Topic: Fire Hydrant

3 chapters across the catalog

An inspection of a specific fire hydrant reveals a flow rate set at 50 gallons per minute, documented by a technician named Russell Allen on August 4, 1998. Since that date, a single hydrant has pumped thousands of gallons of water into the surrounding soil. The investigation aims to total the gallonage across multiple hydrants to quantify the scale of perceived waste on the side of the road.

Calculations from two fire hydrants show that over 150,000 gallons of water have been pumped between August 4 and August 12, 1998. The electronic timers are configured for four-hour durations every single day, contrasting with the "every other day" guidelines suggested for the public. Visual evidence from the meters confirms a steady flow of 10 gallons per click, totaling over 72,000 gallons at one specific station.

Alex Jones Really Cares About Your Childrens' Clean Water(Dogs Too) [6GpVgH5kRfI]
17:35 - 20:40

Alex Jones Really Cares About Your Childrens' Clean Water(Dogs Too) [6GpVgH5kRfI]

Infrastructure Disparity, Plea for Alex Jones Intervention

Residents point out the hypocrisy of surrounding apartment complexes and businesses having full city water access while Northridge Acres remains on a contaminated fire hydrant. They describe the water as "slop" that is unfit for pets and claim the local water tank hasn't been cleaned in years. The segment concludes with a direct plea for Alex Jones to use his platform to fix the water crisis.