Bottles leaching carcinogens into bottled water?
LMAO!
http://www.plasticsmythbuster.org/rumors.asp
Bottles leaching carcinogens into bottled water?
LMAO!
http://www.plasticsmythbuster.org/rumors.asp
The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.
I'm in San Francisco and I'm all for the ban. What a useless waste of money and resources buying bottled water is. I already pay for water through my water bills. San Francisco has good water; I use a Brita filter, but IMHO water is water. I have better things to do with my $$ and Mother Earth appreciates the fewer plastic bottles rolling around in the environment.
I mostly buy it for the convenience and I must admit it does taste better to meI know bottled water is much less regulated that our tap water though.
don't breed or buy while shelter dogs die....
I have been frosted!
Thanks Kfamr for the signature!
Bottled Water:
In Alberta, the town of Strathmore has grown so quickly that it is running out of room for its sewage.
SO - it decided to put it into the Bow River, UPSTREAM from the very large Sikiska Nation (and a few other towns, no doubt).
The Siksika people raised a great outcry (who wouldn't), but Strathmore town council "fixed" the problem by trucking in bottled water for the nation.
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"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
LH, my brother has been sending me lots of info about NOT microwaving in plastic and styrofoam. Your site is making me question all of this. He has also recently sent me info (I know this is off topic) about the fact that there is a possible link to Autism as a result of vaccines. I had heard of this before. Actually someone on Oprah had mentioned it when she did a show on Autism.Originally Posted by Lady's Human
Honestly, all of these things surely do make one wonder.![]()
It is never wrong to keep trying to search for truth though.
I have very mixed feelings about bottle water. First...unless you look for it...most bottled water does not have flouride. The only fillings I have were cavities I developed when my family lived where there was unflourinated well water. I realize the amount of flouride needed for healthy teeth is very small and I probably get it just from the amount of tap water I drink to brush my teeth...but I still think it is a concern if you NEVER drink tap water.
Secondly, yes bottles are very recyclable. But that statement overlooks the energy involved in recycling. The bottles are not "re-filled" but melted down and remade...all that requires electricity, etc.
Come on down to the harbor in our town and count the water bottles washed up.![]()
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Now, instead of taking bottled water to the gym with me...I fill a reusable bottle with ice water. It goes in the dishwasher.
You can take an EMPTY water bottle through security and fill it from a drinking fountain in the secure area at US airports. I also saw this done in Heathrow.
So, yes....we use them. But I try and find other alternatives whenever I can.
Yes, it takes electricity to recycle plastics, but it takes far less electricity to recycle than to make new resin.
Most of the plastics in the body of your car are made from recycled PET.
Not every area in the US uses fluoridated water, and no one on a well is getting fluoride in that manner.
The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.
What??? No comeback for attempting to use alternatives???Originally Posted by Lady's Human
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We live in an old city, on an old street with old pipes in an old house. Our water bill comes with a "Lead in your water" pamphlet, as in olden days, lead was commonly used to solder pipes together. We even had a literal lead pipe entering the house for natural gas, which astounded the men who came to replace our furnace shortly after we bought this house. Health and sanity are important to me. So we do not drink the tap water, but do drink bottled water, and use it for cooking, and always recycle the bottles.
Lead in your water doesn't have any taste, and the effects are cumulative, so I am not taking a chance.
Maybe I'm odd but all the bottled water I've ever used tastes awful.
Plus, I hate lugging the stuff around. Transporting on a bus is no fun either.
I'll stick to our tap water.![]()
No matter what anyone does, someone some where will be offended some how!!!!
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MY BLESSINGS:
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Grandma (RB), Chester, Angel, Chip
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Leonardo (RB), Luke (RB), Winnie, Chuck,
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Frankie
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WHERE YOU ARE IS WHERE YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO BE!!!
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Hmmmm... guess I shouldn't believe everything my mother tells me, lol. I just found this on www.cancer.org as well:Originally Posted by Lady's Human
The original version of this email begins by saying “Many are unaware of poisoning caused by re-using plastic bottles,” and says “bottles are safe for one-time use only; if you must keep them longer, it should be or no more than a few days, a week max, and keep them away from heat as well.” The email says the bottles contain DEHA, which it calls a potential carcinogen.
A newer (2007) version of the email quotes an unidentified doctor as saying women should not drink bottled water that has been left in a car because the heat and the plastic of the bottle have certain chemicals that can lead to breast cancer.
Fact:
These emails are apparently based on a student’s college thesis. In fact, DEHA is not inherent in the plastic used to make these bottles, and even if it was the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says DEHA "cannot reasonably be anticipated to cause cancer, teratogenic effects, immunotoxicity, neurotoxicity, gene mutations, liver, kidney, reproductive, or developmental toxicity or other serious or irreversible chronic health effects." Meanwhile, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), says diethylhexyl adipate "is not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans."
So where will the City Employees go to gossip?
Oh, the humanity!![]()
Sara,
No issues with using alternatives, as I try to when possible as well.
I've got no issues with doing what you can for the environment, (as evidenced by the money I just dumped into a more efficient heating system), I just take issue with the scare tactics used to promote environmentally concious living.
The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.
I am not sure what you consider "scare tactics"???? Just the truth about what is happening with the enviornment is scary enough.Originally Posted by Lady's Human
I take issue with people thinking that because something is recyclable or made from renewable resources (as in paper) that there is no cost to the environment. People tend to overlook the cost of recycling or the cost of producing the product from a renewable resource. Producing paper consumes a huge amount of water and electricity for example.
And if telling people to recycle is all it takes, wouldn't this be a great world!
Bottled water here comes in glass bottles that are re-used, not just recycled. We have this kind of bottles since I was a kid. With beer it's the same.
When I was a kid, your vintner took his wine bottles back as well. We went to close-by Alsace, bought our supply and brought the bottles back next time.
Of course there are now PET bottles as well. Especially for French mineral water and for all the sizes you buy in aiports etc.
They are recycled.
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