Posted on 09/08/2012 5:54:21 PM PDT by hope
CNN) -- Praise the Internet and pass the ammunition: the blogosphere is roiling with conspiracy theories over a Social Security Administration shopping list for 174,000 hollow-point bullets.
Depending on whom you believe, police who protect Social Security Administration officers are either preparing for impending financial doom by purchasing lethal ammo to put down rioting citizens, or they're just making a standard purchase of ammunition for a federal police agency.
It all began last month when the agency, which is primarily responsible for distributing benefits to the disabled and retired people, posted an announcement seeking bids for 174,000 hollow-point bullets.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
Complete crap. What idiot would buy JHP for target practice? That’s retarded.
Meanwhile....the US Marine Corp had it’s ammo allocation chopped by almost 50%......hmmmmmmmmm?
Civilian Army... is this the Soviet Union?
Hollow points are for flesh, not paper, liars.
We aren’t idiots like your constituents.
When home I carry my Beretta Tomcat in .32 alternately loaded with Hydro-shocks and Glaser Safeties, extra mag.
I practice with the inexpensive stuff: Wolf, S&B and the like and keep a pre-ban mag loaded with 15 Hydra-Shoks in my M-9
I will on occasion fire 30 Hydra-Shoks at the pistol range just to get a feel for them, but don’t really notice much difference between them, Cor-Bons, and the inexpensive ammo mentioned above, other than price.
A good practice is to shoot what your local PD shoots, so some liberal DA can’t accuse you of using “cop killer” bullets or similar in a self-defense situation.
If I’m out getting lunch and run into a local LEO, I’ll strike up a conversation about how he likes his sidearm and what type of ammo and guns our taxes are buying for our LEO’s in a friendly way and they are usually happy to converse as long as you don’t come off as being a psycho creepy type of person.
It helps if you are former or currently in the military, but not a requirement.
Just “take their temperature” and feel them out in a friendly way and most will be happy to talk guns and ammo and the pros and cons of stopping power of different calibers. You can even ask them what type of ammo they prefer and if it’s what their dept. issues them.
I mentioned before, I prefer the 9mm in case I wake up to some bad guys in the house and find that my dominant arm is “asleep” due to myself sleeping on my side, or a lady friend sleeping on my arm and I may need to fire my pistol with my non-dominant left hand, which I do practice when I go to the range and it’s something I can’t do with a .45
I tried shooting a .45 with my left hand and almost needed extensive dental work due to the recoil, even though I knew it would be strong.
Accuracy > Stopping Power.
Not to mention, faster target re-acquisition after firing.
Plus that loud bang from that first shot will leave your hearing temporarily compromised and in a dark house, you will need all of your senses to be working, and a .45 makes a bigger “boom” than a 9mm
The muzzle flash might even give you a little case of night-blindness as well.
Having the Mossy 500 nearby is also helpful.
Bigger is not always better - I fired my friends DE .50 and found it to be nearly useless for any purpose as it is a very difficult firearm to master and very expensive for ammunition and for the firearm itself.
Most people I know that have bought the DE in .50 caliber have sold them within the first year of ownership or traded them in.
In a self-defense scenario, your shooting hand may become incapacitated due to a knife or bullet or baseball bat strike, so it’s good to have a firearm you can fire with some accuracy with your “other” hand.
When I go to the pistol range, I do about 10% of my practice with my left hand, “just in case” the need may arise in a real life or death situation.
Just want to make sure their “targets” are daid.
The National Guard will need a lot of ammunition after Obama loses in November as their will be rioting in “Urban Inner Cities”
not at all
600 rounds per agent. Enough to fill 20 clips, 30 Rnd capacity, for each of their MP7s. Sounds like enough to quell a rioting herd of grandparents.
Ouch! Cop killer is an invention of the left. There is no such animal as a cop killer bullet. Hollow points, yes. As a shooter I hate seeing that lingo. :) And... you are supposed to practice with what you are going to carry. Since its my money, I only use FMJ in practice and save the hydroshocks for carry.
That jackass is looking Forward to something quite nefarious.
Actually... Most carry some form of hollow point. Got a cousin in-law who carrys Federal hydroshock, think my buddy who is a cop in Louisiana (sniper team) also uses Federal hydroshocks.
If my life was on the line I would practice with what I intend to use. I can draw a line when I load up some expensive Barnes bullets though, or Bergers.
Our military fights our foreign enemies.
Bureaucrats fight our domestic enemies aka American citizens.
Was gonna say...going all the way back to the wheelgun days (which I am old enough to remember, it wasn’t that long ago), I NEVER saw a cop carrying FMJ rounds. Some variety of hollow points, every one.
Neither is true. Law Enforcement uses full power “duty ammo” not just for carry, but for practice. In that way, it can be said that they are familiar with the functioning of full power ammo. By practicing with the ammo, it also allows them to know if there is a functioning issue. If a cop were to say that the only time he ever fired his duty ammo was in the field, attorneys would have a field day.
Do they carry ball ammo? . . . . Absolutely not. With almost no exceptions, LE officers carry hollow-point ammunition in their duty weapons.
Much of this discussion is trying to make something out of the fact that 170,000 rounds of ammo is excessive. In my agency, we would go through well over 3000 rounds just for training & qualification. 170,000 rounds would not have been enough ammo for just my agency (med-sized Sheriff's Office on the west coast)to last a year!
I can't explain why the Social Security Administration is buying 170,000 rounds of JHP ammo, or if they have a law enforcement unit, but some of the folks responding in this post are looking pretty uninformed.
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