![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:23 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
crazyness! Ban Cars!
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:27 |
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Fireworks companies purposefully waste these firecrackers to drive up prices while many people around the world have no firecrackers at all. Sad!
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:30 |
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More bangs for your buck.
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:32 |
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That’s what she sai......dammit.
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:33 |
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Hell yeah! That’s how you do fire crackers.
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:34 |
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Of course!
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:35 |
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“Hold my baijiu, watch this!”
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:41 |
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damn, do you think that melted the wires?
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:46 |
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I was in Beijing over Chinese New Year a few years ago. It was a truly surreal experience to wake up the next morning and see the city almost entirely covered by low hanging smoke from all of the fireworks the night before.
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:47 |
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I mean how would you know. Last time I was in Beijing the normal visibility was only a couple blocks anyway...
![]() 10/07/2016 at 12:59 |
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It was partly the smell. But also, the air quality is surprisingly good around the New Year (before the fireworks), because so many people leave Beijing to go back to their home cities. It’s a great time to visit actually, because the city is comparatively empty. It felt more like New York on a normal day in terms of people and traffic.
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:07 |
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oh dang, I bet it was extra smoggy after a celebration like that
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:08 |
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who knows, it’s possible
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:09 |
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LOL the best stories start like that :]
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:09 |
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heck yeah! Muric..... China!
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:10 |
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truly dynamite!
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:11 |
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I don’t have any one to one photos, but this is the Forbidden City the day before:
And this is the next morning:
![]() 10/07/2016 at 13:41 |
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oh wow didn’t know that
![]() 10/07/2016 at 14:19 |
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WHOA!!!!!!!! Unbelievable!