Suggested Ban on Glitter

glitter

No I’m not suggesting we ban Mariah Carey’s attempt at movie making.  Nor do I mean the harmless, though annoying, glitter graphics people add to their Myspace and Friendster pages.  Finally, I’m not suggesting we waste our valuable legislative time banning Paris Hilton’s addition to the already overly saturated perfume industry.  I’m making a simple request.  Ban that stupid, little bitty, sparkly crap that they attach to greeting cards.  All other forms of fairy dust are fine by me.  After all, we Meppers hate the War on Drugs.

Let’s get down to brass tacks.  You see that card in Target and you think, “gee that’s pretty and sparkly!  I think grandma will love it!”  You don’t think of all the future negative side effects of that decision.

1) Negative health effects of secondhand glitter

To create that card and get it to the shelf of your local Target, thousands of migrant workers had to mine that glitter.*  The health effects to those workers and their families is shameful.  Additionally, every day thousands of trucks transport glitter and risk a glitter spill in the natural breeding grounds of the Gunnison Sage-Grouse.**

2) The lingering glitter effect

You give the glittery card to bring joy to grandma.  But do you really mean for the joy to keep on giving?  Coming off on her hands, getting on her face, in Snookum’s fur?  And it doesn’t stop there.  The glitter cannot be removed and multiplies, so that it shows up in new places every day.

3) Glitter Reduction

Then guess what?  Grandma’s local neighborhood’s senior van takes her to the grocery store where she touches the oranges to see if they are fresh.  GLITTER

They then take her to the library where she touches the books looking for a new one to read to her grandchildren.  GLITTER

Finally, they take her to the local petting zoo where she touches the animals…to pet them…anyway.  GLITTER

In closing I must add that despite my vehement arguments for a glitter ban, I would like to support a person’s right to glitter in private settings where the impact on other people is limited.  However, due to the inherent properties of glitter, its effects cannot be controlled– and like a parasite born on the back of a monkey, so does the glitter escape the confines of the home destined to spread.  If a ban is too extreme, please consider petitioning Meadowbrook Inventions.  There is no way that Rushman, a lowly cattle farmer turned inventor of glitter, could have foreseen the destruction and angst his creation would cause.  I think Oppenheimer said it best, “I am become death…the destroyer of worlds.”   I think it says it all that glitter and the atomic bomb were both created in the 1930’s after the Great Depression.  I only hope that our current economic downturn doesn’t lead to some new form of terror.

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*This is not true

**Neither is this

One Response to “Suggested Ban on Glitter”

  1. Michael says:

    I AM ALL FOR A GLITTER BAN! Me and my family recently had to clean out an apartment that we own, in which the past tenant let his little heathen’s run around throwing glitter EVERYWHERE. The stuff is everywhere! My grandmother has had two pieces IN her eye, it’s all over us, I’ve had a piece in my eye, and it just multiplies and multiples! Every day, no matter how much I wash my hands or take Gorilla duct tape to my hands in attempts to remove the hellish material, it shows up more and more every day. Now our home is contaminated with this stuff and there is NO way to remove it. It’s not the big pieces either. It’s the microscopic crap that you can’t see until light hits it. So all day me and my family are unknowingly ingesting, inhaling and being covered in GLITTER. The most useless material known to man. So what if kindergarten children will have one less bit of material to paste to their art projects, it will save thousands upon thousands from trips to the ER to have bits of glitter surgically removed from their eyes. I’m seriously considering filing a law suit on the inventor.