The water problem for Waukesha and the rest of suburban America

 Calvin Cooper

Waukesha is a sprawl suburb of Milwaukee and they have pretty much tapped their water supply over the years. The aquifer they usually drawn water over the years as white folks fled inner city Milwaukee is at dangerously high levels of radium and salt. These fucks have pretty much polluted their ecosystem and now are asking to use Lake Michigan's water and drain their resources. Maybe if they want Lake Michigan water these old assholes need to move back closer to lake Michigan. The polluting and depletion of water supplies and aquifers is an ignored fact and only a few have raised the concern this poses for the country. Suburbanites just care about their huge lawns and walking their dogs and care little what their lifestyle choices and dangerous consequences have developed for themselves. City leaders of this miserable suburb say it wouldn't make sense for a business to locate in an area with unsafe drinking water. Good. Why would a business need to locate to Waukesha, a place that evidently has no idea how to be sustainable and manage the most basic of resources. John Cronin has been warning America about our coming water shortages and major problems and I wonder what he would think of this battle in Milwaukee. Waukesha use to have great natural mineral springs that they ruined over the years putting up Wal Marts and Home depots. You know these places are just really good for water drainage and so forth. This crummy suburb made a request to draw ten million gallons a day for their residential and commercial use and just one state of eight needs to veto this. These states are listening to people like Cronin now days and lake Michigan is a crucial last area of big freshwater. People who walk their dogs and water their lawns for hours do not need to tap a reserve that they chose to flee and now is time for cities to protect their supplies from the same folks that tried to bring them down. Waukesha obviously wants a license to continue their nonsustaining sprawl and hopefully people who know all about water like John Cronin keep their voices out there for a blind public.

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