Yet in the rest of the world, toilet paper would be a novelty as bidets, the superior hygiene and environmental choice, dominate.
In case you are unfamiliar with this foreign piece of technology, it is like a cross between a toilet and a fountain that cleans you thoroughly, much better than with toilet tissue, without using your hands. For obvious reasons, the bidet is the much healthier option, especially considering that about half of all people do not wash their hands after using the loo. But is it any better environmentally? Wouldn't using water to wash after ever visit to the rest room just waste a lot more water?
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| The Beautiful Bidet, Credit |
Bidets, on the other hand, use about an 1/8th of a gallon per usage.
Let's get math-matical, shall we? If your average roll of two-ply contains 500 squares of paper, and the average person uses five to ten sheets per visit to the loo, then the roll would be gone in 50 to 100 usages.
The same number of usages of a bidet would result in using 6.25 or 12.5 gallons, respectively, instead of the 37 gallons it takes to make a roll of toilet paper. It also saves all that electricity, wood, plastic, and other materials it takes to produce TP.
Bidets come in a huge variety, but can cost as little as $69 (if you don't mind unheated water). At such an low one-time cost, its a wonder that America hasn't yet embraced the cleanliness and efficiency that is the bidet.
If you're not convinced yet, here is a review of the Japanese super toilet written by an American man.

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