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GUEST,Barry D BS: What are your 4th July plans? (43) RE: BS: What are your 4th July plans? 04 Jul 08


No, it isn't difficult to keep a small carbon print to celebrate. We buy local micro-brew, organic foods locally produced, and have a share in a CSA farm.

As to the pollution, hey--it is my world too, and I have a right to protest dumb asses polluting my enviroment for their jollies. The pollution doesn't stay in the driveway.

Living in an urban area, we are surrounded my major fireworks displays going off every night for over a week. Add to that the THOUSANDS of groups setting off illegal fireworks--as we speak, as they too have been doing for well over a week, starting countless fires, injuring a whole lot of people, including innocent bystanders, and suddenly it doesn't seem so fun anymore. My car was nearly hit by bottle rockets driving home three times this week.

From the Los Angeles Times
Pollution Is Fireworks' Dirty Little Secret

Los Angeles Times
    July 4, 2008

When the rockets and the bombs burst in the air tonight, spectators will experience more than a spectacular show celebrating America's birthday.

Chemists say fireworks are the dirtiest of the dirty bombs: When their blends of black powder, metals, oxidizers, fuels and other toxic ingredients are ignited, traces wind up in the environment, often spreading long distances and lasting for days, even months.

Although pyrotechnic experts are developing environmentally friendly fireworks, Fourth of July revelers this year will be watching essentially the same, high-polluting technology that their grandparents experienced decades ago.

Public health officials warn that people with heart problems or respiratory diseases, such as asthma, should avoid the smoky celebrations, staying upwind or indoors.

"I enjoy a fireworks display as much as anyone else but we do have concerns about exposure to high levels of smoke and particles," said Jean Ospital, health effects officer for the South Coast Air Quality Management District in California.

Also, traces of poisonous metals, which give fireworks their bright colors, and perchlorate, a hormone-altering substance used as an oxidizer, trickle to the ground, contaminating waterways. One Environmental Protection Agency study found that perchlorate levels in an Oklahoma lake rose 1,000-fold after a fireworks display, and they stayed high in some areas for up to 80 days.


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