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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/03/2022 in all areas

  1. 5 points
    A soldier ran up to a nun. A soldier ran up to a nun. Out of breath he asked, "Please, may I hide under your skirt. I'll explain later." The nun agreed... A moment later two Military Police ran up and asked, "Sister, have you seen a soldier?" The nun replied, "He went that way." After the MPs ran off, the soldier crawled out from under her skirt and said, "I can't thank you enough, sister. You see, I don't want to go to Syria." The nun said, "I understand completely." The soldier added, "I hope I'm not rude, but you have a great pair of legs!" The nun replied, "If you had looked a little higher, you would have seen a great pair of balls…. I don't want to go to Syria either."
  2. 4 points
  3. 3 points
    Outstanding points if the problem attempting to be solved were mass murders. But leftists aren’t trying to solve that problem. The problem they are trying to solve is how to neuter the public and have them become docile and powerless. They want the guns to go away. Exposing their motive would be potentially helpful if the media wasn’t corrupt and working with socialists and leftists. Hell..they ARE socialists and leftists. All they want is a seat at the table and a share of the pie for themselves and those in their circle. They all want what the Biden and Clinton Klans have been getting for themselves for decades. The wealth is out there for the taking if they can get control of everything. Thats what they want. Our guns are just another risk they want to eliminate. They could not care less about dead kids.
  4. 2 points
    Whatever it is, buy it quick before prices jump and stock plummets.
  5. 2 points
    Effective 7/5/22: Costco will be members only to purchase fuel. My buddy works in the Fuel station and told me that yesterday.
  6. 2 points
    Today's Top Stories From the Breitbart News Desk Joe Biden has apparently decided to give Saudi Arabia's leaders what they want. The question is whether he will get anything useful in return. Saudi Arabia has been looking for better security assurances from the Biden administration and an official visit from President Biden, who promised during his campaign for the Democratic nomination to treat the Saudi leaders as "pariahs." The U.S. has been demanding more petroleum production in hopes of stemming surging oil prices that have sent gasoline to record highs. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries plus Russia and a few other oil producers, together now known as OPEC+, agreed to increase their collective cap on crude production by 648,000 barrels a day in July and August, up from the 432,000 barrels a day each month under their earlier agreement. This is unlikely to bring down oil prices by very much, if at all. In the first place, the additional barrels are a fraction of the 950,000 barrels Russia has taken off the market already. Even more is likely to come off the market if Russia reacts to the European Union's agreement to ban seaborne imports of oil and refined fuel from Russia by further reducing its production. What's more, a recent study of global oil markets by economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas found that the capacity constraints of OPEC+ members were already holding production under the existing quota. “There are several reasons this supply gap has emerged. One important explanation—and one that continues to play a role in 2022—is the inability of some OPEC+ members to increase production to take advantage of their growing quotas. These countries are bumping into capacity constraints for several reasons, including infrastructure issues and the difficulty of attracting sufficient investment to offset production declines at existing wells,” economists Lutz Kilian, Michael D. Plante, and Kunal Patel wrote in a piece published on the Dallas Fed’s website in April. Part of the problem is the way the OPEC+ quota works. All the members get a piece of the quota equal to the percentage they reduced production when prices crashed during the pandemic. There's no mechanism for redistributing the production allowance when one or more countries fall short. So if Nigerian production declines or Russia shuts off its oil taps, the agreement does not allow the Saudis or the United Arab Emerites to step up and fill the supply gap. Most likely, the only two countries that can quickly and sustainably ramp up production are Saudi Arabia and the UAE. As a result, any actual increase in production is likely to amount to half of the increase in the quota. A glance at oil futures confirms that the market was unimpressed. Prior to the OPEC announcement, Brent Crude futures had fallen to $113 a barrel on the rumor that something was going to change. By the close of business on Thursday, Brent was above $118 a barrel. That is high enough to keep gasoline prices in the U.S. setting new records as summer driving increases demand and China reopens from its recent lockdowns. Gasoline prices tend to be particularly salient in the realm of politics. They are frequently encountered by Americans driving to work, to school, or on vacation, so they have a bigger influence on economic psychology than things like used car prices. Perhaps only grocery prices have a bigger impact. And gas demand is pretty inelastic when compared to other categories of consumer goods. So when the price of gas goes up, households compensate by spending less on other goods and services. The Saudis have scored a great diplomatic victory by winning a Biden visit and whatever other favors the administration has promised the kingdom in exchange for more oil. Unfortunately, none of this will help American motorists. Nor will it give Biden's sagging favorability ratings a boost. Joe, send Knee Pads Harris there! She'll suck it out of them!
  7. 2 points
    Brandon going to be addressing the nation tonight. And the Topic is GUNS I just can't believe how coincidental these random shootings are. Just as the Supreme court is about to rule on the 2nd Amendment
  8. 2 points
    Canada is turning out to be our proverbial coal mine canary between the taking of citizens finances and by default everything they own and of course the ploy of incremental gun control. Pretty clear to a lot of us but unfortunately too many just don't realize this real time tyranny in the making on our own doorstep.
  9. 1 point
    Honestly, more "kids" these days are much less mature at 18 than in the past, have zero coping skills, and blame others for their own self inflicted problems. The only reason I see raising the age to 21 to buy a gun is because.... track records. At 18 years old, on your birthday you can buy a gun... even if you have mental health issues documented, criminal convictions etc... because that information is typically sealed and not accessible. 2 options exist, don't seal juvenile records... not sure why we do that anywaysince expungements exist. I know someone who had an armed robbery conviction expunged within 6 years of getting out of prison...fkin insane.. in NJ of all places. OR raise the age so there is enough time for the individual to screw up before they can purchase a firearm. Does any of this solve the real gun violence in the country? No. We know that these media focused shootings are a drop in the bucket compared to the daily and weekly murders in cities.
  10. 1 point
    Given todays climate - I would buy a 38 Super 1911 Pistol. I would also buy a snub nosed 357 magnum - a 4" 357 - and a .22 DA Revolver
  11. 1 point
    Yeah, that's one of the many things that worries me about Phildo. Whenever California or NY passes a brain-dead law, he immediately feels the need to out-stupid them in his response.
  12. 1 point
    Nice collection! I have all but the Canik. You have all nice guns but they are all full size! You should consider something easily concealable. I love my Sig P938, 9mm and fits in my pocket!
  13. 1 point
    Canada sucks. Always has... Always will.
  14. 1 point
    Such utter nonsense and they know it. Yes. He is clueless. On literally everything. What a sh#t show the United States of America has become.
  15. 1 point
  16. 1 point
  17. 1 point
    Go for the easy target first. "No one needs 'assault rifles!'" "No one really needs handguns! They serve no purpose." ( <- Canada is here) "There is no valid reason for anyone to have a semi-automatic gun. You suck at hunting if you need 10 rounds to kill a deer." "No one wants to see sniper (hunting) rifles in the hands of civilians. In fact, lets just call it all rifles except .22 rimfires." "We promise we'll let you keep your single shot .22. ...Wait, we will? What do you mean I skipped a line and read the wrong....oh. Oh! Sorry! Ahem. Shotguns are only useful for killing multiple people with one pull of the trigger and will be banned." "We promise we'll let you keep your single shot .22, unless something bad happens with a .22." "So, it turns out someone did something bad with a .22 guys, so, yeah, turn those in. You can totally keep your muzzleloaders though!" "Yeah, fuckit, what are you gonna do, we want your muzzleloaders too. Give us your BB guns and airsoft and paintball, too. And we will arrest your kids for holding gun shaped sticks or poptarts, too."
  18. 1 point
    There's No Bipartisan Gun 'Deal' In The Works, Just GOP Capitulation (thefederalist.com)
  19. 1 point
    So the next time he moves to single-handedly confiscate bank accounts he won't have a serious problem.
  20. 1 point
    and who is the bastard love child of Fidel Castro
  21. 1 point
    Not to mention... a man who, along with his family, is well-protected by armed security 24x7.
  22. 1 point
    yea. that's gonna stop the criminals from buying and selling their guns, lol
  23. 1 point
  24. 1 point
  25. 0 points
    License to own semi-automatic rifles Age to own a semi-automatic rifle raised to 21 Restrictions on Body Armor All new guns must have microstamping (like in CA) Is there a single instance of microstamping being used in the arrest or conviction of a violent criminal? We all know it's a de facto ban on new guns and cannot spread.
  26. 0 points
    New Yorker’s have a short attention span. In 2001, they implemented CoBIS, the Combined Ballistic Identification System, in one of the year’s state budget bills. This applied to handguns. According to the law, gun sellers were required to send firearms to a CoBIS center where fired shell casings from those guns would be entered into a statewide databank. It is to be noted that the state spent $32 million on CoBIS since the creation of the program in January of 2001, and not one crime has been solved with this technology. It was discontinued in 2012.
  27. 0 points
    4.85 where i work for the cheap shiit


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