Opinion Enough With the Fireworks Already - “Maybe we have the right to eat a hamburger or drive the biggest truck on the market or fire off bottle rockets deep into the night on the Fourth of July, but it doesn’t make us good Americans to do such things.”

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Philotheus Nisch/Connected Archives

By Margaret Renkl
July 1, 2024
Ms. Renkl is a contributing Opinion writer who covers flora, fauna, politics and culture in the American South.

For 15 straight years, our old dog Clark — a hound/shepherd/retriever mix who was born in the woods and loved the outdoors ever after — spent the Fourth of July in our walk-in shower. He seemed to believe a windowless shower in a windowless bathroom offered his best chance of surviving the shrieking terror that was raining down from the night sky outside.

Did he think the fireworks, with their window-rattling booms, were the work of some cosmic predator big enough to eat him whole? Did he think they were gunshots, or claps of thunder spreading out from inexplicable lightning bolts tearing open the sky above our house?

There’s no way to know what he was thinking, but every single year that rangy, 75-pound, country-born yard dog spent the Fourth of July in our shower, trembling, drooling and whimpering in terror.

Clark was lucky. We have friends whose terrified dog spent one Fourth of July fruitlessly trying to outrun the explosions. The next day a good Samaritan found him lying on a hot sidewalk miles away, close to death. Other friends came home from watching the fireworks to discover that their own dog had bolted in terror from their fenced backyard and been killed by a car.

And those were all companion animals, the ones whose terror is clear to us. We have no real way of knowing how many wild animals suffer because the patterns of their lives are disrupted with no warning every year on a night in early July. People shooting bottle rockets in the backyard might not see the sleeping songbirds, startled from their safe roosts, exploding into a darkness they did not evolve to navigatecrashing into buildings or depleting crucial energy reserves. People firing Roman candles into the sky above the ocean may have no idea that the explosions can cause seabirds to abandon their nest or frighten nesting shorebirds to death.

Then there’s the wildlife driven into roads — deer and foxes, opossums and skunks, coyotes and raccoons. Any nocturnal creature in a blind panic can find itself staring into oncoming headlights, unsure whether the greater danger lies in the road or in the sky or in the neighborhood yards surrounding them.

And all that’s on top of the dangers posed by fireworks debris, which can be toxic if ingested, or the risk of setting off a wildfire in parched summertime vegetation. Little wonder, then, that fireworks are banned in all national wildlife refuges, national forests and national parks.

Animals aren’t the only ones that suffer on the Fourth of July. We live in a country completely saturated with guns, and far too many of them are fired at strangers at public events. These days many human beings have a similar panicked reaction to the sound of fireworks, mistaking it for gunfire.

It’s a reasonable mistake. When a man starting shooting at a Fourth of July parade two years ago in Highland Park, Ill., spectators at first thought they were hearing fireworks. Such shootings are so common now that the whole country is arguably suffering from PTSD. As the editorial board of The Los Angeles Times noted after the Highland Park shooting, “The result is that we will never again hear the bang of Fourth of July fireworks without a jolt of fear that the sound might actually be gunshots fired from a rooftop.”

It would be so easy to find a new way to celebrate the founding of a nation. So easy, at the very least, to limit fireworks to public celebrations meant to bring communities together. When those communities use low-noise fireworks, as well, they limit the stress on people and animals, and they mitigate some of the dangers to local wildlife.

Such measures wouldn’t address the pollution caused by fireworks, though. On average, Fourth of July displays account for the 42 percent more pollutants found in the air on July 4 and 5 than on a typical day.

“All flourishing is mutual,” writes Robin Wall Kimmerer, a botanist and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, in her best-selling book, “Braiding Sweetgrass.” This is one of the most oft-repeated lines in contemporary environmental literature, and for good reason. It reminds us that all creation, human and other-than-human, is interconnected. At a time when life on this planet is faltering in every possible way, Dr. Kimmerer gently points out that our own flourishing depends on the flourishing of planetary systems that we are barely beginning to understand.

Addressing climate change and biodiversity loss on a planet with eight billion human residents won’t be simple. How to grow affordable food without using petrochemical fertilizers and pesticides that poison pollinators, for example, is a challenge. How to build enough housing for human beings without also disrupting natural ecosystems is a challenge. Such things are doable, though they won’t be easy.

But there are easy things we can do at no real cost to ourselves. We can eat more vegetables and less animal protein. We can cultivate native plants. We can seek out products that aren’t packaged in plastic, spend less time in cars and airplanes, raise the thermostat in the summer and lower it in the winter. As Dr. Kimmerer points out in “The Serviceberry,” her forthcoming book, “We live in a time when every choice matters.”

In that context, surely, we can give up fireworks. Of all the little pleasures that give life meaning and joy, surely fireworks don’t come close to the top of the list, and it costs us nothing to give them up. This is one case in which doing the right thing requires no significant sacrifice, one case in which doing the right thing has an immediate, noticeable, undeniably positive effect on a suffering world.

The conflation of selfishness with patriotism is the thing I have the hardest time accepting about our political era. Maybe we have the right to eat a hamburger or drive the biggest truck on the market or fire off bottle rockets deep into the night on the Fourth of July, but it doesn’t make us good Americans to do such things. How can it possibly be “American” to look at the damage that fireworks can cause — to the atmosphere, to forests, to wildlife, to our own beloved pets, to ourselves — and shrug?

The truly American thing would be to join together to make every change we can reasonably make to alleviate the suffering of our fellow creatures, human and other-than-human alike. The truly American thing would be to plant a victory garden large enough to encompass the entire natural world.

Margaret Renkl, a contributing Opinion writer, is the author of the books “The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year,” “Graceland, at Last” and “Late Migrations.”

Source (Archive)
 
I wish people could keep to one subject per article. :roll:

My cats are terrified. One keeps running around with no idea where to hide. I'm not a fan of fireworks anymore. Although I'm seeing less of them this year. Maybe people can't afford them like they used to. People sell and set off illegal fireworks and nothing happens. There are rules that vary from state to state and city to city. It's hard to enforce though as people will quickly flee if they hear sirens. People are setting them off way too close to buildings and trees and setting them off well into the night.

If you want to see fireworks go to a live event.
 
I wish people could keep to one subject per article. :roll:

My cats are terrified. One keeps running around with no idea where to hide. I'm not a fan of fireworks anymore. Although I'm seeing less of them this year. Maybe people can't afford them like they used to. People sell and set off illegal fireworks and nothing happens. There are rules that vary from state to state and city to city. It's hard to enforce though as people will quickly flee if they hear sirens. People are setting them off way too close to buildings and trees and setting them off well into the night.

If you want to see fireworks go to a live event.

my cat does that for both fireworks and thunderstorms. hope your cats are doing fine. though i do have to agree on seeing fewer fireworks. when i was a kid july 4 was crazy with fireworks, but now it is noticeably less and less with each year. i think cost probably is a factor, last time i wen to buy some the other year it got pretty expensive pretty quick. but i also think that people just dont want to shoot them as much anymore, i guess views have changed to whatever.

to anyone who has one of those dogs which constantly barks and make noises at all hours, i hope he gets so scared he constantly pisses himself. serves the little turd for keeping me up at night or ruining what would be an otherwise nice peaceful afternoon.
 
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Four days a year you can plan on fireworks: Independence Day, New Year, Chinese New Year, and your state's founding day (depending on local laws). It's not like they're a fucking surprise. Thru happen every year at the same time. They're even on the calendar. Be a good pet owner and plan around it. If your critter is really that freaked out over fireworks then take some vacation time and take them out of town on those nights. I've owned dogs who were freaked out by loud noises like the boom of fireworks or the rumble of thunder, so I would take them down into the basement during those times. Just because your little fur baby doesn't like fireworks does not mean the rest of us should give up our fun, patriotic tradition that goes back over 150 years. The world doesn't revolve around you or your fucking mutt.
 
Coupla three things:
  1. Fuck your stupid dog. It should count its blessings, considering what used to happen to dogs that couldn’t handle living around human practices.
  2. If some ex-ZOGbot can’t handle fireworks because he was funding his obese babymama and Dodge Charger “””protecting our freedoms””” in Durkadurkastan, that’s his problem.
  3. If some nigger thinks a shooting is going down because fireworks sound like niggers shooting each other, that’s his problem.
 
Crazy how every 4th of July, so many people come out as gay and retarded.
They've been a bit more subdued this year. Only one "You have NOTHING to celebrate this month when you consider how many brave POC transwomen of color got murdered by Drumpfhitler last night!" post hit my FB feed, for example.

Must be all the "L"s they've been taking in court/on the campaign trail that's making it hard for them to chastise the "Wrong Side of History" chuds.

Shame, It's always fascinating to watch someone, without a hint of irony, suggest "Have compassion, consider the feelings of others... and STOP HAVING FUN THIS INSTANT! YOU DESERVE NOTHING BUT MISERY! NOW DO AS I SAY!"
 
They've been a bit more subdued this year. Only one "You have NOTHING to celebrate this month when you consider how many brave POC transwomen of color got murdered by Drumpfhitler last night!" post hit my FB feed, for example.

Must be all the "L"s they've been taking in court/on the campaign trail that's making it hard for them to chastise the "Wrong Side of History" chuds.

Shame, It's always fascinating to watch someone, without a hint of irony, suggest "Have compassion, consider the feelings of others... and STOP HAVING FUN THIS INSTANT! YOU DESERVE NOTHING BUT MISERY! NOW DO AS I SAY!"
These are the same clowns who consider themselves "empaths", one of the more retarded woo-woo horseshit terms to emerge in the last few years. Of course, they only have empathy for those who agree with them on every topic.
 
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