Who Is Is Thirsty For A Bunch Of Effing Poison?
Posted Under: General
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Bottled Water Quality Investigation:
10 Major Brands, 38 Pollutants
Bottled water contains disinfection byproducts,
fertilizer residue, and pain medication.
Authors: Olga Naidenko, PhD, Senior Scientist; Nneka Leiba, MPH, Researcher; Renee Sharp, MS, Senior Scientist; Jane Houlihan, MSCE, Vice President for Research
The bottled water industry promotes an image of purity, but comprehensive testing by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) reveals a surprising array of chemical contaminants in every bottled water brand analyzed, including toxic byproducts of chlorination in Walmart’s Sam’s Choice and Giant Supermarket’s Acadia brands, at levels no different than routinely found in tap water. Several Sam’s Choice samples purchased in California exceeded legal limits for bottled water contaminants in that state. Cancer-causing contaminants in bottled water purchased in 5 states (North Carolina, California, Virginia, Delaware and Maryland) and the District of Columbia substantially exceeded the voluntary standards established by the bottled water industry.
Unlike tap water, where consumers are provided with test results every year, the bottled water industry does not disclose the results of any contaminant testing that it conducts. Instead, the industry hides behind the claim that bottled water is held to the same safety standards as tap water. But with promotional campaigns saturated with images of mountain springs, and prices 1,900 times the price of tap water, consumers are clearly led to believe that they are buying a product that has been purified to a level beyond the water that comes out of the garden hose.
To the contrary, our tests strongly indicate that the purity of bottled water cannot be trusted. Given the industry’s refusal to make available data to support their claims of superiority, consumer confidence in the purity of bottled water is simply not justified.
Laboratory tests conducted for EWG at one of the country’s leading water quality laboratories found that 10 popular brands of bottled water, purchased from grocery stores and other retailers in 9 states and the District of Columbia, contained 38 chemical pollutants altogether, with an average of 8 contaminants in each brand. More than one-third of the chemicals found are not regulated in bottled water. In the Sam’s Choice and Acadia brands levels of some chemicals exceeded legal limits in California as well as industry-sponsored voluntary safety standards. Four brands were also contaminated with bacteria.
Walmart and Giant Brands No Different than Tap Water
Two of 10 brands tested, Walmart’s and Giant’s store brands, bore the chemical signature of standard municipal water treatment — a cocktail of chlorine disinfection byproducts, and for Giant water, even fluoride. In other words, this bottled water was chemically indistinguishable from tap water. The only striking difference: the price tag….
CRAIG COMMENT:
Please read the full article linked at the top of this story. I drink so much of the bargain basement Giant brand that I’m sick reading about how much junk it has in it.
I really shouldn’t be surprised, though, because I have always wondered how and why Giant could sell nearly a gallon of bottled Acadia brand water for $1.
Why, it’s because they want feces, detergent, and poison to be affordable for EV-eryone!
Spread it around. Drink up. Who is thirsty?
This stuff, that I have downed just gallons and gallons of, isn’t on sale for $1…it is pre-printed on all of the labels that you can get 10 bottles for $10 - $1 each.
This is gross and since I read this article I have been boiling my water even though I have about 10 fresh bottles sitting in the back of my truck.
All of this time I might as well have been drinking out of the hose or the terlit.
Nature has it better than civilised humnanity in many ways, now including potable water without fertilizer in it.
I would love to have been a fly on the wall in the meeting when it was decided to allow this junk to be in our bottled water.
Why not just start a whole new marketing plan including the new slogan “Now With Poop!”?
Seriously, people should be aware of this in a more conscious way.
Label this crap correctly:
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