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  2. FBI Lieutenant Oliver R. Bailey demonstrating use of an improvised spray can flamethrower in 1964. In the United States, flamethrowers are broadly legal for personal ownership and use. California requires a permit for the possession of a flamethrower, and only Maryland has outright banned their ownership and use

  3. Protocol on Incendiary Weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_on_Incendiary_Weapons

    The protocol prohibits, in all circumstances, making the civilian population as such, individual civilians or civilian objects, the object of attack by any weapon or munition which is primarily designed to set fire to objects or to cause burn injury to persons through the action of flame, heat or a combination thereof, produced by a chemical reaction of a substance delivered on the target.

  4. Flamethrower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamethrower

    The English word flamethrower is a loan-translation of the German word Flammenwerfer, since the modern flamethrower was invented in Germany. The first flamethrower, in the modern sense, is usually credited to Richard Fiedler. He submitted evaluation models of his Flammenwerfer to the German Army in 1901. The most significant model submitted was ...

  5. Is Florida law cool with owning a flamethrower?

    www.aol.com/news/florida-law-cool-owning...

    Some, though, purchase a flamethrower for the thrill of it. In 2018, Elon Musk sold over 20,000 flamethrowers (at $500 a pop) on the day of the product’s launch on his Boring Company website.

  6. Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_on_Certain...

    The United Nations Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW or CCWC), concluded at Geneva on October 10, 1980, and entered into force in December 1983, seeks to prohibit or restrict the use of certain conventional weapons which are considered excessively injurious or whose effects are indiscriminate.

  7. Flame tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flame_tank

    The first combat-ready flamethrower tanks appeared in the early 1930s: KhT-27, KhT-26 and a number of others - in the USSR, CV3 LF - in Italy. Before the start of World War II b more than 1,300 flamethrower tanks of various types were produced by Soviet industry. [8] By the mid-1930s, the first combat use of flamethrower tanks took place.

  8. Napalm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napalm

    The development of napalm was precipitated by the use of jellied gasoline mixtures by the Allied forces during World War II. [5] Latex, used in these early forms of incendiary devices, became scarce, since natural rubber was almost impossible to obtain after the Japanese army captured the rubber plantations in Malaya, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Thailand.

  9. ‘Why, why, why?’ – 9 famous songs that were banned - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-why-why-9-famous-075646182.html

    Tom Jones’ song ‘Delilah’ has been banned by the Welsh rugby union. Some songs were written to provoke, while others have fallen foul of misinterpretation. Lizzy Cooney picks some of the ...