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NSW proposed new gun laws (Read 3306 times)
Sir Eoin O Fada
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Re: NSW proposed new gun laws
Reply #15 - Mar 7th, 2026 at 10:46am
 
Here’s a really stupid one.
In NSW  a Brown Bess musket, as issued to the troops of the First Fleet, falls under Category B licence, yet it is a muzzle loading weapon that in average hands can fire but one shot in two minutes.
A double barrel 12 gauge shotgun, with self cocking and automatic ejection, capable of at least eight shots in two minutes, in the same average hands, falls into Category A the least restrictive category.

Why would a low power, slow firing ,single shot gun be in a more restrictive category than a thoroughly modern, two shots at each loading,
more powerful gun?
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Self defence is a right.
 
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Jasin
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Re: NSW proposed new gun laws
Reply #16 - Mar 7th, 2026 at 7:19pm
 
It has a rainbow 🌈 on it?
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Bobby.
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Re: NSW proposed new gun laws
Reply #17 - Mar 7th, 2026 at 8:36pm
 
Sir Eoin O Fada wrote on Mar 7th, 2026 at 10:46am:
Here’s a really stupid one.
In NSW  a Brown Bess musket, as issued to the troops of the First Fleet, falls under Category B licence, yet it is a muzzle loading weapon that in average hands can fire but one shot in two minutes.
A double barrel 12 gauge shotgun, with self cocking and automatic ejection, capable of at least eight shots in two minutes, in the same average hands, falls into Category A the least restrictive category.

Why would a low power, slow firing ,single shot gun be in a more restrictive category than a thoroughly modern, two shots at each loading,
more powerful gun?



a Brown Bess musket?

That's an antique for museums from 200 years ago?   Undecided



The "Brown Bess" is the nickname for the British Army's standard-issue,
.75 caliber, smoothbore flintlock musket used for over a century (c. 1722–1850s),
including in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. K
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Sir Eoin O Fada
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Re: NSW proposed new gun laws
Reply #18 - Mar 8th, 2026 at 1:03pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Mar 7th, 2026 at 8:36pm:
Sir Eoin O Fada wrote on Mar 7th, 2026 at 10:46am:
Here’s a really stupid one.
In NSW  a Brown Bess musket, as issued to the troops of the First Fleet, falls under Category B licence, yet it is a muzzle loading weapon that in average hands can fire but one shot in two minutes.
A double barrel 12 gauge shotgun, with self cocking and automatic ejection, capable of at least eight shots in two minutes, in the same average hands, falls into Category A the least restrictive category.

Why would a low power, slow firing ,single shot gun be in a more restrictive category than a thoroughly modern, two shots at each loading,
more powerful gun?



a Brown Bess musket?

That's an antique for museums from 200 years ago?   Undecided



The "Brown Bess" is the nickname for the British Army's standard-issue,
.75 caliber, smoothbore flintlock musket used for over a century (c. 1722–1850s),
including in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. K

Yes, and people still use them, I used one for years as a hunting gun until I found out that it was a First Fleet musket, then it was retired to a serious collector who swapped me a very valuable antique target rifle for it.

A friend has three original, unused Brown Besses, these sit in his safe alongside a reproduction Bess.
The three originals do not have to be registered but the reproduction does, because it is modern and not antique, they are virtually identical.
But for ‘’safety’’ reasons the reproduction must be registered.
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Self defence is a right.
 
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Baronvonrort
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Re: NSW proposed new gun laws
Reply #19 - Today at 12:26am
 
Quote:
Labor announces $40 million boost to address firearms registry failings


The government will inject nearly $40 million into the state’s firearms registry in a bid to overhaul the troubled system and increase community safety following the Bondi shooting terror attack in December last year.

On Saturday, Police Minister Yasmin Catley announced the $39.3 million investment, which will also fund additional staff and system upgrades, to accompany a suite of tighter restrictions on gun owners.

The new restrictions reduce the licence period from five years to two, strengthen checks on people seeking to own firearms and cap the number of firearms a person can own. A comprehensive audit of all existing firearm licences will also be undertaken.

Catley has previously described the registry as being in a “shambles” between 2020 and 2023. During that period, the registry had serious backlogs, and applications typically took two to three years to be processed. It was not fully digitised until 2023.

Part of the Minns government’s new funding includes 22 additional registry staff, who will process licence renewals and the “genuine reason” checks as part of each renewal, expand membership and participation reporting obligations for clubs and licence holders, and review new licence application requirements, including Australian citizenship.

“This $39.3 million investment will deliver 22 extra staff for the Firearms Registry, so these reforms can be implemented – strengthening checks, improving oversight and supporting the practical work needed to reduce risk across the state,” Catley said in her announcement.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/labor-announces-40-million-boost-to-address-...




Another $40 million on firearms registry.

Former NSW Police minister Troy Grant says at 1 minute 20 seconds greater than 97% of all gun crime is done with unregistered firearms

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Leftists and the Ayatollahs have a lot in common when it comes to criticism of Islam, they don't tolerate it.
 
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