i'm not a fan of the SMH , but have a read


Zappa wrote:We're placing a good amount of focus on firearms licensing - and that's not a bad thing - but what the police wont tell you, until a formal inquest is made, that the perp would have had access to firearms well before that anyway. If he was denied a license, he could have smuggled them in via the Philippines, Afghanistan, Pakistan or purchased them on the dark web.
If he was hell bent on committing atrocious acts, a license wouldn't have stopped him.






alexjones wrote:As a man who loves freedom I don't blame NSW police for this.
The son being investigated by ASIO means nothing to me. Why should the father be denied a licence because his son was investigated?
Was his son charged with a crime? Was he convicted of a crime? No!
I have won court cases against the police so merely being investigated should not deny people a licence.
so your telling me your okay with what happened at bondi ? your okay with people having involvement with ISIS or other terrorist groups and giving them gun licenses ?! there's freedom, and there's really inadequate risk assessment and blatant stupidity by the firearms branch . you just blew my mind AJ. 
bigrich wrote:alexjones wrote:As a man who loves freedom I don't blame NSW police for this.
The son being investigated by ASIO means nothing to me. Why should the father be denied a licence because his son was investigated?
Was his son charged with a crime? Was he convicted of a crime? No!
I have won court cases against the police so merely being investigated should not deny people a licence.
seriouslyso your telling me your okay with what happened at bondi ? your okay with people having involvement with ISIS or other terrorist groups and giving them gun licenses ?! there's freedom, and there's really inadequate risk assessment and blatant stupidity by the firearms branch . you just blew my mind AJ.
go back and read the link i put up that details epic past fails by the registry.


alexjones wrote:bigrich wrote:alexjones wrote:As a man who loves freedom I don't blame NSW police for this.
The son being investigated by ASIO means nothing to me. Why should the father be denied a licence because his son was investigated?
Was his son charged with a crime? Was he convicted of a crime? No!
I have won court cases against the police so merely being investigated should not deny people a licence.
seriouslyso your telling me your okay with what happened at bondi ? your okay with people having involvement with ISIS or other terrorist groups and giving them gun licenses ?! there's freedom, and there's really inadequate risk assessment and blatant stupidity by the firearms branch . you just blew my mind AJ.
go back and read the link i put up that details epic past fails by the registry.
The father had the licence. What crimes did the father commit? According to the law the father was a fit and proper person.
What crimes was the son convicted off? All I'm seeing is that he is was investigated(whatever that means). I am not seeing him being convicted of anything criminal.
I am not seeing anything criminal before the attack happened to deny them a licence.


womble wrote:Arguably he should not have had access to a belt fed full semi auto shotgun and a light sabre.

bigrich wrote:are you seriously suggesting you're all for foreign nationals investigated for links to isis, be given access to firearms on the basis that they've got no convictions or criminal record . the reason for the current mess is because of bad decisions and lack of common sense, and not enforcing criteria in existing laws , that's what your advocating for ?. by your logic anyone in the "hells angels" who hasn't been convicted of a crime should also be granted a firearms license . i'm dumbfounded ......

Zappa wrote:bigrich wrote:are you seriously suggesting you're all for foreign nationals investigated for links to isis, be given access to firearms on the basis that they've got no convictions or criminal record . the reason for the current mess is because of bad decisions and lack of common sense, and not enforcing criteria in existing laws , that's what your advocating for ?. by your logic anyone in the "hells angels" who hasn't been convicted of a crime should also be granted a firearms license . i'm dumbfounded ......
I can understand where alexjones is coming from. We're given forms to fill and answer them with honesty. Then we're permitting the regulator to perform background checks on us with a view that if we're nothing turns up and our disclosure is valid, we're normally granted the license.
The father in this case had tripped some flags because it took 4 years to get his license. I'm presuming the father was enquiring and appealing his decision as to why his license was not being granted. Where the authorities honest and transparent in all their background checks? When it goes in depth to AFP and the intelligence agencies investigations, findings are not forthcoming. They will give you very little detail.
I don't have any experience with the appeal NCAT process, but if the authorities don't give you a clear reason for license rejection, what exactly can you appeal against?
However If they did, come out and say we have clear evidence of your association with illegal groups, then I would think he would have taken steps to mitigate and show his associations where unfounded. Over time, he obtained his license.
Admittedly there are a lot presumptions there, but I'm thinking this is based on the Premiers NCAT law of not permitting right of appeal for firearm related matters. If they were vague about your license rejection previously, now they'll come out and say ' go away'.
Most of this stuff will come out with a royal commission, anything that cannot be made available to the public ' due to national ops security' will be redacted with ministerial disclosure only.

Commonwealth countries like Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and Canada maintain strict firearms laws primarily due to a different cultural perspective on gun ownership (seeing it as a privilege, not a right), historical context, and in response to specific mass-casualty events.
Cultural and Historical Factors
Gun Ownership as a Privilege: A fundamental difference from countries like the United States is the prevailing cultural and legal view that owning a firearm is a government-regulated privilege, not an inherent or constitutional right.
Lack of Militias Tradition: Many Commonwealth nations, such as Australia, never had to fight a war of independence on their own soil, so they do not have a historical tradition or constitutional provision for armed civilian militias.
Emphasis on Community Safety: The political and public discourse in these countries often prioritizes overall community safety and public welfare over individual rights to self-defense using firearms. Self-defense is explicitly excluded as a genuine reason for obtaining a firearms license in Australia.
Response to Mass Shootings
Major legislative changes in several Commonwealth countries were a direct, bipartisan political response to specific, high-profile mass shootings, which galvanized public opinion and political will for stricter controls.

Zappa wrote:It's seen as a privilege as they repeatedly hammer this home every time the topic comes up and so is a car license. Again hammered into our heads like school kids every time the vehicle accident numbers go up.
Deny All, and Allow on exemption.
I'm not sure whether this is a product of the Westminister system, but this is what AI has to say.Commonwealth countries like Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and Canada maintain strict firearms laws primarily due to a different cultural perspective on gun ownership (seeing it as a privilege, not a right), historical context, and in response to specific mass-casualty events.
Cultural and Historical Factors
Gun Ownership as a Privilege: A fundamental difference from countries like the United States is the prevailing cultural and legal view that owning a firearm is a government-regulated privilege, not an inherent or constitutional right.
Lack of Militias Tradition: Many Commonwealth nations, such as Australia, never had to fight a war of independence on their own soil, so they do not have a historical tradition or constitutional provision for armed civilian militias.
Emphasis on Community Safety: The political and public discourse in these countries often prioritizes overall community safety and public welfare over individual rights to self-defense using firearms. Self-defense is explicitly excluded as a genuine reason for obtaining a firearms license in Australia.
Response to Mass Shootings
Major legislative changes in several Commonwealth countries were a direct, bipartisan political response to specific, high-profile mass shootings, which galvanized public opinion and political will for stricter controls.
I'd like to see the canucks protect themselves when the 'Mercins decide to head north and annex them.




Zappa wrote:It's seen as a privilege as they repeatedly hammer this home every time the topic comes up and so is a car license. Again hammered into our heads like school kids every time the vehicle accident numbers go up.
Deny All, and Allow on exemption.
I'm not sure whether this is a product of the Westminister system, but this is what AI has to say.Commonwealth countries like Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and Canada maintain strict firearms laws primarily due to a different cultural perspective on gun ownership (seeing it as a privilege, not a right), historical context, and in response to specific mass-casualty events.
Cultural and Historical Factors
Gun Ownership as a Privilege: A fundamental difference from countries like the United States is the prevailing cultural and legal view that owning a firearm is a government-regulated privilege, not an inherent or constitutional right.
Lack of Militias Tradition: Many Commonwealth nations, such as Australia, never had to fight a war of independence on their own soil, so they do not have a historical tradition or constitutional provision for armed civilian militias.
Emphasis on Community Safety: The political and public discourse in these countries often prioritizes overall community safety and public welfare over individual rights to self-defense using firearms. Self-defense is explicitly excluded as a genuine reason for obtaining a firearms license in Australia.
Response to Mass Shootings
Major legislative changes in several Commonwealth countries were a direct, bipartisan political response to specific, high-profile mass shootings, which galvanized public opinion and political will for stricter controls.
I'd like to see the canucks protect themselves when the 'Mercins decide to head north and annex them.





alexjones wrote:Where is all this information you guys are getting about the alleged ISIS investigation? Is it all confirmed cause I am only hearing conjecture.
WE NEED A ROYAL COMMISSION!!!!

alexjones wrote:Where is all this information you guys are getting about the alleged ISIS investigation? Is it all confirmed cause I am only hearing conjecture.
WE NEED A ROYAL COMMISSION!!!!

womble wrote:Zappa wrote:It's seen as a privilege as they repeatedly hammer this home every time the topic comes up and so is a car license. Again hammered into our heads like school kids every time the vehicle accident numbers go up.
Deny All, and Allow on exemption.
I'm not sure whether this is a product of the Westminister system, but this is what AI has to say.Commonwealth countries like Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and Canada maintain strict firearms laws primarily due to a different cultural perspective on gun ownership (seeing it as a privilege, not a right), historical context, and in response to specific mass-casualty events.
Cultural and Historical Factors
Gun Ownership as a Privilege: A fundamental difference from countries like the United States is the prevailing cultural and legal view that owning a firearm is a government-regulated privilege, not an inherent or constitutional right.
Lack of Militias Tradition: Many Commonwealth nations, such as Australia, never had to fight a war of independence on their own soil, so they do not have a historical tradition or constitutional provision for armed civilian militias.
Emphasis on Community Safety: The political and public discourse in these countries often prioritizes overall community safety and public welfare over individual rights to self-defense using firearms. Self-defense is explicitly excluded as a genuine reason for obtaining a firearms license in Australia.
Response to Mass Shootings
Major legislative changes in several Commonwealth countries were a direct, bipartisan political response to specific, high-profile mass shootings, which galvanized public opinion and political will for stricter controls.
I'd like to see the canucks protect themselves when the 'Mercins decide to head north and annex them.
Oh boy. How much time have you got![]()
Not really Westminster system. Well it is in a legal sense.
But it’s Colonialism, Liberalism, Age of Enlightenment. Age of revolution.
Emphasis on community safety is the key issue.
It’s the interpretation of the right to life in a liberal democracy. It’s two separate ideological views, being the liberal version vs the conservative version.
So, we’re discovering, establishing new countries, French , English, Spanish whatever colonialism. And we need to adopt laws and human rights charters for a civil society
So is the crown establishing a new colony in the new world. If so, English or French. They’ve just had their revolutions and are fresh out of serfdom.
They are now masters of their own destiny. They are their own kings. So now we need laws and rights for our new societies.
Right to life and liberty. Freedom. We now have ownership of our own life.
Libre is it latin or Greek I can’t remember. Liberty. Liberalism the I guess tame pragmatic version.
So the liberal version is emphasis on community safety. Therefore the right to life extends to the community. Now at this point firearms are just an extension of the right to life. Or rather being armed to protect yourself, savage new frontiers, brave new world. etc.
Colonies. Nope you must be disarmed for the safety of the community. To ensure everyone has the right to life. You have the right not to be shot by your community.
America. f*** Of. Stick your crown where it fits. Republic. Right to life remains with the individual.
And a very trigger happy wild west.
The USA is the only outlier. And now we have the constant battle between liberals who want what the rest of us have. Vs conservatives who want the principle foundations of their nation to endure.

