تعبير عن الماء بالانجليزي قصير وسهل
تعبير عن الماء بالانجليزي ث
A "culture of water"
Water is essential to life. However, all too often, water
is not perceived as the precious good it really is, but it is paradoxically
wasted. This act of wasting water is morally unbearable. Citizens of some countries
are used to enjoying a privileged situation without thinking about the
consequences of wasting water on the lives of their brothers and sisters in the
rest of the world. In other situations, water is lost or wasted because of
infrastructure that is too old, poorly built, poorly constructed, or poorly
maintained.
There is an urgent need to regain a "culture of
water", to educate society to a new attitude towards water. In many ways,
the value we place on water has weakened. Water was traditionally respected and
protected, and even celebrated. Today, it runs the risk of being a mere
consumer product. In the face of waste, water can not be treated as just
another consumer product because it is invaluable and irreplaceable. Cultural
traditions and values of society determine how people perceive and manage
water. Using only price-increasing mechanisms as a response to wasteful water
does not help to encourage a culture of water and does not take into account
the poor who also need water to live on.
It is necessary to remember that all human beings are
united by a common origin and the same ultimate destiny. Water must therefore
be considered as a public good from which all citizens can benefit, but in the
context of duties, rights and responsibilities of each person.