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AndyH

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    95
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52 Excellent

About AndyH

  • Rank
    Born Hunter

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Herefordshire
  • Interests
    Shooting, walking, photography, shouting in vain at the dogs.
  1. Hope your terrier is OK mate. My Collie got attacked by a staffie when my mom was walking her for me earlier this year, and the tracksuited chav scumbag owner just grabbed the staff & legged it, leaving my mom in the woods, 2 miles from home with my bleeding & screaming collie and her cocker which was going mental. Cost a couple hundred at the vets to get her seen to & sewn up, but as the scrote legged it, I've had to pay it. Damn thing needs a bullet.
  2. Or, the football hooligans were already known to the police through their previous actions (acting like thugs whilst wearing bad 80's clothing), and were therefore easy to pick up. Those potential terrorist morons who managed to head off to join IS didn't have any previous (one used to work in Primark, another for the local council etc.) and/or didn't let on any signs of radicalisation prior to leaving the country. Bit hard for the old bill to take the passport off someone for terrorism offences if they've never outwardly shown any inclination towards it before.
  3. I've got a Macbook Pro, and I wouldn't use anything else. It's my 2nd one now (pint on the first one, oops!), and for what I use it for, it's fantastic.
  4. A 'D Notice' is to do with Defence issues, related to the armed forces. It's not legally enforceable, but more of a gentleman's agreement that you phone up Rear Admiral something-or-other at the MOD and run anything by him first that could compromise national security or harm servicemen's families etc. If they really want to shut you up, they've got to get an injunction served, which is legally enforceable.
  5. How rude, ah yes your the plank that told me to go and tell that to the black lads serving in the British army are you not? Never mind quisling, if I valued your opinion I might be offended, but I dont He worked for the BBC,I think that says it all. Yep, having a job that requires ambition, an education and intelligence. I really should be ashamed... And 'quisling'? Come off it, we're not in some sort of race war. I'm not at all in favour at all of those who do pull the strings behind the scenes, but I don't for one second believe it's solely the work of the Jews, or have seen any ve
  6. I'm guessing your ayran bloodline brethren have some sort of 'final solution' lined up to deal with the jews then? Worked well last time some nazi arsehole tried it...
  7. Whilst in theory, such legislation would be useful, who creates & enacts it? The government. I don't trust the f*ckers to do it fairly or evenly, or in a way that won't give them the upper hand when they need it. There's legislation already in place to stop phone hacking & bribery, and it's just a case of the law being enforced (as it has in the case of Coulson being sent down). That it happened in the first place isn't because of insufficient legislation, but because the perpetrators ignored the law completely. I was working as a junior producer at the BBC World Service when D
  8. Insa Turbo Special Tracks are brilliant off-road, but borderline suicide on-road.
  9. It's not the media, it's the corporations who own the vast majority of the media, who then use it to project their own agendas. I've worked in the mainstream media, and know full well that editorial decisions can and are be forced down from the boardroom; the editors might not agree, but nobody wants to lose their job, do they? Look at The Scum; Murdoch forces them to print whatever will suit his business agenda and eventually provide profits to shareholders. Considering that the Scum's readership isn't the most discerning, it's quite easy for public opinion to be swayed. Ever see the Dai
  10. Sorted, will go grab one this week then. Can't keep relying on it looking like a heap of sh*t to stop it getting nicked
  11. I'm just wondering whether using a battery isolator switch is a safe way of adding security to my truck? I remember seeing a lad using one on his Landy years ago, with the switch hidden well away from casual observations and the switch key taken out overnight. Are there any dangers involved with doing this? (I don't fancy it setting on fire etc. in the middle of the night!)
  12. AndyH

    Llamas

    One of my perms has got 2 emus in one of the fields on it, and despite the old dear who own them telling me they are fine, I'm not getting in there with them. I got mobbed & left with a black eye by the pecky twats when I was in Australia, never again!
  13. Go tell that to all the black lads serving in the armed forces.
  14. If they are on a public highway when taking said photos/video, they are perfectly within their rights to film what they want (apart from gov't spooks, extra-sensitive security installations etc.), even if what they are filming is on private land, i.e. photographing a hunt riding on private land whilst stood on a public footpath etc. If they are on private land, the landowner is able to ask them to leave, but cannot force them to delete any images/footage, or to show them what they have been already taken. Taking the camera and deleting anything on it is criminal damage (and probably assault &
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