by Outcast_Searcher » Mon 09 Oct 2017, 12:03:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('slackercruster', 'I')'ve been drinking this stuff regularly and sadly built up a big emergency supply of it. Getting hard to find clean water nowadays.
https://danieldteolijrarchivalcollectio ... the-worst/Good catch. Don't know if it's dangerous.
Kroger does have information on their bottled water website, and does state that there may be contaminants, which may bother some people more than others. Sounds like legal boilerplate to me.
https://www.kroger.com/topic/water-qualityhttps://www.kroger.com/asset/bottled-water-info-sheetI mainly drink tap water and use the bottles as a convenient, sealable container for refilling. But as a matter of principle, I'll look at his testing and try to get something cleaner.
Sadly, most commercial water could change sources and quality at any time, and not disclose it, as long as it meets whatever federal standard. Which probably means it won't make most people sick short term, but that's about it.
My electrician was having long term intermittent problems with being sick, and discovered that it was the bottled water -- by experimenting with his diet -- since, as usual, the doctors could find nothing.
So, I don't consider this to be all tinfoil hat stuff. This is what pisses me off so much about government. I'd like to see the FDA randomly doing tests like this and reporting on it for their many $billions in spending over the years. But no, they mainly compile spreadsheets and let companies do self-testing and reporting. (This per CSPAN reporting of testimony to congress during various food scares over the previous decade, which I personally watched).
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.