The Vanishing River: USA's Mega Drought | Foreign Correspondent

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ABC News In-depth

ABC News In-depth

Жыл бұрын

The once mighty Colorado River is in trouble. Stretching from the snowy peaks of the Rocky Mountains all the way down to the Sea of Cortez in Mexico, its’ waters are a lifeline to tens of millions of people. Subscribe: ab.co/3yqPOZ5
But the pressures of the decades-long megadrought in America’s Southwest and a warming planet mean the water levels in the river and its dams are dropping.
“I’m not going to say it’s too late, but we are in true crisis’, says renowned river scientist, Professor Jack Schmidt.
The pressures on the river are largely man-made.
The building of the Hoover Dam in the 1930s tamed the waters of this once wild river, harnessing its flows to make hydropower and feed a massive agricultural industry across the Southwest.
But the water was over allocated from the start. Now as dam levels drop to their lowest ever, the survival of farms and industries are threatened.
‘I feel every day of my life that my son will not be able to share in this magnificence …and the beauty of this profession’, says Jace Miller, an Arizona farmer of five generations.
He grows feed for livestock, but next year, his water allocation will be cut to zero.
US correspondent Barbara Miller travels along this spectacular river to meet the communities whose livelihoods depend on it.
Miller rafts down the Colorado rapids with the Native American tribe which depends on tourism for a dollar.
She visits the thriving desert city of Las Vegas, which has become a US leader in urban water conservation.
And there’s a silver lining. As waters in the dam reservoirs recede, natural wonders which were flooded for decades are emerging.
‘We’re seeing this flowing waterfall and this trickling creek. We’re seeing the vegetation start to come back’, says environmentalist Eric Balken.
The vanishing river is a wake-up call for all those who depend on it.
‘We just pretended the Colorado River is just a check account’, says Professor Schmidt. ‘There are gonna be limits…and we’re gonna have to deal with them.’
Read more here: ab.co/3QFuULD
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval - through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
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Пікірлер: 2 200
@kennyw871
@kennyw871 Жыл бұрын
Never underestimate the ability of the American people to deny the reality hiding in plain sight.
@carlinshowalter1806
@carlinshowalter1806 Жыл бұрын
Don't leave out the Soviets!
@x5775
@x5775 Жыл бұрын
Large agricultural systems and huge golf courses were NEVER meant to be placed in a DESERT!
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
You realize all of humanity came from Africa, right? Taming deserts with irrigation and agriculture so we could have food all year is one of the key parts of human achievement. Making use out of deserts gives us the chance to grow and inhabit the areas outside of deserts. Stop blaming agriculture. You are more correct in blaming the golf courses like you did, and you should blame suburbs too, and any other watering of untilled earth not being used to grow food.
@x5775
@x5775 Жыл бұрын
@@NiminaeOld You realize the number of humans was a mere fraction of 1% of what they are now.
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
@@x5775 Right, and we were able to grow because of agriculture
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
Maybe stupid Humans weren't supposed to Inhabit a beautiful Planet, either?
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
@@NiminaeOld Native Americans flourished on this continent for thousands of years before the Christian Capitalists invaded. Now, we nearly 10 billion Earthlings are all an endangered species. See any problems, here?
@kespo5358
@kespo5358 Жыл бұрын
How embarrassing that the states are fighting for golf courses and new housing developments when the tribes don't even have running water. I'd like to see people in those developments haul their water and boil it every day and see how long that lasts.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the Hopi and Zuni live in very traditional small communities on incredibly remote mesas of the Colorado Plateau where they zealously guard their way of life established 700 years ago. Ditto the vast Navajo Nation that migrated into the area much later that surrounds them who farm along canyon streams and about half live in traditional homes and villages accessed with difficulty over mostly unpaved roads. There are small towns with modern city services. If many tribal members choose not to live in towns, but in a location where they can't access either surface water, or drill a well for groundwater, they do so by their own free will. If you choose to live in a beautiful wilderness 20 or 30 miles from civilization completely off grid, and in tribal council vote to keep it off grid, you are NOT being denied running water by some heartless greedy oppressive adversary.
@kespo5358
@kespo5358 Жыл бұрын
@@focusfrost9856 Did you watch the video? Natives were excluded from water access in the original contract between the states to share water. The Natives were forced into reservations where there is still no infrastructure. So America could build towns and cities in their native grounds, Natives were told to go to the res or not get benefits, lose their children, get no land, and then denied essentials on the reservations such as water. Most Natives don't even have physical addresses on the reservations, which were set up by the government and prevents Natives from voting in elections. When people are worried about keeping their lawns and golf courses green while Natives have to haul drinking water to homes they were forced into, that is oppression.
@sean4638
@sean4638 Жыл бұрын
I wonder if that person is really living in a house with no water. He probably has his pocket lined by lobbied money
@LudiCrust.
@LudiCrust. Жыл бұрын
It’s not just the tribes a lot of rural houses have their taps shut off while all the farms use copious amounts of water. One huge problem is the recent grand of growing almond trees which take eye watering amounts of water to grow.
@earthstar2493
@earthstar2493 Жыл бұрын
The water runs 500' below the surface in much of western New Mexico. No matter who lives there they have water brought in.
@tamramoore8377
@tamramoore8377 Жыл бұрын
The desert was Never meant to be farmed or lived in such a unsustainable way. People wake up!
@RascalV666
@RascalV666 Жыл бұрын
exact! and they made las vegas in the desert what they put such a city in the desert in lasvegas for wasting a lot of water because people want to have green grass on the sand.
@kafilkavich707
@kafilkavich707 Жыл бұрын
But here comes these news stations for more fearmongering nonsense! MEGA DROUGHT!!! LOL!!!
@mltmlt8667
@mltmlt8667 Жыл бұрын
Who told you that
@daved6464
@daved6464 Жыл бұрын
This is the definition of insanity. You know you have a water problem but you still keep building new homes.
@PTurbo86
@PTurbo86 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. I live in Phoenix, and I'm tired of seeing the waste. People don't get it. However, the developer barons won't stop paying city and state officials off and let anything get in the way of their profit. It's sickening. I'm pretty sure these development companies are banking on the fact that most prospective residents don't know about this looming crisis. They sure as shit aren't telling those prospective residents there's any problem on the horizon. I love Phoenix, and I've been here almost 30 years. I'm saddened to be telling my wife we need to get out in the next year, or we may be forced to leave in 5 years with no equity, nothing to our names...
@PTurbo86
@PTurbo86 Жыл бұрын
@@julm7744 Well, that's what many keep saying. It's too big to fail, or for it to be possible to fail. The Titanic was, too. Our hubris is going to catch up to us in this region. Those technologies you mention are not up to the task, and any technological intervention needed to be started a while ago. Like 20 years ago. Desalination is the only real route out of this one, if you'd watched the video, Pat mentions this. We can't conserve our way out of this problem. Uh, yeah... It's not a liberal media problem, nor am I liberal... But way to politicize it. That's how our politicians keep getting away with robbing us blind and doing nothing. Left keeps blaming the right, and the right keeps blaming the left. Additionally, You can deny climate change all you wish; you and I won't be around to see the profound effects. Our children and grandchildren will. We'll just live to see the immediate smaller effects like these. Sorry dude, I'm not trying to be rude, but I'm only matching your tone in your response. Condescending, and really pointless. The issues are far more complex than you realize. Anyway.....
@Jeff-jg7jh
@Jeff-jg7jh Жыл бұрын
@@PTurbo86 Well, timing is everything. Hope you make that 200K, if that is your goal. I'm going to get some push on this.
@Finians_Mancave
@Finians_Mancave Жыл бұрын
Completely agree. This desert area can boast they have more heads in the sand than cactus! I would have expected to see plans at the federal and state levels for water replenishment already in high gear at least five years ago... yet so far, nothing major to speak of. Considering how modern government works, they'll probably start working in earnest on the project when the lights in Vegas start flickering out....
@PTurbo86
@PTurbo86 Жыл бұрын
@@Jeff-jg7jh don't even understand your comment. Sorry.
@graces5634
@graces5634 Жыл бұрын
Hard to believe a desert can't support 40 million people and CA agriculture anymore
@Visiorary
@Visiorary Жыл бұрын
That desert was an ocean once.
@ipissed
@ipissed Жыл бұрын
Did you count all of the illegal migrants? Better start over with 40,000 Juan Sanchez. That's okay though they are doing jobs that nobody else will do so that they can buy the food they make. Wait how does that work, you mean they are not robots that run on electricity? So illegal migrants have to eat food? Next, Juan Valdez. Juan Valdez please line up for a free hand out. Juan Valdez. NEXT!
@TheSilmarillian
@TheSilmarillian Жыл бұрын
Nice 1
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
The desert never did. And the droughts and mega droughts have occurred every few hundred years for at least a million years per the geologic and fossil record. That record was unknown to the early settlers. Notice that the Colorado volume being much lower and continually dropping is NOT because the populations are taking more water out, though they do use more of the water that goes to them. The volume of the reservoirs and river is lower because less water from the source watershed in the Rockies is coming in. Remember that there was the Medieval Warm Period and then the recent Little Ice Age (16th to the 19th centuries or 1300 to 1850). The tremendous 6 year heat wave over North America in the 1930's saw consistent high temperatures across the continent we have never re-experienced since, but surely will eventually, with or without climate change. When that happens, wild and domestic plants, wild and domestic animals, and people will either cope or perish. Nature at work is awesome.
@paleshelter5376
@paleshelter5376 Жыл бұрын
Glad i live in Canada 🇨🇦 and also..I love ❤️ that Night Ranger song 🎵 Don't tell me you love me $$
@mray8519
@mray8519 Жыл бұрын
Los Vegas leaders in their wisdom just restricted the size of NEW swimming pools. Phoenix leaders in their finest moment issued 21,000+ building permits in 2021.
@DanLee1969
@DanLee1969 Жыл бұрын
You did a better job covering this than most of the local news has. Good job.
@johnwilson9666
@johnwilson9666 Жыл бұрын
Local news don't want to say anything that'll lower property values
@fruitsyfarms5115
@fruitsyfarms5115 Жыл бұрын
Foreign correspondents always know more than the locals. Especially when a big corporation is trying to control a natural resource
@mattmccue3897
@mattmccue3897 Жыл бұрын
"It's not the American way to deal with limits." Sounds about right.
@isimelilatabua4199
@isimelilatabua4199 Жыл бұрын
Perfectly summed up lol
@kaoskronostyche9939
@kaoskronostyche9939 Жыл бұрын
Moreover, as many world leaders have noticed over the last 1.5 centuries: "The Americans will definitely do the right thing ... after they have tried everything else and F'd everything up beyond repair." No limits to the destruction which has and will continue to be done.
@GlennsFastReviews
@GlennsFastReviews Жыл бұрын
What do you two mean? When no limits are imposed on people, people tend to bleed things to death out of ignorance, laziness, greed, etc. Not limiting things is just plain stupid.
@AshrakAhmed
@AshrakAhmed Жыл бұрын
@@GlennsFastReviews cause "Land of the Free", free to exploit and plunder until nothing left then move to new location "rinse and repeat"!
@GlennsFastReviews
@GlennsFastReviews Жыл бұрын
@@AshrakAhmed Agreed, but that is a global phenomenon that been done by the rich for millennia. And almost nothing stops them.
@b.a.d.2086
@b.a.d.2086 Жыл бұрын
I'm 78 and have lived in the same Utah town all my life. I remember the wonders of a wild Colorado River. I remember dense, clean fog from the Great Salt Lake. I remember how even in dry years the orchards and large vegetable gardens thrived and water went out to the wildlife refuges and the lake. The air was clean. Then the deluge of people came and all the beauty, prosperity and quiet gave way to "Growth" and the clean desert became polluted and paved over. The Great Salt Lake is nearly gone and toxic everything has replaced it. It makes me very sad but I have faith in nature. Nothing is forever just as a cloud never dies.
@manflynil9751
@manflynil9751 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment. It is both beautiful and sad.
@mickwaters474
@mickwaters474 Жыл бұрын
You can't take out more than you put in. Humans will destroy themselves and nature will take over once again.
@deviouspirate1374
@deviouspirate1374 Жыл бұрын
Time for you to kick the bucket.
@tamramoore8377
@tamramoore8377 Жыл бұрын
@@deviouspirate1374 lol.
@johnmaina8515
@johnmaina8515 Жыл бұрын
Are you native American?
@michellereed5638
@michellereed5638 Жыл бұрын
I read recently that California and Arizona might be looking to "purchase power" from PGE here in OREGON. This will put pressure on OUR water systems, and our River systems. I think this is foolish. My sister and I do some heavy conservation in our own home to keep our electric bill down--and we use a lot of battery powered lighting, and modified our diets to more vegetarianism. Cattle, pigs, and such takes much more water and energy to raise than for crops. WE need to use less water while showering. I am allergic to chlorine, so I cannot even take a shower. I physically take sink baths. Every 6 weeks I use 1-2 gallons of water to wash my hair. Every three to four days I use about one quart of water to take a sink bath! I do not stink. Been doing this now for 2 years. WE no longer use a dishwasher, but use same utensils all day. WE each have ONE plate, one cup for all day. I have to get WELL WATER from my church for cleaning and washing. We live like the pioneers did in the old days. WE use much less water. I think all these conveniences use too much water, and we get too spoiled.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
PGE has been selling the hydroelectric power from Oregon generated by the massive Columbia Bonneville, Grand Coulee and Chief Joseph dams, built by the United States in the 1930's by an act of Congress and administered by the Bonneville Power Administration to California and the other Western states for 90 years on the open market and through contracts with individual private power companies. Oregon didn't build the dams or generators, and doesn't maintain them and doesn't own the power. The USA does. Oregon has however benefited from abundant, clean, renewable and cheap electricity for 90 years because of the blessings of the Columbia River and American engineering expertise.
@anastasiab9506
@anastasiab9506 Жыл бұрын
while you are using dirty utensils, rich people in California are watering their golf courses and growing water-hungry crops in the desert. You need to speak up instead of silently suffering
@l.w.4701
@l.w.4701 Жыл бұрын
Water is in reality more valuable than gold. Water is the source of life.
@carlo9524
@carlo9524 Жыл бұрын
I'll swap you as much water you can use. Pay me in Gold.
@l.w.4701
@l.w.4701 Жыл бұрын
@@carlo9524 water is priceless. If (I hope when) we as humans truly appreciate it’s value, we will all become water protectors. There will be no buying/selling of water.
@MOMGEN1
@MOMGEN1 Жыл бұрын
It's almost like the region isn't designed for this type of living.
@dougdownunder5622
@dougdownunder5622 Жыл бұрын
Never was
@stevenmartin6271
@stevenmartin6271 Жыл бұрын
Haha, the irony is great isn't it.
@ivywoodxrecords
@ivywoodxrecords Жыл бұрын
Truly amazing they managed to harness that great river. Would they have done it if they knew what was coming? I think they would not have cared to believe it.
@itsins363
@itsins363 Жыл бұрын
That's like saying Denver is on the wrong side of the Rockies. Take away its transbasin water diversions and it technically has a smaller water supply than Vegas 🤔
@TheChosen1uan
@TheChosen1uan Жыл бұрын
Almost
@capt.Justin
@capt.Justin Жыл бұрын
They build cities in the Desert. Stop complaining about water. It’s like building a city in the rainforest and complaining about the rain
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
Except if you built a city in the rainforest, it would no longer be rainforest as the only thing keeping a rainforest a rainforest is the layer of spongy undergrowth and decay that holds the water.
@carlinshowalter1806
@carlinshowalter1806 Жыл бұрын
If you want water move to the state of Washington.
@Tomallenny
@Tomallenny Жыл бұрын
@@edsloan8535 The comment was NOT a PHD dissertation topic. This aint science class. he made a sensible point. Dont you have "Karen-ing" to do somewhere else?
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
@@Tomallenny As you Kevin the shit out of my comment....
@TheCitizenrat
@TheCitizenrat Жыл бұрын
I got to the part where the farmer said 'name me that crop and I will plant it' Hemp, the answer is hemp, takes less water, has a higher yield and the seeds can be processed on site to make diesel fuel to run the farm equipment, with a likely surplus that can be on sold to cut transport costs. The only thing stopping this is it is pest resistant and grows better than the weeds, so nobody can sell the farmer round up. Given that the seed stock is non terminating there will be no sales for seed stock. The other problem is that it makes cheap acid bleach free paper, so less requirement for chemical companies to pump dioxins (a 'forever' chemical) into rivers and the general food supply. Think of the bottom line of the massive corporations that profit from this. Think of the poor billionaires and the politicians they pay for. Imagine what would happen to them if the bizarre ban on hemp was lifted.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
Excellent sarcasm and irony about the pollutants and profiteering oligarchs. The crops the farmer grows are for animal and human consumption. Can people or horses, cows, goats, or sheep eat hemp? Not sure growing a crop for paper is better than growing one for food when millions in the Horn of Africa are currently experiencing famine, and millions more worldwide were thrown into near-famine food insecurity by the Covid lockdowns. For awhile anyway, until the crushed crickets are better incorporated into the pet and people foods and ramp up more their capacities and efficiencies and figure out how to remove the parasites and toxins, he should keep farming natural foods those species are evolved to process.
@QT5656
@QT5656 Жыл бұрын
Yep
@QT5656
@QT5656 Жыл бұрын
Similar situation in Australia with water hungry cotton.
@realbron3255
@realbron3255 Жыл бұрын
Maybe but who is buying hemp in 2022 lmao
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, you can't live off of hemp. The main culprit is avocados and almonds, which just happen to be the staple of every vegan climate change band wagoner. The state of California bought 3.5 billion pounds of excess almond production to falsely prop up prices. It takes 1 gallon of water to grow one almond. How many almonds are in a pound? That is potentially 300billion gallons of water wasted.
@l.w.4701
@l.w.4701 Жыл бұрын
Interesting; farmers that support our lives put behind cities who want to keep watering lawns… pretty crazy.
@ginakelley749
@ginakelley749 Жыл бұрын
... and swimming pools, golf courses!
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
My backyard is farmed by an unknown farmer who harvests 4 crops of alfalfa every year. That's so Humans can remain carnivores, you know? I can hear the clicking of the irrigation system every day until the snow falls, if it does.
@paulrevere2379
@paulrevere2379 Жыл бұрын
A huge amount of those four-legged equine lawn ornaments owned by the rich also use up vast amounts of water without doing anything more productive than turning feed to fertilizer when the feed could be used to produce human food.
@paulrevere2379
@paulrevere2379 Жыл бұрын
@@rltreasure I think even one million might be an exaggeration. How many have pools, one in 50 people maybe? Poor neighborhoods maybe one in 500; one in five for the high class communities? A pool itself does not necessarily waste that much water although most probably do. Massive private landscaping takes vast amounts more because it is daily watering. Pools can (idk about should - depends on the extreme) be regulated such that only public pools ok when water is low to moderate with private pool fill-ups only allowed when water is sufficiently abundant. It can be regulated by permits the way that burning brushpiles in places requires permits that vary every year based on climate conditions.
@ilovemud2010
@ilovemud2010 Жыл бұрын
@@Diana1000Smiles But I like eating meat.
@twoprop8734
@twoprop8734 Жыл бұрын
My wife and I have been going down to this area since 1989. When we first went down to Las Vegas and travelled out to the Hoover Dam and Lake Mead it was mind blowing all that water in the desert. Over the years we have travelled all over the south west from San Diego to the Grand Canyon and seen the growth in the cities and towns but what amazed me was the development and extent of the farming in this area. Two years ago we travelled from Las Vegas to Nogales stopping at Hoover Dam, Lake Mead and Lake Havasu and couldn't believe the drop in water levels. Viewing this video reaffirms what I often wondered, how this could be sustainable. The Arizona area use to sustain a large population of Native Americans that had a well developed society with canals and water control that disappeared. It was suspected that there was an extended period of drought that caused the society to collapse. Seems history is repeating itself. I hope the people in this area can come to grips with the fact that living within the environment and not controlling it will be the answer to this dilemma.
@reachingcoldmountainbeforeyou
@reachingcoldmountainbeforeyou Жыл бұрын
You are 100% correct. To make matters WORSE, Arizona farms ALFALFA...one of the MOST water consumptive crops EVER😠
@william-fla-321
@william-fla-321 Жыл бұрын
They also farm that on sand with high evaporation .
@proudgrandma138
@proudgrandma138 Жыл бұрын
Vegas & Palm Springs hav the huge UG aquifers (i hav fam high up in the water dist). Water is plentiful, Billionaire's will keep their lush landscaping, pools & fountains. Its the worker that has to pay more. Every decade the "drought" strikes & we pay more in taxes & rates & the water cometh. They are really squeezing this time, im thinking utilities will triple, maybe quadruple. They are tearing down dams (our Insurance) & wont let the desalination plants run. Critical thinker... why?
@TheLittlered1961
@TheLittlered1961 Жыл бұрын
People must look at the head waters of the Colorado River. They have been diverted. They did this to grow corn in Colorado. One of the highest water dependent crops around. What do we use it for? Fuel!!!! We are trying to grow our way out of the climate change. Drilling is bad but we can take water away from cities. Cities use a small portion of the water. Stop the high use of water to grow fuel. BTW Phoenix has, for the most part, their own water system. Most of those dams are at high capacity, 70% or more. They currently have no water problem. Tucson on the other hand is in trouble. The problem is the government. They created the problem and we expect them to fix it?
@TheLittlered1961
@TheLittlered1961 Жыл бұрын
@@william-fla-321 Guess you never lived in AZ. More clay than sand. Not all deserts are sand.
@steven4315
@steven4315 Жыл бұрын
The region is going to have to learn live within it's means.
@laurenkennon3570
@laurenkennon3570 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, after 30 years, I sold my mom's house (she passed) in Phoenix to go to sustainable land and water (also where rain harvest is good) with lakes, natural springs, rivers, etc- a place of refuge for my family to follow. I figured most people put their head in the sand regarding the water crisis until it was all over the news. Once it is all over the news, this can make it difficult to move. Who wants to live where there is no water? I was called rash but now as a creek runs through my acres (which cost way less than a house in Phoenix or up north even) with deer and wild turkeys too, I'm thinking I made a good move. I also considered out of the city and less than national average crime rate in constitutional country.
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
Aren't you special.
@laurenkennon3570
@laurenkennon3570 Жыл бұрын
@@Diana1000Smiles No I put my nose to grindstone to become both biologist and hydrologist. Think for yourself.
@laurenkennon3570
@laurenkennon3570 Жыл бұрын
@@rayray9383 Good for ministry 👍and hopefully like minded people
@--x._.x--
@--x._.x-- Жыл бұрын
Nice! Truly a blessing and I am very happy for you :)
@flyingtoaster1427
@flyingtoaster1427 Жыл бұрын
thank god, in a f desert, she wasn't under one of those corrugated tin roofs reserved for the people who get food to the rest of what we call America. Hot dog! thank god hot dog! Yep v sadly! the local fckers of the world
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
I'm a Utahn and I 100% believe we can and must cut water usage but those who agree with me on that are still being outnumbered by the suits greedy for more growth. Even the Salt Lake is disappearing. This can't continue.
@deviouspirate1374
@deviouspirate1374 Жыл бұрын
3 million Afghan refugees are coming to USA.
@EllieMaes-Grandad
@EllieMaes-Grandad Жыл бұрын
@@deviouspirate1374 Already a couple of million from Latin America over the s/w border . . .
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
@@EllieMaes-Grandad In the last 18 months you mean. May of 2022 over 100,000 crossed illegally, and that was an average month for this year. More than 13 million just since 2008. That's not migration, that's an invasion.Close the border.
@EllieMaes-Grandad
@EllieMaes-Grandad Жыл бұрын
@@focusfrost9856 UK has such a problem, but smaller numbers (into a smaller country). Demographically, you may be near (or past) a tipping point as they'll vote DemonRat.
@anastasiab9506
@anastasiab9506 Жыл бұрын
ask califnornia to stop wasting billions of gallons of water on avocados and almonds in the freaking desert. For starters.
@coweatsman
@coweatsman Жыл бұрын
The US south west has seen the collapse of previous civilisations leaving the ruins of their towns. Phoenix and Las Vegas may join them as ruins.
@tacocruiser4238
@tacocruiser4238 Жыл бұрын
The crazy part that many people don't realize is that Las Vegas is one of the most water-efficient cities in the world. Most of the water that gets used is treated and sent back to Lake Mead. The primary source of water loss is evaporation (which is inevitable and can't be stopped).
@stevenmartin6271
@stevenmartin6271 Жыл бұрын
Will* - time.
@dutchman7623
@dutchman7623 Жыл бұрын
@@tacocruiser4238 But even with a good recycling system, it uses far more than nature can provide. In spite of this, the city keeps building more hotels, more casinos, more houses. And all of this in an area of several states who do the same, it's like going to the cliff edge faster and faster, instead of slowing down + stop + return to a sustainable situation.
@coweatsman
@coweatsman Жыл бұрын
@@julm7744 Every civilisation has thought of itself as immune to what has happened to the ones before it. Every civilsation believes itself to be exceptional, and then they go. The greater complexity of the American civilisation builds in vulnerability, not resilience. The American civilisation has more contingencies and therefore more things which can go wrong.
@Yo-ItsYo
@Yo-ItsYo Жыл бұрын
@@julm7744 The US is not the most developed and intelligent. European countries are much more developed and intelligent. The US infrastructure is literally crumbling everywhere. You are a prime example of someone who needs to get a passport and do some traveling. Your mind will be blown. Unfortunately also your heart and pride will be broken as a result, when you're faced with the fact that the US just does not come close to being a nice place compared to many other countries. This is coming from an ex-military Texan.
@carolynmorris7303
@carolynmorris7303 Жыл бұрын
I try to conserve water to the best of my ability. I'm realizing how precious it is.
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
Water is more precious than gold, already.
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
Could always move to Siberia...Lake Baikal has 20% of the worlds unfrozen fresh water.
@timcleveland225
@timcleveland225 Жыл бұрын
I moved to Southern California in 2010 from the South East, I was blown away by how many people lived there and took water for granted. In just 3 years water was being rationed, grass being replaced by desert landscape. I saw a big crack on the wall and moved back near the mountains of NC. Before I moved I visited the Hoover Dam, in 2012, it freaked me out then, I can’t imagine what will happen when the Dam goes Deadpool, because it will. As beautiful as the desert is, it’s no place to live. If you live in the Western states get out now. It may be only another 10 years or less, but There will be a mass migration from California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah to name a few, your homes will drop in value overnight. The Government should have started building Desalination Plants in the 1960s. To late now, the Salton Sea is a good example of an inland Sea, a nightmare. I would sell now & move east of the Mississippi River, stay way from Florida & Louisiana and the Coast. Good Luck.
@davidanderson8243
@davidanderson8243 Жыл бұрын
Actually Arizona doesn't have a water problem......they don't even attempt to capture any of the billions of gallons of water from the monsoon season.........this year has been one of the wettest ever.
@relevantinformation6655
@relevantinformation6655 Жыл бұрын
After 42 years living in Arizona, we moved in December to Michigan. The Great Lakes contain 21% of the World’s fresh water. That’s correct- 21% of Earth’s fresh water. In Arizona there’s a saying: “People fight over whiskey, but go to war over water.”
@kevinsworld5088
@kevinsworld5088 Жыл бұрын
@@davidanderson8243 hahahahahaha
@kevinsworld5088
@kevinsworld5088 Жыл бұрын
@@davidanderson8243 hahahahaha!
@christianlee576
@christianlee576 Жыл бұрын
Exactly!!!
@bobbypaluga4346
@bobbypaluga4346 Жыл бұрын
I live in Arizona this report does a tremendous job in illustrating the water and power issues we’re dealing with. Thank You
@davidanderson8243
@davidanderson8243 Жыл бұрын
Except it doesn't.......anyone that lives in Arizona will tell you that there isn't a water problem.
@davidmassey9243
@davidmassey9243 Жыл бұрын
Our tribe has water that originates on tribal land. It’s the only tribe where water originates on tribal land in the US. The metro Phoenix cities claimed ownership of our water, even though they are 200 miles south of our tribe … and they don’t conserve water at all - with millions of residents having green lawns while we have to conserve water where we live 😡
@mikenekosama4426
@mikenekosama4426 Жыл бұрын
I've read about your plight. A foreign mining company also wants to build a lithium mine near your land, which would further deplete your water supply. It's disgusting.
@lucindalaree4666
@lucindalaree4666 Жыл бұрын
Wow I was thinking about this recently when flying into the Phonix airport from California. I was sick to my stomach seeing all the man made lakes, swimming pools, green golf courses and lawns. To me this is the problem. Man thinking he can tame and consume nature and greedy lifestyle just taking and taking and not caring about others and living harmoniously with each other and Mother Earth.
@johnsouth3912
@johnsouth3912 Жыл бұрын
Green lawns ought to be outlawed.
@davidmassey9243
@davidmassey9243 Жыл бұрын
@@lucindalaree4666 metro Phoenix gets around 60 % of its water from my tribe and pays very little for it. Phoenix is the 5th largest city in the US and one of the fastest growing metro cities in the US. There’s no way our river can support the city forever.
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
I cannot describe how much that infuriates me
@TheMonkdad
@TheMonkdad Жыл бұрын
We are a country of convenience. We like cheap food and availability of summer foods in the winter. We are absolutely not the tough people of our past. I think the next generation will have to be much tougher to survive.
@deviouspirate1374
@deviouspirate1374 Жыл бұрын
USA is done, China will now run the world
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
I remember at our family business we had to by tomato paste in 55gallon drums year-round because it was only processed one time a year by Stanislaus.
@carlinshowalter1806
@carlinshowalter1806 Жыл бұрын
You gonna have to be real tough when you are trying to eat your dirt sandwich!😁
@Tomallenny
@Tomallenny Жыл бұрын
The 1880's Karl Benz engine was getting slightly old. Maybe it's time to do something else if everyone's sensitive constitution can handle it.
@Godisgood-og1oy
@Godisgood-og1oy Жыл бұрын
Greed eats up up every Damned thing!
@akg96
@akg96 Жыл бұрын
Now we're talking.
@planetarubscons1838
@planetarubscons1838 Жыл бұрын
Respect nature! Respect the water! Respect your body! Respect your creator.
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 Жыл бұрын
It was a pleasure getting to speak with Barbara in regards to this water issue that is crippling the southwest. The more people are informed the quicker we can find solutions that help all of us here in the southwest.
@Andrew-zk4hk
@Andrew-zk4hk Жыл бұрын
Your so far from being one with the land it's ridiculous. Your flood irrigated land in the desert isn't going to last.
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 Жыл бұрын
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. This land in the southwest has been flood irrigated for thousands of years by indigenous native populations long before my family came here to farm. We’ve adopted minimum till and no till practices as well as drip irrigation and sprinkler irrigation to make better use of our land. Some of the best producing agriculture centers of the world have been in arid climates.
@wayneallen9192
@wayneallen9192 Жыл бұрын
@@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 The native people knew how to rain dance back then... Maybe ask the true land owners for some help.
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 Жыл бұрын
@@wayneallen9192 Considering that I happen to be a member of the Choctaw Nation , and work closely with the Great Gila River tribal community where we also farm your recommendation is noted.
@wayneallen9192
@wayneallen9192 Жыл бұрын
@@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 In Ireland there is a monument to the generosity of the tribal members. It is a reminder of the human connection of one people to another. It is an array of nine eagle feathers 20 feet tall. When the Irish were starving to death in 1847 the tribe sent help to the Irish. That gift is still remembered today.
@NewMexico1912
@NewMexico1912 Жыл бұрын
The biggest mistake you’re making is only focusing on the Colorado. It’s the entire southwest that’s suffering
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
The Colorado is the heart of the entire Southwest. It's a bigger story because the Colorado is the most impressive of all the rivers, so if it is drying up you can be certain the others are too.
@bobs182
@bobs182 Жыл бұрын
LA gets its' water from the Colorado River.
@bodhimartina6985
@bodhimartina6985 Жыл бұрын
Living in Baja California, Mx we are facing all these same insane issues in the northern state. This is not a recent crisis, it has been heading this way for a long time. Now state of California people are moving here being pushed out of that state. Rapid development is still going strong and we know there will not be enough water, as we are facing cuts along with everyone else. The Great River use to flow into Mexico and the Gulf of California. No longer. Insane, greed and believing the developers fantasy.
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
Did you know that the residents of Mexico City use the most water per capita of any major city in the world?
@bodhimartina6985
@bodhimartina6985 Жыл бұрын
@@edsloan8535 No I did not know that. However, I live in Baja California, Mx City is like the other side side of the planet from us, culturally and in every other way. The Ancient built on a swamp, so maybe they have good deep aquafers. Here in Baja we share the river water with the US as I said above. Do you know that . Actor Sylvester Stallone’s estate in LA has been receiving Notices of Exceedance, because the estate used 533% over the allocated budget which is an excess of 230,000 gallons per month. It has always be a have and a have not and it always will be. I am just so grateful that finally people are talking about this. I've been writing about it since 2007. I am very grateful for everyone getting the word out. I will be using this video because of its excellent presentation from Australia.
@edsloan8535
@edsloan8535 Жыл бұрын
@@bodhimartina6985 Did you know that California bought 3.5billion pounds of excess almonds to prop market prices? It takes 1 gallon of water to grow one almond and say 100 almonds in a pound. That means 350billion gallons of water were used on a crop no one even needed.
@bodhimartina6985
@bodhimartina6985 Жыл бұрын
@@edsloan8535 Yes, I did know that. That is why as a journalist in Baja, I am watching California closely, because anything that happens or doesn't happen up there, will effect us down here. More cuts are coming for us in 2023. But some bizarre "grandfathering" has not yet forced CA to share the cuts.
@richardsanjose3692
@richardsanjose3692 Жыл бұрын
It's not the farmers,it's the fact.that the population has increased 1000% in the last 70 years in a desert never meant to support these kinds of numbers. 1 billion is the sustainable population capacity.
@vberbano
@vberbano Жыл бұрын
SoKal uses 75% of River flows and farming in the Imperial Valley desert uses 80% of that. So over 50% of the River is used for farming in the desert. That makes little sense doesn't it?
@buddyx6
@buddyx6 Жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks for posting, this should be a required watch in those areas! The most disgusting part is 30% to 40% of the Native Americans NOT having running water!
@senikau78
@senikau78 Жыл бұрын
I am so with you on your outlook here! Why are they so neglected! It infuriates me! 🙏🏼
@johnchedsey1306
@johnchedsey1306 Жыл бұрын
Not only that, when the Glen Canyon Dam was being built, the US government once again lied to the Navajo about what their allocation should be. And then the dam proceeded to drown ancient dwellings and archaeological sites that existed in Glen Canyon. I'm 100% for the native tribes to get their rightful share.
@dutchman7623
@dutchman7623 Жыл бұрын
Been there, seen it, made me angry. Extreme poverty for the locals (natives but also others) and extreme wealth for people who come with yachts for a weekend water pleasure on Lake Powell.
@donnahabig5142
@donnahabig5142 Жыл бұрын
That makes me sad can’t someone do something so native Americans have water. This is crazy!!!
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the Hopi and Zuni live in very traditional small communities on incredibly remote mesas of the Colorado Plateau where they zealously guard their way of life established 700 years ago. Ditto the vast Navajo Nation that migrated into the area much later that surrounds them who farm along canyon streams and about half live in traditional homes and villages accessed with difficulty over mostly unpaved roads. There are small towns with modern city services. If many tribal members choose not to live in towns, but in a location where they can't access either surface water, or drill a well for groundwater, they do so by their own free will. If you choose to live in a beautiful wilderness 20 or 30 miles from civilization completely off grid, and in tribal council vote to keep it off grid, you are NOT being denied running water by some heartless greedy oppressive adversary.
@grantparke5452
@grantparke5452 Жыл бұрын
Farms and food are more important than watering grass, swimming pools, fountains.... stop using them and wasting water.
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 Жыл бұрын
Sadly not everyone understands this. We in the ag industry want everyone in the region to have the most prosperous life but food and fiber is key to life.
@JB-zg5xz
@JB-zg5xz Жыл бұрын
You’re right- food is needed for life. We need to stop growing it in the desert and grow more in climates suited for it
@vberbano
@vberbano Жыл бұрын
Don't farm in the desert. Fountains are 100% recycled water.
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019
@jacemillertriplemfarmsaz5019 Жыл бұрын
@@vberbano Why have sustainable food and fiber when you can have attractive water features.
@angrybritches1854
@angrybritches1854 Жыл бұрын
"Deadpool means we can no longer deliver water or produce power." "Having that happen, is not an option." - It's this kind of arrogance that has them in this position, in the first place.
@denisdaly1708
@denisdaly1708 Жыл бұрын
Yes, I thought the same thing. I bet she voted republican
@william4475
@william4475 Жыл бұрын
Interesting, I had the opposite reaction thinking she wanted to conserve and/or limit water vs letting water drop to dead pool level. Maybe I misunderstood. Either way the situation is unfortunate. Water should be available to families including native Americans then to businesses such as hotels and farming but at the same time monitored for waste or overuse.
@angrybritches1854
@angrybritches1854 Жыл бұрын
@@william4475 Wholeheartedly agree, with water distribution.
@scored5
@scored5 Жыл бұрын
@@denisdaly1708 does not mater what fn party you vote for. Your human, u need water to live, you are running out of it everywhere. And your worried what party she voted for. Lmao wow
@tracyheaslip8754
@tracyheaslip8754 Жыл бұрын
Moringa trees grow in drought and it's one of the best foods on this planet. There's your crop and it grows year round The seeds purify water the leaves are great for salad and they're better than kale. They love the desert. Cut your water on your roof just like Bermuda does
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
THANK you! Never heard of them, they sound great.
@jamied8678
@jamied8678 Жыл бұрын
Some of those scenes with the Red cliffs remind me of the exact same scenery on the Murray River in South Australia
@Stephen-ou4sy
@Stephen-ou4sy Жыл бұрын
Yes beautiful place down there flooding in places now
@MySteamChannel
@MySteamChannel Жыл бұрын
The Murray cliffs whilst beautiful, are no where near as big.
@janmccall7608
@janmccall7608 Жыл бұрын
I posted a comment last night that seems to have disappeared. If I am duplicating I am sorry. It was meaningful to me and I feel needs be said. In the late 60s a film maker and park ranger shared a film he made of a beautiful place that was about to be drowned, he told us, forever. Sadly he told us that it was to be dammed (damned?) by greedy people who didn't care about the future of such places if they could have their lake. (Powell?) Could this be the place shown toward the end of this film? Is nature going to have a chance to take it back? Maybe some good will come from all this. Hopefully our friend Art Kidwell who hiked in to make his beautiful film can get some satisfaction, although at a terrible loss. I hope they let this area come back. We need places like that more than lakes to boat on. The drought is terrible but perhaps some lessons can be learned from all this. I'm old now and may not have all the details, but I wanted Art's story to be told.
@Tomallenny
@Tomallenny Жыл бұрын
Why not tell us the name of the film or the director so we can do a search and watch it?
@MrRipsaw1
@MrRipsaw1 Жыл бұрын
This report is very similar to an IMAX film called "Grand Canyon Adventure: River at Risk" in which narrator Robert Redford heads along the river with his daughter and a group of friends explaining the unsustainable consumption, waste, increasing demands and the negative impact on farming and native residents just as this report does. However 'River at Risk' was released in 2008!
@BillyO
@BillyO Жыл бұрын
We weren't "listening" then to the possibility of future drought conditions due to overuse of water supllies ! Now it's too late ! Wait until the towns & cities have to tell their taxpayers there is no more water tomorrow ! Watch the exodus start, as it did for the indigenous people all thos eyears ago !
@SheriffofYouTube
@SheriffofYouTube Жыл бұрын
Quality report Anne Worthington does quality work, everybody in this report looked fantastic
@brianbell9817
@brianbell9817 Жыл бұрын
The Navaho indigenous people of the dessert area should have rights to the water and the pipelines for running water in their homes.
@VivaCatatumbo973
@VivaCatatumbo973 Жыл бұрын
Not only Navajo but Hopi, Hualapai and Apache as well.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
The Hopi Nation has a large reservation in Northern Arizona on the Colorado Plateau, with communities on 1st, 2nd and 3rd mesa that continue in their traditional culture. They could have pumps and pipe water from their springs and wells into their pueblos if they wanted to. They chose the locations hundreds of years ago, and are farmers. Their locations have permanent reliable year-round water or they couldn't and wouldn't have chosen them for their villages. The huge Navajo Nation, the largest reservation in the US, surrounds the Hopi Nation, and covers most of Northeast Arizona and some of Northwest New Mexico. They are also farmers and sheep herders, and live in small family units or small villages of traditional structures or houses. Again, most live in canyons with springs or have wells. They also have towns with reliable permanent water sources that deliver piped water and electricity, etc. to the homes, offices, art galleries, restaurants, etc. Some people live off-grid in truly remote locations and don't farm or herd, so why they chose a location without a permanent reliable source of water is their business. It is not the job of the tribe to dig up sacred scenic ground to lay waterpipe for 20 to 30 miles to their house. They should move to where there is water. The Havasupai Indian Reservation owns a large section of the Grand Canyon and the Colorado River. Its main economy is tourism, as shown in the documentary. Prices are steep, and access to their portion of the River is limited and tightly controlled. Lastly, another huge reservation owned by native americans on the Colorado: The Colorado River Indian Tribes include four distinct Tribes - the Mohave, Chemehuevi, Hopi and Navajo. There are currently about 4,277 active Tribal members. The CRIT Reservation was created in 1865 by the Federal Government for “Indians of the Colorado River and its tributaries,” originally for the Mohave and Chemehuevi, who had inhabited the area for centuries. People of the Hopi and Navajo Tribes were relocated to the reservation in later years. The reservation stretches along the Colorado River on both the Arizona and California side. It includes almost 300,000 acres of land, with the river serving as the focal point and lifeblood of the area. The primary community in the CRIT Reservation is Parker, Arizona, which is located on a combination of Tribal land, leased land that is owned by CRIT and land owned by non-Native Americans. There are other, smaller communities on the reservation, including Poston, located 10 miles south of Parker.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
@@VivaCatatumbo973 The Hopi Nation has a large reservation in Northern Arizona on the Colorado Plateau, with communities on 1st, 2nd and 3rd mesa that continue in their traditional culture. They could have pumps and pipe water from their springs and wells into their pueblos if they wanted to. They chose the locations hundreds of years ago, and are farmers. Their locations have permanent reliable year-round water or they couldn't and wouldn't have chosen them for their villages. The huge Navajo Nation, the largest reservation in the US, surrounds the Hopi Nation, and covers most of Northeast Arizona and some of Northwest New Mexico. They are also farmers and sheep herders, and live in small family units or small villages of traditional structures or houses. Again, most live in canyons with springs or have wells. They also have towns with reliable permanent water sources that deliver piped water and electricity, etc. to the homes, offices, art galleries, restaurants, etc. Some people live off-grid in truly remote locations and don't farm or herd, so why they chose a location without a permanent reliable source of water is their business. It is not the job of the tribe to dig up sacred scenic ground to lay waterpipe for 20 to 30 miles to their house. They should move to where there is water. The Havasupai Indian Reservation owns a large section of the Grand Canyon and the Colorado River. Its main economy is tourism, as shown in the documentary. Prices are steep, and access to their portion of the River is limited and tightly controlled. Lastly, another huge reservation owned by native americans on the Colorado: The Colorado River Indian Tribes include four distinct Tribes - the Mohave, Chemehuevi, Hopi and Navajo. There are currently about 4,277 active Tribal members. The CRIT Reservation was created in 1865 by the Federal Government for “Indians of the Colorado River and its tributaries,” originally for the Mohave and Chemehuevi, who had inhabited the area for centuries. People of the Hopi and Navajo Tribes were relocated to the reservation in later years. The reservation stretches along the Colorado River on both the Arizona and California side. It includes almost 300,000 acres of land, with the river serving as the focal point and lifeblood of the area. The primary community in the CRIT Reservation is Parker, Arizona, which is located on a combination of Tribal land, leased land that is owned by CRIT and land owned by non-Native Americans. There are other, smaller communities on the reservation, including Poston, located 10 miles south of Parker.
@nykon4693
@nykon4693 Жыл бұрын
Most of the Colorado downstream goes to California agriculture. I'm surprised that side of the story was left out.
@PTurbo86
@PTurbo86 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure folks like IID and other California Ag officials made sure they were not mentioned. They're also not facing any of the 2B water restrictions come January 2023 that us in AZ will be facing. I'm water conscious, and I love Phoenix. It's sad to see the waste. People don't get it. However, the developer barons won't stop paying city and state officials off and let anything get in the way of their profit. It's sickening. I'm pretty sure these development companies are banking on the fact that most prospective residents don't know about this looming crisis. They sure as shit aren't telling those prospective residents there's any problem on the horizon. I love Phoenix, and I've been here almost 30 years. I'm saddened to be telling my wife we need to get out in the next year, or we may be forced to leave in 5 years with no equity, nothing to our names... I posted some of my comment up above and copied and pasted some of it here. No, I'm not a bot.
@mikenekosama4426
@mikenekosama4426 Жыл бұрын
Most irrigation water for California agriculture comes from Lake Shasta.
@allangibson8494
@allangibson8494 Жыл бұрын
@@PTurbo86 California made consumption cuts five years ago. They have been using significantly less water than they were allocated. Arizona didn’t.
@PTurbo86
@PTurbo86 Жыл бұрын
@@allangibson8494 Are you able to reference those cuts? I'm being serious, if I'm unaware, I want to learn of their cuts. IID basically says they're going to fight for their Colorado Water rights until it's dry.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
I'm not. Especially since California was the 1st to divert the water with the Parker Dam and the California Aqueduct to supply Los Angeles in the 1930's, takes by far the lion's share and always has, and has refused to participate in an agreement among the states to reduce consumption, so that now the feds have to enforce it. California is by far the elephant in the room. Arizona faces the sharpest cut: 18 percent of the state’s share of the water will be reduced in 2022, compared to 7 percent for Nevada, 5 percent for Mexico, and wait for it ... no reductions for California. So CA, the home of the most adamant water control, is rewarded for its refusal to cooperate with others or accept any control tantrum.
@PhanOT11
@PhanOT11 Жыл бұрын
This drought makes me sad even though I'm far away from the area. Thanks for the great video.
@falcorthewonderdog2758
@falcorthewonderdog2758 Жыл бұрын
Mismanagement isn't caused by a drought.
@Terradiva
@Terradiva Жыл бұрын
POPULATION GROWTH MUST STOP.
@ak-if9wg
@ak-if9wg Жыл бұрын
perfect. Wise guy
@binkwillans5138
@binkwillans5138 Жыл бұрын
IT USUALLY DOES.
@briankrahn2000
@briankrahn2000 Жыл бұрын
What we supposed to do? Get Vasectomies and tubals
@datuce7634
@datuce7634 Жыл бұрын
Vegas is crazy! was just there on the weekend and new construction is like 70% in progress
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
Don't worry, with inflation on all the costs of construction now at 18% in 2022, and supply chain issues creating chaos and delaying projects, home prices are unaffordable, and then due to interest rates also increasing due to inflation, fewer and fewer people can buy a home, which is intentional. The construction of single family homes, i.e. suburbia has declined 6% per month throughout the peak building season, and commercial construction 5% for office, factory, warehouse and infrastructure projects. Just as the millions of "Shovel Ready Jobs" overseen by then VP Biden for the 2009 Stimulus that cost the taxpayers billions that we haven't paid off yet never materialized and never had any effect on the crumbling infrastructure, the new multi-trillion dollar boondoggle is supposed to fund infrastructure construction and repair and maintenance jobs that also won't materialize, but will make many political donors even more millions.
@LizFromDecencyUnited
@LizFromDecencyUnited Жыл бұрын
I was working for a house boat company, on Lake Powell, 20 years ago. That was the first time they had to close a boat launch because the water had receded beyond the end of it, and there was just this huge concrete slap, hanging in the air, with a 5 or 6 foot drop off at the end. The water was about another 8 to 10 feet beyond that. It was surreal, as earlier in the season, people were launching boats in that very spot, off of that very ramp, and within a couple of months, they had to gate it off so people wouldn't mistakenly drive their vehicles down the ramp and right off of the edge. I'd only spent the one season there, but seeing the bleached water lines that were already growing up the sides of the cliffs was alarming. As much as I loved Lake Powell, and the whole area around it, I think it would break my heart to see it now......
@gaylec146
@gaylec146 Жыл бұрын
I remember going to Powell/Bullfrog 25-30 years ago and it was starting then….it makes me sad it take a quarter of a century for this to be news….40 years ago…a college professor was trying to teach us Colorado was going to be in trouble….it has stuck with me all these years……he was waaay ahead of his time and he was right. I live in Colorado.
@LizFromDecencyUnited
@LizFromDecencyUnited Жыл бұрын
@@gaylec146 I hear ya, my friend. So, you were there just before I was. I know the water had already dropped considerably by the time I got there, so it totally tracks what you experienced. Lake Powell was a grand idea, in a 'perfect world', but sadly, it just wasn't meant to be I'm afraid. It's one of the few major, man made, lakes in the US that was built since I was born. Looks like it's lifespan will be shorter than mine, too. It's sad, because it truly was a beautiful lake, with over 2300 miles of shoreline. The way I described it to friends was, "imagine filling the entire North end of the Grand Canyon with water. All of the little offshoot canyons, and gullys and mesas and everything that makes up the Grand Canyon.....well...that's Lake Powell." It was the 'House Boat Capital of the World', for a while, for good reason. It's going to be sad to see it go.
@calikid3336
@calikid3336 Жыл бұрын
One thing I noted as a Las Vegas condo renter is the HOA's have a 'No Clothesline Policy! I was surprised as this required electrical energy for indoor drying. Sounds silly but each condo or home stricken under HOA policy add up to lots of extra water for power generation.
@paulrevere2379
@paulrevere2379 Жыл бұрын
It's a fundamental violation of America's founding principles to dictate what others can do with their own property. I realize there are some gray areas, but nobody should be denied the option to do what is good for themselves and for their fellow citizens merely to comply with policies based on vain optics.
@woodrateater8006
@woodrateater8006 Жыл бұрын
Excellent point,
@charleshoang566
@charleshoang566 Жыл бұрын
I am owner of a condo in San Diego, I just hang my clothes at the patio all year round,in the summer I use fan only,I pay $40 a month for utility bill,I get$70 credit a year from SG&E, some other people pay $ 400 a month in the summer for utility bill.
@paulrevere2379
@paulrevere2379 Жыл бұрын
@@charleshoang566 Solid comment. I haven't lived in San Diego (born and raised) since 2001. Back then I was renting in Vista. I was paying $25 per month (no kickbacks, no special anything for me) and the people in the apartment below me (exact same floor plan) were paying $300 per month. They were all around more poor than I was too.
@charleshoang566
@charleshoang566 Жыл бұрын
@@paulrevere2379 Because they don't know how to use their appliances effectively especially air conditioner.
@filrabat1965
@filrabat1965 Жыл бұрын
Lesson: If at all possible, do NOT live in an area getting less than 20 inches (about 500 mm) of rain per year. In the US, that means draw a line from San Antonio north to Bismark, North Dakota; and do not live west of that line. *Exception* :the Pacific Northwest west of the crest of the Cascade Mountains, which does get sufficient rainfall.
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
What about the people who already live there? This isn't the best solution.
@JudyinAZ3
@JudyinAZ3 Жыл бұрын
That’s a ridiculous statement
@filrabat1965
@filrabat1965 Жыл бұрын
@@NiminaeOld ​ @Judy in AZ I'm talking about new residents. The drier areas of The West (i.e. most of it) is from a water perspective overpopulated. Unless you want expensive desalinized water from the ocean combined with other excruciating water-saving measures, people are taking a big gamble moving out there.
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
Try telling Humans where to live. 😄 Are you the new Boss?
@filrabat1965
@filrabat1965 Жыл бұрын
@@Diana1000Smiles My first word in that post is "Lesson" , *not* "Command". Translation: "I'm not ordering you what to do, I'm saying you'd be wise to take what I say into consideration before you make your move". Pay attention to detail!! It'll get you accused of superficial understandings every time, believe me.
@truthiscensored
@truthiscensored Жыл бұрын
This why every home need to recycle water. Gray water system for watering the lawn/garden and things that don't require clean water and not use clean water for those things. The way things are currently is backwards
@tedc7714
@tedc7714 Жыл бұрын
Lawns are not natural in a desert.. just outlaw them, if people like desert,, give them desert...
@vberbano
@vberbano Жыл бұрын
We don't water our rock gardens. Indoor water is 100% recycled.
@OmarArts-qn1nl
@OmarArts-qn1nl Жыл бұрын
Really over the world, the Water scarcity becomes nowadays the most challenging issue to overcome. One the best alternative solution is Sea water Desalination. Save water, save the planet 💧🌍🙏 Thanks for this interesting documentary.
@itmaster3805
@itmaster3805 Жыл бұрын
Israel has stepped up. 70% of all drinking water is de-salinized. Aruba has no fresh water, Completly de-salinized sea water
@lorrainegatanianhits8331
@lorrainegatanianhits8331 Жыл бұрын
you know, soil does this for free if you have it.
@vivvoveo384
@vivvoveo384 Жыл бұрын
Not everywhere . There is flooding and there are alot of places that gets their normal rain still. The msm focus on drought .
@charleshoang566
@charleshoang566 Жыл бұрын
But it uses a lot of energy.
@carolynmorris7303
@carolynmorris7303 Жыл бұрын
I've been to the Hoover dam, and I've seen it. It really is amazing. Modern marvel engineering.
@MR..181
@MR..181 Жыл бұрын
100 years old??
@Earthisdivine
@Earthisdivine Жыл бұрын
"Your way of life is threatened and your way of life may not be able to proceed". The key here is way of life. WE can adapt and find a better way which does not have devastating effects on our environment and therefore us. Denial is not the way. Knowing this is real requires responsibility. Climate denial is irresponsible.
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, it didn't seem that any of the water users were denying that the historical 20 year and 10 year cycles of abundance and drought happen, since most have lived on their land (the Native Americans and the 5th generation farmers) long enough to see the river at its peak and the current low point. They seem far better attuned to Nature than the city dwellers, 99% of whom have no idea where their water comes from and how it gets to their faucet. They also seem to be resilient and adaptable and seem to prepare for shortages, such as having their cisterns and barrels and rain catchement systems. It would probably be good to stop diverting Colorado headwaters on the West side of the Rockies to the East side to supply the explosively growing cities there as has been happening since the 1950's. That would do a lot to restore water levels to the Colorado upstream, without having to try to manipulate the weather, an activity that we don't know what the side effects and consequences might be, if it could even be done at all. It would also be nice if the elephant in the room, California, which has taken the lion's share of the water to build cities in its deserts and refuses to adjust its usage of the Colorado had been mentioned. Arizona faces the sharpest cut: 18 percent of the state’s share of the water will be reduced in 2022, compared to 7 percent for Nevada, 5 percent for Mexico, and no reductions for California because it just outright refused to participate in negotiations with the other users and the feds.
@jollyroger5646
@jollyroger5646 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed at NAS Lemoore for almost three years in the '80s. I learned a lot of history from the locals. First and foremost was the fact that the San Joaquin Valley was a desert before irrigation.
@jamesvanscoyoc6064
@jamesvanscoyoc6064 Жыл бұрын
California has always been semi-arid to arid, especially in the south, but except for true desert regions like Death Valley and the Mohave it is not a desert. Even the Los Angeles has artesian springs; my old high school campus has two, still producing water. A local of particularly abundant springs in one locale inspired the name of the town Artesia.
@kilo3-186
@kilo3-186 Жыл бұрын
It's a desert, it does desert things like evaporation of water, why are you people surprised?
@murringo9
@murringo9 Жыл бұрын
Some of those desert suburbs would be like living on a desolate Mars - where's the attraction? This will end badly for a lot of people.
@Ktmfan450
@Ktmfan450 Жыл бұрын
The American dream People are told from birth that they are just temporarily embarassed billionaires and that if they do the right things like owning a house , no matter where that is , they'll have a great future for their family
@MR..181
@MR..181 Жыл бұрын
More of my fate and error "choices"..
@alaska3300
@alaska3300 Жыл бұрын
@@Ktmfan450 That is not true.
@Ktmfan450
@Ktmfan450 Жыл бұрын
@@alaska3300 The working class being "temporarily embarrassed billionaires" or the "if you work hard you'll make it" part?
@alaska3300
@alaska3300 Жыл бұрын
@@Ktmfan450 Having your house paid off no mortgages was basically the American dream. I never heard anyone say where the house was…? Who knows with the way things have changed over the years…
@thedoctor2102
@thedoctor2102 Жыл бұрын
We just came out of a few of these in Au, I remember that 40 year drought in Queensland brought Wivenhoe and Somerset down to just 2% capacity. Can't can't really remember how low Hinze dam at the Gold Coast got , I think about 15% capacity.
@dougwainer8768
@dougwainer8768 Жыл бұрын
So is Au out of drought conditions? How much of a recovery? 40 year drought wow.
@Darby0642
@Darby0642 Жыл бұрын
Wivenhoe is currently 90.5%, Hinz is 99% and Somerset is 82.6% capacity. The drought is over but we still conserve water as rainfall is sporadic. It’s either bone dry or, as earlier this year, we had the worst floods ever. Some towns were actually flooded twice or more within only a few months.
@Finians_Mancave
@Finians_Mancave Жыл бұрын
Extreme worldwide climate changes say otherwise (than this being a "temporary drought"). You're certainly not doing your grandchildren any favors by taking the easy, do-nothing position of assuming it will all work itself out in the end. Of course it will work itself out -- just not in the way you expect...
@thedoctor2102
@thedoctor2102 Жыл бұрын
@@Finians_Mancave this planet has a history of "extreme" climate change spanning back hundreds of millions of years. Now that hu.anity is here it's is still no different. The earth's atmosphere will reset itself when it sees fit. I would think we shoud make the most of what we have in this current 'interglacial' period, though we definitely could head in a much better direction than what we currently are.
@Finians_Mancave
@Finians_Mancave Жыл бұрын
@@thedoctor2102 That's an easy rebuttal... unless you're wrong. And if you are, our children and grandchildren pay a dear price for your indifference. The alternative is to believe the multitude of climate scientists who say this absolutely is happening, and we should act accordingly to save the planet for the sake of our descendants. Those are the two choices. One will cost us now, but could save the planet. The other could cost us dearly later and sacrifice much of the planet. I don't understand how anyone of conscience could choose the latter.
@richardmycroft5336
@richardmycroft5336 Жыл бұрын
I'm always impressed with the quality of reporting by the Australian Broadcasting Company (I think that is their name.)
@QT5656
@QT5656 Жыл бұрын
The right wingers in Australia hate it. They generally hate any kind of scrutiny of environmental problems because it might threaten share prices or corporate power.
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
Rupert Murdoch's life mission is to get them completely shut down. You can see why.
@Jerry2Murray
@Jerry2Murray Жыл бұрын
Casualties building the Hoover: The "official" number of fatalities involved in building Hoover Dam is 96. These were men who died at the dam site (classified as "industrial fatalities") from such causes as drowning, blasting, falling rocks or slides, falls from the canyon walls, being struck by heavy equipment, truck accidents, etc.
@robertmuller3145
@robertmuller3145 Жыл бұрын
And what's your point?, Snap out of it. Millions of people died making this country
@stevenmartin6271
@stevenmartin6271 Жыл бұрын
As an Aussie w/ a degree in climate science, I drove through Bakers Field outside LA, and its DRY AF! Talk about having blinders on. America is f'ed.
@dutchman7623
@dutchman7623 Жыл бұрын
@Robert Beck Some places even drown in water, like Houston, and it will get worse with climate zones shifting.
@matthoskin3572
@matthoskin3572 Жыл бұрын
Imagine us ( Australia) making a massive city in the middle of the Simpson Desert......
@dutchman7623
@dutchman7623 Жыл бұрын
@@matthoskin3572 Imagine us (Netherlands) making a massive city in the middle of the Zuiderzee... It is possible, but sustainability and environmental effects should be carefully taken in consideration. In the USA this balance is lost, they live in the here and now, without any regard to the future or history. Egocentrism is woven into their entire concept.
@stevenmartin6271
@stevenmartin6271 Жыл бұрын
@@matthoskin3572 🤣
@wombat88008
@wombat88008 Жыл бұрын
Planting Salt bush would produce ground cover that would absorb a lot of sun-heat and the temperature of the ground would not "push away" the possibility of cloud cover. There is so little green cover because it is perceived that it requires a lot of water for that. But salt bush grows on very little water and has extremely deep roots... and a water table has been mentioned. Getting Eucalypt trees growing could change things too. Something different needs to be tried.
@DeborahRosen99
@DeborahRosen99 Жыл бұрын
Eucalyptus trees are extremely water-heavy consumers - they, along with sycamores, have been used to dry up swamps. They're also incredibly flammable, a problem to which the Southwest is already prone and doesn't need any more help exacerbating.
@nikmohamed5906
@nikmohamed5906 Жыл бұрын
eucalyptus is called firebomb tree, and its perfect for exacerbating the california's annual forest fire season
@SEVEN-gy3ub
@SEVEN-gy3ub Жыл бұрын
I am a Washington State native and feel blessed that I have never had to worry about water and dread the day I ever have to. People have laughed at the Pacific NW for years because of all the rain and gray skies but now they are moving here. They are doing to this state what they did to theirs.
@akg96
@akg96 Жыл бұрын
Us and them thinking just won't cut it anymore. The problem are diverse and many, while the origin is that flow that comes down the birth canal.
@SEVEN-gy3ub
@SEVEN-gy3ub Жыл бұрын
@@akg96 It is us and them because I won't be overpopulating a desert with no water.
@Joshuatree7746
@Joshuatree7746 Жыл бұрын
"that is unacceptable". What is unacceptable is living in area arid area and complain why there isn't any water. Same as living a rainy area and complain why it rains all day. JUST MOVE!
@kittybrowneye3163
@kittybrowneye3163 Жыл бұрын
It's also not the whole truth and created with an agenda in mind. I live in AZ, we've had the coolest summer in decades and have had so much rain we are just dumping it out of lake pleasant(Phoenix water source) and Bartlett because we have too much. The actual problem is not "climate change" it's that socal diverts the Colorado River for their water supply because they stopped holding back the water of the American River in the bay area and sending it through the canals system down to LA. The government of California will tell you it's because of an endangered smelt fish but the real reason is when they divert the fresh water brackish water moves up the delta and ruins all the rich peoples Vinyards in Napa County. This is a problem created by the elite in Napa, and Marin counties in California and as the comment above me state its because of ignorance which he absolutely is. This entire video doesn't touch once on the actual problem it's essentially propaganda
@mattsyson3980
@mattsyson3980 Жыл бұрын
Humans have often made changes that are too radical which have major pitfalls which were not considered. Even from taking some rabbits to Australia (which then bred like,,,,,,rabbits) especially with no natural predators.
@MedicatedMemory
@MedicatedMemory Жыл бұрын
Bad things happen when you try and tackle nature
@jpsmith9452
@jpsmith9452 Жыл бұрын
Not always. Every time you turn on the AC you’re ’tackling’ nature.
@carlinshowalter1806
@carlinshowalter1806 Жыл бұрын
@@jpsmith9452 And then the water level gets so low the dam generator no longer make power,then A/C no longer work.
@jpsmith9452
@jpsmith9452 Жыл бұрын
@@carlinshowalter1806 true. But thankfully there’s other ways to generate electricity.
@dragilxcom4176
@dragilxcom4176 Жыл бұрын
The mighty nation is being humbled by nature.
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
And yet the people here who need to be humbled most keep pretending these issues don't exist. They use wealth they gain by exploiting others to create towers for themselves, then sit on those towers consuming and patting themselves on the back while they watch the rest of us suffer the consequences of their hubris.
@socialdistancejusticewarri8533
@socialdistancejusticewarri8533 Жыл бұрын
More like by crazy politicians like the kook in the nursing house.
@bobs182
@bobs182 Жыл бұрын
The problem is being recognized which will be solved.
@tobyw9573
@tobyw9573 Жыл бұрын
Hoover Dam was built in part to control flooding, but also to conserve water for droughts. The rainy spell in the 1980s dropped so much water that the Hoover's overflow system was severely damaged and needed redesign. One solution would be to replace the hydroelectric power and its water usage with nuclear and other sources.
@carlinshowalter1806
@carlinshowalter1806 Жыл бұрын
Oh no,not Nuclear! The tree huggers have and will throw a fit! Hell, we already have Las Vegas in the middle of the desert so why not build a huge nuke power plant right outside town and sell the power to other growing cities in the region? It couldn't be that bad of a idea could it? Tell me how I'm wrong please!
@DumbSkippy
@DumbSkippy Жыл бұрын
Kudos ABC Australia Another exceptional documentary...
@craiggillett5985
@craiggillett5985 Жыл бұрын
Simply the best review of this current slow moving apocalypse. Grab your popcorn.
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
So you don't have children. Best to keep it that way.
@JamesMcGillis
@JamesMcGillis Жыл бұрын
Alfalfa is one of the most wasteful crops, in terms of water. Like American diesel fuel or crude oil, how much of it is being exported overseas?
@reachingcoldmountainbeforeyou
@reachingcoldmountainbeforeyou Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@focusfrost9856
@focusfrost9856 Жыл бұрын
Well alfalfa is the premier hay of choice for dairy cows, and AZ has a huge dairy industry that buys most of it (or grows their own). AZ and neighbor states horse operations also prize AZ alfalfa. CA dairies also buy AZ alfalfa. Unlike other crops, alfalfa and cotton tolerate the AZ heat.
@reachingcoldmountainbeforeyou
@reachingcoldmountainbeforeyou Жыл бұрын
@@focusfrost9856 it's not OK, it's draining the water.
@eddiequest4
@eddiequest4 Жыл бұрын
I also live in Phx. I am absolutely shocked that the current powers that be are STILL trying to bring even more water wasters to the valley. The elimination of the farmers will only slow the drought by a year or so. But the ripple effect will ultimately make the southwest uninhabitable. Where will 40 million people move to next?
@BillyO
@BillyO Жыл бұрын
What gets me is the rush to turn off the farmers water first, as they are feeding the rest of the country. But then it was never going to be sustainable if drought conditions prevailed as they have been for recent years !
@AK_Vortex
@AK_Vortex Жыл бұрын
Permaculture? Especially around the river itself let alone the farming areas that depend on water? I'm guessing Monoculture based industrial agriculture is no longer sustainable?
@vicepresident7365
@vicepresident7365 Жыл бұрын
What crop uses little water, well there is this little herb called Cannabis that is really water conservative :)
@cerveza2297
@cerveza2297 Жыл бұрын
Hemp
@sharonneethling2243
@sharonneethling2243 Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@JoeOvercoat
@JoeOvercoat Жыл бұрын
Right?
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
Illegal cannabis farms causing some big problems in suburban California.
@binkwillans5138
@binkwillans5138 Жыл бұрын
Yes, the cannabis herb can be liberally mixed into salads, baked into cakes, and even smoked. In these days of drought, it's just so nice to hear Mother Nature calling, "Hi !!".
@JoeOvercoat
@JoeOvercoat Жыл бұрын
9:05 In other words it’s inevitable and she’s just in denial.
@oliviacrosby6796
@oliviacrosby6796 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for carpenters my father was a carpenter for 32 years I'm 30 now. Thanks for the casa building.
@mwest3583
@mwest3583 Жыл бұрын
Alfalfa growing in AZ is going to be a casualty of the lack of water. Golf courses do not belong in deserts. People can either choose to make more sustainable choices in farming and diet or the decision will be made for them with less predictable and more drastic outcomes. Fun fact: If Americans skipped meat just one day a week, it would be enough of an impact to alleviate the Colorado River's supply problems.
@timothyhouse1622
@timothyhouse1622 Жыл бұрын
We were driving across Texas to take my daughter to college and crossed over the Brazos. Well, where the Brazos was supposed to be. It wasn't there. Completely dried up northwest of Dallas.
@SilG.123
@SilG.123 Жыл бұрын
Yeah Texas is already hot & every year, recently, it's been getting hotter & hotter & the rivers are super low if there at all.
@brianolson1098
@brianolson1098 Жыл бұрын
Those farmers growing alfalfa in the desert knew the day was coming when water would become more scarce. They need to move to the Midwest or find another Crip to grow.
@PuzzleGamesyt
@PuzzleGamesyt Жыл бұрын
I am a 18 yrs old from Nepal watching this. I have never faced water shortage ever in my life. And today I feel proud that our country is still on the developing phase. The natural resources(water sources) are still untouched & tons of lakes & rivers in the mountains & several other places are still undiscovered. Even if we start using water like crazy, we have enough water to survive few more centuries. I hope that our nation will be able to help U.S as soon as possible. To everyone from U.S., don't worry. Good time will come soon.
@robertshriver8392
@robertshriver8392 Жыл бұрын
I can donate about a half inch to your river, every time it rains in the Pittsburgh area my property has so much water I would love to give you some
@Napierala
@Napierala Жыл бұрын
Growing crops in a desert and being surprised that there is no water: priceless. The stupidity is astounding! xD
@NiminaeOld
@NiminaeOld Жыл бұрын
You obviously don't understand how agriculture works. Read any of my other posts to get a clue, but the farms aren't the problem here. It's consumerism.
@MR..181
@MR..181 Жыл бұрын
Oranges, lemons, grapefruit, pomegrante dates??? Heat crops...houses not so much...
@recycle.mind23
@recycle.mind23 Жыл бұрын
Now that media and all content creators have shown the condition of Colorado River. Would you mind to interview those that are sitting in public office. What are there plans, if there are such. That’s we wanted to watch. Thank you.
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
Now that you are informed about some of the issues, perhaps YOU and your fellow voters could bring it up with your candidates for the forthcoming mid-terms, and not rely on a little overseas current affairs program to do what is YOUR responsibility in a federalist democracy.
@TheAguevara201
@TheAguevara201 Жыл бұрын
Things are going to get very tough for us. I feel terrible for the children. Rivers are drying up.
@roberthodge7802
@roberthodge7802 Жыл бұрын
18:21 The lady hits the nail on the head. It is all engineered. Our cheap fresh resource is gone from misuse. The ocean is where the water for coastal communities needs to come from. Mother Nature has succumbed to the demand. The ocean needs way more attention as a source of survival asap.
@janiekcarney5482
@janiekcarney5482 Жыл бұрын
Over 50 years ago Oklahoma built lots of man made lakes. The lakes capture the rain. Provide recreation in boating and fishing. We have at least one dam in the Tulsa area. Our climate has changed slowly helping with extreme heat and cold. It’s helped us. We have cattle horses wheat oil.
@scotttovey
@scotttovey Жыл бұрын
Your talking sensible solutions that come with actions to a population that wants the solution dictated to them and paid for by someone other than themselves. Every one of those states could have followed similar plans and had benefited. The farmers themselves could have implemented water retention systems and even purchased water making machines that are now available and will provide them water for their crops. Did any of them look for a solution and implement that solution? Nope, they just maintained a "not my problem to fix" attitude. The really sad thing is; a lot of Americans have this attitude. They will actively fight against a solution being implemented and because of that attitude; rather than receiving the education that taxes are spent on, children are now being abused by teachers with critical race theory and the immoral lgbtq+ agenda when they attend school.
@argusfleibeit1165
@argusfleibeit1165 Жыл бұрын
Meanwhile all the fracking is causing mini-earthquakes while they pump pollution into your groundwater. All this mess has got to stop.
@scotttovey
@scotttovey Жыл бұрын
@@argusfleibeit1165 "Meanwhile all the fracking is causing mini-earthquakes while they pump pollution into your groundwater. All this mess has got to stop." I hear tell, Joe Biden put an end to fracking on his first day in office. That is one of the reasons energy prices are so inflated.
@argusfleibeit1165
@argusfleibeit1165 Жыл бұрын
@@scotttovey Inflation is world-wide. Look instead to the buy-up of real estate for inflated prices, as multi-billionaires and corporations try to launder their excess, untaxed capital. Suddenly working and middle-class people are having their apartments sold out from under them when the rent is doubled. Second homes sit empty. Affordable housing shortage? This is why. There was no massive destruction of houses or giant burst in population. Excess capital, which needs to be taxed and reinvested in services and infrastructure, not buying up housing at inflated prices.
@scotttovey
@scotttovey Жыл бұрын
@@argusfleibeit1165 " Excess capital, which needs to be taxed and reinvested in services and infrastructure"" Is unconstitutional and unlawful in the United States. The reason the United States has been the most prosperous nation on earth for as long as we have is because we allow people to profit from their business dealings and become rich. Anyone that is pushing for higher taxes, double taxation and anything that will diminish the economic prosperity of the United States is levying war against the United States. Any citizen doing that is committing treason.
@mickgatz214
@mickgatz214 Жыл бұрын
Too many humans...... 😂
@marlysmilligan3015
@marlysmilligan3015 Жыл бұрын
One thing, stop companies making bottle water.!!!! Stop excessive water waste in all apartments, all over the world. !!!!!
@tamramoore8377
@tamramoore8377 Жыл бұрын
I live in a apartment. I planted some flowers out under my window. Watering them and my containers with my grey water from my bath every other day. Working out great so far.
@mcawesomest1
@mcawesomest1 Жыл бұрын
Maybe do some real investigative reporting and look into Las Vegas Concrete straws. Las Vegas hasnt had enough water to support the increased building and construction for over 20 years. So instead of limiting building permits they built 2 massive underground concrete pipes to the middle of lake mead to Drain Arizona’s Water. Arizona has some of the largest Aquafirs in the USA. However, Intel, Motorola, general dynamics dumped chemicals from 1960-1995 into the salt river bed and other water beds turning the massive water reservoirs into Superfund sites... No one has made them clean up the cancer causing toxins... because they give big donations to politicians.
@vberbano
@vberbano Жыл бұрын
Why is it Zona's water? Vegas uses a scant 1.6% of Lake Mead at 241,000 acre ft compared to 2.1 million acre ft Zona uses and 4.507 million acre ft SoKal uses. Zona's aquifers are miniscule compared to aquifers beneath all of southern Nevada. Nevada has more natural springs than any other state - over 300. Vegas Valley has been a desert oasis 500,000 years longer than human walked the Earth. Red Rock Canyon, Rainbow & Spring Mountains, Lee and Kyle Canyons just west of the city of Las Vegas all have water and evidence this. None of that water makes it to Lake Mead. It's all absorbed into the aquifers. I hike those Canyons everyday and there's water in the streams, waterfalls and lush vegetation. And we still conserve and recycle 100% of our water usage. Good thing Vegas is ABOVE the dam and Zona and SoKal are BELOW the dam and Dead Pool is 895 ft, while the River inflows continue at 6 million acre ft per yr.
@sirridesalot6652
@sirridesalot6652 Жыл бұрын
9:05 talking about 'Deadpool' and the inability to generate electricity. "How soon could that happen?" "We're working very hard at making sure that doesn't happen." Way to go to avoid answering the question.
@bell1974
@bell1974 Жыл бұрын
Yes, exactly: Excuse me while I just bury my head in the sand again. If those that are in charge of regulating the river aren't planning for this 'deadpool' eventuality then what hope is there?
@truthiscensored
@truthiscensored Жыл бұрын
Grass and water for Golf Courses, but not for your home. No garden for you... Golf courses should be the first to use fake grass/turf...I don't see the point of having acres of land just to play a dumb game
@agems56
@agems56 Жыл бұрын
Our human population on earth took from the beginning of the human species until 1975 to reach 4 billion people! From 1975 until today, we are already at 8 billion! Something has to give!
@dingdang3418
@dingdang3418 Жыл бұрын
Farming is a real society-helping profession, satisfying and a good reason to hop out of bed at 3AM every morning.
@spikesmth
@spikesmth Жыл бұрын
Every household in the CO River Basin should be prepared to adapt to using 1/2 the water you currently use. We don't need to ban golf courses, but the water use per capita (customer) is less useful than agriculture. And agriculture firms needs to be prepared for some capital investment into serious water efficiency upgrades, we must do more with less, every day for the foreseeable future. Here in California, I think building a brand new nuclear reactor + desalination plant could add some robustness to both electrical and water systems.
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
Or Desal and Solar.
@JoeOvercoat
@JoeOvercoat Жыл бұрын
Actually, you do need to ban golf courses by dewatering them.
@sirridesalot6652
@sirridesalot6652 Жыл бұрын
What about the very high water usage crops like alfalfa? Much of the alfalfa cropland is owned by Middle East countries and the alfalfa crop is shipped there. Why? Because they're not allowed to grow such a water intensive use crop in those Middle East countries.
@YallaMiami
@YallaMiami Жыл бұрын
Can Iran build Nuclear Reactor?
@JoeOvercoat
@JoeOvercoat Жыл бұрын
@@YallaMiami …with Russian assistance, yes.
@ThalanorThornhale
@ThalanorThornhale Жыл бұрын
This is the first longer coverage on this topic by an American news network - finally. More of this sort of coverage please - during prime time. That said, this is mostly a collection of "eye witness" interviews. The connections between water shortage and law and the resulting misuse of water are not clearly explained. The effect of sinking ground water has not been fully explored. It would be nice to see what measures would be necessary to avoid the worst and projected costs. It would be nice to highlight American companies that could provide solutions - or international companies.
@zodwraith5745
@zodwraith5745 Жыл бұрын
ABC is the Australian Broadcast Corp. Not the US's ABC. All our media is massively politically charged.
@ThalanorThornhale
@ThalanorThornhale Жыл бұрын
@@zodwraith5745, lol. I had too much faith that American news would really put in so much time into this sort of news. Most US cable news talk about culture war topics.
@arkroyalr0943
@arkroyalr0943 Жыл бұрын
not sure if Zodwraith may have already explained - but this is not by an American news network. It is from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) - the Australian publicly (government) funded national broadcaster. Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on ABC-TV
@banksiasong
@banksiasong Жыл бұрын
Demand greater relevant and critical content from your local media organisations, as this is a mid-length current affairs program from another country.
@stevearcus2963
@stevearcus2963 Жыл бұрын
Don't worry, you can move half way to the coast and meet the rising sea levels, or do what man always has done adapt to the new conditions or move.
@carlinshowalter1806
@carlinshowalter1806 Жыл бұрын
Adapt or die!
@johnshaddick6858
@johnshaddick6858 Жыл бұрын
It doesn't make any sense to limit water to farmers. Without food from farms,people will starve and prices will go up.
@TheTruckDoesntRun
@TheTruckDoesntRun Жыл бұрын
Nice job on this reporting. Very well done.
@Diana1000Smiles
@Diana1000Smiles Жыл бұрын
I found the comments to be ignorant and irrelevant, too.
@sondrajoyce8810
@sondrajoyce8810 Жыл бұрын
What is the problem - no snow in the mountains in winter, plus no rains in the summer?
@johnchedsey1306
@johnchedsey1306 Жыл бұрын
Far less snow in the Colorado and Wyoming Rockies. That's the major provider of water to the river system. Monsoon rains can help...a little. But it's nothing like spring melt of snow.
@sondrajoyce8810
@sondrajoyce8810 Жыл бұрын
Arizona just now get monsoon rains, they say.......
@chrisyang05
@chrisyang05 Жыл бұрын
17:48 I agree with her. Most of the people in California, Arizona, and Nevada are living in areas that don't have enough natural reservoir of water to sustain. They've already engineered their way out of water constraint for decades. So, if this region's population continues to grow, desalination will be the only viable solution left.
@hedunlap
@hedunlap Жыл бұрын
Saudi Arabia depends upon desalination. From desalination plants built by American companies.
@shirleycathcart5502
@shirleycathcart5502 Жыл бұрын
@@hedunlap And Israel desert has turned into a major source of groceries.
@chrisyang05
@chrisyang05 Жыл бұрын
I'm not saying desalination is good, I'm just saying her point is spot on. How can we say desalination is "engineering our way out of a problem" while we turn a blind eye on dams, oil pipelines and power plants? Cities are inherently unnatural, without engineering, no city can exist.
@charleshoang566
@charleshoang566 Жыл бұрын
10 years ago San Diego California build the biggest desalination plant in the Western hemispheres cost 1 billion dollars product 50 million gallons of water a day.
@uraniumu242
@uraniumu242 Жыл бұрын
Pat Mulroy is the most insightful forward looking government official in the country. As a 40 year resident we would not have been able to thrive as we have.
@stevenboldt6489
@stevenboldt6489 Жыл бұрын
We got into this mess with major populations centers in the desert and more so, industrial farming in the desert. It's hard to compete with fertile desert soil that's pest resistant and 10 or more yields a year of a crop that feeds dairy cows like alfalfa. That's great but we're running out of water in the Sonoran Desert. Also, look what's happening up north in the Central Valley in California right now. It's getting baked. I'd guess this has been by far the hottest Sept. they've ever experienced.
@Kernewik101
@Kernewik101 Жыл бұрын
They've known it was coming...for over 60yrs & they've witnessed the rising heat n reduced rainfall for over 20yrs.. And the authorities have literally stuck their heads in the sand. Tragic n avoidable.😢
@stevenmartin6271
@stevenmartin6271 Жыл бұрын
Haha, yeah I went through Bakersfield on holiday from Australia. The hills are like shimmering yellow velvet from the heat.
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