Many folks might take water for granted as being a mundane issue, although readers of this blog might be the exception. No matter, please read on. Our adventure began when the municipality decided that they no longer wanted us as a customer.
“To really know something, one must go directly to people with immediate experience of the situation. You can’t really know by talking with someone who has only read about it.” – “The Great Taking”, by David Rogers Webb, p xxi.
I am not a professional writer. Instead, I am a strong-minded individualist who insisted on paying my own way through post-secondary education in natural and computer sciences, business, and economics – first working as a carpenter, eventually managing projects. Later, as an asset manager, I was responsible for million dollar budgets involving capital, vehicles, and equipment. I was then forcibly retired at the point that I informed my employer that he could not wear their mandated face mask. This was an honest answer, because as an analyst I could see no data supporting an actual ‘pandemic’, and as a Christian I would not endorse their falsehood.
Assessing Risk
When preparing for something, it behooves one to sit down and give thought to the risk one is setting out to mitigate.
As I write this, we find political risk is significantly high. The World Economic Forum (WEF) – best known for their sponsorship of the ‘pandemic planning exercise’ Event 201 in October 2019, weeks ahead of the ‘discovery’ of a ‘novel coronavirus’ announcement – has also constantly been talking about water. We best be aware of what is being said by this insane influential ‘think tank’ with a participant list that reads like the “Who’s Who” of world leaders, industrialists and financiers.
We find ourselves at a time when the government-run water distribution systems are contaminated with foreign substances – lead, as was reported in Flint, Michigan. And the water treatment policies are at best questionable, if not downright dangerous, and additives such as fluoride are of doubtful ‘science’.
Even out at the farm, water tables are down and they are up – even the best wells are not consistently reliable. Life is naturally risky.Continue reading“A Water System Adventure – Part 1, by E.R.”

