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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    Yup,and considering how much of Ireland is wetland and bog...

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 435 ✭✭Brontosaurus


    If they want to ban lead for hunting that's one argument, but using lead rounds at a range or for clays isn't going to get into the food web unless you're shooting directly into water.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    Rain water leeching and carrying trace elements into the groundwater supplies is their answer to that.:(

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,789 ✭✭✭✭BattleCorp


    Grizzly 45 wrote: »
    Rain water leeching and carrying trace elements into the groundwater supplies is their answer to that.:(

    Yet half of the old houses in Ireland have lead pipes bringing drinking water to the tap inside.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,611 ✭✭✭gunny123


    BattleCorp wrote: »
    Yet half of the old houses in Ireland have lead pipes bringing drinking water to the tap inside.

    And never done any harm as far as i know :confused:.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,119 ✭✭✭Gravelly


    BattleCorp wrote: »
    Yet half of the old houses in Ireland have lead pipes bringing drinking water to the tap inside.

    Not to mention the fact that just about every roof in the country has lead on it, with the water running off it into the ground!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    And not to mind our Victorian and Edwardian ancestors had more lead injested in their bodies in their day to day lives than we ever had and still seemed to have survived?

    Wonder how us lot born in the 60's ever survived childhood? Lead paint on our toys and cribs,lead and asbestos pipes delivering our drinking water.To an outside school tap where we all 100 plus of us drank from?:)

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    gunny123 wrote: »
    And never done any harm as far as i know :confused:.

    Can attest to that...Half the piping in my place is still lead.So long as there is a good thick coating of limescale on it.

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    Not happy with the 2014 directive. Brussels is trying again to go after semi-auto firearms. This time by mixing it in with illegal arms trafficking.
    Consider 3 things here.
    1] This is now the organisation that wants an EU army, that despite our neutrality,we are signed up to.[Courtesy of Maastricht.It was in the 800 odd pages,we were told not to bother reading by Aherne ]

    2] Wants to ban in toto ALL EU subjects from owning firearms in the long-term

    3] What could go possibly wrong with those ideas?:rolleyes:

    THIS is why we in Ireland need to support an organisation like Firearms United Network. When would you hear about this from our native organisations??Probably when the guards rescind your license, as "its an EU directive,nuthin we can do about it!"
    Don't think just because you don't want, don't like or ever want a semi-auto rifle, shotgun or pistol that it doesn't concern you what happens in Brussels. Lead shot in bullets and pellets concern you,and that is a major issue to us all here in Ireland. Ask yourself, when was the last update you got here about what is going on in Brussels from our organisations here?



    Firearms United Network position on Council Conclusion on the Adoption of an EU Strategy Against Illicit Firearms, Small Arms & Light Weapons & Their Ammunition (November 19, 2018)

    General comment:

    The document presented by the Council can be understood twofold. On the one hand, in general and declarative aspect it touches on well-defined threat if illicit gun trafficking. On the other hand, while describing specific details and actions it includes into the analysis legal documents which influence law-abiding citizens. Such an action is ineligible in the best case. This approach makes the actual intentions of the document doubtful at the best.

    Agreeing that illicit gun trafficking of SALW (Small Arms & Light Weapons) is a serious problem requiring international cooperation to combat, we are very concerned with mixing it with legal firearms ownership by law abiding citizens.
    It begs to ask a question how serious European Institutions are in combating illicit gun trafficking and how much they use it as a cheap excuse to enforce legal changes aimed at legal firearms owners and shooting sport clubs.

    It should be noted that the authors never presented any connections between legal and illegal firearms trade, but simply presented it as an axiom which doesn’t require any justification at all. Based on this, it seems to be a safe assumption that the above narrative is simply a farfetched manipulation.

    Comments to appendix Council Conclusions on Adoption of an EU Strategy against illicit firearms, Small Arms & Light Weapons and their ammunition

    It is a big surprise to observe an attempt to combine illicit fireamrs proliferation with disturbances in ‘sustainable growth’. SALW is named as one of the main obstacles in achieving goals like “peace, justice and strong institutions, poverty reduction, economic growth, health, gender equality, and safe cities and communities”. It is also appalling to observe an attempt to correlate between illicit firearms trafficking and regulations of legal firearms ownership by law abiding citizens.

    In this context, statements like “to promote accountability and responsibility with regard to the legal arms trade” seems like a euphemism. Taking into consideration the fact that each EU Member State has professional systems of ensuring internal security, which consists of police, military and special forces, one can only wonder why someone tries to put all the blame on SALW.

    The authors never presented reliable political diagnosis on the problems with problems with sustainable growth. They suggest that the crisis has been caused not by wrong political decisions nor scarce democratic support, but inanimate objects, like firearms.

    What is extremely outrageous i san attempt to suggest existence of a link between legal gun ownership and armed violence, criminal activities and enhance terrorist attacks’ outcomes. It shows complete lack of understanding of the problem presented by the Council, as all available scientific research prove beyond any reasonable doubt that there are no connections between realm of legal gun ownership and reals of criminals or terrorists.

    Based on the above it seems to be a safe assumption to state that the reason to shape the document in this manner is to increase the feeling of insecurity in the readers. Also, an indirect goal of this approach seems to be condemning and stigmatising of legal firearms owners. It is clearly observed in attempt to equalize legal firearms owners with criminals and terrorists, coupled with introduction of collective responsibility (based on the way the proposal to change regulation are being shaped), while at the same time presumption of innocence seems to be rejected.

    It is worth to note that the Council reminds EU strategy from 2005, although at the introduction says clearly that the said strategy didn’t work. And then proposals included in the document reinforce this non-working strategy and demands it being repeated.

    Comments to “Securing Arms, Protecting Citizens’:

    Introduction shows that the authors’ concentrate mostly on terrorist threats which hurt international peace, humanitarian actions, stabilising actions in Africa and internal security of EU. Accepting this context, it is really hard to understand why it is being suggested that the proper solution can be achieved by later mentioned Directive 91/477 which regulates legal possession of firearms. It is very farfetched to state that introduction of further restrictions in legal firearms and ammunition purchase will improve humanitarian efforts in Africa. \
    3
    The next paragraph describes connections between organized crime and terrorists, which exist without any doubt. I would like to point you towards the clear statement on illegal origin of firearms used on recent terrorist attacks across Europe. This is a clear contradiction to Council’s position from 2015 and onwards, when Council used terrorist attacks as an excuse to introduce irrational restrictions on legal firearms owners via changes to Directive 91/477 voted in 2017.

    On page 7 you can find the major manipulation of the whole document. The authors suggest that legal firearms transferred to illicit trafficking can’t be differentiated from military grade weapons which means that it should be treated in the same way as military grade weapons. The authors ‘forget’ to present any statistic in support of such a movement at all (legal firearms transferred to illicit market). And make no mistake. There is no support evidence presented, as such a movement does not exist.

    Comments to „Countering illicit firearms and SALW: Objectives and Actions”:

    Using the before presented thought train, the authors present very broad definition of SALW, which includes even revolvers. Such classification may seem meaningless at the first glance, but in practical terms it has far-reaching consequences. It suggests that such firearms should be available to military forces ONLY. The authors suggest that SALW is a separate firearms category, separate from firearms accessible for civilian use.

    It comes as a surprise to see assumptions made at pt 2.2.1. „Control on firearms and SALW manufacturing”, where authors claim that one of the biggest threats to combat illicit firearms trafficking is „ the illicit re-activation of deactivated firearms, craft production and the illicit conversion of alarm or signal guns designed for blank ammunition or flobert guns, the illicit conversion of ammunition and the illicit use of reloading tools”.
    Using simple terms, it means levelling light rocket launchers and grenade launchers with sport firearms
    The above statement is the clear indication of lack of technical knowledge of the authors or decisive insincerity and camouflaged intentions of the authors.

    Point 2.1.5 „Stronger EU norms” makes it clear that the last year update to Directive 91/477 was just a prelude to introduce further restrictions. It is clearly stated that Council would like to introduce further firearms marking scheme to increase firearms’ traceability. We need to remember that Council talks about illicit firearms here. It remains an open question how further regulations of legally held firearms will increase traceability of illicit firearms, especially in context of Africa, which authors concentrated upon in earlier parts of the document.

    Equally strange ideas can be found at point 2.2.3 „Secure SALW and ammunition stockpile management”. This section claims that SALW and ammunition stockpiles in Member States has such low security levels, that allows for transfer from the said stockpiles into illicit market. It means that Member States do not execute proper control over SALW and ammunition stockpiles. Which one more time begs for reconsideration if the before mentioned Directive 91/477 is the proper control measure.

    Point 2.2.4 “Responsible disposal of SALW and their ammunition” is also very controversial. Council suggest that SALW and ammunition surplus should be destroyed. The text does not provide any guidance of what stockpile levels are sufficient and what consist a surplus. So it seems as a safe assumption that the European bodies would like to have a say in this respect on case by case basis.

    Link to the document:

    http://data.consilium.europa.eu/…/document/ST-13581-…/en/pdf

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users Posts: 535 ✭✭✭solarwinds


    I seem to recall having a temporary custody order here in the 70's to stop certain organisations getting their hands on firearms, that was about as effective as a chocolate teapot.
    These organisations managed to get their hands on some firearms we could only dream about, and a lot coming from other countries with I imagine help from their politcal powers that be.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,611 ✭✭✭gunny123


    The whole situation is vexing, not only do we have our own village idiots trying to restrict legitimate shooting sports and the firearms we use in them, but we have a second tier in the bloody eu. The terrorists and criminals do not obey laws, thats why they are called terrorists and criminals, but the eu seems to think the more laws they pass, the safer things will be. But as ireland knows first hand, that simply is not the case.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,611 ✭✭✭gunny123


    Grizzly 45 wrote: »

    Your link is not working Grizz.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    Another 404 ...:rolleyes: "They" are after us lads!!;)

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    A study confirms what we know all along. Gun owners are the most law-abiding people in a community. In future I'll just post the entire article or doc,as there are too many broken links for some reason,so apologies for longish posts in the future.
    With thanks to Pierangelo Tendas[FUN Italy]

    *** GREAT NEWS FROM ITALY ***

    On December 12th, the largest Italian University (Università La Sapienza of Rome) announced the completion of a study titled "Sicurezza e legalità: le armi nelle case degli italiani" ("Safety and legality: firearms in Italian households") whose drafting took three years.

    The first study of this kind to be carried on and completed in Italy by an impartial entity, it was spearheaded by Professor Paolo De Nardis – one of Europe's most eminent sociologists – and it returned results thar completely destroy the anti-gun narrative (https://www.gunsweek.com/…/sicurezza-legalita-convegno-sull…)

    The study will be published in its entirety in January and will hopefully be translated in English – Firearms United will be happy to distribute it! – but in the meanwhile, please enjoy some highlights.

    The purpose of the study was originally to verify the consistency of gun ownership in Italy, collecting reliable data and analyzing it, to understand the mechanisms that are at its roots and determine the strategies to raise the level of security, if necessary.

    The data collected covers 11 years, from 2007 to 2017, and shows a very limited incidence of murders committed with legally owned firearms: only about 5% of all gun murders in the Country see the use of legally-held firearms. Of this 5%, about 12% are euthanasia acts, made with the intent to alleviate the sufferings of the victim (generally a family member), almost always with the victim's own consent.

    68% of the murders are homicides, and in almost half of the cases the killer committed suicide afterwards.

    In over 45% of these specific cases, however, the research has shown that the behaviour of the future perpetrators raised "red flags" that could have allowed to foresee the risks of a murder and prevent it: in 5.6% of cases the killer had been the subject of complaints or public security warning notices, and in one case even an involuntary psychiatric commitment.

    In 22% of cases the murderer had indicative behaviors (ill-treatment or acts of physical or verbal violence against spouse or other family members, disorderly behaviour, etc.) while in more than 15% of cases showed significant mental health problems (depression, paranoia, etc.).

    It must be pointed out that in Italy a gun license holder who is involountarily committed for mental health issues, diagnosed with a mental disorder or reported for violent behaviour automatically loses his/her license and may be forced to turn his/her guns in to the Authorities or sell them away to licensed individuals or entities.

    Thus, virtually all the (few) above-mentioned cases can be blamed to a failure to act by the relevant Authorities.

    Financial difficulties are also a factor, having been reported in over 15% of cases of homicides committed with legally-held firearms and sometimes being the trigger for particularly bloody events (generally family murders).

    Only 2.45% of the murders object of the analysis can be described as "excessive use of force in legal self-defense" – a fact that curtails the discussion on the overhauling of self-defense laws that is currently very heated in Italy (with anti-gunners labeling personal and home defense as "Far-West style DIY vigilante justice" and the like).

    One of the most striking results returned by the research is that the rate of homicides among licensed firearm owners is 20% lower if compared to the rate among the general population, and the recent increase in firearms licenses corresponded to a decrease in events.

    Thus the research shows that the current vetting and check system on legal gun owners is clearly effective, and while there may be room for improvement, the positions of anti-gun advocates and politicians who constantly call for tighter gun control rules are questionable at best.

    Needless to say, the anti-gunners here in Italy are going absolutely INSANE since these results were announced, with one in particular (a self-appointed sociologist and researcher whose name we won't report here because we won't give him any visibility whatsoever!) even going so far as stating on Twitter that "Prof. De Nardis should have taken murders committed with illegal guns in consideration to prove that legal gun owners are dangerous."

    This led to a huge flame between him and the Comitato Direttiva 477 – the Italian national association federated to the Firearms United Network – which the anti-gun in question is of course losing and that's taking some frankly hilarious turns (https://www.facebook.com/comitatodirettiva477/posts/1022991927898102 -- https://www.facebook.com/groups/1013953488622810/permalink/2677286158956193/ -- www.facebook.com/comitatodirettiva477/posts/1022978744566087), just going to show how anti-gunners have literally no sense of shame.

    Please note that currently around 4 million Italian citizens hold firearm licenses, and that all firearm licenses give access to firearms such as handguns or modern sporting rifles (so-called "assault weapons") or even firearms that would be restricted under the provisions of the 1934 National Firearms Act in the United States (short barrel rifles or shotguns, handguns with stocks or foregrips, etc.).

    It is assumed that a person vetted to own firearms will be trustworthy regardless of whether he/she owns a shotgun, a pistol, or an AR15.

    All licenses also allow for all these firearms to be transported all through the national territory without additional red tape.
    Shooting can be practiced at either indoor or outdoor shooting ranges, or on private land if it's reasonably distant from permanently-inhabited buildings or major roads.

    Now, once and for all (hopefully) an impartial research carried on with scientific criteria reveals that licensed gun owners are not a threat to public safety.

    And the comments of the anti-gun crowd prove once and for all how stupid or outright evil they are, willing to twist the truth to pursue their liberty-suppressing agenda.

    ACT TOGETHER, FEEL FREE AND MAKE CHANGES

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,500 ✭✭✭tac foley


    The same might be said of the US of A. Those states with the highest rates of legal possession are the lowest in terms of gun-related crime. And you can take that to the bank. Take the example of Kennesaw, GA, where the local sheriff, tired of sudden influx of 'visiting crime', made it a city ordnance for citizens who had a clean record [not felons] to carry either openly or concealed - their choice, but it was compulsory unless the person was actually blind, or had strong religious convictions concerning the turning of the other cheek. The result, in a short period of time, was that the 'visiting crime' very quickly decided to visit their 'brothers' back in wherever it was up North that they came from. Especially after one of their number, held up an eighty-eight-year old lady coming back home after a DoA bake-up. She was accosted on her porch by a 'brother' with a knife. He asked her to give him the contents of her purse. She obliged. There was some change and roll of fruit pastilles, but the main content was a .38cal Smith & Wesson Chief's special airweight, which she stuck under his chin and emptied in short order.

    One city where handguns are NOT permitted is Chicago, where almost 600 fatal shooting had taken place so far between 1 January and 1 October this year alone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,772 ✭✭✭meathstevie


    So the summarise the Italian study above. Only 5% of all illegal killings with firearms during the life of the study were with legally held guns.

    More importantly, in quite a sizeable number of those cases existing legislation to remove guns from owners that had flagged up as no longer suitable to hold a firearm has not been enforced.

    I think the study in question clearly demonstrates that creation of new legislation to restrict gun ownership is not necessary. Definitely not if the powers that be are failing to use existing legislation to deal with problematic gun ownership.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    tac foley wrote: »

    One city where handguns are NOT permitted is Chicago, where almost 600 fatal shooting had taken place so far between 1 January and 1 October this year alone.
    On that point alone. London has had 100 shooting deaths in 2018 sofar. Triple the body count of Dunblane and Hungerford put together. Wasnt the UK law introduced to stop gun deaths and massacres with handguns?? or assault rifles??

    Doesn't seem to be working very well...Yet the "gun mad Yanks" are actually consistently, not shooting each other every year. And haven't been for the last two decades according to CDC and the FBI.Strange that!

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    It is coming towards the annual check-up time for me in January.I am going to do the same, get one multiple blood test done and see what amount of lead is in my blood? That should be interesting after 53 years of being in direct contact with lead, as a kid making lead soldiers, drinking water from a house with lead pipes, handling scrap and roofing lead, wearing lead as scuba diving weights.indirectly from 45 years of shooting. I should be full of the stuff by now!



    //www.all4shooters.com/en/shooting/culture/the-myth-of-poisonous-lead-ammo/?fbclid=IwAR1TSexSTbyxp_21QpeYGR5GlZeNu39G9i_2JmILIqEvuzfa5hYMzsmaXMQ




    Let's start from the end: metallic lead in ammunition (bullets and primers) has no significant impact on human health. It's a fact proven by several scientific studies and research papers. Yet, anti-gun and anti-hunting movements spread the wrong assumption among public opinion that hunters and shooters are the most affected by lead poisoning because of their high exposure to lead contained in ammunition. Even if disguised as a public health concern, the underlying message is always the same: guns are evil and should be prohibited.

    To clarify the truth an article by Gloria Martini, secretary-general of AFEMS (the Association of European Manufacturers of Sporting Ammunition) tells the story of Danka Barteková, a Slovak professional skeet shooter and a member of the IOC Athletes Committee. The article has been published on Euractiv, the media platform focusing on European policymaking.


    Has metallic lead in ammunition (bullets and primers) any significant impact on human health? The answer is “no”.
    One of the most well-known athletes in her country and flag bearer for Slovakia at the Rio 2016 Olympics Games opening ceremony, Barteková started to shoot in 1998 at the age of 13, winning lots of medals from many European and World Championships. Among them, 5 medals from the World Cup Final, 9 medals from the World Cups and a bronze medal from the Olympic Games 2012 in London. Barteková is also a two-times European Champion, a 14-times Slovak champion in skeet and at the European Championships held in Nicosia, Cyprus in 2008, she set a world record by hitting 99 targets out of 100.

    In the process, Barteková fired many, many “poisonous” cartridges, of course. So, as Gloria Martini informs us, “Earlier this year, the Slovak shooter decided to undergo a blood test to measure lead level in her body. One, if not all, would expect to find an elevated blood lead level in the body of an athlete that for two decades has been shooting an average of 200 rounds a day five days a week and that has, in her career, some 500 thousand targets under her belt.”

    Ideology vs. reality
    The results of Barteková's test? Well, as you may have guessed, they are not what anti-gun zealots would expect. In Martini's words, “Her blood test result showed no significant concentration of lead in her blood just like any other individual in good health that has never shot a single round in his life."

    Is Barteková a lucky girl? Well, human exposure to other forms of lead may cause health problems – even very serious ones. But once again evidence proves that metallic lead in ammunition does not have any significant effect on human health. Actually, this is a well-known fact to anybody who takes a non-ideological, unbiased approach to the matter, since scientific proof has long been available. In 2015 AFEMS even organized in Brussels the symposium “The Sustainable Use of Lead Ammunition in Hunting and Sports Shooting: Facts and Emotions” with a panel entirely focused on the effects of lead ammunition on human health.

    Just as we are certain that Barteková's case is a further confirmation, however, we can be sure that scientific evidence won't affect the anti-gun movement at all, since the latter is too often ideology-based rather than evidence-based. And as the saying goes, if reality does not fit the concept – too bad for reality!

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,500 ✭✭✭tac foley


    I'm very nearly 73. I started shooting lead when I was six. Since around 1984 or so I've been making/casting my own lead bullets, a few hundred at a time, for my BP guns, which I then go and shoot. I shoot two, often three times a WEEK. So I'm cooking lead, I'm handling lead, and I'm shooting lead projectiles - an ounce at a time, note, two or three times a week. On a guest day I probably handle about a hundred shots in revolvers and rifles.

    Note that I'm not including the huge amount of .22cal rimfire LEAD stuff I shoot, and the seven calibres I shoot regularly - all handloaded.

    I have my blood tested every six months as a matter of course. It's great stuff to have, for sure, especially when it's as pure as mine has shown itself to be since the six-month testing began back in 2000.

    Another person who shoots a lot of lead in the air is the redoubtable and VAST George Digweed - look him up if you care to do so. His shooting career makes Miss Barketová's look like an abject beginner, and a more healthy-looking 6ft 6in-cher would be hard to imagine.


  • Registered Users Posts: 335 ✭✭yubabill


    Just to add, once lead enters your body it is there for good - i.e. the levels are cumulative over a lifetime. Lead exposure from shooting is a red herring, of course.

    And as for lead pipes carrying drinking water, they are dangerous when new, but a coating eventually forms inside the pipe from contact with the water, which eventually prevents the lead from dissolving. Not that I'd like to have them.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,219 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    The proposed banning of lead has nothing to do with the safety of shooters, the "powers that be" claim that its to protect wading birds from picking up shot and ingesting it.
    As if the general public eat a lot or wigeon etc.......


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,113 ✭✭✭Zxthinger


    This constant erosion is why we need rights and not half backed privileges
    A lead ban is rubbish talk and they need telling


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    I await with great anticipation the Irish political party who will change the Irish constitution to a US-style bill of rights that can be summed up in 4pages and is understandable to the average ten-year-old.Unlike the EU version that runs to 15, 700-page books that only a lawyer might make sense of.:rolleyes:

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,789 ✭✭✭✭BattleCorp


    Emmmm, it can be pretty harmful if it enters the body at high speed. :-)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,772 ✭✭✭meathstevie


    Grizzly 45 wrote: »
    I await with great anticipation the Irish political party who will change the Irish constitution to a US-style bill of rights that can be summed up in 4pages and is understandable to the average ten-year-old.Unlike the EU version that runs to 15, 700-page books that only a lawyer might make sense of.:rolleyes:

    Dunno Grizzly but I reckon the European Court of Justice sometimes struggles to come up with unanimous decisions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    So does the US supreme court.Wonder why they are avoiding any hearings or pleas on 2A?? But at least we can see the politics as to who appoints them in the US.

    Who appoints the EU Supreme court judges??
    And they have come up with some right doozies in recent times too.
    Making offending "the religion of peace" a crime is not one of their better decisions.:(

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,500 ✭✭✭tac foley


    Ah yes, the 'Religion of Peace'.

    Riiiiight.

    That's the one where, if you offend them, they cut your head off, or put out a death warning notice that tells ALL their co-religionists to cut your head off.

    Very peaceful, that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    Yeah,them Church of England vicars...:rolleyes:

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,219 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    Grizzly 45 wrote: »
    Yeah,them Church of England vicars...:rolleyes:

    You don't get a machine gun named after you for nothing ...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 58 ✭✭rugerfanatic


    "Following terrorist gun attacks in Paris and Brussels in 2015 and 2016, the EU tightened gun rules, known as the "EU Gun Ban", the bloc encouraged Switzerland to comply with its laws............................................

    "If Switzerland refused, the country could have been excluded from the Schengen Area."

    Encouraged & then threatened ...... Hard to believe EU is supposed to be a democracy :rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 286 ✭✭oldgit1897


    "Following terrorist gun attacks in Paris and Brussels in 2015 and 2016, the EU tightened gun rules, known as the "EU Gun Ban", the bloc encouraged Switzerland to comply with its laws............................................

    "If Switzerland refused, the country could have been excluded from the Schengen Area."

    Encouraged & then threatened ...... Hard to believe EU is supposed to be a democracy :rolleyes:

    The eu threw open the borders to the middle east and africa, allowed in huge amounts of people with no back ground or security checks. There followed a spate of sexual assaults, criminality and more seriously, spree murders by religious nutters. The eu then decides that law abiding gun owners are the issue and goes about banning their firearms.

    Pure stupidity.

    As for the eu supposed to be about democracy, whatever gave you that notion ? The laws are drawn up in secret by the unelected commission which seems to comprise largely of ex-bankers, and are sent to the parliament to be passed or rejected. The elected parliament cannot propose legislation or amend legisation, they are powerless really. Still the Irish will trot out to the polling booths later in the week and vote for fg, ff and liebour people for meps, and tell us "we are at the heart of europe". Are we fairycakes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    oldgit1897 wrote: »
    T

    ? The laws are drawn up in secret by the unelected commission which seems to comprise largely of ex-bankers, and are sent to the parliament to be passed or rejected. The elected parliament cannot propose legislation or amend legisation, they are powerless really. Still the Irish will trot out to the polling booths later in the week and vote for fg, ff and liebour people for meps, and tell us "we are at the heart of europe". Are we fairycakes.

    Called Trilouges... Star chambers,with no offical recognition,media excluded,as are any sort of minutes being takenWhere the deecisions are made at 3AM with much shouting,bullying
    and table thumping.Ask Viky Ford and Dita Chernosva about it.Both women MEP's who stood up to Peter Kings bullying on the EU gun ban.THAT is how EU decisions are made...:mad:

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 286 ✭✭oldgit1897


    A poll was done by the eu in the last few weeks, a large amount of people, particularly in France and Italy see the eu collapsing in the next few decades, not the Irish though, which is baffling to me, as there was a 700 year struggle to get away from an undemocratic empire, and then we join and whole heartedly support another one !


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 58 ✭✭rugerfanatic


    Now that the farmers are not benefiting as much from EU (beef farmers got €50 million out of the €100 million they demanded) I reckon in not too distant future once the media start telling the truth about what people think of EU we may actually be looking at Irexit.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 286 ✭✭oldgit1897


    Now that the farmers are not benefiting as much from EU (beef farmers got €50 million out of the €100 million they demanded) I reckon in not too distant future once the media start telling the truth about what people think of EU we may actually be looking at Irexit.

    The national broadcasters like the bbc and rte receive "funding" from the eu, why would blueshirt fm bite the hand that feeds and tell the truth ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,004 ✭✭✭minktrapper


    Now that the farmers are not benefiting as much from EU (beef farmers got €50 million out of the €100 million they demanded) I reckon in not too distant future once the media start telling the truth about what people think of EU we may actually be looking at Irexit.
    Farmers don't benefit from the E.U.. Consumers/food production does. Food producers are merely caught in the middle.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 28,627 Mod ✭✭✭✭Cass


    oldgit1897 wrote: »
    ..... not the Irish though, which is baffling to me, as there was a 700 year struggle to get away from an undemocratic empire, and then we join and whole heartedly support another one !
    • When we have the EU/Germans auditing our budgets before even the Dail sees them
    • When we have 9,000 Euro of debt per person compared to the rest of Europe (42% of total EU debt) being paid by Irish tax payers
    • When we have Ministers delaying the results of budget reports because of how they may effect local elections
    • When we have 158 million Euro paid into a tribunal with no power of subpoena or arrest
    • When we have 2 billion for a childrens hospital (costs twice as much as the world's tallest building) from a inept manchild that never even finished college
    • When we have the unelected leader that says he supports free speech but shuts down parts of the city in anticipation of protests while having AGS illegal check IDs of citizens (no power under section 2 to ask for ID unless a crime is committed or believed to have occurred)
    • When we have a proven corrupt former leader still drawing pension and thinking of running for President
    • When we have former Garda Commissioner's still receiving their lump sums and pensions and then getting cushy EU jobs or their defense costs covered by taxpayer monies
    • When we have rampant corruption in our national police force so much so that total section of the force are disbanded to built up from scratch and high ranking members suspended/arrested
    • When we have the current unelected leader giving the former leader an award and lump sum prize that was created by the very office both men held
    • When we have current chief whips and TDs sending AGS out to intimidate members of the press
    • When we have TDs that were proven to have accepted brides from private businesses for contracts and the same businesses getting new contracts for billion euro broadband networks
    • When the leader of the opposition calls Sovereignty an outdated and backward way of thinking
    • When we have unprecedented homelessness, and under recording of those figures to make is seem less severe
    • When we have a national health service emergency that goes ignored
    • When we have the Government declare a "climate emergency" then have only one TD turn up in the Dail to debate it


    ..................... are you in any way surprised that we bend over as soon as our EU masters tell us to.

    Firearms have been a staple of our way of life for hundreds of years. From farmers needing them for crop/livestock protection to ordinary people needing them because if they didn't hunt they didn't eat. Now that we live in a digital age where there is a supermarket on every corner and those in cities think they are more advanced, and better educated than the rest of the country we are supposed to give up that way of life and that heritage to "civilized". Are these the same people "civilized people that voted to allow the murder of babies i wonder?

    We all heard the same talk when growing up about breaking free from 700 or 800 years of oppression. The same firearms our ancestors used to feed and defend themselves were used by our founding fathers to break us free from oppression, slavery and servitude. Yet it took barely 100 years to voluntarily walk back into it.

    The Irish are great at bitching and moaning, but that is all we do. We never act, stand up for our rights, or say we've had enough. We sit back, bitch, moan, and post on forums and social media (exactly like i'm doing now) and then go to the polling stations and vote the same people (and i don't mean parties only, i mean the exact same people) back into office because "well i've always voted for them".

    We our having our rights taken from us not only by our own politicians who act on their own interests and not for the people that voted them into office, but now by our EU masters who answer to no one. Those rights are then "sold back" to us under the guise of taxation, licenses, and sometimes never at all.

    The EU is not a country, it has no sovereignty, it has unelected leaders making sweeping decisions for nearly 500 million people.

    Ireland is a Republic. That means our elected representatives/politicians act in our best interests or at least they should.

    Donald Trump won because people were fed up. Sebastian Kurz won in Austria because people were fed up. Brexit happened because people were fed up. Only yesterday the Australian Prime Minister was re-elected because of the same.

    The fake news machine was found to have omitted or under reported exit polls in all the above and it's why people were so shocked when they won. Most of the "civilized" people i spoke of above now criticize these leaders and say anyone who follows or supports them is a Nazi, Fascist, etc. It's this blind ignorance of the will of the majority, the double standards, the corruption, the unending cycle of the last 50 years that has people fed up.

    Nothing will change until we, the people, make it happen. Voting in the same people who have held office for all their adult life and done nothing in that time will not change a thing.

    What has any of this to do with a lead ban. It'll happen despite our piss poor efforts at stopping it because its an opportunity to virtue signal to the world at how progressive we are, and ban a sh*t load of guns while they're at it.

    IOW business as usual.
    Forum Charter - Useful Information - Photo thread: Hardware - Ranges by County - Hunting Laws/Important threads - Upcoming Events - RFDs by County

    If you see a problem post use the report post function. Click on the three dots on the post, select "FLAG" & let a Moderator deal with it.

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,076 ✭✭✭✭Grizzly 45


    Make a change next Friday.I'm voting totally for anyone who is a euro skeptic.It has to start sometime,somewhere.

    "If you want to keep someone away from your house, Just fire the shotgun through the door."

    Vice President [and former lawyer] Joe Biden Field& Stream Magazine interview Feb 2013 "



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 286 ✭✭oldgit1897


    Grizzly 45 wrote: »
    Make a change next Friday.I'm voting totally for anyone who is a euro skeptic.It has to start sometime,somewhere.

    Me too Grizz, or if there is no one spoil the ballot. Personally i despise this country and i used to love it and be proud of it. It seems the country is run for trendy "progressive" issues, and virtue signalling. Millions spent on these issues, yet my heart sinks when i see a dozen people in sleeping bags and cardboard boxes in the doorway of the gaiety theatre on my way to work.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 28,627 Mod ✭✭✭✭Cass


    oldgit1897 wrote: »
    ...... or if there is no one spoil the ballot.........
    Don't do that.

    I never understand anyone who spoils a ballot or doesn't vote. How can you say you want change but not contribute to trying by either not voting or wasting a vote.

    As little difference as you may think it makes, take the time, do the research and vote for whomever you think best suits your needs. However make a meaningful vote.
    Forum Charter - Useful Information - Photo thread: Hardware - Ranges by County - Hunting Laws/Important threads - Upcoming Events - RFDs by County

    If you see a problem post use the report post function. Click on the three dots on the post, select "FLAG" & let a Moderator deal with it.

    Moderators - Cass otmmyboy2 , CatMod - Shamboc , Admins - Beasty , mickeroo



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 286 ✭✭oldgit1897


    Cass wrote: »
    • When we have the EU/Germans auditing our budgets before even the Dail sees them
    • When we have 9,000 Euro of debt per person compared to the rest of Europe (42% of total EU debt) being paid by Irish tax payers
    • When we have Ministers delaying the results of budget reports because of how they may effect local elections
    • When we have 158 million Euro paid into a tribunal with no power of subpoena or arrest
    • When we have 2 billion for a childrens hospital (costs twice as much as the world's tallest building) from a inept manchild that never even finished college
    • When we have the unelected leader that says he supports free speech but shuts down parts of the city in anticipation of protests while having AGS illegal check IDs of citizens (no power under section 2 to ask for ID unless a crime is committed or believed to have occurred)
    • When we have a proven corrupt former leader still drawing pension and thinking of running for President
    • When we have former Garda Commissioner's still receiving their lump sums and pensions and then getting cushy EU jobs or their defense costs covered by taxpayer monies
    • When we have rampant corruption in our national police force so much so that total section of the force are disbanded to built up from scratch and high ranking members suspended/arrested
    • When we have the current unelected leader giving the former leader an award and lump sum prize that was created by the very office both men held
    • When we have current chief whips and TDs sending AGS out to intimidate members of the press
    • When we have TDs that were proven to have accepted brides from private businesses for contracts and the same businesses getting new contracts for billion euro broadband networks
    • When the leader of the opposition calls Sovereignty an outdated and backward way of thinking
    • When we have unprecedented homelessness, and under recording of those figures to make is seem less severe
    • When we have a national health service emergency that goes ignored
    • When we have the Government declare a "climate emergency" then have only one TD turn up in the Dail to debate it


    ..................... are you in any way surprised that we bend over as soon as our EU masters tell us to.

    Firearms have been a staple of our way of life for hundreds of years. From farmers needing them for crop/livestock protection to ordinary people needing them because if they didn't hunt they didn't eat. Now that we live in a digital age where there is a supermarket on every corner and those in cities think they are more advanced, and better educated than the rest of the country we are supposed to give up that way of life and that heritage to "civilized". Are these the same people "civilized people that voted to allow the murder of babies i wonder?

    We all heard the same talk when growing up about breaking free from 700 or 800 years of oppression. The same firearms our ancestors used to feed and defend themselves were used by our founding fathers to break us free from oppression, slavery and servitude. Yet it took barely 100 years to voluntarily walk back into it.

    The Irish are great at bitching and moaning, but that is all we do. We never act, stand up for our rights, or say we've had enough. We sit back, bitch, moan, and post on forums and social media (exactly like i'm doing now) and then go to the polling stations and vote the same people (and i don't mean parties only, i mean the exact same people) back into office because "well i've always voted for them".

    We our having our rights taken from us not only by our own politicians who act on their own interests and not for the people that voted them into office, but now by our EU masters who answer to no one. Those rights are then "sold back" to us under the guise of taxation, licenses, and sometimes never at all.

    The EU is not a country, it has no sovereignty, it has unelected leaders making sweeping decisions for nearly 500 million people.

    Ireland is a Republic. That means our elected representatives/politicians act in our best interests or at least they should.

    Donald Trump won because people were fed up. Sebastian Kurz won in Austria because people were fed up. Brexit happened because people were fed up. Only yesterday the Australian Prime Minister was re-elected because of the same.

    The fake news machine was found to have omitted or under reported exit polls in all the above and it's why people were so shocked when they won. Most of the "civilized" people i spoke of above now criticize these leaders and say anyone who follows or supports them is a Nazi, Fascist, etc. It's this blind ignorance of the will of the majority, the double standards, the corruption, the unending cycle of the last 50 years that has people fed up.

    Nothing will change until we, the people, make it happen. Voting in the same people who have held office for all their adult life and done nothing in that time will not change a thing.

    What has any of this to do with a lead ban. It'll happen despite our piss poor efforts at stopping it because its an opportunity to virtue signal to the world at how progressive we are, and ban a sh*t load of guns while they're at it.

    IOW business as usual.


    Thank god Cass, i thought i was alone in my thinking, but you have hit on my views exactly. As for who i vote for, well i never vote for ff, fg, and never will. Labour and sinn fein are as bad as the rest, if not worse, the list gets a bit thin after that.

    Anyway you know what Mark Twain said "If voting made any difference, they wouldn't let us do it".


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 58 ✭✭rugerfanatic


    Farmers don't benefit from the E.U...

    Ya right :eek: Getting paid subsidies to do nothing is a major benefit! What other business that isn't viable & making money is bailed out by EU (I repeat €50 million to beef farmers who are in trouble).................


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,219 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    Ya right :eek: Getting paid subsidies to do nothing is a major benefit! What other business that isn't viable & making money is bailed out by EU (I repeat €50 million to beef farmers who are in trouble).................

    Absolute bull****.
    Getting paid subsidies because the price paid for beef by the factories is below the cost of production.
    Subsidies havent increased in 20 years, but every cost has, plus inflation, so its now necessary to farm twice the land area to have the same standard of living.
    In 1987 I was getting 950 to 1000 punts for a factory weight bullock.
    Green diesel was less than 80p a gallon, fertilizer was 150 punts a ton and animal feed about 120 punts a ton.
    Land could be bought foe 1000 to 1300 punts per acre.
    Today, a bullock sells for 1300 euros, green diesel is 70 cent a litre, fertilizer 330 euro a ton and 16% protein animal feed about the same.
    Land costs are anything from 5,000 to 10,000 euro per acre.
    So 30 years later what we sell still pays tbe same.
    Are you bringing home the same pay packet today in euros, that you brought home in 1987 in punts?

    The outlook is for this trend to continue, so in another 30 years we will need to double farm size again, and there is a limit to what any person can physically or mentally do.

    EU subsidies are paid to ensure a cheap food supply to the population, and 95% of farmers hate the fact that they are reliant on them and would wish them gone .
    Pay double or triple for your grocery shop, and that can happen.
    Theres not a farmer out there who wouldnt relish telling the EU and the Dept. of Agriculture inspectors where to shove their inspections, their regulation, their artificially low age limits for cattle and their subsidies.


  • Registered Users Posts: 335 ✭✭yubabill


    Cass wrote: »
    Don't do that.

    I never understand anyone who spoils a ballot or doesn't vote. How can you say you want change but not contribute to trying by either not voting or wasting a vote.

    As little difference as you may think it makes, take the time, do the research and vote for whomever you think best suits your needs. However make a meaningful vote.

    The smart thing is to vote as a block, like Muslims do - they have a group here in Ireland which invites election candidates to court the Muslim vote;

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/social-affairs/religion-and-beliefs/new-muslim-group-in-dublin-to-encourage-engagement-with-politics-1.2478981


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,004 ✭✭✭minktrapper


    Farmers don't benefit from the E.U...
    Ya right :eek: Getting paid subsidies to do nothing is a major benefit! What other business that isn't viable & making money is bailed out by EU (I repeat €50 million to beef farmers who are in trouble).................
    To say that farmers are subsidised is a thing of the past. Everyone would be running a farm if that was the case. It's beef production that's in trouble.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 58 ✭✭rugerfanatic


    Nekarsulm wrote: »
    Are you bringing home the same pay packet today in euros, that you brought home in 1987 in punts?

    Great question.

    In 1987, I was earning £600 punts per week now I'm earning €400 per week..................


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 28,627 Mod ✭✭✭✭Cass


    In 1987, I was earning £600 punts per week ............
    Were you standing on street corners :D

    That is the equivalent of over €800 per week today.

    I was earning £75 per week and that was, to me, decent enough money. 20 smokes cost 0.59p, a litre of petrol was 0.36p per litre, etc.
    Forum Charter - Useful Information - Photo thread: Hardware - Ranges by County - Hunting Laws/Important threads - Upcoming Events - RFDs by County

    If you see a problem post use the report post function. Click on the three dots on the post, select "FLAG" & let a Moderator deal with it.

    Moderators - Cass otmmyboy2 , CatMod - Shamboc , Admins - Beasty , mickeroo



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 58 ✭✭rugerfanatic


    Cass wrote: »
    Were you standing on street corners :D

    If I was I'd have made a lot more than that :D
    Cass wrote: »
    That is the equivalent of over €800 per week today.

    In real terms when you take cost of stuff then into account it was in the region of €2,000 in todays money :eek:
    Cass wrote: »
    I was earning £75 per week and that was, to me, decent enough money. 20 smokes cost 0.59p, a litre of petrol was 0.36p per litre, etc.

    Needless to say, I wasn't earning it in this little bannana Republic :p


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