Thread: if its brown, flush it down. If its yellow, let it mellow.
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Oct 17th, 2007 08:58 PM
#31

Originally Posted by
Eldorado
Pee in the shower..
I do, I aim right for the drain though, most of the time I hit it in one try, sometimes a miss by a few cm.
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Oct 17th, 2007 09:02 PM
#32

Originally Posted by
Eldorado
Pee in the shower..
i just did LOL
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Oct 18th, 2007 05:59 AM
#33

Originally Posted by
romsan04
i just did LOL

If you're in the shower by yourself, why not? Its sterile, you're already bathing, and our shower drain and toilet drain go to the same place.
If it's a community shower though like in the above article, its just bad manners, even if it doesn't actually harm anyone. Passing gas in a crowded room isn't harming anyone either but that doesn't mean it shouldn't try to be avoided.
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Oct 18th, 2007 08:15 AM
#34

Originally Posted by
brunes
If you're in the shower by yourself, why not? Its sterile, you're already bathing, and our shower drain and toilet drain go to the same place.
If it's a community shower though like in the above article, its just bad manners, even if it doesn't actually harm anyone. Passing gas in a crowded room isn't harming anyone either but that doesn't mean it shouldn't try to be avoided.
Does this remind anyone of Seinfeld: "They're pipes! They're all connected!"
Regarding passing gas in a crowded room, that's a better place than any because there's less chance to get caught
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Oct 18th, 2007 02:55 PM
#35
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servl.../National/home
The Great Lakes contain about one-fifth of all the fresh water on the planet. Although a drop of a metre may not seem like much compared to what they contain, about 99 per cent of the lake water is considered a legacy of the last ice age and is basically non-renewable.
Only about 1 per cent is replenished each year through precipitation, and has to offset what flows out of the lakes through the St. Lawrence River into the Atlantic Ocean.

Originally Posted by
brunes
Actually, yes, it is. It is extremely difficult to take water and pollute it to an extent that it is is not cleansed by simple evaporation. To do such a thing the binding force between the H2O molecule and the polluting molecule woudl have to be great enough to overcome whatever their different sublimation points were, so that as gases they would not be miscible but continue to be bound together so that when the water condensates and falls as rain it would still retain the pollutant.
I don't know of ANY pollutants offhand that could do this. There are lots of airbourne pollutants that will mix with water and fall with rain (for example those that cause acid rain), but these compounds are a result of air pollution, not water pollution.
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Oct 18th, 2007 03:40 PM
#36
eww... this thread reminds me of that ratemypoo.com website. Like the hot or not photo rating site... except that one rates something else.
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Oct 18th, 2007 04:48 PM
#37

Originally Posted by
Madchester
eww... this thread reminds me of that ratemypoo.com website. Like the hot or not photo rating site... except that one rates something else.
poopreport is better.
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