Posted on 06/17/2016 6:25:09 AM PDT by rktman
No one uses Tommy guns anymore. Today's thugs sling lead at one another with their plastic wonder-guns across playgrounds and parks, with poor accuracy and less style. Desperados, the demented, and the depraved appear to have settled on the ubiquitous black rifle as their favorite fashion firearm. Even Chicago, America's Free Fire Zone, hasn't seen anyone mowed down with the fabled Chicago Typewriter in decades.
It is a puzzlement.
After all, the Tommy is an all-American weapon, an iconic symbol of American independence and ingenuity. General Thompson intended it to sweep trenches clear of enemy soldiers, but the Germans, rather inconsiderately, threw in the towel before development work was complete. Yet the general persevered, in due course bringing forth the Thompson Model 1919: genuine American walnut and intricately tooled, highly polished steel. Able to carry up to 100 rounds of .45 ammunition and spit them out at the rate of 600 per minute (1,200 in early models).
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Roland was a warrior from the Land of the Midnight Sun
With a Thompson gun for hire, fighting to be done
The deal was made in Denmark on a dark and stormy day
So he set out for Biafra to join the bloody fray
Through sixty-six and seven they fought the Congo war
With their fingers on their triggers, knee-deep in gore
For days and nights they battled the Bantu to their knees
They killed to earn their living and to help out the Congolese
Roland the Thompson gunner...
His comrades fought beside him - Van Owen and the rest
But of all the Thompson gunners, Roland was the best
So the CIA decided they wanted Roland dead
That son-of-a-bitch Van Owen blew off Roland's head
Roland the headless Thompson gunner
Norway's bravest son
Time, time, time
For another peaceful war
But time stands still for Roland
'Til he evens up the score
They can still see his headless body stalking through the night
In the muzzle flash of Roland's Thompson gun
In the muzzle flash of Roland's Thompson gun
Roland searched the continent for the man who'd done him in
He found him in Mombassa in a barroom drinking gin
Roland aimed his Thompson gun - he didn't say a word
But he blew Van Owen's body from there to Johannesburg
Roland the headless Thompson gunner...
The eternal Thompson gunner
still wandering through the night
Now it's ten years later but he still keeps up the fight
In Ireland, in Lebanon, in Palestine and Berkeley
Patty Hearst heard the burst of Roland's Thompson gun and bought it
450,,,,
Dang.
And a number of Winchester Model 12 shotguns.
My daddy carried one in Europe. He had a dangerous job, but never had to shoot at an enemy.
I’ve fired one, and can attest to the weight.
Didn’t Bonnie carry in Whippet configuration?
My dad was the BAR man in his unit. Told me that he got the job because he was the only one that could lug the damned thing around.
LOL, to keep out all the dangerous criminals from Waveland and BSL? Cops and government creatures in general are never more themselves than just after a hurricane, when the power-grabbing instinct overwhelms all else. It is what vexed me more than anything else after Katrina, and what the rest of the country never understood.
Years ago I met a guy at a range who was shooting a full auto Thompson. He let me fire a 30 round mag. WHAT A HOOT! Emptied it in three bursts due to muzzle climb.
—and for those short on history, pistols and revolvers almost got included in the National Firearms Act—the NRA stopped that-—
Actually here in free America we can own full auto. But thanks to Reagan I can’t own a machine gun manufactured after 1985. That means if I wanted full auto Thompson I’m gonna pay about 25K. That for something that takes maybe $200 to make. I really want a full auto TG
There's a scene in "Saving Private Ryan" where a soldier fires his Thompson through a wall to kill the bad guys. Dad and I both simultaneously looked at each other and said "Bull****!!!". :-)
Also, Nixon wanted a total ban on handguns. His handlers talked him out of it.
—yes—
My Dad carried a stick magazine Thompson in New Guinea in World War II. He said the barrel started climbing with the first round, so he just used short bursts. He never complained about the weight.
Bonnie's whippet was a 20-gauge Remington Model 11, being as she was but 4 11 and 90 pounds. It was displayed along with other hardware recovered from their death car after the shooting.
Amen! My life would be impoverished otherwise.
I need to check which model 20ga Remington I have. I'm pretty sure the barrel on mine is longer.
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