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Bonfire Night (1 Viewer)

  • Thread starter Otis
  • Start date Nov 6, 2019
Forums New posts

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #1
Time to ban fireworks being sold to the public and allow organised used events only?

Surely now is the time.

I see riot police were out on the streets of Leeds last night with kids throwing fireworks about and the other day some kids threw a firework into a Domino's pizza place in Ernsford Grange here.

It's enough now isn't it. Time to pull the plug. My dog is nervous for weeks, leading up to and past the event and it is unrelenting.

Twice this week fireworks have been going off at 2 in the morning.

Organised events only. Make it a community thing and go and see proper displays, which are always so much better than anything you can conjure up in your garden anyway.
 
Reactions: ajsccfc

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #2
I’m all for this for the simple fact I am bored of my neighbours playing ‘my firework(cock) is bigger than your firework’ for a week before and after.

The kids bloody love it though.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #3
I’ve always been against it (banning them), but to be honest it’s getting to the point where we should at least make it more restricted. As long as professional displays for Diwali/Bonfire Night/New Year are still attainable by small community groups.
 
Reactions: Otis

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #4
Loads of them here all hours of the early morning
 

Covstu

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #5
One of my two cats hate them but again it’s over a small period of time. I would prefer it to be at organised events but as a kid we always had them at home so maybe double standards if I took that view.
All goes back to our current fucked up society and lack of respect
 

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #6
Covstu said:
One of my two cats hate them but again it’s over a small period of time. I would prefer it to be at organised events but as a kid we always had them at home so maybe double standards if I took that view.
All goes back to our current fucked up society and lack of respect
Click to expand...
I wish it was just a small period of time, stu, but these days it goes on for weeks.
 
Reactions: Covstu

Covstu

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #7
Otis said:
I wish it was just a small period of time, stu, but these days it goes on for weeks.
Click to expand...
Not been as bad this year, divali normally goes on longer but didn’t but yes we will get at least a week for bonfire night
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #8
Will say that as a shared parent I’d hate it if bonfire night was restricted to one day/weekend. My kids have two bonfire nights (and most holidays) so we can both do things with them. I’ll be taking them to a display this weekend which no doubt some think is too far away.
 
Reactions: Sky Blue Pete

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #9
shmmeee said:
Will say that as a shared parent I’d hate it if bonfire night was restricted to one day/weekend. My kids have two bonfire nights (and most holidays) so we can both do things with them. I’ll be taking them to a display this weekend which no doubt some think is too far away.
Click to expand...
No, you could have as many displays as you want and not just restricted to one night, but they would just have to be organised.
 
Reactions: shmmeee

richnrg

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #10
shmmeee said:
I’ll be taking them to a display this weekend which no doubt some think is too far away.
Click to expand...
why, how far away is it?
 
Reactions: ccfchoi87

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #11
Hong Kong.
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #12
When I was a kid many moons ago, I started buying fireworks weeks before the day.
I liked catherine wheels, rockets, and the the conical shaped ones that spewed out orange 'lava' like volcanoes.
I looked forward to it all year, let them off in our back garden and always followed the instructions and warnings to the letter.
If a firework failed to go off, I wouldn't approach it but left it till the next day.
I would even get up early the following morning and roam around the neighbourhood looking for landed rocksts.
For me, there is no fun at all in an organised display.
I've seen the display at Disneyland, which is spectacular, but to me one firework seen up close and personal is better than a one hour organised display.
 
Reactions: Ian1779 and shmmeee

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #13
Gazolba said:
When I was a kid many moons ago, I started buying fireworks weeks before the day.
I liked catherine wheels, rockets, and the the conical shaped ones that spewed out orange 'lava' like volcanoes.
I looked forward to it all year, let them off in our back garden and always followed the instructions and warnings to the letter.
If a firework failed to go off, I wouldn't approach it but left it till the next day.
I would even get up early the following morning and roam around the neighbourhood looking for landed rocksts.
For me, there is no fun at all in an organised display.
I've seen the display at Disneyland, which is spectacular, but to me one firework seen up close and personal is better than a one hour organised display.
Click to expand...

Same. But then I talk to people from countries where they’re banned for public sale and they all think we are mad.
 

ccfc92

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #14
shmmeee said:
Same. But then I talk to people from countries where they’re banned for public sale and they all think we are mad.
Click to expand...

I thought I would Google US firework sales.

I almost knew this would be the case, it literally sums up their Gun culture. :joyful::joyful::joyful:

"Consumer fireworks that explode in the sky are only legal in Maine and New Hampshire. They are illegal in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont."
 

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #15
ccfc92 said:
I thought I would Google US firework sales.

I almost knew this would be the case, it literally sums up their Gun culture. :joyful::joyful::joyful:

"Consumer fireworks that explode in the sky are only legal in Maine and New Hampshire. They are illegal in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont, unless you are pointing them directly at someone."
Click to expand...
 
Reactions: ccfc92

Marty

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #16
I think they're fine, you can't ban everything for the few mindless idiots.
 

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 6, 2019
  • #17
Marty said:
I think they're fine, you can't ban everything for the few mindless idiots.
Click to expand...
It's not banning everything though. Fireworks allowed, but only for organised displays. There would just be more organised displays.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #18
Marty said:
I think they're fine, you can't ban everything for the few mindless idiots.
Click to expand...

That's the justification the NRA uses for semi-automatic weapons
 
H

HuckerbyDublinWhelan

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #19
Maybe the government should look to bring in licences? Renewable on a yearly basis?
 

richnrg

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #20
perhaps someone should invent a new type of 'personal' firework (the i-firework?)
They would work exactly the same as normal (flashing lights, smells etc), but with the 'bang' removed - to be replaced by an artificial, synchronized bang, which is transmitted wirelessly to the special i-firework-ear-pods of the wearers below.
No more scared pets (unless someone has given them an ear-pod for a laugh), and the next door neighbours no longer get to benefit from the full excitement of your display.
 

richnrg

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #21
...and volume control could be added to help the 'hard of hearing'
 

Marty

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #22
Sky_Blue_Dreamer said:
That's the justification the NRA uses for semi-automatic weapons
Click to expand...

Should we ban driving/cars?
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #23
richnrg said:
perhaps someone should invent a new type of 'personal' firework (the i-firework?)
They would work exactly the same as normal (flashing lights, smells etc), but with the 'bang' removed - to be replaced by an artificial, synchronized bang, which is transmitted wirelessly to the special i-firework-ear-pods of the wearers below.
No more scared pets (unless someone has given them an ear-pod for a laugh), and the next door neighbours no longer get to benefit from the full excitement of your display.
Click to expand...

But some 'joker' would hook it up to a loudspeaker and turn the volume up....
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #24
Marty said:
Should we ban driving/cars?
Click to expand...

Cars can be lethal in the wrong hands but have a practical use to transport people/goods around. Fireworks do not - they just emit bright lights and loud noises and can be lethal in the wrong hands. Only thing a gun is designed to do is kill/injure things.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • #25
Marty said:
Should we ban driving/cars?
Click to expand...

Silly point. It’s a cost benefit discussion and cars have obvious utility.
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 8, 2019
  • #26
ccfc92 said:
I thought I would Google US firework sales.

I almost knew this would be the case, it literally sums up their Gun culture. :joyful::joyful::joyful:

"Consumer fireworks that explode in the sky are only legal in Maine and New Hampshire. They are illegal in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont."
Click to expand...
Each state sets its own laws.
I'm not sure what point you are tring to make, but you can buy fireworks in the supermarket where I live in Arizona.
But some cities in the state still ban them.
But they aren't the same as those I remember buying as a kid in the UK.
Back then, they were all made by British firework companies. I remember Brocks and Paines but I know there were others.
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 8, 2019
  • #27
richnrg said:
perhaps someone should invent a new type of 'personal' firework (the i-firework?)
They would work exactly the same as normal (flashing lights, smells etc), but with the 'bang' removed - to be replaced by an artificial, synchronized bang, which is transmitted wirelessly to the special i-firework-ear-pods of the wearers below.
No more scared pets (unless someone has given them an ear-pod for a laugh), and the next door neighbours no longer get to benefit from the full excitement of your display.
Click to expand...
They did exist years ago.
I think they were called 'table-top fireworks' or something similar.
They were designed for indoors.
Here you go: Indoor Fireworks Wholesale Low Hazard Fun Party Items
 

ccfc92

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 8, 2019
  • #28
Gazolba said:
Each state sets its own laws.
I'm not sure what point you are tring to make, but you can buy fireworks in the supermarket where I live in Arizona.
But some cities in the state still ban them.
But they aren't the same as those I remember buying as a kid in the UK.
Back then, they were all made by British firework companies. I remember Brocks and Paines but I know there were others.
Click to expand...

My point is, it's ironic that in some states fireworks are illegal, yet in some/the same states, you can buy an assault rifle to kill people.

I could of guessed the answer before googling it.
 

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 8, 2019
  • #29
Watch: Shocking moment fireworks launched in Broadgate

Someone just let off a box of fireworks in Broadgate, sending them flying off in all directions.
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 9, 2019
  • #30
Otis said:
Watch: Shocking moment fireworks launched in Broadgate

Someone just let off a box of fireworks in Broadgate, sending them flying off in all directions.
Click to expand...
Where were the police?
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 9, 2019
  • #31
ccfc92 said:
My point is, it's ironic that in some states fireworks are illegal, yet in some/the same states, you can buy an assault rifle to kill people.

I could of guessed the answer before googling it.
Click to expand...
I think most if not all the states you listed where fireworks are illegal also have very strict gun laws.
But strict gun laws don't stop criminals aquiring guns.
 

Otis

Well-Known Member
  • Nov 9, 2019
  • #32
Gazolba said:
Where were the police?
Click to expand...
Ducking, is my guess.
 
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