve massive population cull through injected nanotech (re transhumanist programme). Agenda 21 also sees the permanent loss of all property rights with the introduction of universal basic income (ref NESARA/GESARA) and has/is being promoted by The World Economic Forum.
      'You will own nothing and you will be happy' WEF
      In a depopulated world the surviving brainwashed and controlled population will be confined to mega cities. Carbon limits will be used to restrict consumption and liberty. Meanwhile the re-greened wilderness will be the exclusive playground of the ultra rich elite posing as conservationists.
      The CO2 hoax amounts to the theft of the world and the enslavement of humanity by a parasitic few.
      Welcome to the future!
      _________
      I have included a debunking of 'accumulated heat' as it is so often used to explain how trace elements, so called 'greenhouse gasses', can warm the planet.
      Accumulated heat whilst sounding a reasonable explanation of how heat can build up is rather nothing more than gobbledygook. In fact it shows those using such arguments do not even understand what heat is.
      When we measure temperature we are measuring the heat energy a thing is losing. In short heat is a measurement of flow, the transfer of heat energy and this will always be in the direction towards the colder. For this reason a thing can never 'accumulate heat' in the way those advocating CO2 climate change describe. The temperature of a body is the measure of heat output, it can never be greater than the measure of heat input. Output = input. When a thing is warmed it is heated to an equivalent of the heat input. If this input is not maintained it will cool. Those that propose that heat can build up to be hotter than the total measure of heat input at a given time either do not understand what heat is or are being deliberately misleading. To illustrate, an object being heated by a flame can never become hotter than that flame, it's temperature cannot rise inexorably to the temperature of the sun for instance. Heat cannot be accumulated. When we think about it common sense tells us this must be the case.
      NASA and even Nobel Prize winning physicists have expounded 'accumulated heat' as the explanation how CO2 is able to warm the atmosphere. They claim that over hundreds of years CO2 has captured heat energy and this heat has 'accumulated' to produce a serious warming effect. As I have just explained, this is totally impossible and fundamentally violates all the laws of thermodynamics. That respected scientists should support such uneducated, unthinking nonsense is disturbing and only reflects that in terms of being able to think clearly about a subject they have no facility or inclination. These are the Dark Ages of science. Belief has outweighed logic or any critical thought. It tells us that we should not unquestioningly accept anything we are told, that experts can be fools.
      (NB: be aware of attempts to discard thermodynamics by talking about biology.
      Eg. 'It only takes a drop of arsenic to kill a person.'
      This would be somewhat desperate, muddled thinking. Clearly biological processes based on the reaction of a cell are not the same as the laws of physics/thermodynamics).

    • @frenchonion4595
      @frenchonion4595 Před 2 lety

      It will make gold look worthless

    • @danielservant0153
      @danielservant0153 Před 2 lety

      (sahkainyayshusai myanmarninenganko sanarr par hcay ) We believe Jesus Christ saves Myanmar! Lord save this country in Jesus Christ Name!!! czcams.com/video/jon4aFWLrIM/video.html

  • @nightwaves3203
    @nightwaves3203 Před rokem +3

    Farm in the desert areas, make use of multiple grow cycle crops in a years time then be amazed of how fast the water went down.

  • @andrethompson2034
    @andrethompson2034 Před rokem +5

    Can't imagine a river drying up, I live in Nashville Tennessee where the Cumberland river runs through the city. Makes me wonder what would happen to the city if it dried up 🤔

    • @desertangelfish140
      @desertangelfish140 Před rokem

      Once they start siphoning from it and sending it to the west then you'll know!

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 Před rokem

      we could have a bourbon supply chain problem??

  • @MultiMojo
    @MultiMojo Před 2 lety +408

    "We don't anticipate water levels below 950ft" - famous last words. Hope they have contingency plans

  • @brianmacintire3064
    @brianmacintire3064 Před 2 lety +1274

    The Colorado River is not "drying up". It is being sucked dry.

    • @sam-ww1wk
      @sam-ww1wk Před 2 lety +88

      Yup!! Tired of people saying it's drying up. Uninformed news. Who are these guys. Probably from LA.

    • @LeesReviews69
      @LeesReviews69 Před 2 lety +94

      The Colorado river isn’t like a lake, it doesn’t get sucked dry. it is constantly being refilled. But there’s no freaking rain or snow to refill it.

    • @shaystern2453
      @shaystern2453 Před 2 lety +4

      exactly

    • @louiscypher4186
      @louiscypher4186 Před 2 lety +89

      @@LeesReviews69 When it's being drained faster then it can be replenished it is indeed being sucked dry. The river was at historically low levels, well before this drought hit.

    • @brianmacintire3064
      @brianmacintire3064 Před 2 lety +40

      @@LeesReviews69 It's a finite amount of water, and it's being sucked dry. There is no argument against that. Lack of snowpack only makes it worse. Water use is going up, snowpack has been going down. Rain doesn't do much for this river. It's driven by snowmelt.

  • @SteveAbrahall
    @SteveAbrahall Před rokem +1

    Interesting to see this one year on - VICE can you do a follow up?

  • @carmendelgado105
    @carmendelgado105 Před rokem

    Wow. This is scary.

  • @snowmiaow
    @snowmiaow Před 2 lety +272

    When l visited the Southwest in the 80s, they used water like crazy, trying to get the desert to look like Ohio. l found that disturbing.

    • @brianhalps
      @brianhalps Před 2 lety +9

      did you also find it disturbing that the farmers think the water is better spent on their crops and their way of life than on humanity itself?

    • @MagicalBread
      @MagicalBread Před 2 lety +34

      @@brianhalps You have no idea how important food is. Food is a life line. It’s our fault that farmers have to grow so much because we Americans are greedy and ungrateful. We take everything for granted.

    • @brianhalps
      @brianhalps Před 2 lety +42

      ​@@MagicalBread I'm a specialist in Human Geography. Food cultivation in the SW is not as important as water. And just shouting into the air American's are greedy is BS. The farmers in California and the SW are the worst, they grow some of the least important most water intense crops, in a desert! Just look up how much water cotton takes, how much water avocados require, how much water almonds require. It's a joke, because California used to look like the Ole South with its orange orchards... which required virtually no water in comparison. Also do we need to grow cotton in the SW? No, we do enough of that in other areas in the US, where water is plentiful. Sure Vice news likes to say they're "alfalfa" farmers, but its that kind of propaganda and mismanagement that have lead the SW to be in this position. Hold the Farmers accountable for their mistakes in the SW

    • @apocalypsepow
      @apocalypsepow Před 2 lety +11

      @@MagicalBread doesn't the us waste like 40 percent of their food.

    • @lexwaldez
      @lexwaldez Před 2 lety +3

      @@brianhalps crops that are heavily subsidized by taxpayers... it's a rational decision from their perspective, but it's morally bankrupt

  • @AkureiNoKaras
    @AkureiNoKaras Před 2 lety +696

    the first cutback should be businesses like golf courses, things that waste water. Farmers need water more than rich people need to golf or homes need green lawns when they build in the desert.

    • @JohnnyKarate44
      @JohnnyKarate44 Před 2 lety +80

      Agriculture uses 70% of all water usage.
      Don’t grow crops in the desert. I agree with you on all points, but irrigation in a DESERT is a bad idea.

    • @danielmartin7197
      @danielmartin7197 Před 2 lety +13

      @@JohnnyKarate44 Agree. Specially high water use crops such as Alfalfa, that is just dumb.

    • @americanhero8606
      @americanhero8606 Před 2 lety +5

      Certain crops need to be banned or strictly curbed. Water reservoirs and underground well access need to be taxed in order to push the unproductive and wasteful water hogs to cut down on usage.
      Water is too precious of a resource to just leave untaxed and unregulated.

    • @bencera6067
      @bencera6067 Před 2 lety +13

      Yup cut the golf courses and other wasteful yuppy corporate BS.

    • @carbass9264
      @carbass9264 Před 2 lety +11

      I agree with your points but being a farmer in the desert nowadays is also a little bit a "waste of water" because you need so much more than in other states with enough water.

  • @elisekrentzel27
    @elisekrentzel27 Před rokem

    All over TX also. I moved to Austin 11 years ago and how many droughts later golf
    courses still get preferential treatment. It’s sick!

  • @tomcash4277
    @tomcash4277 Před rokem +1

    It's time for an update, as of today lake Mead is at 1043 feet, 24 feet lower in the last year or less

  • @marcosayala4828
    @marcosayala4828 Před 2 lety +1020

    Don’t let big companies tell you to do your part in fighting against this when they’re about 70% of the problem.

    • @seibertsmiths
      @seibertsmiths Před 2 lety +37

      Who do you think buys those big companies products?

    • @abandonedfragmentofhope5415
      @abandonedfragmentofhope5415 Před 2 lety +15

      Down with the corporations!

    • @kanethompson708
      @kanethompson708 Před 2 lety

      👍

    • @palehorserider1407
      @palehorserider1407 Před 2 lety +10

      Exactly climate is not changing its being engineered !!! They have been spraying the skies for years !! Look up Bill Gates been talking about blocking out the sun for the longest ! Chemtrails use to be a conspiracy theory till government came out and said we are blocking out the sun bcuz of climate change bs !!!

    • @davidbeaulieu4815
      @davidbeaulieu4815 Před 2 lety +2

      @@seibertsmiths people like you.

  • @Ass_of_Amalek
    @Ass_of_Amalek Před 2 lety +387

    ban all irrigation of grass, including home lawns, golf courses, parks and roadside lawn strips! STOP using decorative plants that are not adapted to a dry climate! and in entivise farmers to grow crops with low water consumption using drip irrigation, or set up some sort of closed/recondensing greenhouse systems...

    • @rickc2102
      @rickc2102 Před 2 lety +2

      💯

    • @kyleh4354
      @kyleh4354 Před 2 lety +25

      Also, tell everyone to stop having babies! All of these issues are just going to keep getting worse the more people we put on the planet.

    • @royhernandez4872
      @royhernandez4872 Před 2 lety +6

      Okay we something called the bill of rights here in the US we are not a communist regime unlike China. You scream ANTIFA supporter

    • @bigzachful
      @bigzachful Před 2 lety +5

      @@kyleh4354
      Abortion is already at an all time high

    • @justice4549
      @justice4549 Před 2 lety +9

      I think there is a big difference between forcibly limiting families from having children or multiple and acknowledging we are heading towards potential mass loss of life and encouraging people to not have children.
      It’s like cigarettes, we can’t make you stop, but we can have anti smoking ads on nearly every tv channel.

  • @amimrie
    @amimrie Před rokem +1

    water level is now below the minimum required to produce power.

  • @albertsparrow9485
    @albertsparrow9485 Před rokem +1

    This video was 11 months ago it's now July 23rd need a follow-up video to this one.

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 Před 2 lety +448

    Alfalfa and Cotton are exceptionally water-intensive crops. Growing those crops in the desert can ONLY work with copious amounts of irrigation water. Sand doesn't retain water in the root zone, so growing such thirsty crops requires regular irrigation. The flood irrigation methods that are so common in the desert are inexpensive, but they are also horrifically wasteful. Most of the water farmers flood across the sandy soil never reaches a plant's roots, because it simply runs deep into the sand. If farmers want to continue raising alfalfa and cotton in the desert into the future, they MUST adopt more efficient irrigation methods. In order to encourage farmers to adopt more efficient methods of irrigation, Congress has established funding to cover most of the expense of installing more efficient systems.
    And yet, even when taxpayers are covering most of the cost of efficient irrigation systems, and are also providing financing to help the farmer cover their small share, the farmers still won't update their irrigation equipment. They want cheap, plentiful water provided at taxpayer expense. They don't want to install sprinkler systems even when the taxpayers pay for most of that cost too.
    Why is it so hard to convince people that the benefits of living in a society come with responsibilities as well? The social contract is not a one-way street.

    • @FateTurns
      @FateTurns Před 2 lety +49

      Because a large majority of people are taught to be selfish.

    • @tedpreston4155
      @tedpreston4155 Před 2 lety +42

      @@FateTurns You're right about that. I've traveled all over the world, and the most self-absorbed people I've met have been right here at home in the U.S.

    • @curiouscampbell5447
      @curiouscampbell5447 Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly

    • @cyrilsquirrel2874
      @cyrilsquirrel2874 Před 2 lety +10

      @@tedpreston4155 don't you believe it ,they are all over ..even mentioning to the middle class that their almond ''milk'' is unsustainable as a crop and is environmentally destructive will only draw a blank stare, that the fashion they discard daily is the same....but i will admit ,most of that farming is done in areas that are desert, which is crazy

    • @bassketchum
      @bassketchum Před 2 lety +12

      @@cyrilsquirrel2874 all the real farmland has been bought out and put houses or mansions on by now.

  • @ipwee
    @ipwee Před 2 lety +312

    The fact that people have lush lawns in a desert is absurd.

    • @genyoder7566
      @genyoder7566 Před 2 lety +7

      Its called freedom. If you work hard and have your own property you should be able to have your own well on your own property.

    • @emceeboogieboots1608
      @emceeboogieboots1608 Před 2 lety +42

      @@genyoder7566 Suppose your neighbors sink deeper wells and grow cotton, making yours run dry?

    • @ipwee
      @ipwee Před 2 lety +38

      @@genyoder7566 I have no idea what country you live in, But in the states, your property is subject to eminent domain.
      Besides that, Narcissistic behavior is nothing to be proud of.

    • @genyoder7566
      @genyoder7566 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ipwee not narcacitic its being fed up with the willingly ignorant fools handing America over to the globalist that want to depopulate it and steal th land. Imenent Domaine is an unconstitutional illegally concocted USA INC Usurpation by the shills in govt that don't get it that freedom is not up for negotiation ever!
      It is in the constitutions of every state and the nation that these rights are unalienable rights !
      That means the Can Not be gone around changed taken away distorted unless proven in trial of your peers that you have tresspassed another man's rights, aka,, property natural or God given such as life liberty and the pursuit of happiness. I am an American and I know I am free. This faux corporation is violation g all the laws of the land and the Nuremberg Codes set up so internationally they are not to usurp the right of any man woman or child, born or unborn! There diverting the rain and snow for nefarious purposes is not a light subject. Imenant domain laws are for _fools_ that gave up on the laws of this land.

    • @genyoder7566
      @genyoder7566 Před 2 lety +1

      @@emceeboogieboots1608 Americans need to start working together not looking for big brother to come save the day. That just invites problems like Iraq and Vietnam had by letting the C I A run its country for a while. WRK THINGS OUT WITH YOUR NEIGHBORS YOUR SELF FIRST THENOF THEY DONT WORK WITH YOU YOU GIVE THEM NOTICE OF CIVIL ACTION OTHERWISE WITH TIME TO DECIDE TO NEGOTIATE A COMPROMISE.

  • @jeffersonfxm
    @jeffersonfxm Před rokem

    Isto é realmente preocupante!

  • @Dunning.Kruger
    @Dunning.Kruger Před rokem +2

    We are in a population crisis. 40 Million would be a decent number of people to get rid of. Colorado is no loss either. So, win win.

  • @patrickhealey7348
    @patrickhealey7348 Před 2 lety +1136

    Absolutely shocking that when you build massive city’s in a desert that water shortages will become a problem.

    • @elira123100
      @elira123100 Před 2 lety +23

      😂😂😂

    • @dmannevada5981
      @dmannevada5981 Před 2 lety +28

      The cities aren't using the water. Cities like Las Vegas as part of Nevada, gets a 2% water allocation, and they're only using about 2/3rds of that allocation. So what made you think it was the cities...who told you that or how did you get that impression?

    • @elira123100
      @elira123100 Před 2 lety +2

      @@dmannevada5981 Just when I thought people couldn’t get anymore dumb, here you come along. People don’t shower with milk, soda doesn’t come out of the tap and grass does not grow with Harry Potters wand.

    • @bavondale
      @bavondale Před 2 lety +50

      @@elira123100 You are the ignorant one. Dman is correct. The vast amount of water is used for agriculture. You can remove all the cities from the southwest and there will still be an issue. Farming, in a dry desert basin, is what is taking the water

    • @elira123100
      @elira123100 Před 2 lety +20

      @@bavondale If we removed the cities and there would still be a water problem then why build the cities in the first place? There’s already a shortage dummy.

  • @8arrows
    @8arrows Před 2 lety +414

    “Faith in those working on the problem.”
    Who exactly is that? And how are they “working” on it?

    • @21xK
      @21xK Před 2 lety +7

      She's got faith in Carolyn Goodman, selling the most compelling lie.

    • @shoersa
      @shoersa Před 2 lety +1

      Good luck with that!

    • @OceanBlueKeys
      @OceanBlueKeys Před 2 lety +14

      I literally said the same thing!
      I'm guessing there's a team somewhere out there driving tough negotiations with the climate as I type this.

    • @zombienectar
      @zombienectar Před 2 lety +6

      rainmakers

    • @Skapo
      @Skapo Před 2 lety +8

      @@OceanBlueKeys Well in a sense, yes. There is a lot of research going into stuff like carbon capture, sea water desalination, aerosol based atmospheric cooling, vertical farming, kab grown meats etc. Still nowhere near enough to match the scale of severity of the problem especially as we keep realizing how timelines for climate changes were actually too conservative, but there are some big resources going into finding solutions that can be scaled up.

  • @rickschuman2926
    @rickschuman2926 Před rokem +1

    Does not see the difference between evaporation and pouring out?

  • @roberth3094
    @roberth3094 Před rokem +2

    The colorado river is not made, nor does it have the resources to supply 40 million plus people. Even historic snowfall will not be able to keep up with demand. None of the western water sources are able to keep up with the increased demand. The solution is to use desalination or pipeline infrastructure from water-rich states.

  • @baddarkfaller4568
    @baddarkfaller4568 Před 2 lety +312

    she said, "i have faith on the people working on the problem." Who? The politicians? We're screwed...

    • @johngalt8279
      @johngalt8279 Před 2 lety +9

      People of faith, who are praying to Jesus for rain.

    • @greg1030
      @greg1030 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johngalt8279 LOL! Look to your own mind and actions to decelerate climate change. And stop reproducing like rabbits if you really expect to fight climate change!

    • @happygp698
      @happygp698 Před 2 lety

      She has faith in God.

    • @XM-qk5sh
      @XM-qk5sh Před 2 lety +10

      These are the same people that haven't done anything meaningful in 20 years. That is some wishful thinking.

    • @Veeger
      @Veeger Před 2 lety +4

      They've known this was coming and continued to carry on unsustainable expansion until collapse of water resources. Who are you able to trust?

  • @robertkerr9527
    @robertkerr9527 Před 2 lety +233

    My extended family moved to Las Vegas over 20 yrs. Ago and my sister to Boulder city. I've been to the hoover dam multiple times when I visited and each time I was shocked by what I saw. This has been happening for decades and nobody wanted to admit this day would come. No one should be surprised.

    • @zacharypeery4082
      @zacharypeery4082 Před 2 lety +7

      Boulder City is hell on earth I'm my humble opinion

    • @Bodezefah
      @Bodezefah Před 2 lety +2

      my thoughts exactly.

    • @tyrone-tydavis5858
      @tyrone-tydavis5858 Před 2 lety +3

      So what you're saying is you're part of the problem.

    • @robertkerr9527
      @robertkerr9527 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tyrone-tydavis5858 Ha, what troll. I live in Europe actually. And Las Vegas is just part of the problem. The water in the hoover dam is already low by the time it gets there because of poor management and its over use in Northern California, not Nevada. But already knew that.

    • @tyrone-tydavis5858
      @tyrone-tydavis5858 Před 2 lety +2

      @@robertkerr9527
      So did you take your extended family with you or are they still there in denial as well?

  • @spacecase6825
    @spacecase6825 Před rokem

    i am in wyoming right now for work and i’ve noticed the entire town of jackson hole and the surrounding areas have the sprinklers on even when it’s 50 degrees out . all the locals keep complaining about the snake river running dry yet the entire area is a sponge from overwatering .

  • @doodlebg44
    @doodlebg44 Před rokem

    Hey Vice, you should come see how bad things are now; it’s frightening. Vegas is still approving housing developments, encouraging more people to move here, and Lake Mead now has one intake that is dead…above water. A prime example of mismanagement.

  • @hellomynameisname4270
    @hellomynameisname4270 Před 2 lety +538

    golf courses should be considered evil under these circumstances

    • @johndough23
      @johndough23 Před 2 lety +14

      Yep the concept of the fairway needs to be renamed the dirtway.

    • @corkyvanderhaven3391
      @corkyvanderhaven3391 Před 2 lety

      In the valleys, yes

    • @tommakarov
      @tommakarov Před 2 lety +10

      @@aman-qj5sx I doubt the rich will want to play on concrete fields

    • @skygge1006
      @skygge1006 Před 2 lety +12

      Stop blaming the golf courses sure they’re a problem but the main problem is the farming which uses 70% of the water and to add onto that farming plants like alfalfa uses huge and I mean huge amounts of the water farming in the desert is the large problem

    • @hellomynameisname4270
      @hellomynameisname4270 Před 2 lety +19

      @@skygge1006 you can't compare farming anything to jacking off our precious water supply onto arbitrary patches of mono culture that only serve to please the aesthetic perversions of some viking descended alpha male with a pension for leveling anything that stands before his gaze...

  • @danielgomez1923
    @danielgomez1923 Před 2 lety +98

    Native Americans used to say "Don't exploit the land. Learn to live and coexist with the natural environment." Native Americans walked the talk.

    • @BFaluup
      @BFaluup Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah it’s too bad we don’t understand to a better degree the teachings of many of NA tribes they were truly connected to the land and were a part of it...southwest tribes fully adapted to and became part of the desert each tribe you can see their environment reflected through physical traits.

    • @jeannichols2459
      @jeannichols2459 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BFaluup If I'm not mistaken it was Siting Bull when he saw how the pioneers were tilling up the soil of the prairie made the comment they turn everything upside down. What a wise man he was.

    • @nyunixguru
      @nyunixguru Před 2 lety

      People wouldn’t listen to the Indian with a tear in his eye

    • @magnus4346
      @magnus4346 Před 2 lety +2

      @@BFaluup The biggest challenge would be tolerating adversity and getting spoiled Americans to live VERY minimalist.

  • @gloriaterry333
    @gloriaterry333 Před rokem +1

    What a difference a year makes, thank God we got a lot of rain this year. 2023.

    • @cubone44
      @cubone44 Před 10 měsíci

      Was at the dam just last month. Looked pretty empty to me. 😂

  • @stirgy4312
    @stirgy4312 Před rokem

    In 96, during a visit I took a picture of the intake towers, recently I found a picture of the same view from 2021. It's unbelievable how low it has dropped just in those years.

  • @abetg2009
    @abetg2009 Před 2 lety +448

    Don't forget that golf courses in AZ were marked "essential" during covid lockdown.

    • @markbrennan8705
      @markbrennan8705 Před 2 lety +14

      Golf Course should not be essential farm land that needs water to grow food should be Highly Essential

    • @jays2551
      @jays2551 Před 2 lety +62

      golf courses shouldn't even exist, golf is a retarded game that wastes precious resources like water and arable land

    • @jerroldbates7015
      @jerroldbates7015 Před 2 lety +15

      @@jays2551 those wealthy retirees that always played golf back home, must have a lot of clout.

    • @bidenadministrationischina5091
      @bidenadministrationischina5091 Před 2 lety +14

      Fk golfers. They don't even use the water. It's just there for scenery , which they probably don't even notice in the first place

    • @andreblackaller3560
      @andreblackaller3560 Před 2 lety +1

      I think they might be dependen ding on who you are haha.

  • @coke8077
    @coke8077 Před 2 lety +375

    it’s almost like building farms and massive cities in the fucking desert isn’t a good idea

    • @sownheard
      @sownheard Před 2 lety +32

      It's almost like deserts get created by a lack of water

    • @AGMI9
      @AGMI9 Před 2 lety +15

      massive cities anywhere are a mistake, most societies/towns should never get over 3000 people

    • @brucegelman5582
      @brucegelman5582 Před 2 lety +6

      Dont blame the desert for human stupidity.

    • @lxndress
      @lxndress Před 2 lety +1

      @Woody Woods lol precisely.

    • @linkspeaks
      @linkspeaks Před 2 lety +6

      @@sownheard It was already a desert before the water shortage, that's a dumb argument

  • @PSA04
    @PSA04 Před rokem +4

    What I really want to know is... "who," is working on this problem? I have just started to deep dive into this subject and it seems large corporate agriculture is taking up a majority of the water to produce almonds in CA? Looking to become educated on this subject. Places like Pheonix have huge population increases over the past couple years and is encouraging more growth. Is it corporate water greed that's causing the problem or population explosion in the South West? I mean here in my neighborhood in LA of just one year, three very large apartment complexes are almost finished being made. Where's the water for the future of these real estate investments and how come no one is talking about reducing water use in our communities?

    • @mountainman5025
      @mountainman5025 Před rokem

      Joe Biden has a plan; he just can't remember where he put it.

    • @duanebailey6253
      @duanebailey6253 Před rokem

      If the water isn't making it to Lake mead than it's not going to CA. Need to look more upstream at the water ducts and aquifers to see what's going on.

    • @twagoner21
      @twagoner21 Před rokem

      in america you take profits now and deal with consequences later.....or I'm sure someone will. Also, I sure hope none of you conservatives are looking for government policy to bail you out. government bad! grab those bootstraps!

  • @danchrysler4284
    @danchrysler4284 Před rokem +1

    It's not climate change, it's the golf courses and swimming pools and big fountains.

  • @tima.478
    @tima.478 Před 2 lety +1069

    When you consider the fact that this river has flowed for millions of years, untouched without any issues at all...we touch it for just a blink of an eye and it's virtually destroyed! This is truly sad.

    • @Automedon2
      @Automedon2 Před 2 lety +64

      That is true with everything. Humans didn't overpopulate for 200,000 years (because of natural diseases and famine) The more 'problems' we try to solve, the more we battle nature, the worse it becomes.

    • @blackjohnson5195
      @blackjohnson5195 Před 2 lety +11

      Hey Tim,
      You heard from a Child, "Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Will be done." Now get up and start dancing!!!

    • @jaygarcia6094
      @jaygarcia6094 Před 2 lety +21

      we?? i've never touched this river. More like YOU. Since you said we, Im guessing you had something to with it

    • @blackjohnson5195
      @blackjohnson5195 Před 2 lety +1

      @Heloise O'Byrne Understand. A run on the Banks is a Capitalist's nightmare.
      A nightmare at the dinner table too. The problem here is that the 2% get dividends every quarter. When
      stupid ass Reagan's trickle down ended up in multi million dollar Jets and Yachts, the expenses went to a new level.
      Hell, I pay 5 dollars for a decent loaf of Bread.

    • @Gustav4
      @Gustav4 Před 2 lety +24

      The worst part is that nobody can understand or talk about the real cause of this, it is not how we use the water that is the problem, the problem is that America's land is deteriorating so fast that it cant supply water to the rivers and also the health of the land determine the rainfall, so with degrading soils we are effectively reducing the amount of rainfall.
      Civilizations has failed through the past 10.000 years due to this fact and them not understanding the role of the soil. This is beyond politics or anything, it is too important for any ego or what ever to be in the way, lets sacrifices everything to spread this knowledge so we can start addressing this serious issue.
      We have to wake up or America is Fuc*ed.
      Make this the most popular comment if you are inspired to be the generation in history who changes this human error we have had since dawn of times.

  • @blastfiend7478
    @blastfiend7478 Před 2 lety +518

    Same shits happening to our rivers here in Australia - the cotton industry has basically destroyed the Murray river and it’s ecosystem

    • @factanonverba7547
      @factanonverba7547 Před 2 lety +5

      That and cats

    • @chaitanyarao5546
      @chaitanyarao5546 Před 2 lety +21

      @@factanonverba7547 I find it hilarious and fascinating that Australia rages war on cats and emus.
      They even have the World's longest fence to protect against Dingos.

    • @johndough23
      @johndough23 Před 2 lety +27

      Disposable clothing...made to wear out and disintegrate on a time schedule. Those practices should be outlawed Globally. Planned Obsolescence needs to go ASAP.

    • @factanonverba7547
      @factanonverba7547 Před 2 lety +11

      @@chaitanyarao5546 they call them invasive species, but we all are. Cats rule, dingos drool

    • @shredderly
      @shredderly Před 2 lety +6

      same happened with the Aral sea.

  • @gregj7916
    @gregj7916 Před rokem

    at the Hoover Dam the lady from the bureau of reclamation said they had people working on the problem with the low water level, what exactley did she mean?

  • @larstenfaelt1859
    @larstenfaelt1859 Před rokem

    There is also a problem with the vast use of Ground water....

  • @katel3962
    @katel3962 Před 2 lety +189

    The problem isnt lack of water. The problem is farming in a DESERT, building homes and businesses in a DESERT, building lawns and golf courses in a DESERT.
    Respect Nature.

    • @xoxoxoxoxo7997
      @xoxoxoxoxo7997 Před 2 lety +8

      Especially Vegas

    • @Pixelsplasher
      @Pixelsplasher Před 2 lety +11

      Those people living in the desert? They will simply migrate to greener parts of the US when the water runs out.

    • @enticingmay435
      @enticingmay435 Před 2 lety +15

      Phoenix is the fastest growing major city in the country and its literally in the middle of a desert. People from California and the East Coast are moving here in droves driving the housing prices to skyrocket to the point of it becoming unaffordable to the locals. The city is ever expanding into the desert with new suburbs with cookie cutter houses being built all the time. People take the resources that they have for granted and thinks that it’s infinite. It’s a build, build, build mentality that’s going to backfire massively once the water runs out. Let’s see how many people will remain once severe water restrictions are in place.

    • @Quellthathitta
      @Quellthathitta Před 2 lety +1

      @@enticingmay435 facts I’m from Denver Colorado originally, but I’ve been in Phoenix for the last two years! I see it already transpiring.

    • @pilotactor777
      @pilotactor777 Před 2 lety

      Spoton Kate.

  • @jamilwilliams5080
    @jamilwilliams5080 Před 2 lety +128

    It's almost like farming in the desert is fucking reckless to begin with

    • @bidenadministrationischina5091
      @bidenadministrationischina5091 Před 2 lety +7

      It's how we survived over generations

    • @russelltackett4779
      @russelltackett4779 Před 2 lety

      Nasty

    • @eclipse369.
      @eclipse369. Před 2 lety +6

      @@bidenadministrationischina5091 wrong
      You went where the water was.

    • @NiminaeOld
      @NiminaeOld Před 2 lety

      Well it wasn't when there was water here.

    • @dennisp3314
      @dennisp3314 Před 2 lety +3

      AND - we are growing water crops (alfalfa, etc) in southern AND Northern AZ for the Saudis. To Export. Same reason we long ago started growing Cotton in Arizona for God's Sake.

  • @trustmeimafailure
    @trustmeimafailure Před rokem

    Desert suburbs literally are one of the main clauses the Colorado river is drying up

  • @mountianbreed5493
    @mountianbreed5493 Před rokem

    Yes but I was wondering some thing with the poles shifts and gravity brining some what a gravitational disruption do is it possible that the basin may be up lifting and cut down in
    Water flow s . Just saying . Y'all

  • @JWALL_
    @JWALL_ Před 2 lety +39

    I live in AZ and I’ve always tried telling people the Colorado is drying up, and they are like “oh” and then never think about it again, we got water parks here and Vegas is even worse, and nobody wants to change

    • @nicolea8205
      @nicolea8205 Před 2 lety +1

      The people in AZ can’t admit that their city has problems. They just put their heads in the sand, glad to be leaving AZ hopefully soon, it’s way too crowded.

    • @akuma8841
      @akuma8841 Před 2 lety

      AZ is gonna turn into fallout new vegas

  • @RichterBelmont2235
    @RichterBelmont2235 Před 2 lety +542

    First-rate country, third-rate farming technique. You can't keep doing this "strip farming" and wasting water resource forever.
    But then again, having green lawns and golf courses in the middle of desert is as equally as disconcerting.

    • @bustedknuckles6051
      @bustedknuckles6051 Před 2 lety +4

      What do you propose the farmers do differently?

    • @DJFRITTZ
      @DJFRITTZ Před 2 lety +68

      @@bustedknuckles6051 transition to airponics and hydroponics where stacked farms can produce rediculously more food per sq ft of space and use a fraction of the water. This stuff isnt difficult to learn either. Having said that... we can do without those golf courses first

    • @thomasbingham2797
      @thomasbingham2797 Před 2 lety +2

      Totally agree

    • @vlogcity1111
      @vlogcity1111 Před 2 lety +9

      @@DJFRITTZ you need a lot more capital and labour and different machines to manage hydroponics. These farmers don’t have the capital to make the switch

    • @Gustav4
      @Gustav4 Před 2 lety +11

      The worst part is that nobody can understand or talk about the real cause of this, it is not how we use the water that is the problem, the problem is that America's land is deteriorating so fast that it cant supply water to the rivers and also the health of the land determine the rainfall, so with degrading soils we are effectively reducing the amount of rainfall.
      Civilizations has failed through the past 10.000 years due to this fact and them not understanding the role of the soil. This is beyond politics or anything, it is too important for any ego or what ever to be in the way, lets sacrifices everything to spread this knowledge so we can start addressing this serious issue.
      We have to wake up or America is Fuc*ed.
      Make this the most popular comment if you are inspired to be the generation in history who changes this human error we have had since dawn of times.

  • @gadget348
    @gadget348 Před rokem +1

    40 million people eating, drinking, washing, growing food and watering the garden from one river and climate change is the problem!

  • @woocheongan1437
    @woocheongan1437 Před rokem +3

    Water shortage is the main problem in the desert, which makes it impossible to live normally in the desert, but the scary thing is that with the destruction of the ecology, the area of ​​the desert is getting smaller and smaller, and the government has introduced relevant protection and defense measures in time, but It is still difficult to meet the demand, and it is hoped that the worsening situation can be alleviated as soon as possible, and man and nature can coexist peacefully.

  • @marktrinidad7650
    @marktrinidad7650 Před 2 lety +104

    The priorities of America is truly mindboogling. Military over healthcare, education. Golf courses over farmers. No wonder they are blaming and smearing other countries to hide their paranoia.

    • @Anthony-xv6tk
      @Anthony-xv6tk Před 2 lety +12

      more like priorities of the rich elite ruling class. thanks capitalism!

    • @jjmo7383
      @jjmo7383 Před 2 lety +15

      America squandered $2 trillion for the Afghanistan war - a fiasco - enriching the military industrial complex while bring death and destruction to the Afghan people. Imagine if this money was spent on the construction of infrastructures that benefit the American people. Why? Corrupt and incompetent lawmakers.

    • @marktrinidad7650
      @marktrinidad7650 Před 2 lety +5

      ​@@jjmo7383 Geez you're right the war on Afghanistan alone could have build an extensive continental hi speed railway all over the United States. And remember the cost is just on Afghanistan. Imagine if the cost could have included the war on Iraq, Syria, the Middle East, the money could have put the United States at the forefront of its competition with China.

    • @vardenfell971
      @vardenfell971 Před 2 lety +1

      golf courses over idiotic farmers.

    • @zachheisen5022
      @zachheisen5022 Před 2 lety +1

      @@marktrinidad7650 and what of that rail system? it would rust with no support because america already has an extensive air and ground transportation network.

  • @jeremykiahsobyk102
    @jeremykiahsobyk102 Před 2 lety +48

    If you're in the Southwest and you have a lawn, you're goddamn irresponsible.

    • @diffusesingularity2760
      @diffusesingularity2760 Před 2 lety +5

      yeah it is a waste of water and plain grass lawns inherently suck either way, but the blame does Not fall on regular consumers - that's the basis of ecofascism which corporations continually use to blame working and middle class people on their lack of responsible recycling and taking 4 minute showers as the cause of these environmental issues, when it is always wealthy corporations driving the irresponsible use of water and other resources.

    • @raypitts4880
      @raypitts4880 Před 2 lety

      which river do the bottled water come from
      deepest wells for nothing sold at a profit.

  • @waynewayne9693
    @waynewayne9693 Před rokem +1

    I love the mindset of being shocked when you take more water out of a system than it naturally receives and acts shocked when water level lowers.

  • @ryannechvatal9888
    @ryannechvatal9888 Před rokem +2

    We need to engineer large atmospheric generators powered by solar and wind to produce water in these drought times.

  • @erow80
    @erow80 Před 2 lety +412

    “Water, water, water....There is no shortage of water in the desert but exactly the right amount , a perfect ratio of water to rock, water to sand, insuring that wide free open, generous spacing among plants and animals, homes and towns and cities, which makes the arid West so different from any other part of the nation. There is no lack of water here unless you try to establish a city where no city should be.” ― Edward Abbey

    • @factanonverba7547
      @factanonverba7547 Před 2 lety +17

      "water water everywhere, not a drop to drink," Samuel T. Coleridge

    • @1RustyGee
      @1RustyGee Před 2 lety +42

      Precisely, Arizona should not be full of people its never naturally had the resources to sustain that.

    • @lukegaming86
      @lukegaming86 Před 2 lety +27

      This is true but the water resources that have been available have been dwindling because of shortfalls in the predicted snowpack and rainfall. The reason? Climate change

    • @ianchandley
      @ianchandley Před 2 lety +13

      @@1RustyGee this very issue was covered in great detail in the book “Guns, Germs and Steel” regarding the lack of development in this region during pre-Colombian times. Quite fascinating that we are living through a repetition of history, only now it’s the white man’s turn and our technology can’t do anything about it....

    • @SwagFlap
      @SwagFlap Před 2 lety +2

      @@lukegaming86 whaaaat Climate change? who would've thunk it.

  • @energiewender143
    @energiewender143 Před 2 lety +134

    2:50 Granddad getting ready to plant cotton - in Arizona. Arizona literally means arid or dry zone, and cotton has a bad reputation for needing huge amounts of water to grow. How can you call yourself a farmer and yet be so clueless about how nature works? How can those people feign surprise that there is no more water after consuming unsustainable amounts of water for generations?

    • @why-xr6lg
      @why-xr6lg Před 2 lety +1

      Less money in farming drought tolerant foods to increase the local food supply and use the water for good.

    • @mrbear1302
      @mrbear1302 Před 2 lety +4

      They wouldn't be planting so much cotton if people weren't buying lots of stuff made out of it.

    • @MC-tm2uy
      @MC-tm2uy Před 2 lety +1

      They are both victims and perpetrators

    • @janeblogs324
      @janeblogs324 Před 2 lety +4

      You realise US money literally grows on cotton trees?

    • @offchance789
      @offchance789 Před 2 lety +6

      Honestly the sooner these boomers start meeting real water adversity, maybe they'll switch to a drought resistant crop. Oh who am I kidding.

  • @OCRay1
    @OCRay1 Před rokem +4

    That type of farming has to come to an end in many regions around the world including obviously the SW US. They use far too much water compared to the major hydroponic farms which can stack on a small footprint of land and use far less resources.
    People may need to relocate from some areas and animals will need to be helped in major ways.
    It’s a nightmare but we must look for innovative and charitable ways to make things tolerable if not somewhat stable. Fighting for the old ways is illogical and detrimental.

  • @mikecamrcplus3057
    @mikecamrcplus3057 Před rokem +2

    Always blame climate change but never the population explosion and the ever increasing use of water from the river.

  • @emmaevans7011
    @emmaevans7011 Před 2 lety +47

    When we all start starving, it won't be just the farmers crying. I was in school studying hydrology in late 80's and early 90's. Topic of every conference was water shortage.

    • @helenclark7876
      @helenclark7876 Před 2 lety

      Yes we were as well

    • @morninboy
      @morninboy Před 2 lety

      Yea it is something I recall from the 80's. That was the surface water problem they presented. Then there is the aquifer problem.

  • @fuckingdonut9489
    @fuckingdonut9489 Před 2 lety +231

    The amount of water needed to keep the grass that green is enormous. It's a bunch of rich privileged ppl that want to live and play golf in "quirky" places. Greta got one thing right, dreaming of eternal economic development should not be happening when the ground beneath you doesn't have any moisture and the air around you is blazing

    • @bobbowie9350
      @bobbowie9350 Před 2 lety

      Depends on the seed.

    • @SRM_NZ
      @SRM_NZ Před 2 lety +1

      You're a fool with an analogy like that....it's not farming or green spaces....it's urban sprawl, storm water and 8 billion selfish humans using the blame game while refusing to implement rain water harvesting and conserve water...it's not green spaces...it's people just like you

    • @anthrosapien3784
      @anthrosapien3784 Před 2 lety

      Greta got something right one thing

    • @MrSladej
      @MrSladej Před 2 lety +3

      Greta got nothing right. She’s and her handlers are just like the rest of the climates fear mongers. If a different group had a better idea or better solutions Greta and gang would be their enemies. It’s a power thing. And at the end of that struggle is the rest of us getting the shaft whilst these privileged people carry on as normal. That’s why people reject these scientists and activists. Rules for thee not for me. Covid showed everyone that.

    • @royormonde3682
      @royormonde3682 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol...oh ya, the rich have all filled their basements with water, I'm sure they'll be fine. This drought effects everyone, rich or poor. Golf coarse's, baseball fields, football fields, swimming pools, laundry, toilets, thirsty people.....they're all a factor. Try and keep up and lose sight of reality, it's the climate change we've been warned about for 50 years. Farmers are the ones hogging the water and their time is up. Maybe the farmers growing corn for a fuel additive can take over where these guys left off.

  • @chalmapatterson544
    @chalmapatterson544 Před rokem +1

    iIts not climate change. It's horrible government management of natural resources. The weather isn't the primary cause.

  • @levismith3252
    @levismith3252 Před rokem

    I'm loving this I live in Mount Vernon Washington State we still have all the water and all our rivers

  • @pigjubby1
    @pigjubby1 Před 2 lety +263

    My parents moved to the desert in the 1980's. Every house had a lawn. A lawn in the desert was silly. When you build more homes in the desert you add more washing machines, more showers, more car washes.

    • @johngalt8279
      @johngalt8279 Před 2 lety +18

      ....swimming pools, golf courses, water fountains...

    • @happygp698
      @happygp698 Před 2 lety +13

      That is the American dream.

    • @justicedemocrat9357
      @justicedemocrat9357 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah the government should ban people from living where they want to.

    • @carljohnson7168
      @carljohnson7168 Před 2 lety +34

      @@justicedemocrat9357 It's not that the government should ban people from living where they want to, but they should start restricting heavy water-depriving resources such as lawns and golf courses in areas where they are dry and receiving extreme drought.

    • @pulda015
      @pulda015 Před 2 lety +20

      @@justicedemocrat9357 don't ban people from living where they want, but they don't get to complain about a lack of water or flash floods in the wash that they built their subdivisions in.

  • @TheBic4
    @TheBic4 Před 2 lety +95

    I’m going to start a banana farm in Alaska and act shocked when it fails and beg for a government bailout.

    • @deathmachineusa2689
      @deathmachineusa2689 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm going to start a moron school and be in shocked when it fails to Curtail foolish comments.

    • @jaelynn7575
      @jaelynn7575 Před 2 lety +13

      @@deathmachineusa2689 Why did you capitalize "curtail?"

  • @therealkrystalvintage

    fivegee doesn't have any thing to do with the sudden severity of 2021 water loss does it?

  • @Jack-by2hg
    @Jack-by2hg Před rokem

    A desalination plant off the west coast was supposed to be built and running by next year and provide 50 million fresh water gallons per day. But that got cancelled.

  • @RoscoRide
    @RoscoRide Před 2 lety +240

    And they failed to mention Nestlé’s corporation using water from the dam In years past

    • @mrike5651
      @mrike5651 Před 2 lety +2

      They used up Florida's water in our fresh waters.

    • @Automedon2
      @Automedon2 Před 2 lety +2

      True, but they were producing water that people actually drink.

    • @erickeller162
      @erickeller162 Před 2 lety +21

      @@Automedon2 Water that used to cost cents per gallon they are now selling at 2 to 3 bucks per bottle?

    • @erickeller162
      @erickeller162 Před 2 lety +23

      @Will Smith You missed my point entirely. Nestle takes municipal water at huge discount rates and sells it back to you at an inflated price. Go look that up if you don't believe me, it's pretty common knowledge and I'm not here to argue about it with you.

    • @shariyahlevvi9142
      @shariyahlevvi9142 Před 2 lety +6

      @@erickeller162 Blue gold documentary spoke on how nestles was sucking lake superior water, bottling, selling it

  • @lalah9481
    @lalah9481 Před 2 lety +73

    Why would you have faith in ‘the people working on this problem’ when they’re the ones who got us here?

    • @davidday9967
      @davidday9967 Před 2 lety +2

      She's referring to the people at the dam itself. Not the jumbo turds that sell the water off to farms in az and ca. Did you know it's illegal to collect rain in Colorado? Probably most of the south west but I know co for sure

    • @isaacb5968
      @isaacb5968 Před 2 lety +3

      Because she’s being paid to not look half as scared as she should be. “It’s…concerning.” GTFOH

  • @stealthcamo712
    @stealthcamo712 Před rokem

    July 1st, 2022. Level is now 1043ft.

  • @raedowling8778
    @raedowling8778 Před rokem

    from the great lakes area,,,,,,,good luck

  • @dominostabz8234
    @dominostabz8234 Před 2 lety +468

    I didn’t know taking all the water from a river to make a desert look like Florida would dry it up 🧐

    • @ToriBailey
      @ToriBailey Před 2 lety +1

      It's not like Florida. It's a concrete jungle. It's all the humans consuming it. It's not going into the ground in AZ

    • @notapplicable328
      @notapplicable328 Před 2 lety +14

      That greenery was very artificial if you’ve been to AZ a lot of homes just have gravel front yards because grass isn’t fit for that climate. Stop trying to farm in the desert. You would think the dust bowl would’ve told us where in the US had soil suitable for farming.

    • @karstenhanson5095
      @karstenhanson5095 Před 2 lety +8

      @@notapplicable328 actually not true at all, I'm an Arizona native and there is millions of acres of farmland that is extremely fertile and suitable for farming. Its not like farmers are just trying to turn sand into crop fields here.

    • @dmannevada5981
      @dmannevada5981 Před 2 lety +2

      It' didn't. People living in that desert barely use a any water in the scheme of things...and I know you don't know where the water is being used.
      Hint: the water is being used to feed you...hello!

    • @dmannevada5981
      @dmannevada5981 Před 2 lety

      @@ToriBailey Yes, all the humans are using it...ACROSS N. AMERICA & THE WORLD.
      When the BOR's own data shows that over 80% of the water is being used to produce agriculture, agriculture that is feeding YOU, the rest of N. America & the world, obviously that "concrete jungle" isn't the reason for the water crisis.

  • @campll121
    @campll121 Před 2 lety +301

    Farming in a desert doesn't seem like a great idea to begin with..

    • @farmerjohn6526
      @farmerjohn6526 Před 2 lety +28

      Where I live in the east...we have empty farmlands and tons of water

    • @greg1030
      @greg1030 Před 2 lety +7

      @@farmerjohn6526 Where I live in the east on overpopulated, over developed and obscenely over priced Long Island we have tons of water and practically NO farm land, for obvious reasons.

    • @clairedgaia3626
      @clairedgaia3626 Před 2 lety +7

      There is actually thpusands ofvyears of dryland farming in tandem With nature, by Hopi, Dine, Zuni peopleas and more. They did ceremonies to call on rain and protected, blessed their water.
      It is the big ag, greedy, manipulative, power over nature corporations destroying soils, making dirt lifeless, with no regard to water that contributes much damage.

    • @gringrin3979
      @gringrin3979 Před 2 lety +1

      Cactus Farmers.

    • @TheDoorspook11c
      @TheDoorspook11c Před 2 lety

      Right

  • @jbshaka653
    @jbshaka653 Před rokem

    How do you negotiate for something that no longer exists?

  • @gunplow
    @gunplow Před rokem

    Will it effect Yuma AZ produce

  • @mckennabrock1865
    @mckennabrock1865 Před 2 lety +229

    I did my dissertation on this and this video is actually kinda problematic.
    For starters, it doesn't address the main reason we're in this state is because of the policy failure surrounding water in the SW United States. Water ownership is based on a chain of ownership based on ancient prior appropriation laws (ie first come, first served) from the pioneer days. The first in line (or the first who "laid claim" to the land) is able to use as much water as they need and whatever is leftover goes to the next person. The inclusion of the first lady in this video is misleading. She's likely further down the chain of ownership, thus not able to irrigate her crops. (Also, alfalfa and cotton are some of the most water-intensive crops you can grow. It's an incredibly risky decision on her part to grow these crops if she is that far down the chain.) There are people above her freely using as much water as they need; the water restrictions do not affect everyone equally.
    Another problem this video fails to address is that agriculture is responsible for the *vast majority* of water usage. Municipal use is minuscule in comparison. New developments and golf courses are not responsible for the Colorado River's dramatic decline in water flow. Water generally comes from two places in this region: the Colorado River and the aquifer. Farmers have ZERO restrictions on the amount of water they can pump from the aquifer free of charge. This has resulted in megafarms owned by places like China (no land to grow crops like alfalfa to feed their livestock) or Saudi Arabia (no more water to have agriculture) who build giant pumps to irrigate acres and acres of water-intensive crops to send back to their own countries.
    The last thing (and the most important) this video does not address is the amount of corruption that exists within agriculture and water policy. Farmers have zero incentive to reduce their water usage because they get heavily subsidized water and insurance payments for growing their water-intensive crops (it makes zero financial sense for them to grow anything else). Farmers vote for politicians who implement these policies. As a result, politicians vote down any legislation aimed at creating more sustainable water usage/limiting water use/setting restrictions on what types of crops can be grown in a drought-stricken area. It's an absolute mess and our politicians are entirely to blame.
    I really didn't like how this video makes it seem as if there is nothing that can be done.

    • @billpetersen298
      @billpetersen298 Před 2 lety +23

      Please keep sharing what you know, change is obviously needed.

    • @itsmeagain966
      @itsmeagain966 Před 2 lety +20

      Thank you for the the practical insight 👍 there are clear holes in our water policies that need to be addressed

    • @aliciaflores5052
      @aliciaflores5052 Před 2 lety +13

      As an ADWR employee, McKenna summed up everything perfectly

    • @chobai9996
      @chobai9996 Před 2 lety +11

      It's because they think it's just climate change, but never think of the nuances of how crises work. Also, anytime you mention the horrible things the Chinese Communist Party is doing you get labeled as a racist by these kinds of people

    • @aolvaar8792
      @aolvaar8792 Před 2 lety +1

      My City sells 5 parts Class A+ reclaimed wastewater for 4 parts Colorado River water.
      It is used to grow Cotton.
      She would have traded her allotment for more water(reclaimed).
      Now no allotment

  • @GaiusCassius15
    @GaiusCassius15 Před 2 lety +272

    I can't help but feel as though this video tries to make that farmer and her family seem like the good guys, but her and her farm are part of the problem.
    Your growing cotton in Colorado? Just as short sighted as the cotton farmers in Arizona and several other desert-like states. If we want our water supplies to become sustainable we cant have people wasting it on products that can be made sustainably in other locations

    • @charlesgarrett7766
      @charlesgarrett7766 Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah the south is still the cotton capital

    • @johnb7046
      @johnb7046 Před 2 lety +34

      Exactly, thank you. Water intensive crops in deserts are indeed part of the problem. With soil desertification, chemical fertilizers, water mismanagement and greed I honestly think we are heading to another dust bowl.

    • @ElevenAce
      @ElevenAce Před 2 lety +5

      I hear you points but when you think about it we use cotton everyday. Like she's growing that for the economy. The other water uses are less useful. In another video the golf courses were using tons of water just so folks can hit a few balls??? And I'm sure there are other farmers growing food too.

    • @williamrose7184
      @williamrose7184 Před 2 lety +2

      During the dust bowl it wasn’t because of lack of water there was so much water there but they just didn’t know how to access it at the time

    • @masterdecats6418
      @masterdecats6418 Před 2 lety +6

      @@williamrose7184 they didn’t till the soil correctly. They literally planted, grew, and extracted without putting nutrients back into the soil.

  • @ivermectin7751
    @ivermectin7751 Před rokem

    10months later. 140 feet now.
    We have about 2-7years
    Before It's done generating electricity.

  • @brokendownoldman9547
    @brokendownoldman9547 Před rokem

    Why are golf courses "exempt" from the water ban?

  • @gordb.2381
    @gordb.2381 Před 2 lety +115

    I remember reading a article in a science magazine in the early 80's which outlined the water woes. In it they described the Colorado river and how the people along it have historical water rights which exceeded the actual amount of water flowing down it. It showed the reservoirs in California drying up. 40 years later its news.

    • @Natescoop8800
      @Natescoop8800 Před 2 lety +4

      Right i remember reading as well as a kid in school in the early 90s...

    • @j.thomas7128
      @j.thomas7128 Před 2 lety

      Right.... that was most likely when California was attempting to renegotiate their water rights when expanding their DESERT FARMING projects. The state sponsored propaganda ala PRAVDA was everywhere!

    • @patfranks785
      @patfranks785 Před 2 lety +1

      The Colorado river doesn't reach the ocean. 🤦‍♂️

    • @dls951
      @dls951 Před rokem +1

      I remember Powell and Mead were full in 2000

    • @juliuscee4633
      @juliuscee4633 Před rokem

      @@Natescoop8800 i remember reading as a kidd in the early 00s..

  • @DirtyWorka
    @DirtyWorka Před 2 lety +82

    Reminds me of the old Sam Kinison bit. “You live in a fkn desert! There’s no water here! It’s sand!! Sand!!! Nothing grows in sand. Move where the water is!!!”

    • @jaelynn7575
      @jaelynn7575 Před 2 lety +3

      NO! Don't do that. We don't want 40 million people moving East.

    • @joeblow9126
      @joeblow9126 Před 2 lety +2

      He was referring to Ethiopia

    • @LK-pc4sq
      @LK-pc4sq Před 2 lety +2

      100 years ago water flows in tuson and TREES were growing along the river banks. They are all gone!

    • @MrMemyselfandi415
      @MrMemyselfandi415 Před 2 lety +5

      @@joeblow9126 Go back and listen to it again. He said "we have deserts in America too A##HOLE...WE JUST DON'T LIVE IN EM". Well...he was mostly right...back then. czcams.com/video/eQQ2btbidWE/video.html
      lol..."See this?....IT'S SAND...YOU KNOW WHAT IT'S GONNA BE IN 100 YEARS...SAND YOU A&&HOLES...SAAAND!!!"

    • @joeblow9126
      @joeblow9126 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MrMemyselfandi415 thanks reply
      I just watched
      He screams so loud hard to understand him 😆
      Every time I drive thru needles I think about him

  • @edbrown6985
    @edbrown6985 Před rokem

    I agree it's not gonna get better

  • @abcderghijk
    @abcderghijk Před rokem

    Doesn't seem to be drying up in Colorado only in the dessert Southwest..

  • @_D1886
    @_D1886 Před 2 lety +81

    “Water, water, water....There is no shortage of water in the desert but exactly the right amount; a perfect ratio of water to rock, water to sand... There is no lack of water here unless you try to establish a city where none should be.”
    Ed Abbey

    • @SegoMan
      @SegoMan Před 2 lety

      JWP congress of this and the west would not support large cities.. What did they do? Lol

    • @jaysoncolbert6187
      @jaysoncolbert6187 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm an American and if I want to drink more water than I will, it's called manifest destiny

    • @jaysoncolbert6187
      @jaysoncolbert6187 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thecrappycoder ^ Assume their gender immediately

    • @emceeboogieboots1608
      @emceeboogieboots1608 Před 2 lety

      @@jaysoncolbert6187 Cool, so no problems if other Americans consume your portion then?
      Being their manifest destiny and all...

  • @cageybee7221
    @cageybee7221 Před 2 lety +284

    growing cotton in the desert, no fucking wonder there's no water. that's how the aral sea dried up.

    • @scottedwards6578
      @scottedwards6578 Před 2 lety +4

      But there are people managing it we are so much smarter now 😠

    • @erwin887
      @erwin887 Před 2 lety +1

      @@scottedwards6578 that happend not too long ago mate

    • @scottedwards6578
      @scottedwards6578 Před 2 lety +3

      @@erwin887 and I met it's always the same thing Easter Island 2.0 people always think they are in control until it's to late then blame something else

    • @morninboy
      @morninboy Před 2 lety

      that whole drainage system got redirected. STUPID PEOPLE

    • @darijus4094
      @darijus4094 Před 2 lety

      The soviet unions' government diverted most of the water to the farms and the aral sea didin't get any water

  • @eugenehancock2649
    @eugenehancock2649 Před rokem

    Can sea water be used instead of fresh for 2/3 of water usage in the large cites and fresh water for drinking?

  • @ayebing
    @ayebing Před 11 měsíci +1

    Lake Powell is back at its highest level one year later. Almost like weather is cyclical