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This Product Wouldn’t Sell in Any Country With Drinkable Tap Water

A few days ago, while walking home, I noticed a tiny water bottle at a store.

I had already seen that little bottle before – about two months ago I had seen an advertisement for it, but I thought it was pointless so I didn’t go check for it.

But now it wasn’t any picture on a piece of cardboard hanged to a wall – it was the real deal.

https://kozume.neocities.org/images/blog/water/200mlbottle.jpeg

And as I saw the tiny bottle, holding a puny 200ml of plain water with my own eyes, I asked myself: “How on Earth could such a thing even be sold? Who would buy this?”

I asked my mother about it and she told me that it was intended for toddlers, whose hands are too small for them to easily carry a larger bottle with their hands; but that answer didn’t really suffice me – after all, wouldn’t it be easier for the parents to just buy a water bottle for their kids and fill that up instead?

Fast forward to now, and the situation concerning the tiny water bottle comes back to my mind, as I get bored during class; and I remember that in the very country I live in, you cannot drink the tap water anywhere, from the most important urban centers to the most remote villages.

Even in the capital city, there are many places whose residents cannot not only afford, but outright access this tap water, which has then to be boiled or passed through a cleaning filter in order to be drunk safely.

This kind of environment is replicated in many other countries around the world, all of them developing, and it’s even present in a smaller scale in more impoverished parts of so-called “developed” countries.

And such an environment is the only place where the idea of selling 200ml of bottled water, which is already rendered moot by tap water itself in any place where it’s treated well enough to be drinkable (which is any place that is worth living in, really) can be concieved.