What is dead pool, and what does that mean for the Hoover Dam?

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2022
  • What is dead pool, and what does that mean for the Hoover Dam?

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @andre-le-bone-aparte
    @andre-le-bone-aparte 2 года назад +251

    Dont Worry Guys.... When they say the Lake won't dry up "Not in our Life Times" - That means like next year.

    • @sexygeek8996
      @sexygeek8996 2 года назад +22

      Maybe they're saying they expect us all to die this year.

    • @garapito24
      @garapito24 2 года назад +7

      Exactly what I was thinking!

    • @irocker350
      @irocker350 2 года назад +18

      Short sighted politicians have been ignoring the warnings since the late 80's early 90's and call for more and denser development of an area that was never meant to support such a large population.

    • @liam3284
      @liam3284 2 года назад +7

      The problem with allocating water that doesn't exist.

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 2 года назад +6

      @@irocker350 They've been ignoring the warnings since the 1880's.

  • @joefran619
    @joefran619 2 года назад +24

    Dead Pool is when bodies in barrels appear

  • @wdrobby
    @wdrobby 2 года назад +174

    Who would have thought colonizing the desert wouldn't have been sustainable?

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf 2 года назад +7

      Israel made it work.

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 2 года назад +43

      @@AMPProf Israel uses 74 gallons per person per day Utah 244. Israel treats water as the precious resource it is. The southwest acts like there is an endless supply.

    • @theashpilez
      @theashpilez 2 года назад +3

      Starry eyed dreamers in the land of plenty. Before the invasion.

    • @wdrobby
      @wdrobby 2 года назад +1

      @@AMPProf If they had more Americans it wouldn't.

    • @TheGor54
      @TheGor54 2 года назад +14

      Israel has huge desalination plants.

  • @444truthteller
    @444truthteller 2 года назад +65

    Spend 2 billion on a stadium but have water issues….yeah ok. Get it together

    • @steveeddy6876
      @steveeddy6876 2 года назад +4

      Oh come on Pro Football is more important than having water in the middle of the Desert 😉

    • @1gwapo7
      @1gwapo7 2 года назад +2

      And they want to build another one for the NBA beyond ridiculous

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 2 года назад +3

      Vegas doesn't have water issues.

    • @444truthteller
      @444truthteller 2 года назад

      @@starmc26 do you watch the news? Have you seen lake Meade ?

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 2 года назад

      @@444truthteller Vegas doesn't get water from Lake Mead.

  • @pauljmaldonado
    @pauljmaldonado 2 года назад +5

    We can continue to deliver water until Lake Mead is a mud puddle……..and then what?

  • @steven4315
    @steven4315 2 года назад +64

    The book Deadpool written by geologist James Powell talks about the history of western water and what the future holds. He talks about the various options. He also talks about salt and silt. It was written in 2010 and so far his predictions have been spot on.

    • @Rebecca-1111
      @Rebecca-1111 2 года назад

      Lake Powell is dropping water levels as well I have heard. Thanks for the comment 👍

    • @mickeywicked478
      @mickeywicked478 2 года назад

      The dam water is amniotic fluid. Look up “Pregnant Goat Woman of the West Coast”. Folks have no idea how far they’ve been led astray in this “life”...

    • @isartoraplatz
      @isartoraplatz 2 года назад +1

      If ocean water is take
      Eventually it will be
      Like the Dead Sea...
      It’s then end of the
      World as you know it..
      Nowhere to run nowhere to hide..

    • @mickeywicked478
      @mickeywicked478 2 года назад

      @@isartoraplatz learn to swim

    • @maebliss344
      @maebliss344 2 года назад

      I haven’t read it but sounds interesting. I used to do watershed delineation and worked in the waters department in environmental testing lab…in 2006 or so I predicted the next Great War would be over water.

  • @ackulakan
    @ackulakan 2 года назад +5

    Building cities in a desert was probably the first mistake.

  • @timw5108
    @timw5108 2 года назад +67

    My state, (California) bears the most responsibility for killing the Colorado.
    23 million people south of the Santa Barbara County line on the edge of two great deserts that stretch all the way to Texas.
    But, among other things, lawns and golf courses still going full speed.

    • @logandodson1484
      @logandodson1484 2 года назад +11

      Ugh, don’t get me started on golf courses in the desert. There is a reason the sport was invented in Scotland and not SW U.S.

    • @zoghackendorft5541
      @zoghackendorft5541 2 года назад +5

      Not that I play, but golf courses are not the problem here, not compared to Big Ag growing shit like almonds and using up the groundwater for big $$.
      Remember, 'Privatize the Profits and Socialize the Loses'.

    • @butcho7492
      @butcho7492 2 года назад +7

      Not to mention all of the illegal aliens using water

    • @timw5108
      @timw5108 2 года назад +2

      @@butcho7492 Absolutely.

    • @markbrockman9859
      @markbrockman9859 2 года назад

      Sw area irrigated the desert with water that had to be piped in from natural sources. I’m glad they are finally suffering from their arrogance. Southern California refuses to build desalination plants with and endless resource “the Pacific Ocean” and instead want to divert the Mississippi River so they can continue their wasteful practices. Have fun with your lack of water, but continue to build golf courses for the rich and grow crops in the desert.

  • @LifeProducersofNewJerseyLLC
    @LifeProducersofNewJerseyLLC 2 года назад +40

    This was an issue when I lived out there in 1992. You figure that they would have fixed this problem by now. Really that problem is building in the west. Just stop the building. No water, no building.

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 2 года назад +4

      This was NOT an issue in 1992. The lake has NEVER BEEN this low since it was originally created.

    • @LifeProducersofNewJerseyLLC
      @LifeProducersofNewJerseyLLC 2 года назад +3

      It was always a news story on the local Vegas networks. There were some major scares over the years with various droughts and the resulting issues on the restrictions on building. But you are right, it has never been this bad.

    • @LifeProducersofNewJerseyLLC
      @LifeProducersofNewJerseyLLC 2 года назад +1

      Yes, in 1992 they were building like mad. I remember being an insurance salesperson by day and a security guard by night. I would drive around and have to find new streets to service existing customers and then sit in new construction developments as a guard at night. So I was always buying new maps of the area. Often I would go to an area that I haven't been to in 3 months and it would be all built up. It was so shocking. The issue of water in Lake Mead was always an issue as permits were needed to build in Vegas. The construction would stop because of the lack of water, or that the water level and drought caused Mead to drop. It was ALWAYS a news story out there. Because people would lose their jobs in construction. The industry would find some stupid reason that they could conserve water, the government would then issue more permits, and of course the water problem continued. Drought years: 2007-09, 1987-92, 1976-77.

    • @William-Bill-Munny
      @William-Bill-Munny 2 года назад +1

      So your saying democrats should put the millions of illegals somewhere else? This is how our torn to shreds social safety nets will be dealt with too - too little too late.

  • @randallruyle530
    @randallruyle530 2 года назад +52

    The second you realize this isn’t a political issue the second we start making progress. This is mismanagement, if this doesn’t explain our government in a nutshell nothing will, both sides are evil and need to no longer exist.

    • @jerameedwards1832
      @jerameedwards1832 2 года назад

      I’ve been wondering myself if the government would ever drain lake Meade for the hell of it to cause an issue in order to have another agenda to run on?

    • @mrrooster4876
      @mrrooster4876 2 года назад

      @@blakejohnson3864 It's mismanagement in that the CO river project involving MEAD and Powell wasn't thought about or planned out long term. This was never going to work long term. They should've been on top of this after forming Powell. If you're going to reroute and damn water (especially in a desert) you have to plan for perpetuity.

    • @epyle100
      @epyle100 2 года назад +3

      We need “problems” ..so public “reacts “ demanding “solutions” which gives power, money, jobs to the solution saveys…. go Brandon, ahh, Bartleby, ahh, Humanity

    • @isartoraplatz
      @isartoraplatz 2 года назад

      Agreed

    • @alanwilliams8490
      @alanwilliams8490 Год назад

      I Agree Obiden

  • @sentientflower7891
    @sentientflower7891 2 года назад +18

    Las Vegas the time to migrate away from a catastrophe is now not later. If you wait until dead pool you won't have the opportunity to migrate.

    • @cbrashsorensen
      @cbrashsorensen 2 года назад

      Totally agreed. We are leaving New Mexico in September and won't look back. In my town data shows we can have "adequate" water for 50,000. The City Council just got some $$$$$ from Pulte to build MORE HOMES. Add in fires all around and life here is dying faster than you can say - DEAD TREES.

    • @googleuser868
      @googleuser868 2 года назад +1

      Musical chairs.

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 2 года назад

      Buyers market and no buyers.

  • @GYM-Tom
    @GYM-Tom 2 года назад +7

    This video provides everyone in the SW United States with important information about the future of Lake Mead and water supply. Good video!

  • @indridcold8433
    @indridcold8433 Год назад +5

    Dead pool is my favourite hero. But you have to be dead in the head to build a city in a desert. For that matter, you have to be dead in the head to build a city in a river delta, a heavy earthquake zone, in a flood plain, below sea level, below a large dam, or near a volcano that is not extinct. But are there any cities built in places like this?

  • @Ro6entX
    @Ro6entX 2 года назад +83

    Shut down the golf courses including shutting off water until the crisis is over. LV makes plenty of money without it.

    • @tbugher62
      @tbugher62 2 года назад

      Wow another idiot uneducated remark.

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf 2 года назад +18

      There was a reason the natives never built a village in Las Vegas Area!

    • @wileybird69
      @wileybird69 2 года назад +12

      I agree!! How many golf courses are watered everyday with this water👍

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf 2 года назад +8

      We have solutions. We just have people saying no to them! it's either we do something-&-stay or nothing-&-Leave!!

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf 2 года назад +5

      @@wileybird69 unfortunately it's the casino resorts!

  • @c_w2266
    @c_w2266 2 года назад +28

    Did anyone else hear a single solution or plan to combat this issue? No? Me either.

    • @jokers7890
      @jokers7890 2 года назад

      lol yeah good point....i agree.....at best the MSM exposes problems but never contributes to solutions.....ever.

    • @truelies3690
      @truelies3690 2 года назад +12

      No, they won't say overpopulation in the las Vegas Nevada valley. No, can't do that. Too many people, not enough water. Ripping out all lawns, trees, plants, swimming pools, jacuzzis, water falls, fountains, whatever won't solve the problem. It might delay doomsday dead pool in 2025. But problem still there. Keep building homes, apartments, etc... To encourage more people moving there is a big mistake. Water running out faster as more people moving there. Good luck with water. No water means no life in the hot desert.

    • @clchawaii09
      @clchawaii09 2 года назад +3

      I didn’t hear anything specific

    • @lotsofthisandthat9791
      @lotsofthisandthat9791 2 года назад

      Pres Joe Biden Ned wrote order make Michigan pipe water from there Lake Michigan they hording water make they pumping pipe to Meade thanks you

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 2 года назад +3

      @@lotsofthisandthat9791 no.

  • @amateurhour6426
    @amateurhour6426 2 года назад +92

    For starters Hoover Dam does not feed water into lake Mead like she said in the beginning of the video… And lastly even if you waved Nevada off the map, the river would actually be there because of some 50 to 80,000,000 people who rely on Hoover dam for water and power are abusing the precious resource. In this case the SW states all need to go on a water restriction. Y’all know who ya are thinking you need a lush green yard and 10-15 showers.

    • @77chevy4x4
      @77chevy4x4 2 года назад

      Boosie living standards.. sorry

    • @DavidTorres-sf2nt
      @DavidTorres-sf2nt 2 года назад +18

      Yeah having non native grasses that require frequent watering for that HOA look is such a waste.

    • @fishmonger6879
      @fishmonger6879 2 года назад +23

      Are you telling me that the Government should not have waited until 75% of the water was gone before enacting the first round of restrictions ?

    • @tedlahm5740
      @tedlahm5740 2 года назад +13

      Phoenix Arizona visit. Surprise to see green lawns on most houses. 2 million people?
      Expected to see desert motifs in front of houses. No such thing, all green.

    • @joshuaturnage5243
      @joshuaturnage5243 2 года назад +7

      It's an election year name me a politician that wants to be the guy who shut the water off and is known for that

  • @Chuck_Dick
    @Chuck_Dick 2 года назад +57

    I don't think building a deeper intake valve which still sucks water out of the lake to provide for people downstream and for the city of Las Vegas is doing any kind of conserving whatsoever.

    • @SmedleyWarIsaRacket
      @SmedleyWarIsaRacket 2 года назад +6

      There is plenty of water, the issue is Government managing the water or anything else for that matter.

    • @sexygeek8996
      @sexygeek8996 2 года назад +2

      When the water level is so low that only our intake works, we should just take our allocation and let California worry about how they will get theirs.

    • @DreamDg187
      @DreamDg187 2 года назад +6

      If you don't think the city of Las Vegas is doing water conservation obviously you don't live here. 🙄

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 2 года назад +1

      @@SmedleyWarIsaRacket Let's sell the Colorado river to Blackrock. They will manage it for a profit and pay a royalty to the US government.

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 2 года назад +1

      @@sexygeek8996 Supreme Court says California has senior water rights, They had better lawyers.

  • @J0shua029
    @J0shua029 2 года назад +34

    The top residential water user of 2020 was Spanish Gate Holdings, which used more than 12 million gallons of water. Spanish Gate Holdings is the official owner of a compound built by Prince Jefri Bolkiah, brother of the sultan of Brunei.

    • @mrtopcat2
      @mrtopcat2 2 года назад +8

      They keep insisting it is all because of the drought. It has nothing to do with overpopulation of Las Vegas and the surrounding areas. Perfect example of how failing policies and corresponding cover up and misinterpretation can’t produce desired results. They were always about selling out, but now they ended up having oversold.

    • @J0shua029
      @J0shua029 2 года назад +11

      @@mrtopcat2 I know right! Then to point the finger at the tiniest water usage while ignoring people like these and big corporations. Oh wait that’s right, they have money…
      Hit the nail right on it’s head, you did.

    • @mrtopcat2
      @mrtopcat2 2 года назад +14

      @@J0shua029 OK, so let me nail it even more then; all these calls for conservation of water by residents is nothing more than calling residents to help 'cocking their books', so that they can pass environmental reviews for MORE housing to built. So essentially they are asking the publics help to temporarily reduce water consumption, that way it looks like increased population and corresponding housing development was sustainable. Then they get their permits, build more and make everything even less sustainable than before. Same thing is currently going on in California.

    • @herbertbrown119
      @herbertbrown119 2 года назад

      @@mrtopcat2 With three million new illegal immigrants, and counting , they all have to live somewhere , they insist on drinking water , and they don’t like cold wearher

    • @J0shua029
      @J0shua029 2 года назад +3

      @@mrtopcat2 I’ve never even thought of that.

  • @MichaelClark-uw7ex
    @MichaelClark-uw7ex 2 года назад +2

    They were talking about this 50 years ago and they did nothing in all that time but use even more water.
    Their shortsightedness should not be made a burden for everyone else.

  • @stephanievosburgh2348
    @stephanievosburgh2348 2 года назад +37

    Las Vegas has the best water management in the west. I can assure you watering golf courses and running fountains with grey water is not the issue. The issue is growth in all 7 states that share the Colorado River. Read a book people.

    • @Odin33356
      @Odin33356 2 года назад

      The Colorado River dams are controlled by agricultural needs so we dump the fresh water in the dirt and drink the stored bleached fluoride program water.

    • @clchawaii09
      @clchawaii09 2 года назад +6

      Golf courses need to use recycled water if they want to remain in Vegas. It’s a desert they need to except that.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 2 года назад +3

      It's not only the growth in population in the seven states, but also the drought of the last 22 years which has accelerated the decline in the water level. Also 70% of water in Arizona alone is for agriculture. Water intensive crops like alfalfa and cotton take a large proportion of that water. How much I don't know.

    • @Odin33356
      @Odin33356 2 года назад

      @@michaeldeierhoi4096 the cia only allows zombies breed or raise children in a way Jesus, Nikola Tesla and Bruce Lee were not

    • @docwatson1134
      @docwatson1134 2 года назад +2

      I agree, increasing demand for more water, while shifts in rainfall patterns provides less to fill the reservoirs.

  • @jaredbrown5634
    @jaredbrown5634 2 года назад +7

    The Hover Dam dose not supply water to lake Mead. It dams the Colorado river.

  • @briangc1972
    @briangc1972 2 года назад +11

    The water level dropping about 5 feet per week right now. Other RUclips Videos show the drop since last week and the week before.
    We will reach dead pool before the end of this summer.

    • @gdstef1
      @gdstef1 2 года назад +7

      that is exactly what I have observed from local youtubers filming the decline. The canyons are a funnel not a box...it's getting exponentially worse the lower it gets.

    • @100pyatt
      @100pyatt 2 года назад +1

      Best case scenario is 24-30 months before the 3rd inlet cannot pump water. Shortest case is about 14 months. As it drops the vertical head loss is speeding up. Next month it will be about 6' per week of loss, in 3 months it'll be over 7' a week lost. By November it may be closer to 8' a week.

    • @briangc1972
      @briangc1972 2 года назад +1

      @@100pyatt You are forgetting that electrical production is already down 40%. Every week, the head pressure is less and the electrical production is less than optimum. This is far more serious than anyone is willing to honestly discuss.

  • @John_Rogers
    @John_Rogers 2 года назад +10

    Forget oil & gas pipelines. Fresh water pipelines will be the next big thing.

    • @That.Lady.withtheYarn
      @That.Lady.withtheYarn 2 года назад +4

      At least if they burst, the land and water won't be contaminated for years after

    • @leashau7817
      @leashau7817 2 года назад +1

      Well oil,gas,mining ect made mississippi and great lake water NOT SAFE TO DRINK! Fresh is somewhat different .....

    • @drjekelmrhyde
      @drjekelmrhyde 2 года назад

      From where? Don't come looking east, so you can fark up our environments with your gluttony.

  • @taj1460
    @taj1460 2 года назад +8

    Got to keep the pools full and the grass green i Cali!

  • @markgreen2170
    @markgreen2170 2 года назад +8

    maybe, it's time to move where there is more water.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 2 года назад

      Sure millions of people will just move out of the southwest but to where? The east coast to face hurricanes? The Great Lakes states had temperatures near 0 last winter and several feet of snowfall?? People will only move when they see water availability reaches a crisis point and we aren't there. Hell, a lot of people are still moving TO Phoenix and southern Arizona!! It's one of the fastest growing regions in the country.

    • @jimparsons9454
      @jimparsons9454 2 года назад +1

      That would be the smart move.

    • @drjekelmrhyde
      @drjekelmrhyde 2 года назад

      @@michaeldeierhoi4096 To the Midwest rust belt. People can adapt to our winters pretty quickly. People from hotter and drier parts of this planet have no problem getting use to Midwest winters.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 2 года назад

      @@drjekelmrhyde Some perhaps most people are willing to adapt to a cold climate. But I lived in Ohio and now New Mexico and I hear from a lot of people out west that hate the cold.

    • @poopedonyourchest799
      @poopedonyourchest799 Год назад

      @@michaeldeierhoi4096 mexico

  • @Zayskibop
    @Zayskibop 2 года назад +2

    You realize they posed no solution other than “the pump is lower so we can tap the very bottom of the lake now”

  • @eman7892
    @eman7892 2 года назад +66

    What they are not telling you is that the current water level is only about 15 inches above teir2 at which point, 12 turbines will have to shut down. Bye-bye power.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 2 года назад +16

      I can't imagine where you get the 15 inches from, but Tier 2 was passed at 1050' and the lake is now at 1047'. In the infinite wisdom of the authorities who determine when water restrictions go in effect the Tier 2 restrictions will not go into effect until Jan 1. Or so I heard on another channel. By next January 1, the water level could drop close to or even below 1025' which is Tier 3.

    • @eman7892
      @eman7892 2 года назад +6

      @@michaeldeierhoi4096 thank you. You're correct. Guess I need to do better research. 😁

    • @Clearanceman2
      @Clearanceman2 2 года назад +7

      950 the rest go offline

    • @MrTlee7
      @MrTlee7 2 года назад +1

      The water could be syphoned into the intake tubes. This would work as long as the outlet of the hose is lower than the water level.

    • @KatiTheButcher
      @KatiTheButcher 2 года назад +4

      @@michaeldeierhoi4096 why not enforce restrictions now before it gets that bad? It is mind blowing.

  • @keyboarddancers7751
    @keyboarddancers7751 Год назад +3

    So the solution to the falling reservoir level is to build more extraction pipes lower down to continue extracting water from the reservoir whose level is falling. Sounds like a plan!
    The article didn't mention any of the colossally water dependent agricultural developments.

  • @Piss-Poor-Infantry
    @Piss-Poor-Infantry 2 года назад +5

    You couldn't pay me to live in a desert... Get out while you can!!

  • @jimvick8397
    @jimvick8397 2 года назад +4

    It's like something from the Bible, where nobody prayed for rain so there wasn't any...

  • @johnnysin702
    @johnnysin702 2 года назад +9

    Tax the rich and drain Lake Las Vegas

  • @richardgalli7262
    @richardgalli7262 2 года назад +9

    Back when I visited the Dam the projected life span was about 1000 years which was determined by the sediment deposited. Now or tomorrow, nothing lasts forever

    • @rcreccomendationsforpeople3906
      @rcreccomendationsforpeople3906 2 года назад

      thats for the concrete structure, the water will go very soon. but hey atleast the dam its self will last atleast 1000 years, if not more.

  • @Crimepaysaskapolitician
    @Crimepaysaskapolitician 2 года назад +23

    People in Las Vegas and the local government should had put water conservation measures in place decades ago.

    • @johnchedsey1306
      @johnchedsey1306 2 года назад

      They have been putting measure in place for years: "Since 2008, the City has reduced its water consumption from 1.47 billion gallons to 1.18
      billion gallons in 2016". It is worth pointing that they dropped that much usage despite the population of the city growing.

    • @andre-le-bone-aparte
      @andre-le-bone-aparte 2 года назад +6

      Its ok guys, We have a stadium now. Who needs water?

    • @WillbeSingin
      @WillbeSingin 2 года назад

      Then they got paid to build resorts instead.

    • @brianlanders5306
      @brianlanders5306 2 года назад

      Whatever happened to self governing??? They live in a desert for goodness sakes, the only thing water should be used for is drinking, manicured lawns and swimming pools should've never been allowed in the desert.

  • @JohnDoe-fx9eb
    @JohnDoe-fx9eb 2 года назад +1

    I wish they'd hurry up and make a Deadpool and Wolverine movie already

  • @alainarchambault2331
    @alainarchambault2331 2 года назад +1

    "Could be within our lifetime..."
    Don't know about her, but I'm expecting this time next year if the pattern holds.

  • @lovera3878
    @lovera3878 2 года назад +3

    I believe they are going to start widespread use of Salt water through desalinization plants for California, the more populous state. You cant hope for rain to replenish Lake Mead and Lake Powell. Thinks are pretty critical.

  • @briangc1972
    @briangc1972 2 года назад +32

    The problem is the people "in charge" of the dam and water flow are not held accountable. They just blame the weather......

    • @scotcoon1186
      @scotcoon1186 2 года назад +1

      That's a bureaucracy based thousands of miles away from, and with no accountability to, the people its decisions most affect, for ya.

    • @stevew5212
      @stevew5212 2 года назад +8

      What part of less rain and snow dont you understand?

    • @brainblast9363
      @brainblast9363 2 года назад +3

      @@stevew5212 or the fact that theres a huge water theft problem 🤔

    • @stevew5212
      @stevew5212 2 года назад +2

      @@brainblast9363 do you have FACTS of thief or are you just reciting Qanon stuff?

    • @leashau7817
      @leashau7817 2 года назад

      @@stevew5212 well YES! Utah has by the treaty 1/5 of the quota of the water. They never even used close to this number and now they want to use it! thats why water is held back in lake powell now !!!! Its Utahs water ! You stole water from your own people for decades now !

  • @frankblangeard8865
    @frankblangeard8865 2 года назад +1

    She says 'you could completely wipe Nevada off the map' 1:38. Food for thought.

  • @CBeard849
    @CBeard849 2 года назад +12

    I'd be willing to bet that if you looked at building permits for new homes that will rely on Lake Mead water......there are no serious requirements for water conservation.

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 2 года назад +3

      This issue is not on the backs of the residential sector, but is on the agricultural industry.

    • @philnbspook6446
      @philnbspook6446 2 года назад

      Thats ok then.

  • @vincentortega4284
    @vincentortega4284 2 года назад +9

    Part of the problem is we doi have very little rain fall, or snow. The main problem is the foolish leaders keep building in the desert for more people.. Here in southern CA. we are just starting to have water restrictions. Many of our so called leaders ned to wake up. Soon we will have no water.

    • @seth7745
      @seth7745 2 года назад +3

      The should have a tiered billing structure that make it super expensive above a certain amount, then use that money to fund desalination projects.

  • @gregoryschmidt1233
    @gregoryschmidt1233 Год назад +3

    I'm being told not to take a shower or flush my toilet, while big ag grows almonds, corn and alfalfa in the desert.

  • @meatpopsicle1567
    @meatpopsicle1567 2 года назад +9

    Couldn't happen to a nicer city.

  • @truthhurtsdontit
    @truthhurtsdontit 2 года назад +8

    That lady is wrong. The river didn’t have any problems until humans decided to dam it. Now it barely makes it to the Gulf of California.

    • @Sahadi420
      @Sahadi420 2 года назад

      and people back then said "this will never work".

  • @Kaijuus
    @Kaijuus 2 года назад +14

    Building in the desert. Bright idea. No sympathy here. Thank god for the great lakes around my area. No dead pool here.

    • @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975
      @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975 2 года назад +1

      Well yeah, that’s because you Midwest people are so much smarter than everyone else.

    • @herbertbrown119
      @herbertbrown119 2 года назад

      Yeah. Lots of water but can you drink it ?

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 Год назад

      @@krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975 I live where there is water how about you?

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 Год назад

      @@herbertbrown119 It's fresh water. I think I'd rather drink it untreated than the Colorado untreated.

    • @herbertbrown119
      @herbertbrown119 Год назад

      @@steven4315 The Colorado is runoff from mountains. The Great Lakes are runoff from cities

  • @cherylsmith4826
    @cherylsmith4826 2 года назад +41

    A little late now! This wasn't a surprise- folks been talking about this exact issue for years but did they listen? Hell No- life continued as normal & here we are- certainly folks will be complaining about not being able to water the freaking lawn- no sympathy here

    • @brianlanders5306
      @brianlanders5306 2 года назад +3

      Exactly, waste not, want not. I flew over Las Vegas when I was in the military, when you look down, you see thousands of houses with swimming pools glistening in the sun and just as green as Iowa lawns, until you get away from the city, it's a dry desolate desert. Their waste of water is what should've been addressed, not yesterday, but decades ago, the only thing left for Las Vegas is that it's going to be a ghost town when the water runs out.

    • @SmedleyWarIsaRacket
      @SmedleyWarIsaRacket 2 года назад

      Apparently the government could not prevent this, although they did build the dams, and resevoirs that are now drying up.....hmmm?
      We cannot say that the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation that built the dams and lakes did not Reclaim the land ...right?!
      Americans must realize the US Government is the genisis of all of america's ills.
      The US & State Governments have dried up the west.
      One must take a real close look to see where the water from the Colorado and the Sierra Nevada Mountains has gone.
      This message that the lake levels are dropping has been spoken for a couple of decades, so what has government done?
      Plan for the lake levels to drop? Apparently so! according to the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

    • @spoonypoon7998
      @spoonypoon7998 2 года назад +2

      Yes more and more casinos using tons of water! Everyone with their huge pools! People taking half hour showers with their rain faucets! The same people yelling about it are the same who are doing all that!

    • @andrewa5077
      @andrewa5077 2 года назад

      @@spoonypoon7998 to be fair, the entire state of Nevada only uses 4% of the water from the Colorado river. The majority of the water, around 58% goes to California, and 70% of Californias water goes to agriculture. For example: 18% of California’s water goes directly to grow alfalfa plants that get exported to Saudi Arabia to feed show horses. Eliminate that wasteful alfalfa growing and guess what: there will be no more water issues in the southwest.
      Also, I think creating a federal law, similar to Reagan’s “right to work” laws, create a right to live law. Something that would give homeowners to right to refuse to join the HOA, or leave their HOA. Then people can switch to hardscaping like they do in Phoenix, get some cactuses.

    • @spoonypoon7998
      @spoonypoon7998 2 года назад

      @@andrewa5077 you have no clue

  • @thehotBOXYoutube
    @thehotBOXYoutube 2 года назад +2

    Getting real hard to deny

  • @erick1076
    @erick1076 2 года назад +14

    Might be time to find a way to build distilation stations along the cali coast

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 2 года назад +6

      Desalination plants require huge amounts of energy, which California is also running out of. The only solutions are to build nuclear power plants and/or reduce consumption.

    • @edwardhanson3664
      @edwardhanson3664 2 года назад +2

      @@slappy8941 And they produce huge quantities of waste salt, which can't go back in the ocean.

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 2 года назад +2

      You making booze??.. it's called a "DESALINATION" facility.

    • @leashau7817
      @leashau7817 2 года назад

      @@starmc26 y and the toxins of the water enrich in the salt so you can not use it for anything --- or put even more power into it --- would it be so easy , there would be no waterproblems in fe India ............. they have toxic rain, toxic water, not enough electricity and no one has a clue how to fix any of those ........... and least they can work cheap for us -.-

  • @casienwhey
    @casienwhey 2 года назад +10

    She is right about conservation. You can't complain about a drought on one hand and have golf courses, outdoor pools, water parks on the other.

  • @merovingian688
    @merovingian688 2 года назад +5

    Just blast more rocks down into the lake to raise the water level. Problem solved. It’s hard being a super hero.

    • @RedShipsofSpainAgain
      @RedShipsofSpainAgain 2 года назад +1

      God this is such an ignorant comment.
      You do realize adding rocks to the lake does not solve the root cause of the low water level, which is the water shortage that's causing the actual drop in water level.
      Adding rocks to thr lake will not solve the real problem, which is inadequate water supply in the lake.

    • @KN-jr6tx
      @KN-jr6tx 2 года назад +3

      @@RedShipsofSpainAgain I think you missed the sarcasm. If it's a water supply problem, maybe blast water down into the lake? ;)

    • @tedlahm5740
      @tedlahm5740 2 года назад

      We already do that with toilet tanks.

  • @jeffg.8964
    @jeffg.8964 Год назад

    When I visited back in the 70s the water level at the highest, I believe. Shocking to see it so low, far worse than when I was out there in the late 90s.

  • @jesusisreal3209
    @jesusisreal3209 2 года назад +1

    People who water the grass/yard may be insane

  • @williamfowler616
    @williamfowler616 2 года назад +9

    maybe they need to go into the hills where the run off occurs and repair the land so any rain water will be absorbed into the ground, many desert countries are using techniques to restore desert land to useful lands again by preventing as much runoff as possible, the water table will rise and springs and rivers will return

    • @playhooky
      @playhooky 2 года назад

      I saw a youtube video of a guy in west Texas who did exactly that on his land!

    • @chucknoob7041
      @chucknoob7041 2 года назад +2

      The Mojave is unbelievably dry. I grew up there and it has slowly been getting dryer over the years. Even the desert plants aren’t surviving. I went back last year after being away for years and was taken back at how dry it was. It was a bit depressing to be honest.

    • @scotcoon1186
      @scotcoon1186 2 года назад

      That goes against DC's one-size-fits-all land management guidelines.
      But it can be done.
      Some ranchers were working with their local bureau of land management office to get vegetation growing in the desert, but the BLM office was told to "get these people under control" though they were, more likely because they were, successful.

    • @chucknoob7041
      @chucknoob7041 2 года назад +1

      @@scotcoon1186
      Nothing is going to grow in the desert surrounding Las Vegas and Lake Mead without irrigation. There’s no rain to absorb.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 2 года назад

      you have zero knowledge where the water comes from--IT IS NOT RAIN WATER!!! it starts in wyoming,utah as snow--rain is near zero----the colorado river used to go straight to the ocean--it a very snowy year the melt destroyed everything with runoff -the dams help control that--there is about 6 dams on the river--the people making comments on here are dumb as can be

  • @wheresthebeefwherestheprob9951
    @wheresthebeefwherestheprob9951 2 года назад +12

    She said "you can get rid of all the ppl and still have the problem, the ppl aren't the problem"! Bs and I think we all know we've pulled to much water out for bs golf clubs, resorts, lawns etc.

    • @alainarchambault2331
      @alainarchambault2331 2 года назад

      May be the contributing factors but the real culprit is agriculture.

    • @landonfogle5903
      @landonfogle5903 2 года назад

      @@alainarchambault2331 well you have to eat don't you? It's all the people in the desert trying to water their yard and golf courses

    • @alainarchambault2331
      @alainarchambault2331 2 года назад +1

      @@landonfogle5903 Oh agriculture claims an average of 70% of the water used by humans, but not only that... this...
      "Draining Arizona: Mining For Water In The Desert Leaves Residents' Wells Dry"
      RUclips video shows you the mindset of unregulated industrial farming. Not only raising crops in the desert but water-intensive crops..... to feed cows.
      Now, figure out that once the water is gone and all that agriculture dries up. You ain't seen inflation yet, and empty store shelves?
      Run a search for images regarding "land subsidence." In these images, you can argue that it has gone on for decades, but on the other hand, these aquifers will never refill again. Once they're depleted, you're dead.
      You may want to run a search on the "most water-intensive crops." Question: "Why in the desert if not in green states."

    • @poopedonyourchest799
      @poopedonyourchest799 Год назад

      If all the people were gone that lake would be full . It’s common sense

  • @Helloreality101
    @Helloreality101 2 года назад

    This was a much more optimistic report than any other I've seen where they are just saying "it even lower today! Get ready to run out!"

  • @RealCptHammonds
    @RealCptHammonds 2 года назад +2

    If you rely on that water to live, you better move east before it's too late.

  • @kenhurley4441
    @kenhurley4441 2 года назад +4

    @ $5 a gallon for gas,,,, it's pretty hard to relocate. Wait until it reaches $6 and then move.

    • @TheWestlandgirl
      @TheWestlandgirl 2 года назад +1

      We are at 5.30 and 5.70 in Michigan today.

  • @alooga555
    @alooga555 2 года назад +12

    I wish we could send some of the rain that we keep getting here in the Pacific Northwest. Argh, so tired of it...

    • @VesperAegis
      @VesperAegis 2 года назад

      Knock on wood! Lest we regret what we wish for =)

    • @steveeddy6876
      @steveeddy6876 2 года назад

      Yes I live in Olympia and I never get dry!!!!!!!

    • @drjekelmrhyde
      @drjekelmrhyde 2 года назад

      People in the South West will drink you guys dry and still keep adding more people/ag/water hungry companies there.

  • @ronniedurham7634
    @ronniedurham7634 2 года назад +1

    I love the Hoover dam and a construction about it back in the early 30s it’s awesome and amazing to see how those guys put that big structure together back in those early days but you folks You better be building a damn pipeline that’s the only thing that’s gonna save you guys find another place to move

  • @wetsaltypickle
    @wetsaltypickle 2 года назад

    I am siting here watching this feeling lucky to live in NW Oregon.

  • @cosmosrunner
    @cosmosrunner 2 года назад +4

    Start getting ice from asteroids, now!!

  • @uptoapoint7157
    @uptoapoint7157 2 года назад +4

    Interesting. What energy source will power the pumps? Presumably the generators on the dam. Electricity output is already down about a third at Hoover due to lower water levels and will decrease further if the drought continues.

  • @musk-eteer9898
    @musk-eteer9898 2 года назад +1

    spiderman was my superhero when i was young, DEADPOOL is my superhero now that i'm more or less mature

  • @jamebrooke894
    @jamebrooke894 Год назад +2

    You'd think those states that need vast amounts of water annually would have all gotten together many years ago and built desalination plants. But no short sighted states and Governors.

  • @banshee8989
    @banshee8989 2 года назад +6

    These people are in absolute denial. As the lake recedes its going to start going faster the lower it gets. If things stay the way they are I give lake Mead less than 10 years.

    • @amateurhour6426
      @amateurhour6426 2 года назад +1

      It’s at an average of 3-4 inches a day

    • @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975
      @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975 2 года назад +2

      I was actually thinking 5 years , but 10 is probably correct.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 2 года назад

      that is like saying when the built it in '33 it will never fill--stupid comment--we could easily have record snowpack for the next 10 years--they said Lake Tahoe would be near empty and would take years to fill up--it took one winter of heavy snow to fill--dumb people never know anything--don't join that club,it makes you look stupid

  • @unousuck4613
    @unousuck4613 2 года назад +17

    They keep saying we in water emergency that the water levels are terrible but yet there are golf course throughout Las Vegas that use millions of gallon for people to play a game how bad can it truly be

    • @MH-eu1dr
      @MH-eu1dr 2 года назад +2

      Well all the ones on the strip at the Wynn and the lake at the Bellagio and a few others are all on their own water grids and use a combo of waste water, well water and dew collection on the steam out takes on their power plants.

    • @lt4324
      @lt4324 2 года назад

      @@MH-eu1dr correct, not many know most hotels on the strip use well water.

    • @MH-eu1dr
      @MH-eu1dr 2 года назад

      @@lt4324 not just well water. Actually it’s kinda hard to see at night but if you look at the Wynn golf course from above for instance they got dew nets.

    • @ninjaclown2081
      @ninjaclown2081 2 года назад

      That's how stupid they are lol running out of water? Oh well golf course brings in tons of $$. Dips shits

  • @TeletubbiesRcute
    @TeletubbiesRcute Год назад

    Deadpool isn't what we need, but it's what we deserve

  • @johnd.5601
    @johnd.5601 2 года назад +2

    How about human cat boxes? It could work like those automatic cat boxes poop wipe and scoop. You can pee down a separate tube It won't be a perfect catch but accuracy would save you money on litter. It'll kinda be a game boys will probably be better than girls so that competition will drive sales and user uptake.

  • @nostalgic_pokemon_memories
    @nostalgic_pokemon_memories 2 года назад +3

    Stop building in the desert! None of that water should go to golf course or watering residential grass.

  • @dodgeguyz
    @dodgeguyz 2 года назад +10

    I don’t feel sorry for anyone out west! They knew they were going to have a big problem at least 10 years ago! Yet they didn’t do anything about it.

    • @amateurhour6426
      @amateurhour6426 2 года назад +1

      Well there are people ( like myself) who track their power and water consumption. I don’t care that I have LED lights, I still make sure if nothing needs to be on I turn it off! It’s the other millions of people who abuse the system thinking they need lush green yards and take 10-15 minute showers. That’s just the bottom of the totem poll.

    • @captspiff6922
      @captspiff6922 2 года назад

      Make that 30 years ago. Troubling then, very scary now.

    • @icshay21
      @icshay21 2 года назад

      Not being in the west will not prevent you from the issues this will cause nationwide

  • @robertsontirado4478
    @robertsontirado4478 2 года назад

    Commercials saying "we must sell a 1000 jacuzzi this weekend" I guess you better get one.

  • @Steve4TheWin
    @Steve4TheWin Год назад +1

    I have heard for years that dead pool was 1050 ft but was modified and is now 950 not 895.

  • @timkis64
    @timkis64 2 года назад +4

    they been watching the water levels recede for years.while at the same time they just keep on building new homes & business as if they have unlimited supply.poor planning equals poor results.

    • @welshgit
      @welshgit 2 года назад +1

      And in other areas, the opposite is happening - they keep building close to the sea in areas which may be underwater in 30 years! It's mad!

    • @Lucrativecris
      @Lucrativecris 2 года назад

      @@welshgit Yikes stupidity

  • @edmonhaddad3335
    @edmonhaddad3335 2 года назад +5

    Maybe restrict growth for awhile.. but they wont do that, to much money to be made.

  • @highbrass3749
    @highbrass3749 2 года назад +1

    So glad I left Southern California!

  • @andyaga6143
    @andyaga6143 2 года назад +1

    One humble suggestion is to have temporary halt on building new residential swimming pools here in the county. It will save millions and millions of gallons of precious water . Just saying if not already in the books.

  • @zachramsden9549
    @zachramsden9549 2 года назад +3

    "The hoover dam has two main functions, to stop flooding, and to store and supply water" Lol! Apparently she forgot it also has another function?? Little thing called hydro electricity??? You're only getting about 23% of your power in Vegas from the dam...

    • @maebliss344
      @maebliss344 2 года назад

      Right….and that also impacts the siltation.

    • @mekt0r
      @mekt0r Год назад

      Don't forget irrigation. All those farms growing crops with irrigation systems get their water from the dams. Even if the farms use wells...Their underground aquafers are still fed by those local rivers seeping water into the ground. As surface water dies up: so to does the underground aquafers.

  • @alaskayoung3413
    @alaskayoung3413 2 года назад +2

    You’re telling me that Nevada, the place of pools and golf courses isn’t effecting this issue? I call BS.

    • @josephineddddd
      @josephineddddd 2 года назад

      not really. no. most water goes to az an cal

  • @jnolette1030
    @jnolette1030 2 года назад +1

    I thought it was predicting celebrity deaths

  • @drp1036
    @drp1036 2 года назад +1

    Agriculture uses approximately 80% of the Colorado River’s water, using it to irrigate 15% of the nation’s farmland, and produce 90% of the winter vegetables. Wheat, corn, berries, and fresh produce are likely to be particularly strained by supply rationing to manage water-stress, as well as the crops, including alfalfa and hay, used by farmers to feed cattle. A recent study found that the largest consumer of river water in the Western U.S. is irrigation for cattle-feed crops.

    • @Sahadi420
      @Sahadi420 2 года назад

      so with that said: Why were cities in the desert allowed to grow 400%????
      This isn't "climate change"...this is "you morons are stupid."

  • @bigbuilder10
    @bigbuilder10 2 года назад +4

    The best solution is one of economics. The cost of water is still cheap enough for people to be wasteful and the government to have to mandate people reduce consumption. If you increase the price to buy the water, people will then be encouraged to reduce consumption on their own (by watering their lawn less or investing in more water efficient appliances). I doubt anyone would say yes to that as it directly raises the cost of living (making an essential part of life more expensive) and would lead to decreased economic activity. Farms might not grow as much (but should they even be farming in a desert to start with), factories might not produce as much, et c. or they pass the cost on and keep operating as normal.

  • @richsherman3673
    @richsherman3673 2 года назад +11

    Interesting how predictable our modern society is. This video could very well be perfect for the Leonardo DiCaprio denial movie. Society will only react when reality knocks on their front door.

    • @tylerpestell
      @tylerpestell 2 года назад

      It reminded me of that movie as well. I don't know why this isn't more in the news than it is. There needs to be some major construction projects in the works right now for a long term solution. Building an intake that is lower is just a band-aid project. Instead we have things like Johny Depp's court case getting more air time. It seriously feels like a societal collapse is eminent and people just have their heads in the sand.

  • @irishcherokee8884
    @irishcherokee8884 2 года назад +2

    2 days later and it’s now 1046. Could it reach dead pool in 151 days ?

  • @kiwifruit2240
    @kiwifruit2240 Год назад

    Do the sluice gates still function? I'm sure they will be able to allow water through the structure when dead pool is reached.

  • @richardlong8014
    @richardlong8014 2 года назад +3

    Nothing lasts forever. Plans are in place to provide for all contingencies. We don't intend to let go and give up.

    • @jdebell7068
      @jdebell7068 2 года назад +5

      Where is the imaginary water going to come from, not the great lakes

    • @AK4974U
      @AK4974U 2 года назад

      Green salt water dumbass desalination plants get to it idiot

    • @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975
      @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975 2 года назад

      Reverse the flow of the Missouri. Las Vegas people are more important than those states.

  • @williammielenz3752
    @williammielenz3752 2 года назад +7

    How will the dam react to being refilled?
    The release and reapplication of pressure will surely have unexpected results.

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 2 года назад +3

      No.

    • @wildatheart3182
      @wildatheart3182 2 года назад +3

      That’s a valid question. Kind of like a pool. If you leave it empty to long it will crack and/or have breaches.

    • @55tmilam
      @55tmilam 2 года назад +1

      I wonder about that too

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 2 года назад

      built into solid rock--not like your gut which expands causing major smelly farts

    • @williammielenz3752
      @williammielenz3752 2 года назад +1

      Dethray1000
      Is that the best you can do?

  • @sudilos1172
    @sudilos1172 2 года назад

    So this is why the Movies show Las Vegas as a Deserted town covered in sand dunes

  • @J0shua029
    @J0shua029 2 года назад

    The biggest commercial users include several golf clubs (Angel Park, Red Rock and Southern Highlands Golf Club), casinos (Venetian, Wynn, Caesars Palace and Mandalay Bay), Canyon Gate Country Club, Summerlin North Community Association, and others.

    • @rcreccomendationsforpeople3906
      @rcreccomendationsforpeople3906 2 года назад

      its mainly agricultural using up the water, which is more complicated because we cant just stop growing food.

    • @J0shua029
      @J0shua029 2 года назад

      @@rcreccomendationsforpeople3906 do you have any research to back up your claims? I would also say give them all the water they need, I’m pointing my fingers at the actual top commercial users, which are posted above. Thank you.

  • @HarryPotter-gw6ee
    @HarryPotter-gw6ee 2 года назад +8

    Nothing wrong about playing on a sandy golf course. Just line the putting area with pretty pebble rocks just like the city does along the interstate. What's wrong with that?

    • @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975
      @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975 2 года назад +1

      We play Rez-golf in northeast Montana, middle of the badlands. We just carry a piece of AstroTurf with us and hit from that. Still loads of fun.

    • @butcho7492
      @butcho7492 2 года назад +2

      Nevada usage is a total of about 5%-California
      is the biggest drag

  • @danhillman4523
    @danhillman4523 2 года назад +6

    This has been going on for 20 years. It's NOT due to a few year drought. I was married in Vegas in 2006 and it was down 80 feet even then. Too many people live there. Better to move now, because that place is going dry.

  • @thinkingoutloud6741
    @thinkingoutloud6741 Год назад

    I’d like to see dated index marks painted onto the inner face of the damn to mark water levels by year. Something that could show in pictures taken from places people can easily access.

  • @nickywoodard5174
    @nickywoodard5174 2 года назад +1

    Lake Mead and our and my Hoover Dam with water levels dropping dramatically is getting rough and worse

  • @markhaydon8681
    @markhaydon8681 2 года назад +3

    If water cost more that gas we would not have this problem......it definat

  • @hellsscoutact5379
    @hellsscoutact5379 2 года назад +8

    the problem is to much need and to much greed. 😕 JMHO

  • @WillbeSingin
    @WillbeSingin 2 года назад +1

    While bottled water sells at EDC for $30.

  • @Dunbarick
    @Dunbarick 2 года назад +1

    and yet, they continue to issue building permits all day, every day

  • @ryker102208
    @ryker102208 2 года назад +5

    You must terrace and plant trees and bushes to slow water flow. Dig level trenches to capture water and to let water slowly percolate down to the lake. You need a mass planting and trenching to fix your water problems.

    • @wannabuyamonkey5983
      @wannabuyamonkey5983 2 года назад +2

      There is practically no rain, snow melt from the Rockies. Add 3 million more people this year and watch the level drop and the lake dry up faster

  • @lawnman3638
    @lawnman3638 2 года назад +4

    Flying into Las Vegas for the first time I saw damn near a pool in every yard and was thinking how can that be with a water shortage.

    • @johnchedsey1306
      @johnchedsey1306 2 года назад +4

      Someone actually did the math on all those pools and how much water is lost to evaporation...it is a literal drop in the bucket. (Check out Answers With Joe channel for that video). Industry & agriculture is the thirstiest pair of water consumers in the region, but we seem to be conditioned to always blame and point fingers at every day people instead.

    • @lawnman3638
      @lawnman3638 2 года назад +1

      @@johnchedsey1306 Well it sure doesn't help that they have all those damn pools when the water is running out. Industry and ag is needed to support the local economies. Pools and fountains not so much.

    • @googleuser868
      @googleuser868 2 года назад +2

      Got to have an emergency hoard of water in the dessert.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 2 года назад

      @@googleuser868 that is what all those resvsoirs are for more on

    • @googleuser868
      @googleuser868 2 года назад

      @@dethray1000
      Built for your personal use. Might rethink that. MORON!

  • @weaponizedconfusion
    @weaponizedconfusion 2 года назад +1

    Lol we've designed this newest intake to continue making the problem exponentially worse even after everything has gone to poop

  • @LasVegas68
    @LasVegas68 2 года назад +2

    Meanwhile in Las Vegas
    Building more homes, hotels, Condos and a few more casinos for good measure. Smh!

    • @Lucrativecris
      @Lucrativecris 2 года назад

      Las Vegas only uses 4% of the water while California uses 51%

  • @speshul7525
    @speshul7525 2 года назад +3

    It is dropping faster, these people are incompetent