Anonymous wrote:The thing about fireworks in Arlington and 22205 is that there is that HUGE fireworks store up at the corner of North Harrison and Langston Blvd, near the CVS and Auto Zone. It's been there several years now. Hard to argue that folks can't shoot off some fireworks here when that store is up there basically egging people on and encouraging home use.
I don't like them either and would be upset if someone were shooting them right outside/at my house. And I also live in 22205. Maybe we should think about that store, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.
+1776
Very well said!
It’s true, fireworks aren’t 100% risk free. We get it. But explosions are cool, boozy parties are fun, and I’m not limiting my life to the handful of activities that middle-aged hall monitors deem sufficiently safe.
Just bar your doors and windows, massage your basket case Labradoodle, and drink your herbal tea. It’s one day a year, you’ll be OK.
How many MAGA families that complain they can’t afford groceries under Biden spent $500 on fireworks?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.
+1776
Very well said!
It’s true, fireworks aren’t 100% risk free. We get it. But explosions are cool, boozy parties are fun, and I’m not limiting my life to the handful of activities that middle-aged hall monitors deem sufficiently safe.
Just bar your doors and windows, massage your basket case Labradoodle, and drink your herbal tea. It’s one day a year, you’ll be OK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.
Says someone who never lost a bodypart from a rogue illegal firework.
A “rogue” illegal firework? WTH is that?
I’m a lot more concerned with losing body parts to roque illegal aliens with machetes. You should be as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.
+1776
Very well said!
It’s true, fireworks aren’t 100% risk free. We get it. But explosions are cool, boozy parties are fun, and I’m not limiting my life to the handful of activities that middle-aged hall monitors deem sufficiently safe.
Just bar your doors and windows, massage your basket case Labradoodle, and drink your herbal tea. It’s one day a year, you’ll be OK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.
Says someone who never lost a bodypart from a rogue illegal firework.
Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.
Anonymous wrote:https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2024/07/investigators-say-discarded-illegal-fireworks-likely-caused-two-house-fires-in-montgomery-co/
Discarded illegal fireworks caused two house fires this week.
Anonymous wrote:We're in a drought, and things are very dry. Contact the homeowners and then police, if you haven't talked to them. It's so needlessly dangerous.
Anonymous wrote:Setting off fireworks illegally is pretty much THE single most American thing a person can do on Independence Day, short of enlisting in the military.
By setting off fireworks illegally, you’re embracing the same spirit of rejection of authority and exercising self determination to do what pleases you as the people who told The British Crown they were no longer the subjects of the King.
Sure, fireworks are a little less dramatic than throwing a revolution and killing redcoats - but the spirit is the same. Someone in authority wants to control you, and you reject their authority.
It makes me smile to see people openly using fireworks in places where they’re banned. Because it tells me there’s still a spark of that rebellious nature that created this country.