zooophagous:ralfmaximus:princeloki:f1rstperson:Glad to see my lifelong disinterest in golf is paying
zooophagous:ralfmaximus:princeloki:f1rstperson:Glad to see my lifelong disinterest in golf is paying offlet me tell you about golfi grew up in a little desert valley called Tucson, Arizona, where it only rains 2 inches a year on average. the majority of the city’s water is pumped from an underground aquifer, which took millions of years to fill. one of the biggest conservation efforts in our city was for water, naturally, and i spent a lot of time learning about low flow toilets and 5 minute showers. i learned that filling your sink basin and washing your dishes in that water is less costly than running the tap. i learned that it only takes 2 days without water on the desert for someone to diethe city was sinking as the aquifer drained. neighborhoods fell into flood zones that didnt exist 10 years agothere’s a road called Golf Links in the city and it is lined with golf courses. miles of green grass where grass doesn’t grow, in a valley where it doesn’t rain. why? because the rich white retirees who moved there to stop the aching in their joints decided they should also get to play golf. meanwhile our public schools taught small children like me that taking long showers would kill the worldlet the golf industry burnThere are 15,500+ golf courses in the United States alone. Each one consumes ~312,000 gallons of water per day. That consumption is equivalent to 55+ million humans per day in the United States… roughly 1/6 the entire population.We simply cannot sustain this frivolity, especially for something 99% of us will never use.Destroy golf courses and plant wild grasses and butterfly bushes in their place.If you listen to the entirety of this podcast episode and don’t want to violently dismantle the golf industry afterwards, then there’s no hope for you -- source link