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Dryheavemorning OP t1_ja2v60j wrote

Acadia Spring Water. Yet another reason it's stupid to buy bottled water.

77

uptown_gargoyle t1_ja2w8gg wrote

Life hack: can also get water straight from the faucet at home.

On the other hand, is a reasonable person supposed to trust the EPA and the grocery chain when they tell us that this water is safe to drink? I'm actually asking.

ETA: I'm asking because it seems like if we had a functional regulatory framework then the derailment wouldn't have happened in the first place

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icedoutskimaskszn t1_ja2xwjt wrote

those gallon jugs that expired mid feb were likely sourced prior to the date of derailment.

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flamehead2k1 t1_ja2zqn3 wrote

Expiration dates on water are more about the plastic leeching in than water going bad and I've seen anywhere from 6 months to 2 years from manufacture.

Bottled water sucks and should minimized to when it is really needed but this water is likely fine as you said

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vectorizer99 t1_ja36o3b wrote

>“The water quality is being tested regularly by the supplier,” said Ashley Flower, a spokesperson for Carlisle-based Giant

Translation: the company whose viability depends on not finding contamination, found no contamination.

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Darius_Banner t1_ja37d9j wrote

Honestly if you’re dumb enough to buy bottled water you get what you pay for

−16

stonkautist69 t1_ja3fqj9 wrote

Don’t worry the future will be better corporations will have solutions for the problems they have created, to buy of course unless you want ads on your rx script you can select that option as well

12

ScienceWasLove t1_ja3gq2v wrote

Tell me you didn’t learn about the water cycle and aquifers without telling me you didn’t…

−13

aoeudhtns t1_ja4b5ms wrote

I trust that they're working within frameworks they already have. Like when BPA blew up, lots of assurances that it was safe and tons of manufacturers saying their levels were "below allowed," completely sidestepping the issue that the question is: are the allowed levels even safe?

Similarly here, many of these chemicals don't have allowable levels or it's not known if the allowed amount is the right number. So someone certainly can say that the water being tested is passing tests. It's avoiding the question that the tests aren't right.

But ysk that EPA controls for city tap water are MUCH more rigorous than bottled water.

8

PM_me_ab_ur_landlord t1_ja4j6hl wrote

Because one is only allowed to have one account?

Go deal with all the dog whistles about “culture” and “good families” under the hundreds of crime threads, stop wasting your time snapping back at me with some half-thought out response.

−5

fudgebacker t1_ja4lq3p wrote

Compared to Philly tap water....improvement.

−11

Darius_Banner t1_ja5pts5 wrote

I’m not retarded. No shit there are certain applications, but for the most part it’s a stupid product bought by vain, paranoid, or easily manipulated people. Enjoy the downvoting, I stand strong.

−6

L_Ron_Stunna t1_ja6rf9i wrote

Honestly they know their reputation hinges on this i doubt they would sell contaminated water knowing what the consequences may be. Companies like these recall shit all the time for less. If you really think youre gonna get sick drinking bottled water you might as well just kill yourself and save everyone the bitching

−10