Moment View

Girlfriend Floods My New House

No, my argument for the whole wasting water thing is— and I knew this conversation was going to take a turn there, that's why I wrote this down— is I don't understand, I don't understand why like leaving the sink on when you're brushing your teeth is a waste of water. Because it's not like when the water goes down the sink it shoots up into space. Like, isn't it still circulating in the world of water? Like, doesn't it even like maybe go back to the ocean or wherever where we can reuse the water later? You know what I mean?

November 24, 20173:44David
3:44/0:00
Scrub the kinetic waveform to jump through the episode.
7
Transcript window
Transcript Window

Context stack

Nearby lines for local context around the selected quote.
Jason3:25
Oh, it's real simple. Every flush takes water. That's it.
David3:29
Okay, every flush takes water. Yeah, but like, this is my question, right? And like, bear with me because I may be wrong because I'm just— I'm a kid. What do I know?
Jason3:35
Here we go. I'm a kid. Jason, you're old, so you're always wrong. And I— if I am wrong, it's fine because I'm 21.
David3:44
No, my argument for the whole wasting water thing is— and I knew this conversation was going to take a turn there, that's why I wrote this down— is I don't understand, I don't understand why like leaving the sink on when you're brushing your teeth is a waste of water. Because it's not like when the water goes down the sink it shoots up into space. Like, isn't it still circulating in the world of…
Jason4:08
No, it doesn't. That's why there's droughts everywhere. That's why Northern California had a drought like all last year.
David4:14
But what happens to the water?
Jason4:15
Like, it goes, it gets wasted, it's no longer drinkable. What do you think goes to the sewer?