Political beliefs are often blamed for the lack of patriotism on July Fourth but there’s a more obvious explanation to why some dread the national holiday and it’s rooted in how Americans choose to celebrate the country’s birthday.

While loud booms in the sky will evoke pride for many people on Tuesday, a silent mass aches inside their homes. A 2021 YouGov poll surveying over 6,000 people found that 1 in 5 Americans don’t like fireworks. 

Their personal vendetta against fireworks goes beyond noise disturbance though that can be reason enough. Fireworks temporarily worsen air pollution, often trigger PTSD for veterans and gun violence victims and anger owners of frightened pets. 

Madison May Jones, a 49-year-old veteran from Seattle, used to be a Fourth of July enthusiast but now she can not bear the holiday. She said she developed PTSD by working as an ironworker for nearly three decades, always fearing falling while working at extreme heights and panicking at any loud sounds. 

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“When you have PTSD. It just throws you that paranoid state where it’s like it’s fight or flight,” Jones said. “When it goes bang, I twitch. I want to see where it’s at and I want to make sure it’s not coming after me.”

Jones said she doesn’t have a problem with controlled pyrotechnic events clarifying that her instinctual response is set off by the spontaneous nature of fireworks. 

“I have to be warned about it now. It can’t be just a spur of the moment,” Jones said. “I really truly love the displays. I love to see things go bang. I like to see sky displays, catch on fire, whatever. But I don’t want it to be random. I have enough randomness in my life to begin with.”

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