The other day I was listening to the news on the radio, and there was a string of reports about gun violence across the country. It wasn’t a “special” on gun violence, it was just the morning news. Gun deaths have become normalized, like weather reports. And yet, because Trump stacked the Supreme Court with gun-rights justices, any effort to limit access to guns seems doomed.
The Los Angeles Times recently published an editorial that captured the gun insanity in which we are all now trapped. Why doesn’t this Court of Originalists limit gun ownership to the kind of weapons available when the Second Amendment was written? Muskets, primarily.
It was perfectly legal for the racist killer of three Black people at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Fla., on Saturday to buy and possess the Glock handgun and AR-15-style rifle he used in the shootings, officials said.
A laptop belonging to Ryan Christopher Palmeter, the white 21-year-old killer, was filled with racist screeds. Officials said he had been briefly held for an involuntary psychiatric evaluation in 2017.
Two days before the Jacksonville massacre, Jason and Melissa Dunham and their three children aged 15, 12 and 9 were found shot to death in their Lake Township, Ohio, home in an apparent murder-suicide. The handgun used in the shooting belonged to Jason Dunham, police said, but it wasn’t yet clear whether he was the shooter. He and his wife both had permits to carry concealed weapons.
A day before that, retired Ventura police sergeant John Snowling shot his estranged wife and eight other people at Cook’s Corner, a roadhouse in Trabuco Canyon in Orange County. His wife, Marie Snowling, survived but three others died. Police shot the gunman to death. The killer lawfully acquired and possessed the .380 pistol, .38 revolver, .25 pistol and shotgun that were recovered at the scene.
A few days earlier, Orange County Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Ferguson pleaded not guilty to murdering his wife, Sheryl Ferguson. He is charged with shooting her to death in their Anaheim Hills home during an argument. His lawyer said it was an accident. Law enforcement officers recovered 47 other weapons and about 26,000 rounds of ammunition from the judge’s home, all of which were apparently acquired and owned lawfully, although one rifle is unaccounted for.
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that Americans’ right to possess, carry and conceal weapons cannot be curtailed by laws that are not rooted in practices that existed in the late 18th century, when the 2nd Amendment was drafted and ratified. Gun advocates argue that the right to carry weapons makes Americans safer, and that any bad guy with a gun is now more likely to be stopped by a good guy with a gun — someone presumably like an armed parent, retired police officer or judge.
The targeted racist slayings understandably loomed larger in the news than the family violence. President Biden said, “We must say clearly and forcefully that white supremacy has no place in America.” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, said, “Targeting people because of their race has no place in the state of Florida.” Former Vice President Mike Pence, also running for president, said, “There is no place in America for racially inspired violence.”
They are wrong and they know it. The American people, their politicians, their courts and their culture have made this nation the planet’s preeminent place to target people for death because of their race — or for any other reason, such as their familial relationship, differing beliefs or reasons indiscernible to the rest of us. This country is exactly the place for hateful, murderous, suicidal gun violence, because this is the place for millions upon millions of guns, and the bizarre American delusion that the more of them we have, the safer and freer we are.
Pence added that his solutions include an “expedited federal death penalty for anyone engaged in a mass shooting.” It’s difficult to grasp how quick executions would alter the behavior of the Jacksonville killer, who shot himself to death. Or whichever member of the Dunham family pulled the trigger, the deranged Ventura cop who died at the scene or the judge who claims to have shot his wife by accident.
Firearms are the leading cause of death of juveniles in the U.S. Biden recently unveiled a plan to increase access to mental health care, including in schools, in part to address the causes of gun violence.
The far-right organization called Moms for Liberty said, in effect, don’t you dare. Mental health care “has NO place in public schools,” the group said in a social media post earlier this month.
At a special session of the Tennessee Legislature called in response to the slaying of three children and three adults at a Nashville elementary school in March, lawmakers last week rejected gun control proposals and instead introduced measures to allow more guns in schools.
Speaking of schools, a 16-year-old boy was shot to death at a high school football game Friday night in Choctaw, Okla. Several others were shot as well. Don’t confuse that incident with the one at the high school game the same night in Tulsa, in which a 16-year-old waved a pistol, causing a stampede and ending the game before it was finished. Or the game on the same night in Locust Grove, also in Oklahoma, where a deputy took a gun from a teenager.
Or high school football games the same night in Abington, Pa., Waterloo, Iowa, or Goodyear, Ariz., where other teenagers were disarmed before they could harm anyone with the guns they brought with them.
A week earlier, four teenagers were charged for carrying three loaded Glock 9 millimeter pistols at a high school football game in Canal Winchester, Ohio.
“Why bring those to a football stadium?” Madison Township Police Chief Gary York asked. “Why do these kids have them to begin with?”
Such a mystery. Where on Earth do kids get these violent ideas? And where do they get all those guns?

Editorial: There’s no place like America for gun violence https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2023-08-28/editorial-jacksonville-mass-shooting
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Wouldn’t it be amazing if a handful of democratic and republican legislators could be the grownups in the room and work hard together and make some real changes. We must stop talking at each other and over each other and find some way — hard as it is – to work together. It literally is the only way to make change.
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The Democrats are already the grownups in the room.
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“Orange County Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Ferguson pleaded not guilty to murdering his wife, Sheryl Ferguson. He is charged with shooting her to death in their Anaheim Hills home during an argument. His lawyer said it was an accident”
“What can I say? Sh** happens. Guns go off. People die”
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“Tennessee Legislature called in response to the slaying of three children and three adults at a Nashville elementary school in March, lawmakers last week rejected gun control proposals and instead introduced measures to allow more guns in schools.”
Since 2016, profs can carry guns on campuses in TN. K-12 teachers need to undergo 40 days of training while profs don’t. I guess a PhD qualifies for more than we thought.
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Doctor of Phirearms
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BS: Bachelor of Saturday-night-specials
MS: Master of Shotguns
PhD : Doctor of Phirearms
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BA: Bachelor of Ammunition
MA: Master of Assaultrifles
MD: Doctor of Magazines (and of M1s)
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Of course, MD can also be Doctor of Munitions, or Doctor of Machineguns depending on the area of specialty.
And a GP is a Gun Practitioner, with a general knowledge of snd expertise using all guns.
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And last but not least, a PA is a Phirearms Assistant
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How about the gentlest degree of all, MFA? This acronym seems to fit best your line of truth seeking.
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MBA: Master of Bombs and Ammunition?
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Haha. Getting a PhD has just become muchoer, despite some stereotypical events
An Idaho State University professor accidentally shot himself in the foot with his concealed weapon Tuesday, just two months after the state passed a law making it legal for him to carry a gun on campus, local media reported.
https://www.guns.com/news/2014/09/05/professor-shoots-own-foot-2-months-after-concealed-carry-legal-video
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MA can also be Master of AKs, so as with the MD degrees, there is some ambiguity with the MAs
It’s unfortunate , but other info on the CV (like Post Doc in AKs) often provides the necessary disambiguation.
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Yes indeed
How did I overlook MBA and especially MFA?
Thanks
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Forgot NP: Nuke Practitioner
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“An Idaho State University professor accidentally shot himself in the foot with his concealed weapon “
Was he aiming for his head?
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MFA = Missouri Farmers Association
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This is part of the mythology that the right wing spreads. “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.” However, the reality is that we would all be safer if gun access were restricted. https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/03/24/980838151/gun-violence-deaths-how-the-u-s-compares-to-the-rest-of-the-world
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A good guy with a gun?
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The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.”
Actually, that’s not quite right.
A good guy with a crossbow, handgrenade, flamethrower or a nuke also works
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I remember reading years ago that the majority of murders and shootings in NYC were accomplished using weapons that had been stolen either from the homes of the owner or while in transit (to and from a firing range, for instance).
That’s one of the problems with the “good guy” theory. The aggressor will always have the upper hand. I’ve seen concealed holsters designed for very fast access but things are different when you’ve got a firearm staring you in the face.
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Tried to think of one for JD but came up blanks as far as gun names.
It’s weird that there is not a single term for gun (standard or slang)that I am aware of that begins with a “j”
Must mean something.
The only thing I could think of that is related is “Doctor of Jams” as in one who fixes jammed gun mechanisms.
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Javelin [missile] Detonator
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You may have heard of what happened in my neck of the woods. My family had worked this festival; I painted a mural for this festival (Herby in the Kids’ Zone); and “hauled trash” driving a tractor for all the years my sons were in high school. The event is a few miles from my house. I could walk there. And, what’s scarier is the shooter entered from an area a half-mile from my home. My wife worked the “finance trailer” and was in lock down mode all night because we didn’t know if there was another shooter. This was a mainstay for our community and the money raised helped schools tremendously. The Garlic Festival has ceased to exist after this. In my last few years of teaching, I kept thinking to myself, “We are fish in a barrel. We have two exits. What is my plan if someone walks through that door and opens fire? How do I get the kids out?” I kept thinking this a lot. We were the last refuge for all the “bad kids” or “delinquents” as I heard more often than not. It was a “placement” and not always the best placement, but if it saved the district money… Even if our kids inside were making changes, we still had to look out for “others” that came looking for some of them. One day I looked at how many signs were posted on the entry to the high school, i.e., “Guns are not allowed. Weapons are not allowed. This and that is not allowed.” Wow. One of my students I worked with ended up getting a gun and killing another former student of mine. He is in prison for life. I remember years ago when I taught middle school “Teen Forum” we discussed all aspects of life and making logical decisions and how to “count to ten” before acting violently through emotions. I asked, “…and you are not going to get in trouble…no names…but, if you wanted to get a gun, could you?” Most of the kids raised their hands. One young man said, “Charvet, it is really easy to get a gun you want.” This was in the ’90s and the young man was about 12. Another family who lives around the corner (she was my former student and her husband was a sheriff) lost their 3-year old when he found “daddy’s gun.”
Her dad was my colleague at school. I grew up with hunters and responsible gun owners. But this is all too crazy for me. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilroy_Garlic_Festival_shooting
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“I grew up with hunters and responsible gun owners.”
I also grew up with ethical hunters and responsible gun owners. When did it become acceptable for anyone to walk around with a loaded weapon in public? Pure insanity!
Growing up ethical and responsible gun ownership did not include walking around with a loaded weapon, or even just walking around with a firearm, in public. One didn’t chamber a round until one was ready to fire the weapon in a safe manner (what’s the background, where can the bullet go if it deflects, are others around?) whether at a shooting range or hunting.
We reap what we sow and our love affair with everything US Military, that force that permeates out consciousness 24/7, praised to high heaven, is the primary cause of our “gun culture”.
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The hunters who actually have a respect for guns and their proper use rightfully find the behavior of the weenies who think it’s cool to carry a gun around like it’s the old west appalling.
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Yes, exactly!
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One of my roommates in college was an avid hunter (both rifle and bow) and he kept his rifle locked up at all times when he was not hunting with it.
He understood better than anyone that a gun is a deadly weapon to be treated with utmost caution.
His mentality was the exact opposite of the clowns who think carrying a gun makes them look cool.
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Yes, hunters very much understand the destructive capabilities of the gun that they use.
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@Duane — Yes, there are many “old families” in Gilroy, The “brothers” who are our local chimney sweeps, told me they used to walk to the TG&Y, park their squirrel gun outside while they went inside and got a soda. Since when do you hunt with an AR15?
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I don’t own an AR15. But one can hunt with one as with any rifle. And with the various maladies that my body inflicts on me, I don’t get to hunt anymore.
By the way, what is a TG&Y?
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@ Duane — Oh, I didn’t mean you. I should have said, “One” like why would one need an AR15 to hunt like I have heard from those who defend it. You have very good points. TG&Y was like a Woolworths store. A “five and dime, but the point was that no one was concerned someone would take the gun and go kill kids or people. Crazy world.
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Thanks for the clarification!
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Was at a diner in Marlborough, Mass a month ago and the guy in the booth across the aisle was packing. I would guess ex-cop by the looks of him. Not a great feeling.
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Where do adolescents get the idea to go on a shooting spree to see how many they can kill?
violent video games and adolescent minds are a toxic mix.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/can-a-video-game-make-you-racist-new-study-says-yes
What behaviors can make the adolescent brain more vulnerable to mental disorders?
“Physical, emotional and social changes, including exposure to poverty, abuse, or violence, can make adolescents vulnerable to mental health problems.”
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/adolescent-mental-health#:~:text=Physical%2C%20emotional%20and%20social%20changes,vulnerable%20to%20mental%20health%20problems.
“Brain development continues into the early 20s. The development of the frontal lobe, in particular, is important during this stage. Additionally, changes in both the levels of the neurotransmitters dopamine and serotonin in the limbic system make adolescents more emotional and more responsive to rewards and stress.”
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/wm-lifespandevelopment/chapter/brain-development-during-adolescence/#:~:text=Brain%20development%20continues%20into%20the,responsive%20to%20rewards%20and%20stress.
On top of that toxic mix, the adolescent brain and video games, we have fascist loving MAGA lunatic urged by their little god Traitor Trump, grooming children to become violent racists, too.
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Are you suggesting we ban violent video games?
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Flerp no we want to ban the guns stop pretending to not understand. Your comments are always to trolling.
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Who’s “we”? I was asking Lloyd.
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Texastitleoneteacher,
I wish there was a “like” button on here. Thanks for your comment.
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“Are you suggesting we ban violent video games?”
I know it’s not politically correct to say so; but that’s been on my mind for decades. I’ve been put down plenty of times for that view…but I can’t shake it.
I worked for 17 years as a homeroom teacher for children and adolescents with severe emotional problems. Most of them couldn’t control themselves and some of them did not want to.
We would always have a class meeting at the beginning of the day. Or at any time of the day if things were getting intense.
At one of these meetings, I asked the kids why they enjoyed these violent video games so much. I mentioned how they were always talking about them.
“Cuz I can put my foot on the guy’s throat and when he begs for mercy…? “POW POW POW!”
“Yeah…I love that part!” (from the other kids).
I’ve read studies about violent video games. No doubt that the vast majority of people who play these games aren’t going to go out and commit murder. And they also provide an outlet for most people who have aggressive tendencies. Got it.
But we’re not talking about “most people”. We’re talking about a small minority with serious and extreme anger management issues. How could playing games like this on a daily basis until 2:00 in the morning since childhood not have some impact in terms of a desire to take part in the real thing?
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One of the consequences of the public nature of this violence has been door locking. Churches are advised to lock outside doors during services and events, schools lock outside doors, restricting access to points where personnel allow entry. This year, for the first time since I served as treasurer of the high school chorus, I and all other members of school booster clubs and similar volunteers had to be certified through a fingerprinting process that tracks our behavior. We all trooped dutifully to a local gun shop, the only place with access to the data base that compares gun owners to criminals.
None of this works at all. The Nashville shooter at the recent shooting entered through a locked door. It was caught on video, and happened faster than it would have had it been left ajar. Very few of the people associated with the many mass murders of the past few years would have tripped the switches designed to keep guns out of the hands of infidels.
Whatever we do, creating ineffective restrictions will not help.
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A locked door means nothing to a person with any gun more powerful than a 22
The only thing locked doors really do is give some school officials a false sense of security — and give them someone to blame when a teacher leaves a door propped open (as originally happened in the Texas school massacre, even though the teacher in question had actually closed the door before the shooter arrived with his AR15 rifle)
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My stepfather used to say that locked doors and windows are for the purpose of keeping noncriminals out.
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We were told to lock our doors and hide quietly with the kids in the closets, out of sight range as our lockdown procedure.
A locked door is no match for an AR-15. And young children who are far on the spectrum don’t take well to being quiet and contained for any extended period of time.
We brainstormed and came up with olive oil and marbles or small ball bearings spread on the floor for when the perpetrator entered the room. Then run out from the closet with a can of hornet spray when he falls.
Collaborative lesson planning.
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Refusal to do anything about gun violence: 1-Campaign $$; 2-Guns for insurrection; 3-Election campaign issue distraction from inequity; 4-On-your-own ideology.
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“Such a mystery. Where on Earth do kids get these violent ideas?”
NO, not a mystery at all. They get the ideas from the society around them. . . which now is so steeped in military pornography and adoration of all things military that if one points out that fact one is immediately chastised, harassed and/or ostracized. America’s lovefest with the largest death and destruction machine, the US Military, is the fount of these ideas. Until we drastically reduce by at least 75% that military, continue to expect the all too common killings in this country.
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When you export violence and death abroad, eventually it blows back.
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Exactly!
But no one seems to want to acknowledge that trillion dollar elephant in the room.
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Seriously, though, watch this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCI4bUk4vuM
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Gloria Johnson of the Tennessee Three declared her candidacy for US
Senate 2024. Incumbent Sen Blackburn gets $ from NRA.
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I sent two contributions to Gloria Johnson in Tenn. she would be a wonderful Senator
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No doubt, we must vote for Gloria, and I have no reservation for saying this.
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WAY too many guns with too few people willing to turn them in. Even if mandated by the state or federal government.
So halt the commercial production and sale of ammunition. There will be a black market, of course. But nothing like we see now, in terms of accessibility.
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If one randomly spiked the commercial ammo supply for the general public with a certain percentage of bullets that automatically blew up inside the guns, I bet ammunition sales would plummet very quickly.
In addition, it would add a new element of risk and excitement to shooting a gun.
Just imagine what a rush it would be if every time you shot your single action gun, there was a 10% chance it would blow up in your face.
And if the very first time you squeezed off 30 rounds with your semi-auto AR15, it was all but certain that it would be the last time you ever did.
NOTE: real hunters load their own bullets.
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SDP,
If only!
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“NOTE: real hunters load their own bullets.”
Yep…and most don’t insist on carrying their fully loaded and ready semi automatic weapons to polling stations on election day as an expression of their Second Amendment rights. They’re also good enough with a rifle not to need a recoilless semi automatic rifle to hit the target, in the first place.
I used to play poker with a group of hunters in a camp every Thanksgiving in northern Vermont. Played a game called “Guts” because there were so many of us at the table. Three cards dealt and then a draw. The pot would accumulate if nobody could claim it.
I was dealt three aces. I did not draw. The pot was enormous. I bet the max. They all thought I was bluffing.
As I raked in my winnings, this huge lumberjack across the table said (with a smile because he liked me), “You pull a stunt like that again ‘n I’ll drag you out to the tannin’ shed”.
Ten minutes later I was dealt three Queens. S*#t you not.
Another big pot. I did not draw. The lumberjack looked at me and I gave a very definite nod of the head. Everyone folded.
All these guys loaded their own ammo. And I did not want to pay a visit to the tannin’ shed.
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“NOTE: real hunters load their own bullets.”
Now that there is 100% Pure USDA Grade A Horse Manure.
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The hunters I played poker with talked a lot about making their own bullets. Maybe it was a thing they’d gotten into as a group. I don’t know. I was the honorary flatlander/city slicker at the table.
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Most don’t load their own ammo–and most that do don’t “make their own bullets”. And yes, those who load their own ammo do tend to travel in groups-LOL! I know a few but not many.
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Yeah…they’d definitely ride me for using the wrong terms. I remember talking about getting a field “bushwhacked” (supposed to be “bush hogged”). That one went over real well.
But let’s see them take the subway from the West Village to Queensboro Plaza in their own! That’s what I say!
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Sorry gitapik, I can’t resist. . . please take with the humor intended. It’s “brush hogged”.
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Lol…well so it is.
Dang…time to just shut up and play my hand. Or just fold and go back home.
😉 No offense taken, Duane
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A ban on bullets would almost certainly be struck down by courts.
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I know.
My dad was a very good lawyer. We were discussing weed. My argument was that it was more benign than alcohol and the only violence associated with it came as a result of its illegal stature.
His stance was simple: I’m a lawyer. My job is to interpret and defend the laws as they’re written, whatever I may think of them. You make good points. Change the laws about marijuana and I’ll stand with you. But in the meantime…
Took awhile, but that’s happening, now. Wish he was still here to see it. What’s it going to take to make changes in the area of gun control?
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I’m no one to talk because I smoke a ton of pot (it helps me drink less booze, and it also helps me have more fun on my increasingly large guitar/amp rig at home). But I have very mixed feelings about the legalization of pot. Particularly concerning heavy use by teens.
I really hope SCOTUS draws some line—any line—in the sand about where states may permissibly regulate firearms. But regardless I think we are probably stuck with the current regime for the rest of my lifetime at least. There are just too many guns out there. Frankly I’m thankful (and a little surprised) that there are as few “random” mass shootings as there are.
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“ my increasingly large guitar/amp rig at home). But I have very mixed feelings about the legalization of pot. Particularly concerning heavy use by teens”
Yes: an increasingly and alarmingly large collection of wonderful sonic engines! I did sense a kinship in that area. 🥂
I recently sold off a bunch of my pedals and the platform for my large board. But not to “get back to basics”. Oh nooo: I’m very into modelers, now. HX Stomp and Fractal FM3. Learning curve but very worth it imho.
I agree about the pot. All points. Like the Wild West out there, now.
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Well, the second amendment says “the right to bear arms”, not “the right to bear (led) balls” or “the right to bear arms with balls”
And there is at least a possibility that there was a typo in the amendment and it was actually supposed to be “bare” arms (ie, arms without balls)
Furthermore, “the right to bare balls” might not even have been intended to refer to firearms.
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But if they did ban led balls, an unintended consequence would be that Alex Honnold would have to give up free soloing.
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Oops
Lead balls
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Given the prevalence and importance of hemp to the economy at the time, the Founding fathers undoubtedly never imagined that it would ever be outlawed.
If they had, they almost certainly would have added a zeroth amendment “The right to keep, bear and smoke weed shall not be infringed”
I imagine there was a whole lotta weed at the Constitutional Convention.
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How else could they ever have come up with the government they did?
LSD had not yet been invented.
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Benjamin Franklin for one was definitely as high as a kite when he was doing his electricity experiments during lightning storms.
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I get option paralysis with modeling rigs, although these days they sound fantastic. I recently got a Captor X, which works as an attenuator/reactive load box/cabinet emulator. So I run my amp into that, and then into two monitor speakers (because the Captor X does stereo output). That allows me to use natural overdrive at any volume.
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“ I get option paralysis with modeling rigs, although these days they sound fantastic”
That is a common stumbling block. I tend to stick with amps, cabs, and effects that I’m familiar with, which helps out in that area. The one exception is the Matchless amp. Friend of mine suggested I give it a shot and it’s fantastic.
Two Notes puts out excellent stuff. That Captor X is a prime example. Heard nothing but great reviews!
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I never took up guitar (play clarinet) so saved a boatload of money over the years on amps, pedals, boards and weed.
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Right…clarinetists don’t smoke weed.
Now, bassoonists, on the other hand…!
There was a bassoonist who used to play in Grand Central Station. Had a contact mic wired up to it. Portable amp and effects pedals. Backing tracks. Lot of mainstream and progressive jazz. Some classical. He was incredible.
Love the clarinet. My first instrument. You’re still playing, SDP?
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It’s hard to smoke weed while playing the clarinet.
And yes I still play almost daily.
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I would think a bassoonist would be more the opium (hookah) smoking type.
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There are those who want us to be armed in order to overthrow a government not to their liking. Think Jan 6. This requires arms and ammunition. Lots of arms and ammo.
I often wonder what the leadership of the NRA and the firearms manufacturers/distributors think of this concept.
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Given that they almost succeeded, I think what January 6 showed was that all one really needed at the time to overthrow the government was a crazy Shaman with buffalo horns, a crazy Conman in the White House and a VP to go along with the whole thing. No guns required.
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Don’t forget the Congressional allies. They were standing and at the ready.
Bassoonists/oboists/English Horn(ists), King Cobras, and caterpillars sitting on mushrooms love hookahs.
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Guns have become the American Cancer. Like the prevalence of lung cancer resulting from decades of cigarette smoking, this melanoma has reached stage four.
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