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Boycott Chinese fireworks
Josey1
Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
Boycott Chinese fireworks
Posted: June 24, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern
c 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
Every year in late June and early July - at least in areas where selling fireworks is still legal - groups like churches, service clubs, schools, etc. raise money by selling fireworks to the public.
In 2001, for instance, fireworks sales totaled an estimated $650 million, according to the American Pyrotechnics Association.
So what's wrong with selling fireworks? Am I worried about accidents?
Actually, no. In fact, while sales of fireworks are way up, fireworks-related injuries are way down - falling over 86 percent in the last 24 years.
No, my concern about the sale of fireworks is completely different from what you typically hear in the establishment media this time of the year. I'm also not worried about terrorist attacks disrupting our national celebrations. While I enjoy the pyrotechnics of a good July 4 celebration as much as the next guy, my concern about all the fireworks sales in America is centered on where those pyrotechnic devices are manufactured - in China.
How can this nation celebrate its independence every year by supporting the evil empire in Beijing? When you buy fireworks made in China, you are helping the Beijing regime rake in millions on the backs of slave laborers, political prisoners and badly exploited peasants - people who have no choice, no freedom, no independence, no say.
How ironic. How sad. How tragic.
It's true, though, that every single fireworks package I see - at least those available to ordinary consumers - is marked "made in China." While there may be alternatives, I have never seen any.
So I want to set off some rhetorical fireworks here while we still have time to prepare for July 4, 2002. Let's boycott Chinese fireworks. Let's say no to distributing Chinese-made fireworks in the U.S. Let's celebrate Independence Day by supporting independence and freedom throughout the world - including China.
While we're at it, we ought to boycott Chinese-made goods in general. But that is getting more difficult all the time. It seems almost all the cheap goods being sold in retail outlets throughout the U.S. are made in China.
It reminds me of my own family's July 4 celebration in 1997.
My wife, Elizabeth, and I had decided to take the children to see the Statue of Liberty. What better place to celebrate the founding of the greatest nation in the world? Perhaps Independence Hall in Philadelphia? Maybe, but we were in New York - and this would be an opportunity to teach our kids about the ideals of freedom upon which the American Dream was created.
The first surprise was how few people would be joining us for this 221st anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. The ferry ride over to Ellis Island and then Liberty Island was beautiful, the sun was shining and the breeze was blowing. But only a handful of Americans were making the trek with us. And many of those were foreigners, speaking other languages, but clearly in awe of the vision of Thomas Jefferson and the courage of the patriots who stood with him against tyranny, religious persecution and taxation without representation.
On Ellis Island, we quickly found the wall commemorating the arrival of millions of immigrants who came to this country earlier this century and contributed so much to building the world's most benevolent superpower. The names of my paternal grandmother, Alexandra Kurdock, and grandfather, Joseph Farah, were etched upon that wall. I reflected upon their own courage in making those long, lonely journeys from Middle Eastern countries in search of freedom and opportunity. I tried to give my four little California girls (we've had one more since then) a sense of what they must have endured to give them the comfortable life we all take for granted.
As a remembrance of this special day, we took the children to the island's official gift shop, run by the U.S. Park Service. Inside we purchased several replicas of the statue and historical reference works on the mammoth task of building it and restoring it to its present glory. The kids were as excited as their parents about their new treasures, which would occupy a place of honor in our home.
But what a shock and disappointment for the parents when we examined the prizes more closely and found three incredible words stamped on the bottom: "Made in China."
Yes, my friends, this was symbolism so tragic - so ironic - that it quickly brought us back to the reality of what we as a nation are facing today.
Think about it. At least 2,000 Chinese citizens gave their lives only a few short years ago in Tiananmen Square for the grave offense of erecting a papier-m?ch? replica of this symbol of liberty and individual rights. The Chinese government ruthlessly stormed the crowd of freedom-loving protesters and smashed that statue. Now, apparently, the U.S. Park Service has contracted with a Chinese company to make tiny replicas for tourists visiting the Statue of Liberty!
We thought long and hard about the poor Chinese workers - some perhaps in slave labor camps - toiling away their hours and days making little Statues of Liberty while they themselves would never have the chance to experience the promise it represents.
Contemporary China is the very antithesis of everything for which the Founding Fathers fought and died. Religious persecution worse than any they ever experienced or imagined 226 years ago is taking place today in this "enlightened" age in modern China. The slavery they wrestled with so long ago and we as a nation shed so much blood over and abolished more than 130 years ago still persists in China. Grotesque human rights abuses - including forced abortions and severe state-imposed limitations on childbirth - are a way of life in China. Freedom of expression and freedom of the press are unheard of in today's China.
Has America sold its very soul?
Maybe it's not a big step - a dramatic step - but I think it's time to start reclaiming our national soul. A good first step would be for charitable organizations across America to swear off the sales of Chinese-made fireworks this summer.
Are you with me?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=28063
"If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
Posted: June 24, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern
c 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
Every year in late June and early July - at least in areas where selling fireworks is still legal - groups like churches, service clubs, schools, etc. raise money by selling fireworks to the public.
In 2001, for instance, fireworks sales totaled an estimated $650 million, according to the American Pyrotechnics Association.
So what's wrong with selling fireworks? Am I worried about accidents?
Actually, no. In fact, while sales of fireworks are way up, fireworks-related injuries are way down - falling over 86 percent in the last 24 years.
No, my concern about the sale of fireworks is completely different from what you typically hear in the establishment media this time of the year. I'm also not worried about terrorist attacks disrupting our national celebrations. While I enjoy the pyrotechnics of a good July 4 celebration as much as the next guy, my concern about all the fireworks sales in America is centered on where those pyrotechnic devices are manufactured - in China.
How can this nation celebrate its independence every year by supporting the evil empire in Beijing? When you buy fireworks made in China, you are helping the Beijing regime rake in millions on the backs of slave laborers, political prisoners and badly exploited peasants - people who have no choice, no freedom, no independence, no say.
How ironic. How sad. How tragic.
It's true, though, that every single fireworks package I see - at least those available to ordinary consumers - is marked "made in China." While there may be alternatives, I have never seen any.
So I want to set off some rhetorical fireworks here while we still have time to prepare for July 4, 2002. Let's boycott Chinese fireworks. Let's say no to distributing Chinese-made fireworks in the U.S. Let's celebrate Independence Day by supporting independence and freedom throughout the world - including China.
While we're at it, we ought to boycott Chinese-made goods in general. But that is getting more difficult all the time. It seems almost all the cheap goods being sold in retail outlets throughout the U.S. are made in China.
It reminds me of my own family's July 4 celebration in 1997.
My wife, Elizabeth, and I had decided to take the children to see the Statue of Liberty. What better place to celebrate the founding of the greatest nation in the world? Perhaps Independence Hall in Philadelphia? Maybe, but we were in New York - and this would be an opportunity to teach our kids about the ideals of freedom upon which the American Dream was created.
The first surprise was how few people would be joining us for this 221st anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. The ferry ride over to Ellis Island and then Liberty Island was beautiful, the sun was shining and the breeze was blowing. But only a handful of Americans were making the trek with us. And many of those were foreigners, speaking other languages, but clearly in awe of the vision of Thomas Jefferson and the courage of the patriots who stood with him against tyranny, religious persecution and taxation without representation.
On Ellis Island, we quickly found the wall commemorating the arrival of millions of immigrants who came to this country earlier this century and contributed so much to building the world's most benevolent superpower. The names of my paternal grandmother, Alexandra Kurdock, and grandfather, Joseph Farah, were etched upon that wall. I reflected upon their own courage in making those long, lonely journeys from Middle Eastern countries in search of freedom and opportunity. I tried to give my four little California girls (we've had one more since then) a sense of what they must have endured to give them the comfortable life we all take for granted.
As a remembrance of this special day, we took the children to the island's official gift shop, run by the U.S. Park Service. Inside we purchased several replicas of the statue and historical reference works on the mammoth task of building it and restoring it to its present glory. The kids were as excited as their parents about their new treasures, which would occupy a place of honor in our home.
But what a shock and disappointment for the parents when we examined the prizes more closely and found three incredible words stamped on the bottom: "Made in China."
Yes, my friends, this was symbolism so tragic - so ironic - that it quickly brought us back to the reality of what we as a nation are facing today.
Think about it. At least 2,000 Chinese citizens gave their lives only a few short years ago in Tiananmen Square for the grave offense of erecting a papier-m?ch? replica of this symbol of liberty and individual rights. The Chinese government ruthlessly stormed the crowd of freedom-loving protesters and smashed that statue. Now, apparently, the U.S. Park Service has contracted with a Chinese company to make tiny replicas for tourists visiting the Statue of Liberty!
We thought long and hard about the poor Chinese workers - some perhaps in slave labor camps - toiling away their hours and days making little Statues of Liberty while they themselves would never have the chance to experience the promise it represents.
Contemporary China is the very antithesis of everything for which the Founding Fathers fought and died. Religious persecution worse than any they ever experienced or imagined 226 years ago is taking place today in this "enlightened" age in modern China. The slavery they wrestled with so long ago and we as a nation shed so much blood over and abolished more than 130 years ago still persists in China. Grotesque human rights abuses - including forced abortions and severe state-imposed limitations on childbirth - are a way of life in China. Freedom of expression and freedom of the press are unheard of in today's China.
Has America sold its very soul?
Maybe it's not a big step - a dramatic step - but I think it's time to start reclaiming our national soul. A good first step would be for charitable organizations across America to swear off the sales of Chinese-made fireworks this summer.
Are you with me?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=28063
"If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
Comments
only fireworks made in us are COMERCIAL use not for public use ....
If you are going to boicot all things made in china you will end up in a cave naked !!!!!!
Just for Fun try to get a class 3 license (required) to manufacture class c fireworks .....
Sure you will end importing them from china too .....
JD
Good...? , Bad...? Who cares ? as long I am the one with the the gun.....
SSgt Ryan E. Roberts, USMC
"If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878