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Reason: None provided.

Chlorine will leave a slight taste in the water but only if you overdose it slightly for safety but not too much so it becomes harmful. It will leave far less of a taste than bleach (which is recommended as a water treatment solution by the CDC) or iodine which also leaves the water colored red. Iodine treatment tablets are ridiculously expensive so they are never viable unless you're taking a two week vacation in Tibet. I can confirm that iodine is effective because I used it when taking a two week vacation in Tibet... and their drinking water is sewage.

Trust me, when Shit Hits The Fan, the taste of treated water will be the least of your worries.

Yes, chlorinated water is safe for human consumption as long as you don't use too much chlorine: all first world nation water treatment plants use chlorine to treat their water. What comes out of your tap is chlorinated water. Most people are unaware of this.

Grocery store bottled water is also treated with chlorine because that's tap water too, only in a toxic plastic bottle and 100,000 x as expensive but it comes with a picture of a snowy mountain on it.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Chlorine will leave a slight taste in the water but only if you overdose it slightly for safety but not too much so it becomes harmful. It will leave far less of a taste than bleach (which is recommended as a water treatment solution by the CDC) or iodine which also leaves the water colored red. Iodine treatment tablets are ridiculously expensive so they are never viable unless you're taking a two week vacation in Tibet. I can confirm that iodine is effective because I used it when taking a two week vacation in Tibet... and their drinking water is sewage.

Trust me, when Shit Hits The Fan, the taste of treated water will be the least of your worries.

Yes, chlorinated water is safe for human consumption as long as you don't use too much chlorine: all first world nation water treatment plants use chlorine to treat their water. What comes out of your tap is chlorinated water. Most people are unaware of this.

Grocery store bottled water is also treated with chlorine because that's tap water too, only in a toxic plastic bottle and 100,000 x as expensive but it comes with a picture of a snowy mountain on it.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Chlorine will leave a slight taste in the water but only if you overdose it slightly for safety but not too much so it becomes harmful. It will leave far less of a taste than bleach (which is recommended as a water treatment solution by the CDC) or iodine which also leaves the water colored red. Iodine treatment tablets are ridiculously expensive so they are never viable unless you're taking a two week vacation in Tibet. I can confirm that iodine is effective because I used it when taking a two week vacation in Tibet... and their drinking water is sewage.

Trust me, when Shit Hits The Fan, the taste of treated water will be the least of your worries.

Yes, chlorinated water is safe for human consumption: all first world nation water treatment plants use chlorine to treat their water. What comes out of your tap is chlorinated water. Most people are unaware of this.

Grocery store bottled water is also treated with chlorine because that's tap water too, only in a toxic plastic bottle and 100,000 x as expensive but it comes with a picture of a snowy mountain on it.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Chlorine will leave a slight taste in the water but only if you overdose it slightly for safety but not too much so it becomes harmful. It will leave far less of a taste than bleach (which is recommended as a water treatment solution by the CDC) or iodine which also leaves the water colored red. Iodine treatment tablets are ridiculously expensive so they are never viable unless you're taking a two week vacation in Tibet. I can confirm that iodine is effective because I used it when taking a two week vacation in Tibet... and their drinking water is sewage.

Yes, chlorinated water is safe for human consumption: all first world nation water treatment plants use chlorine to treat their water. What comes out of your tap is chlorinated water. Most people are unaware of this.

Grocery store bottled water is also treated with chlorine because that's tap water too, only in a toxic plastic bottle and 100,000 x as expensive but it comes with a picture of a snowy mountain on it.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Chlorine will leave a slight taste in the water but only if you overdose it slightly for safety but not too much so it becomes harmful. It will leave far less of a taste than bleach (which is recommended as a water treatment solution by the CDC) or iodine which also leaves the water colored red. Iodine treatment tablets are ridiculously expensive so they are never viable unless you're taking a two week vacation in Tibet. I can confirm that iodine is effective because I used it when taking a two week vacation in Tibet... and their drinking water is sewage.

Yes, chlorinated water is safe for human consumption: all first world nation water treatment plants use chlorine to treat their water. What comes out of your tap is chlorinated water. Most people are unaware of this.

Grocery store bottled water is also treated with chlorine because that's also the same water that comes out of the tap, only in a toxic plastic bottle and 100,000 x as expensive.

2 years ago
1 score