Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Why are either legal.... jenw2 Sep 2012 #1
cannot be serious, can you loli phabay Sep 2012 #5
I'm not sure if you're serious, so JoeyT Sep 2012 #20
Oh bullshit. OffWithTheirHeads Sep 2012 #2
I take it the article tipped your sacred cow Care Acutely Sep 2012 #7
I wonder how much pollution the old John Deere put out snooper2 Sep 2012 #10
Water vapor? jberryhill Sep 2012 #3
"Air contaminant" tends to exclude condensation and water vapor. Robb Sep 2012 #9
But doesn't it matter what the particulates are? jberryhill Sep 2012 #19
Water vapor is a gas, and water droplets aren't considered particulates in the pollution sense petronius Sep 2012 #11
Doesn't LA have restrictions on commercial BBQ's? jberryhill Sep 2012 #12
I don't really know - the UCR release just quotes one of the engineers that petronius Sep 2012 #14
There was some large city a few years back... jberryhill Sep 2012 #18
It takes Laurajr Sep 2012 #4
Can we factor in all the resources used to get the oil for the truck? (nt) The Straight Story Sep 2012 #6
Is this a Koch-funded study? nt Jacoby365 Sep 2012 #8
Dead animals on a grill still taste amazing. nt Comrade_McKenzie Sep 2012 #13
A key question is what are the effects of the different forms of pollution being discussed here? antigone382 Sep 2012 #15
Well how about non-charbroiled then? Duer 157099 Sep 2012 #16
Sorry, but I'm still not canceling this weekend's barbeque. NT Llewlladdwr Sep 2012 #17
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»One Charbroiled Burger Po...»Reply #6