Federal Safety Regulators Say 43 Percent of Tested Fireworks Are Illegal. God Bless America.
Fireworks consumption is at record levels even as fireworks injuries fall.

Fourth of July is almost upon us, which means that it's time for America's safety regulators to do what they do every year: plead in vain for Americans to use their illegal fireworks responsibly.
Last week, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)—known for its "will she, won't she" comments on banning gas stoves—released its annual report on fireworks use and injuries. Historically, about 75 percent of fireworks injuries occur within a month of the Fourth of July holiday. The agency is trying to get ahead of the mayhem with warnings about just how dangerous these products can be.
"Fireworks are beautiful to watch, but they can be deadly when mishandled or misused, or if the fireworks themselves contain illegal components," said CPSC Chair Alex Hoehn-Saric in a press release. "I urge everyone to use care around fireworks, only use fireworks labeled for consumer use, and always keep children far away from fireworks, including sparklers. We want everyone to have a fun and safe celebration."
That's easier said than done. According to CPSC's report, 43 percent of fireworks tested by the agency in 2022 included illegal components, including "fuse violations, presence of prohibited chemicals, burnout or blowout, and pyrotechnic materials overload."
The commission's report says that this is significantly higher than past years. In general, people are consuming way more fireworks as well. The American Pyrotechnics Association reports that 436 million pounds of consumer fireworks were bought in 2022, a historic high and nearly double the rate of pre-pandemic firework consumption.
That hasn't left the country worse for wear. There were an estimated 10,200 fireworks injuries in the country in 2022. That's a decrease in real terms from the 11,500 injuries in 2021 and the staggering 15,600 reported in 2020 (when blowing up fireworks kept people entertained during a summer of lockdowns and government-mandated social distancing).
CPSC found there were 3.1 firework injuries per 100,000 people in 2022, slightly above the 3 injuries per 100,000 reported in 2019.
At this point, the CPSC may be reminding you of the Declaration of Independence's complaints about "swarms of officers" that "harrass our people, and eat out their substance." But for the record: Yes, consumer-facing explosives can be dangerous. In 2022, 11 people died from fireworks injuries. Those included people killed while manufacturing their own fireworks and at least three people (including an 11-year-old boy) who died while holding motors on or near their heads.
Some caution is advisable.
Nevertheless, the fact that Americans can't get enough of blowing up (often illegal) stuff and are doing more and more of it every Independence Day shows that the spirit of 1776 is alive and well. A straight line of gun-powder-scented chaotic energy runs from our revolutionary forebearers right up to today's patriotic pyromaniacs.
The Declaration of Independence itself was a bold, daring, and certainly just act. It was also a risky one considered illegal by the authorities of the day.
It's fitting, then, that we continue to replicate their messy embrace of freedom by flouting the laws of our modern-day George IIIs and blowing up a small piece of the new nation they created.
(Please, for the love of God, do not fire off mortars while holding them on your head.)
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Historically, about 75 percent of fireworks injuries occur within a month of the Fourth of July holiday.
I blame Pride.
Not those kind of eruptions. You've got a dirty mind.
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I dated a guy who got monkeypox from lighting off roman candle in his bathing suit.
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Baby, You're A Firework! 🙂
https://youtu.be/QGJuMBdaqIw
A poem by Howard Nemerov
Because I am drunk, this Independence Night,
I watch the fireworks from far away,
from a high hill, across the moony green
Of lakes and other hills to the town harbor,
Where stately illuminations are flung aloft,
One light shattering in a hundred lights
Minute by minute. The reason I am crying,
Aside from only being country drunk,
That is, may be that I have just remembered
The sparklers, rockets, roman candles and
so on, we used to be allowed to buy
When I was a boy, and set off by ourselves
At some peril to life and property.
Our freedom to abuse our freedom thus
Has since, I understand, been remedied
By legislation. Now the authorities
Arrange a perfectly safe public display
To be watched at a distance; and now also
The contribution of all the taxpayers
Together makes a more spectacular
Result than any could achieve alone
(A few pale pinwheels, or a firecracker
Fused at the dog's tail). It is, indeed, splendid:
Showers of roses in the sky, fountains
Of emeralds, and those profusely scattered zircons
Falling and falling, flowering as they fall
And followed distantly by a noise of thunder.
My eyes are half-afloat in happy tears.
God bless our Nation on a night like this,
And bless the careful and secure officials
Who celebrate our independence now.
He must've lived in Illinois. 😉
Looked him up in Wikipedia. Born and raised in NYC, ended his career teaching in St. Louis. Close enough!
I have no idea what other poetry he wrote; high school English teachers who insisted on analyzing poetry to death turned me off poetry almost completely. But this one has always stayed in my memory, and makes me wonder if he was some kind of closet individualist.
Some of us preserve “the spirit of resistance.” Year’s ago when Myrtle Beach, SC was worth going to, I bought some M-80s from a neighbor at the rental houses on the beach shoreline instead of buying from the regular fireworks stores.
I put one of the M-80s on a wooden boat slip post in in the yard of our rental house, did the ol’ “light fuse and get away,” and when that thing went off, the blast echoed throughout walls of the neighborhood and it blew a 2″ chunk of wood out of the wooden post! It sounded like a damn 12 Gauge shotgun it was so loud!
Bootleg fireworks are still out there, though nowadays, they may be easier created by DIY than bought. In any event, watch your six, and you may want to keep your powder slightly wet. ????
At least he expressed his Individualism with proper use of capital letters.
Either all caps like Hihn or no caps like e.e. Cummings isn't Individualism, it's just looney!
"(Please, for the love of God, do not fire off motors while holding them on your head.)"
I think you mean Mortars
I have a Mini Cooper and I would have a hard time holding its motor at waist height, let alone near my head.
See below, the set of things between unwise and deadly to be firing off while holding them on your head is, at least, a very large set.
(Please, for the love of God, do not fire off mortars while holding them on your head.)
Evidently, Britches or his proofreader caught his mistake by the time I read it.
Soooo…Was this Vermin Supreme who fired mortars off of his head?
🙂 😉
Nothing screams freedom and independence louder than spending $370 million on Chinese (communist) fireworks.
I say bring fireworks manufacturing to the USA. Also the phone I typed this with...
Ever heard of comparative advantage?
Once you've been making your own for a while, the attraction of commercial fireworks (consumer or display) diminishes considerably.
Nobody needs two hands.
Hey, nowadays, you could probably do DIY fireworks much safer with RC toy cybernetic arms and precisely-poured chemicals to prepare them and RC drones to transport and ignite them. At least the parts could be salvaged and rebuilt if there's an accidental explosion.
There are fireworks companies here in the states but what they produce are professional displays not the stuff you buy at a temporary stand.
When I was a kid in Minnesota, we went to South Dakota to buy the good stuff. Now in California, you have to trek to Arizona.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Unless there's an article on Counter-Economic fireworks, No!
I will just load up my dozen antique toy cannons with black powder and an aluminum foil wad, and shoot them off while considering that people used to buy them for their children to play with.
Some use PVC pipes and caps with igniters and alcohol-based hairspray to make “Potato Guns.” Also quite entertaining and noisy fun!
Not mentioned in the article is the number of house fires and wild range fires caused by incautious celebrations. And the terror inflicted on innocent wildlife and pets. Not my problem. I have homeowners' insurance and most of the fireworks here are shot out over the water.
My cat was terrified the first time he heard fireworks. Every year after that he would just say, “oh, it’s the Fourth of July again,” and go back to sleep.
My cat, Jill, hides under my bed.
I have no problem with people lighting off fireworks on the 4th but when it's going on until 2:00 goddamn o'clock in the morning and I have to get up and go to work while they mofos are nursing their hangovers, which serves them right.
"It's fitting, then, that we continue to replicate their messy embrace of freedom by flouting the laws of our modern-day George IIIs and blowing up a small piece of the new nation they created."
Nicely put, but in a few years we may be needing F-15s in order to "flout the laws."
"and the staggering 15,600 reported in 2020 (when blowing up fireworks kept people entertained during a summer of lockdowns and government-mandated social distancing)."
Yes, of course, those are the only reasons that fireworks injuries went up in 2020. There was absolutely nothing else that people were doing with fireworks in major cities in summer of 2020 that might have resulted in injury. Certainly not outside a federal courthouse or anything like that.
The gangs were setting off fireworks all month long in 2020, just to show that the cops couldn't stop them.
"Fireworks are beautiful to watch, but they can be deadly when mishandled or misused, or if the fireworks themselves contain illegal components,"
"War reenactments are beautiful to watch, but they can be deadly when mishandled or misused, or if the props themselves contain illegal components,"
"Automobiles are beautiful to watch, but they can be deadly when mishandled or misused, or if the automobiles themselves contain illegal components,"
"Airplanes are beautiful to watch, but they can be deadly when mishandled or misused, or if the airplanes themselves contain illegal components,"
"Toddlers are beautiful to watch, but they can be deadly when mishandled or misused, or if the toddlers themselves contain illegal components,"
Pretty sure there isn't anything that's safe to watch that can't be made deadly by misuse or adulteration.
The nation burns off hundreds of times more gasoline than gunpowder every 4th , not counting charcoal lighter.
Gag! Anyone who still uses charcoal lighter fluid is an amateur and has no business anywhere near a BBQ.
1- starter chimney
2- charcoal starter haystacks
3-Light haystacks, set chimney filled with charcoal over burning haystacks wait fifteen minutes.
No nasty lighter fluid smell.
Anyone who still uses charcoal lighter fluid is an amateur and has no business anywhere near a BBQ.
Gonna take away their gas stoves because it's too convenient?
As long as you aren't literally soaking the briquettes in lighter fluid, they should be burned off well before charcoal is even burning under it's own heat.
And if your nose is so sensitive that even a whiff of organic solvents offends your sensibilities intolerably, I pity you. [sips bourbon]
A straight line of gun-powder-scented chaotic energy runs from our revolutionary forebearers right up to today’s patriotic pyromaniacs.
…
It’s fitting, then, that we continue to replicate their messy embrace of freedom by flouting the laws of our modern-day George IIIs and blowing up a small piece of the new nation they created.
Exactly. As a kid just out of second (or maybe it was third) grade, I strongly suspected that that was the idea, and that the “bans” on fireworks were actually intended to be flouted for exactly that reason. Alas, such was not the case.
But sparklers are quite safe for children to use, with only minimal instruction on their safe handling needed. I was proud to be given a couple of them to twirl (one at a time) that night. As for keeping children “far away” from other fireworks: far enough away, but that usually isn’t all that far.
I dunno. Sparklers can get up to like a few thousand°F, much like Magnesium shavings from a fire-starter block and the wire can burn little hands and cause them to drop in dangerous places. They need all the caution of matches and anything else hot. Best left stuck in the ground.
Here's one Fireworks Stand I won't be frequenting. Gunpowder, Cordite, and, Tannerite just don't mix well with Apocalyptic churchin' up!
Paul Thorn--Mission Temple Fireworks Stand
https://youtu.be/x-FhapPZ0h8
The Sawyer Brown cover is even creepier! Those poor kids!
https://youtu.be/PZBOvHf-NHE
Two years ago the L.A. police confiscated some illegal fireworks in a South L.A. neighbor hood and instead of trucking it out to a safe area the not very bright police decided to blow up the lot right there, in the street causing damage to homes and cars nearby.Along with a number of injuries.https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/south-la-los-angeles-illegal-fireworks-explosion-lapd-bomb-squad-timeline/2926329/
As of June 30, 18 families still remain living in a hotel.
I don't mean this to be spam, but this is important viewing on Independence Day to learn from history.
Whenever you get the chance, I highly recommend this documentary below! It’ll make you damn glad that we broke off from the treacherous British Empire when we did!
Channel Islands, 1940: When The Nazis Invaded England | Hitler’s England | Timeline
https://youtu.be/JR7v8114XOc
After seeing this, I couldn’t help but wonder: “Would the British Empire have deserted us the way they did the Channel Islands if we were still Colonies?”
“And if generations of Americans had been bred under British squishiness, would we be collaborating with Nazi conquerors the way too many Channel Islanders did?”
We were attending a small Christian liberal arts college in the late 70s. Had a lot of missionary students from South America there. They would smuggle in fireworks that were incredible. Some of those puppies would put out the power of about a 1/4 stick of dynamite. Had some great ID celebrations for a few years.
Illegal fireworks caused $500 in damage to a boat
It happened just before 10:30 p.m. Saturday night.
Crews arrived and found the boat had a man-made platform on the top of it, where illegal fireworks were being lit from.
The problem isn't dangerous fireworks, but the stupidity of those using them!
Very true. Tommy Boy said it best: "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
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تصميم حدائق في دبي
I'm an apartment dweller, but I do have Goodle Translate and I can and will tell you in Arabic what I tell everyone else:
اخرج من حديقتى!
"Get off of my lawn!"
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حداد في عجمان
Sorry, I don't live in a glass house.
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