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Malia Politzer
Editor of piqd.com. International Investigative Journalist
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piqer: Malia Politzer
Sunday, 29 April 2018

A Surprising Unintended Consequence Of Cape Town's Drought: Unity And Cooperation

This Huffington Post Highline piece is a beautiful read, both for the reporting and writing, and also the overall message of optimism it imparts. 

Most people will have heard of Cape Town's count down to "day zero"—the day that the city runs out of water. Leading up to this cataclysmic day, most media pundits (and even the local government) predicted utter chaos. The fact that water was running out in a city known for a history of extreme racial tension only made predictions more dire.

However, when reporter Eve Fairbanks traveled to Cape Town to see how residents were managing the impending apocalypse, what she found was quite the contrary: People were coming together, across economic and even racial lines, to conserve water and try to find some sort of solution: Voluntary water usage plummeted, and it soon became a badge of honor to "show a visitor day-old urine ripening in your toilet."

She describes residents of Cape Town's behavior as a "beautiful social experiment."

It could be that human beings are just waiting for something that gives them a challenge, a chance to rise above their politics-exhausted cynicisms and prove they can be good neighbors, stand for more than just money and success, and find ingenious tricks, together, to outwit their new tormentors. It could be that certain kinds of disasters—particularly the natural, which feel more neutral and acceptable than politically driven ones—may wedge open spaces for change in other areas in which we feel stuck.

This excellent piece about how Capetonians came together—and what their cooperation achieved—is definitely worth a read. 

A Surprising Unintended Consequence Of Cape Town's Drought: Unity And Cooperation
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