Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My (white, solidly middle class) ILs do this. They live somewhere with perfectly clean water. And they usually look for the cheapest option for everything - store brand everything, unlicensed contractor, budget airlines - yet the buy cases upon cases of Poland Spring and make snide remarks when I use their tap to refill my reusable water bottle. I don't understand it.
Maybe they know more than you do about their water source.
Their water source is fine.
80% of USD drinking water contains PFAS "forever chemicals"
https://www.ehn.org/drinking-water-pollution-2655521279.html
https://www.science.org/content/article/millions-americans-drink-potentially-unsafe-tap-water-how-does-your-county-stack
Are you serious?
https://www.consumerreports.org/bottled-water/pfas-in-bottled-water-new-study-finds-a1111233122/
Tap is better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My (white, solidly middle class) ILs do this. They live somewhere with perfectly clean water. And they usually look for the cheapest option for everything - store brand everything, unlicensed contractor, budget airlines - yet the buy cases upon cases of Poland Spring and make snide remarks when I use their tap to refill my reusable water bottle. I don't understand it.
Maybe they know more than you do about their water source.
Their water source is fine.
80% of USD drinking water contains PFAS "forever chemicals"
https://www.ehn.org/drinking-water-pollution-2655521279.html
https://www.science.org/content/article/millions-americans-drink-potentially-unsafe-tap-water-how-does-your-county-stack
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people think the public tap water is dirty yet it's cleaner and more regulated than bottle water is so it doesn't make sense. I think it's sheer ignorance. Even using a brita or pur water filter with tap water is better than buying water it's cheaper and doesn't waste a bunch of plastic.
Tap certainly is not cleaner than bottled water since bottled water is just filtered tap water.
I wish people would do a simple search before running their mouth or fingers online. Tap water is indeed cleaner than bottled water. LOOK. IT. UP. STOP SPREADING MISINFORMATION because of your ignorance.
I bet you don't get your tap water from a source that's near a former Kodak film processing plant, International Paper plant, etc .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My (white, solidly middle class) ILs do this. They live somewhere with perfectly clean water. And they usually look for the cheapest option for everything - store brand everything, unlicensed contractor, budget airlines - yet the buy cases upon cases of Poland Spring and make snide remarks when I use their tap to refill my reusable water bottle. I don't understand it.
Maybe they know more than you do about their water source.
Their water source is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My (white, solidly middle class) ILs do this. They live somewhere with perfectly clean water. And they usually look for the cheapest option for everything - store brand everything, unlicensed contractor, budget airlines - yet the buy cases upon cases of Poland Spring and make snide remarks when I use their tap to refill my reusable water bottle. I don't understand it.
Maybe they know more than you do about their water source.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My white parents but cases of water. For them it’s convenience. They don’t want to wash bottles/glasses and just want to grab icy cold water straight from the fridge.
OP here. I guess my observation is that it's almost exclusively hispanic people, but not exclusively one gender, age group, etc. But maybe that's just my weird sample set.
Some people immigrate here from countries/states/towns where bottled water is literally the only safe drinking water. It can be hard to break that habit/mindset when you are taught from birth never to drink anything but bottled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My white parents but cases of water. For them it’s convenience. They don’t want to wash bottles/glasses and just want to grab icy cold water straight from the fridge.
OP here. I guess my observation is that it's almost exclusively hispanic people, but not exclusively one gender, age group, etc. But maybe that's just my weird sample set.
Anonymous wrote:My (white, solidly middle class) ILs do this. They live somewhere with perfectly clean water. And they usually look for the cheapest option for everything - store brand everything, unlicensed contractor, budget airlines - yet the buy cases upon cases of Poland Spring and make snide remarks when I use their tap to refill my reusable water bottle. I don't understand it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people think the public tap water is dirty yet it's cleaner and more regulated than bottle water is so it doesn't make sense. I think it's sheer ignorance. Even using a brita or pur water filter with tap water is better than buying water it's cheaper and doesn't waste a bunch of plastic.
Tap certainly is not cleaner than bottled water since bottled water is just filtered tap water.
Tap is cleaner. Tap also doesn’t have millions of particles of micro plastics like bottled water. Look it up. You think all that bottled water that’s probably been sitting in the hot sun, breaking down the plastic, is a good thing? Also, read about nylon tea bags. Like Ito En ones from Costco. These plastic particles can break the blood brain barrier as well. I only drink filtered tap now and loose leaf tea.
I mean… have *you* looked it up? Because it by “clean” you meant “free of micro plastics” tap water has micro plastics too.
Just read the fking studies. Bottled water, you know that sits in plastic for long periods of time in hot and cold weather, that has a plastic top that sheds plastic into the bottle, clearly exposes you to more microplastics than tap water. Jesus Christ.
First hit on google. I hate lazy posters.
https://cleanwater.org/2020/07/29/bottled-water-human-health-consequences-drinking-plastic
Let me guess, you also don’t believe in vaccines or that they change your dna and do bad stuff, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people think the public tap water is dirty yet it's cleaner and more regulated than bottle water is so it doesn't make sense. I think it's sheer ignorance. Even using a brita or pur water filter with tap water is better than buying water it's cheaper and doesn't waste a bunch of plastic.
Tap certainly is not cleaner than bottled water since bottled water is just filtered tap water.
I wish people would do a simple search before running their mouth or fingers online. Tap water is indeed cleaner than bottled water. LOOK. IT. UP. STOP SPREADING MISINFORMATION because of your ignorance.
I bet you don't get your tap water from a source that's near a former Kodak film processing plant, International Paper plant, etc .