rivers/streams/lakes/what-have-you. Often the water from treatment
plants is cleaner than the stuff already out in the open, which is
vulnerable to environmental pollution. Public drinking water is
usually treated to remove any contaminants -- but it isn't distilled,
which is what it would take to make it pure.
The point being, though, that whether you pee in the toilet, the
shower, or the utility sink, it all goes to the same place(s).
--- In [email protected], "areofilm" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> Fish food i am hoping.
>
> --- In [email protected], "Ellen" <ellengoodman6@>
> wrote:
> >
> > so where does it go from the sewage treatment plant?
> > --- In [email protected], "David Patch" <patch@>
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > I agree. Please cite an example from an industrialized nation
of a
> > > place where sink/shower water is filtered and reused for
drinking
> > > water. All the wastewater from my house goes to the same place -
-
> > the
> > > sewage treatment plant -- and in rural areas, I'd be surprised
to
> > > learn that it goes anywhere other than a septic tank (or an
illegal
> > > direct drain into the environment, which happens sometimes).
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