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waffles-n-gravy t1_isvgml6 wrote

Now the entire planet is interconnected... by sewers

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Circus_Brimstone t1_isvhuuh wrote

Then again, there was that whole pesky world war about defeating evil fascists and junk.

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reptarcannabis t1_isvkczu wrote

If you go to Paris now it is there’s human feces all over the sidewalks alleys streets it’s everywhere because the cost of rent and the housing market is so high that people shit to protest outside of multi million dollar apartments

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crankyoldbrent t1_isvlz36 wrote

Is it that percentage now for showers? Hahahs

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_Silver_Engineer_ t1_isvmaxw wrote

Was that because WWII had destroyed the infrastructure or indoor plumbing just hadn't caught on before the war?

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ieya404 t1_isvnmsz wrote

As opposed to a public indoor bathroom? Please say a crapper in the kitchen was never a thing... :)

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OldMork t1_isvrccx wrote

I still today dont have a private bathroom

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Omnimpotent t1_iswpo7q wrote

But they're cuisine is le best in ze world!

Why? Because it's French! There is no other reason they're food is the best, it's just French and that's it and butter.

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NinDiGu t1_iswvl1f wrote

Until the late 1950's the majority of fertilizer in Japan was untreated human waste.

Old style Japanese houses had a room, for pooping, that was over a pit that was emptied weekly and used as fertilizer. An indoor outhouse so to speak.

There are still many houses that use this system, usually in more rural areas.

So these are private and indoor, but not in the way most Westerners think of private and indoor.

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marmorset t1_isxmik5 wrote

Bathtubs in the kitchen used to be a thing. That's where you produced the hot water, that's where you took baths. Indoor plumbing came about much earlier than indoor plumbing with heated water. You'd use your stove to heat the water, there was no hot water system.

Cold water flats were the standard apartment in NYC and many big cities until after WW II.

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Randomly_Cromulent t1_isxtvhq wrote

I was there several years and was looking for hotels. Somebody online recommended one because of its location and it was close to a subway station. I immediately dismissed that one because it had a shared bathroom.

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TWiesengrund t1_isyfvgc wrote

And most garbage like broken pottery was collected and used for land reclamation projects. There's an interesting display in the Edo-Tokyo-Museum about it. We used to recycle before we used to recycle.

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fuckthewholeroster t1_it1nqwn wrote

The European landscape was dominated by farms, horse carriages and cobblestone roads for a very long time. The America of the 50s looked like a space age civilization compared to my own country back then lol.

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TWiesengrund t1_it7z3pv wrote

Absolutely! And I was blown away by the fact they offer free tour guides inside if they are available. I had a private tour in 2018 and I am still grateful for that.

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refugefirstmate t1_it8ksfr wrote

Hence the development of the bidet (not the recent bidet attachment; the fixture that looks like a mashup of a toilet and a sink) - it took less room than a bathtub and used a lot less water, so you'd straddle it to wash your naughty bits in between your weekly bath.

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