• @money_loo
    link
    -521 year ago

    Wait till you learn about the water cycle.

    • @SheeEttin
      link
      English
      331 year ago

      It takes hundreds of years for groundwater to replenish. We are experiencing problems right now.

      • @money_loo
        link
        -241 year ago

        Sure, I never said anything about that, only commenting against the hyperbole that there will be “no tomorrow” when places run out.

        There will still be tomorrows, people will just move elsewhere like they’ve done for thousands of years.

        • @CitizenKong
          link
          151 year ago

          Problem is, there will be less and less elsewheres where people can still live within a hundred years or so.

          • @money_loo
            link
            11 year ago

            Yes, I commented on that. They will go elsewhere, and they will have tomorrow. It’s weird y’all are downvoting this like it’s personal to you.

        • @LotrOrc
          link
          11 year ago

          Where you gonna move when people already live there and those areas are low too?

            • @money_loo
              link
              1
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              Fuckin thank you.

              These people are addicted to drama. Jfc. _

        • @Smoogs
          link
          -1
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Thousands of years ago didn’t have desalination nor electricity… there’s a reason why they moved to fresh water inland.and before you jump there: desalination requires a fuck load of electricity that impacts with other issues.

          Read a book.

          • @money_loo
            link
            11 year ago

            What does this have to do with tomorrow stopping permanently because places lose ground water, though?

      • @money_loo
        link
        01 year ago

        Would you point me in the direction of a book or research paper that describes how places losing ground water will cause all tomorrow to stop?

        You guys are being extremely broad while I’m only arguing against hyperbole.

      • @money_loo
        link
        01 year ago

        Sir?

        I see you posting and I’m still waiting for your proof or reasoning behind thinking there will be no tomorrow when some places lose ground water.

        You guys are all smug af with your downvotes, but got absolutely nothing for facts beyond your provocative hyperbole.

        Keep in mind I never said losing ground water wouldn’t suck and/or be catastrophic, only looking for some proof it will be “the end of tomorrow” as the upvoted dude with his provocative words stated so definitively.

        I keep getting told to read a book or that I know nothing of history or geology, yet all of human history proves me fucking right so far, so I’ma need literally any scrap of evidence from fucking anyone who has something better than a shitty opinion alongside some clicks of a down arrow.