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bubbiesdad

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Everything posted by bubbiesdad

  1. I was in Oak Ridge WalMart today. Sign was gone, no longer a limit. Plus, They had .38 SPL.
  2. The SKS bi-pod sounds tempting. But so does a scope.
  3. No, I don't reload, yet. But interesting trades will be considered.
  4. FOR TRADE: WILL HAVE SATURDAY 38 RNDS OF REM. 2 3/4" 00 BUCKSHOT 15 RNDS OF REM 2 3/4 " SLUGGER
  5. I have two .40's, a Glock 22 and a Baby Eagle.
  6. I would be willing to swap some cash for your .40 ammo, if we can agree on a price.
  7. Don't forget the matching murse.
  8. I'm coming, hopefully bringing Cody and perhaps one of his friends. Last time, I brought chips, soda, cookies, can do again.
  9. Bet you can't get in the boat
  10. One of the arguments the restaurant association was using last year, was that they would lose convention business to Indiana and Oregon with the wild west coming to TN. They failed to include that both states allow restaurant carry.
  11. You can ride with me if you want.
  12. I just picked up a Taurus 709 Slim. I have put close to 200 rounds through it with no issues. Shoots accurately and the recoil is light.
  13. I have one in 9mm, took it to IDPA after I had it a couple of weeks, it performed flawlessly.
  14. McElroy: Living a lie: Restaurants, bars and guns I think it's safe to say the NRA speaks for all Tennesseans when it states in its gun safety rules: "Alcohol … must not be used before or while handling or shooting guns." So why do NRA-backed legislators want guns in bars? They don't. They want permitted guns allowed in restaurants, whether they serve alcohol or not. But because the state is living a lie, the issue has tangled up the General Assembly for two sessions and gone to court in between. The lie is that there are no bars in Tennessee. Under state law, liquor-by-the-drink permits can be issued only to restaurants, which are defined as places where "the serving of meals is the principal business conducted." That doesn't mean the "principal business" has to bring in half a restaurant's revenue, though. The state Alcoholic Beverage Commission also weighs other factors such as kitchen equipment and seating. Food can be a mere plurality of revenue, as in a restaurant that earns 26 percent from meals, 25 percent from liquor, 25 percent from beer and 24 percent from souvenirs. A restaurant can even qualify for a liquor license if it makes a "good faith" effort to sell food. "Establishments can't force their patrons to buy food or to want to eat," ABC Chairman John A. Jones explained to the Chattanooga Times Free Press recently. Beer, by the way, does not come under state regulation, so, from the ABC's point of view, it is food, too, a concept to which many college students can relate. This farce was the reason the previous version of the guns-in-bars bill was thrown out. That legislation sought to ban guns from restaurants that were really bars, while liquor laws insisted that all bars were restaurants. No wonder a judge found the bill unconstitutionally vague. The new guns-in-bars bill does away with any such vagueness, declaring, simply, that properly permitted guns are allowed in all joints that sell alcohol. Gov. Phil Bredesen has again vetoed the measure, declaring that "the General Assembly has essentially re-passed last year's legislation in an even more expansive and dangerous form." "I don't understand why he would even say that," responded Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey, possibly with a straight face. Some bystanders have been hurt in the gun fight, such as the Buckwild Saloon in Nashville, which made the mistake of unabashedly being a bar. In 2007, ABC found that food accounted for just 1.2 percent of its total sales. That was enough of a "principal business" for the saloon to keep operating then. But last year, amidst the guns-and-alcohol furor, ABC did a fresh audit and was shocked - shocked - to discover that Buckwild's food service accounted for just 2.4 percent of sales. One might argue that doubling food sales showed a good faith effort, but the "restaurant's" license still was suspended for 90 days. "We are under the microscope of some members of the Tennessee General Assembly," ABC's Jones admitted to the Times Free Press. A token effort to clarify what's a bar and what's not was introduced this legislative session but now lies dormant in committee. It's a safe bet it will never pass. Instead, guns soon will be in bars, where no one wants them, and, when the microscope goes away, places like Buckwild will get back to their "primary business."
  15. They are great, glad I have one.
  16. A Marlin 1894C.
  17. in layaway today.
  18. Put a rifle
  19. No, you were passing it on the indkividual "It doesn’t sound to me like his kid was in danger. But if he was; Baer should be ashamed that his business practices put his family in danger. Maybe when the son gets done hiding in the bathroom he will do some research and find out what kind of guy good ole Dad is."
  20. So the thugs outside the house are not responsible for their actions? You passed judgement in an earlier post.
  21. Thinking of you and Verne Troyer at the same time, I came up with this. YouTube - Get in my Belly
  22. What's your definition of "little"?
  23. YouTube - Black Sabbath Heaven and Hell
  24. Does he serve beer now? I heard he was going to start. Haven't been there for a while.

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