President Trump’s reversal on prices dominated the headlines on Wednesday, but he also found the time to continue his longtime quarrel with low speed shower potatoes.
The president signed a decree to loosen a restriction on the waterflow flow of shower potatoes, leading the energy secretary Chris Wright to cancel a definition of the shower potatoes implemented by President Barack Obama. This echoes an effort from the first administration of Mr. Trump – later hampered by the Biden administration – to considerably increase the amount of water that showers with several nozzles can use.
“The showers will not be lower and worthless,” the White House said in a press release.
Trump has a long-term crusade against low water pressure, a problem in some New York skills. In his first mandate, he deplored that his showers did not provide enough water so that he could make his “perfect” hair. He released this complaint again when he signed the order on Wednesday.
“I like to take a nice shower, take care of my beautiful hair,” said Trump. “I am in the shower for 15 minutes until it is wet. It comes out drip, drip, drop, it’s ridiculous. ”
The new order restores the language of a 1992 federal law which prevented new shower potatoes from praising more than 2.5 gallons of water per minute.
The Obama administration ordered that for showers with several nozzles, the 2.5 -gallon limit applied to each shower head, not each nozzle.
Towards the end of Mr. Trump’s first term, he promulgated a rule that allowed each nozzle to pump 2.5 gallons, without restrictions on the total number of nozzles. Administration Biden canceled this rule in 2021.