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In 1922 officials from seven states agreed on the Colorado River Compact. This agreement would decide how water was distributed across the states that the Colorado River ran through. Today, this compact is the reason for severe drought and an apocalyptic scenario that is coming quickly to the southwest.
At the time, the officials thought they fairly distributed water rights among constituents, which would have been true if the math were correct. But the numbers were terribly off, and the states are now drawing more acre-feet of water than the River can reasonably sustain. Water continues to be used frivolously even though we know that there is not nearly enough water for this level of consumption. If something doesn't change soon, there might actually be no water to go around.
Things I Learned Last Night is an educational comedy podcast where best friends Jaron Myers and Tim Stone talk about random topics and have fun all along the way. If you like learning, and laughing a whole lot while you do, then you’ll love TILLN. Watch or listen to this episode today!
Become a Patron and Get Early Access to Ad-Free Episodes:
https://www.patreon.com/tillnpodcast
Episode Link: https://tilln.com/coloradoriver
Want to Support TILLN: https://linktr.ee/tillnpodcast
Text TILLN to 66866 to become a patron and gain access to ad-free episodes, the exclusive discord, and earn discounts on TILLN Merch.
Advertise with us: https://bit.ly/3FdZirY
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Jaron Myers and Tim Stone4.7
684684 ratings
In 1922 officials from seven states agreed on the Colorado River Compact. This agreement would decide how water was distributed across the states that the Colorado River ran through. Today, this compact is the reason for severe drought and an apocalyptic scenario that is coming quickly to the southwest.
At the time, the officials thought they fairly distributed water rights among constituents, which would have been true if the math were correct. But the numbers were terribly off, and the states are now drawing more acre-feet of water than the River can reasonably sustain. Water continues to be used frivolously even though we know that there is not nearly enough water for this level of consumption. If something doesn't change soon, there might actually be no water to go around.
Things I Learned Last Night is an educational comedy podcast where best friends Jaron Myers and Tim Stone talk about random topics and have fun all along the way. If you like learning, and laughing a whole lot while you do, then you’ll love TILLN. Watch or listen to this episode today!
Become a Patron and Get Early Access to Ad-Free Episodes:
https://www.patreon.com/tillnpodcast
Episode Link: https://tilln.com/coloradoriver
Want to Support TILLN: https://linktr.ee/tillnpodcast
Text TILLN to 66866 to become a patron and gain access to ad-free episodes, the exclusive discord, and earn discounts on TILLN Merch.
Advertise with us: https://bit.ly/3FdZirY
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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