Posted on 08/15/2009 3:38:49 PM PDT by Confed
Take a deep breath and listen to the man...
Click here: Louisiana Gun
On my bus it was me and the driver ...............
.45 seconds, eh?
And no, I don’t own any guns or firearms.
Got that Axelrod, and CARNIVORE...I got no guns!
Smartest thing I do is admit that I don’t know ....
Stop till I get help or proper instruction. Hope yer project turns out well.
As stated .....just funnin with ya.
Stay Safe !
Well that does present a problem....
Either your Mom told you the you had your own chauffeur because you were "Extra Special" or your Mom or Dad took you to school.
Yep. AWESOME!
Take AC-130H Spectre gunship evaluator-navigator Capt. Allison Black, for example. It was mid-November 2001...
Black began to chart the course. When her voice crackled over the soldiers field radios, Dostum was delightedly incredulous. A woman? Sent to kill the Taliban? He couldnt believe it, Black said. He thought it was the funniest thing.
The Spectre neared and its cannons erupted. Unaccustomed to the Gatling guns mechanized snarl, the fighters confused the airstrike with a ground assault. Militants scattered into the fields, seeking cover in ditches and vehicles, although Black could see their heat-signature silhouettes from her console by the cockpit.
Dostum, hidden with the Army detachment several miles away, said the Taliban also believed a high-powered laser pointer used by Spectre operators to identify ground targets a sparkle, in Air Force spec ops speak was a death ray that turned everything it touched to flames.
As the hailstorm of munitions continued, Dostum grabbed his walkie-talkie, switched to the Talibans unsecured frequency and relayed to them the sound of Blacks chatter coming through Army radio.
He used the female pilots voice to taunt them as they bled.
He said, America is so determined, they bring their women to kill the Taliban. Youre so pathetic, Black said. Its the angel of death raining fire upon you.
What kind of pistols are those and what period in history were they made?
The reason I ask is because I bought one in Yorktown VA at a garage sale for $10.. It is not complete and was found on the Yorktown Battlefield by a treasure hunter.
Just bought an AR-15 six days ago. Opened the case when I got home and a big red flier inside the instruction manual stated, “Using Wolf or any steel case ammunition will void warranty.”
Just bought an AR-15 six days ago. Opened the case when I got home and a big red flier inside the instruction manual stated, “Using Wolf or any steel case ammunition will void warranty.”
Well, there’s a reason. I bought a CZ82 at a recent gunshow. Whne I tried the steel cased ammo with it, I got a jam in the fiorst four shots. The extractor ripped right through the lip of the casing, leaving the spent shell in the chamber. Don’t bet you life on cheap ammo, use ONLY brass casing ammo.
Does a duck have lips?
And I had color in mine.
Those are flintlock pistol reproductions. In the displays at Yorktown and Williamsburg they also have many originals in first class condition. The flintlocks gradually replaced the matchlocks and Wheel-locks in Yorktown after 1650 and were improved until being replaced by percussion cap muzzle loaders in the 1830s and 40s. Those in the photo were of a style that stayed popular through the Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Alamo. The Alamo happened the same year Sam Colt patented his revolver.
If your relic has a lock of any kind left it is valuable unless it is a tossed reproduction.
America is a country of instant nostalgia proven by the reunion at The Little Big Horn only ten years after the battle. Forensic studies of empty brass cartridge case placement at such battlefields are thrown off by brass dropped from salute volleys and reenactments while the original type of head stamped brass cartridge case was still in existence.
That, too. I can't imagine that. I'd likely never use an outhouse again. It's bad enough with black widow spiders...
They're easy to put together yourself. I build a lower in about two hours, and I've never owned one before. I did buy the upper complete, but they're even more simple than the lowers. I was amazed at the sweet logic built into how every piece went together. I was also amazed that something that was built for combat in terrible conditions relied on so many tiny little pins and springs.
rather a hard-working honest American of any color vs. lazy Fedzilla teet-sucking miscreants and their corrupt politician enablers.
Join the service, they'll teach you how!
All my guns, ammo and other equipment were lost in a tragic boating accident on Lake Michigan.
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