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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/13/2014 in Posts
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6 points
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Jump in fellas, extra time to get the cash in! That, and I really want more of these in the future! My birthday is actually Oct 15th, make my dreams come true... buy a TGO Godfather! Willis, I'm sure this is frustrating work for you. I hope you know that I, and many others, sincerely appreciate it. Many of us have no other chance at getting such sweet custom pieces, and your generosity in time and work to do this for us is really awesome.5 points
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3 points
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But hey, here's some good news. Obviously it's not a big deal in New Jersey if your wife or girlfriend annoys you and you decide to punch her out like some punk thug, just don't be a law abiding mom who made a "DUMB" but honest mistake and bring a gun into the state. http://www.inquisitr.com/1471690/prosecutor-who-let-ray-rice-off-the-hook-demands-jail-time-for-single-mom-licensed-gun-owner/3 points
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3 points
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My son, who is a Senior this year called a little while ago to tell me about his day today. My son is in the JROTC program at his high school. Today they had an assembly to meet and greet two MOH recipients from the Vietnam War. If I understood him correctly via long distance cell call, he met two gentlemen by the name of USMC Vargas and US Army Fritz. Both gave speeches and took the time to meet and greet the Cadets. It was apparently covered by a television station so he is watching the news for a glimpse of himself.2 points
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It ain't the guns that are the problem folks. Surprise, surprise. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/sunday-review/the-assault-weapon-myth.html?_r=02 points
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Rest Your Mind I know you have been laying awake at night wondering why baby diapers have brand names like Luvs,Huggies and Pampers while undergarments for old people are called "Depends" Well here is the low down on the whole thing!! When babies crap in their pants people are still gonna Luv"um, Hug'um and pamper'um. When old people crap in their pants it "DEPENDS" on who's named in the "Will" Glad I got that straightened out so now you can rest your mind!!!!!2 points
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He just sent me a text that the helicopter flight to the high school was on the news tonight. He was so excited he couldn't quit sending me messages. I looked for the clip online, but couldn't find it. I can't say enough about his JROTC program. Without it I seriously doubt that he would ever graduate high school.2 points
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With the deadline extended, i will probably be able to get in on this one. It will probably be after first of October before payment can be sent though.2 points
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I bought this off a man at work who said he bought it off the original owner. The original owner rode it for about 6 months and then parked it in a barn under blankets and cardboard for 15+ years! The guy I got it off of didn't hardly ride it either. This is about as good a condition as you can find on something this old that hasn't been in a collection. It does have a few scratches here and there, but the dang thing has the original tires on it, which still have tits on them, and the finish isn't even worn off the engine. It's still shiny! Yamaha only made these for about 2 years. They made an 80, a 200, and the 350 like this one. The 80 and 350 are the least common. It has electric start and working lights. They did come with racks...maybe optional. A nice little gem to add to the inventory. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk2 points
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I thought it was a childs bike until I saw the guy on top. Man those are massive bike tires.2 points
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I'd rather see this opened up to outside orders than see it bagged. But it is your baby and I support whatever you decide. mostly if this is a fail I don't see myself spending this kind of money on a random knife. C'mon people join in on this group buy.2 points
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SGAmmo from Stillwater, Oklahoma has deals on ammo and are a reputable online vendor with reasonable shipping.2 points
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It has partnered up with @livestockauction to provide those radical jihadists with the virgin goats they all seek.2 points
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I disassembled a dirt bike engine on the kitchen table. In my defense we have two dining tables in our house and this is not the one we eat at. Plus I put cardboard down first and it was the table that I brought into the marriage. My wife will be home shortly, if you guys don't hear from me for a while she broke my computer or buried me in the backyard.2 points
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2 points
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It's not Elmer, but picked up something special from the local store today. Just need a special occasion to open the thing now ... Now just waiting on the next batch of Elijah Craig Barrel Proof to make its way to Nashville and to my store ...1 point
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1 point
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Thanks for posting, but I too posted here on Aug. 10th. I thought long and hard about the Hbar, but I decided to go with the new A4. http://www.tngunowners.com/forums/topic/80929-gander-mountain-deal-used-colt-ar15-used-a2-sporter-hbar/?hl=gander1 point
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I think it's more of GZ just being a target. However, I do blame him for not being smart enough to avoid an altercation.1 point
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I had this AK held up in my safe as a novelty and now with a few ad on's she is a now no longer a mild mannered gimmick but a SBR wannabe ,legal too.. my M92 with added Centry Arms hand brace and after market flashider/booster looking forward to trying this baby out1 point
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Haven't your coworkers learned yet not to mess with you? #### gets real when you mess with BigK!1 point
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Please comment and show your support for this Dr as he's getting hammered for sticking up for gun owners! :) http://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2014/09/11/why-public-health-needs-a-new-gun-doctrine/ I am a public health professional, educated at the vaunted Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Hygiene and Public Health. I like guns, and I believe the Second Amendment clearly secures the rights of individuals to own firearms. You read that correctly. I am a public health professional. And I like guns. This make me a heretic in American public health, where embracing firearms and the rights of gun owners is a gross violation of orthodoxy. As a society, our focus on guns and not gun users derives from the shock of mass killings, such as those in Newtown, CT, Aurora, CO, Virginia Tech, and Norway, which has some of the strictest gun control laws on the planet. Mass killings, however tragic, get distorted by saturation media hysterics and 24-hour political grandstanding. What gun opponents refuse to discuss is the precipitous fall in violent crime and deaths by firearms over the past 20 years, and how it coincides with an equally dramaticincrease of guns in circulation in the US. While that isn’t cause and effect, the association is certainly curious. In 2013, the Institute of Medicine, at the behest of the Centers for Disease Control, produced a report on firearms violence that has been ignored by the mainstream media. The upshot: defensive use of firearms occurs much more frequently than is recognized, “can be an important crime deterrent,†and unauthorized possession (read: by someone other than the lawful owner) of a firearm is a crucial driver of firearms violence. That report went away for political reasons. Translation. Nobody wanted to talk about it because it raised more questions than it answered. The tragic mass murders in Virginia, Colorado, Norway, Connecticut, and most recently California, showcase the failure of the healthcare system, including potential abuse of prescription drugs, and families where parents either checked out or were willfully oblivious to what their children are doing. They are also outcomes of popular, feel-good movements, such as deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill, colliding with communities that had no means to deal with the consequences. Adam Lanza, Anders Breivik, Seung Hui Cho, James Holmes, and Elliot Rodger all needed treatment, and, if necessary, involuntary commitment, with due process for both admission to a facility and subsequent release. My public health approach to the problem of gun violence starts with the assumption that every gun owner is not a raving, irresponsible nut, but in fact a person of some seriousness who has a legal right to choose to own a firearm. My next assumption is that the most egregious gun violence happens in communities that are broken, such as inner city Baltimore and St. Louis. Again, a topic that is not to be spoken. Gun control will not fix schools, restore neighborhoods, stabilize disintegrating (wealthy or poor) families, employ people, heal mental illness, rejuvenate local economies, or help create self respect. I support gun courts and mandatory, no-parole sentencing for people who commit gun crimes, with a massive public education campaign to back it up. Public education works and is central to many public health issues, from highway safety to tobacco use reduction, but for some reason, when it comes to guns, the public health establishment’s histrionic reflex is not to educate but to control and confiscate. According to the FBI, in 2012 there were 8,855 firearms homicides, down 7% since 2008. By contrast, 33,516people died on the nation’s highways in 2012, and alcohol abuse claimed 88,000 lives. Where’s the clamor to control and confiscate cars, cellphones (deadly when used while driving), and booze? Before buying a firearm, I took a gun safety class and got advice from experienced friends. I choose to store my guns in accordance with commonly promoted safety guidelines. My son (10) can pick up each shotgun and ensure that both the magazine and chamber are empty. He can check the safety, point it correctly, and place it safely in a case. He also knows how to hold and hand it to an adult. In a state where guns are ubiquitous, this is an essential skill in case he is ever in the presence of child who thinks that his family’s carelessly unsecured guns are toys, not lethal weapons. Of course, he also knows to exit that room and get an adult. Gun owners should not, however, get their hopes up that the public health community will ever take them seriously. Public health students are taught early on that guns are evil, that the people who think otherwise are an ignorant, backward, Jerry Springer watching lot and that there are some questions you don’t ask: at least not if you want to pass the class. This says more about the public health community than it does anything else. More about that one in a future essay. I think you’ll enjoy it. Ironically, public health academics happily assert that there is a clear Constitutional right to privacy, even as they vilify a right that is actually expressed in the document, and they merrily condescend to its adherents, whom they regard as pathetic rubes. Here is how gun owners can thwart the push to have doctors ask about the presence of guns in a home during a routine history and physical: refuse to answer on the grounds of the much heralded penumbra-emanating right to privacy. As for the claim that gun rights proponents oppose the conduct of legitimate research, consider this. Many years ago, I asked a very powerful anti-gun academic the following questions: What proportion of gun crimes are committed by the lawful owner of a legally purchased firearm, and what percentage of lawful gun owners use their firearm in commission of a crime? He said that he did not know, and that he would oppose conduct of the research to answer both questions. The answer was no surprise, and neither should my rejoinder be:molon labe.1 point
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Hey, I converted my Saiga .223 and I have no mechanical ability, what so ever. If I could do it, anyone could do it! :)1 point
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That's what I've been doing for several weeks. I found out it's not as easy as they make it seem....at least not for me it wasn't :rofl:1 point
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I remember when the law went into effect for toy guns to have this. My first thought as a kid was, but won't the bad people just paint theirs?1 point
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Very nice, We had the Honda FAT CAT. I believe it was first but very similar.1 point
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[quote name="rugerla1" post="1189344" timestamp="1410610879"]Holy crap, that is awesome! Chances are very small to find one in even decent shape, much less like the one you've found[/quote] I looked on eBay and there's only one for sale...and it's very much used. Starting price on it is more than I paid for this. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk1 point
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That guy on the tape didn't really seem to upset that someone threatened to shoot him, especially someone that had previously shot and killed another person. Also don't think GZ is stupid enough to do that in a public place. If I had to pick a side on that one without knowing everything, I'd hold my nose and pick GZ on this one.1 point
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1 point
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Montana is on my short list of places to move if the perfect situation aligns itself. I'd rather it not be sullied by an asshat like George Zimmerman.1 point
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I can fire 20 rounds of slug out to 100 yards and hit a pizza box, yea I hate pizza boxes. Then switch to a 10 round mag of "00" buck. [URL=http://s896.photobucket.com/user/redintn/media/firearms/S12415122_zpsdced220c.jpg.html][/URL]1 point
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Mine two or three are different "no name" versions off eBay, all have been fine. Are adjustable for tension on the nut on end. I use a similar riser only type for QD of a vertical forward grip on my AR "pistol/firearm" also. ~$15 from US sellers, half that from the PRC ones. - OS edit: fuzzy crops to show: bipod: VFG:1 point
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And yet created a bunch more in the process. Criminals with automatic weapons, flashbangs and anger issues.1 point
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56 ford is on the money. The other part is there was a claim that a complaint made that kids from the compound were observed playing on the dangerous busy highway. I'm here to tell u, I've been to the compound. There is no traffic in that part of Waco. It sent a chill through my body to see burned kiddie bikes and branch davidians still holding services in a makeshift tent.....burned plastic dollies and other kids items. The whole op was complete bullshit. And always will be. Prayers for the children who died a painful death on that fateful day...1 point
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I've got an Anderson lower on the pistol build I just did, no issues.1 point
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Martin Luther King, Jr.- "One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws."1 point
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I'll worry more about things like cancer. I realize that it is good to be prepared, but the chances of being the victim of an armed siege which I am single handedly defending, then surviving armed siege (regardless of defenses or what my house is made out of) are about the same as the same as having Jennifer Anniston show up at my front door to give me a BJ and make me a sammich.1 point
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Honestly, there is no practical way to be prepared for something that in all probability will not happen. That does not mean not to think of a plan with what you have, but if you allow paranoia to run your life you will waste alot of money on things you will never use. Its wise to have a few days rations, water and a few survival items and a self defense plan with weapons and ammo. The most probable thing to happen is a natural disaster, tornado, earth quake, volcanic eruption etc so those things can help you survive for a bit. Learning survival techniques is also important, and not off some reality show; honest hands on training with firearms and improvised methods included.1 point
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Now, I agree they tend to be good saws, but Stihl was only founded in 1926 and I don't for a minute believe you're that old either. ;) - OS1 point
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That's what I get for liking the old stuff. I've never seen a folding buffer tube. That's cool! Dammit!!!!! You guys keep showing me new ways to spend money! :wall: :wall: :wall:1 point
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