JG55
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Everything posted by JG55
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Micheal Collins Single Malt Irish Whiskey for me
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Fryguy thanks just watched some of the you tube videos of GSSF matches . Looks like alot of fun. How many magazines are recommended ?
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Can we join the GSSF as well as Register for the competition on either Saturday or Sunday ? Looking at the courses: Are the 3 strings of fire same as 3 rounds ? 4 strings = 4 rounds What is a the Major Sub ?
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First thing in the morning, 16 oz of Real Water not that imported unreal water Get's the body rehydrated. Then Pot full of Black Coffee either Don Pablo or some other brand. That gets the day going... ( just to be clear if the waters not REAL well it's well you know____)
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I appreciate that.
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I opted for which I think is kinda of
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Me Very Smooth:popcorn:
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I have been using a Remora Holster for my P238 and it works well for me. Home of the Original Remora No Clip Holster
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I don't drink whiskey often, but when I do.....Jack or George?
JG55 replied to Will Carry's topic in General Chat
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THE BALVENIE Single Barrel, Aged 15 Years The Balvenie Single Barrel is a 15 year old single malt which is drawn from a single traditional oak whisky cask of a single distillation. Whilst each cask is subtly different, The Balvenie Malt Master selects only those casks which have the essential characteristics of The Balvenie Single Barrel, particularly honey, vanilla and oaky notes. Each bottling forms a limited edition of no more than 350 hand-numbered bottles - so each bottle is unique and unrepeatable. Film TASTING NOTES NOSE Fragrant aroma of vanilla, honeyed sweetness, hints of heather and dry oaky notes. TASTE Rich and complex, suggestive of years of careful ageing, it has a honeyed maltiness with vanilla, oak flavours and delicate spice notes. FINISH Long and complex with a touch of liquorice.
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From Publishers Weekly Elmore Leonard's latest, When the Women Come Out to Dance, is a collection of short sketches that feature strong female characters in trouble. "Sparks" describes a flirtation between an insurance investigator and a widow who has apparently burned down her own mansion in the Hollywood hills. The riveting title piece involves a rich Pakistani surgeon's wife, a former stripper who's terrified that her playboy husband will have her killed once he gets bored with her. Hoping to knock him off first, she hires as a maid a Colombian woman rumored to have murdered her own abusive husband. "Fire in the Hole" finds two former co-workers pitted against one another in a deadly showdown: Boyd Crowder is a Bible-quoting neo-Nazi with a penchant for terrorist acts, and Raylan Givens is the U.S. marshal sent to shut him down. Leonard fans may wish for something meatier, but the razor-edged dialogue and brisk storytelling won't disappoint. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Did a little Research on the series: Seems that Justified was created from a short story by Elmore Leonard called "Fire in the Hole" which can be read on line for free, if anyone is interested. Spoiler_ Fire in the Hole is Ist episode season 1. In season 1 opener, Rayland shoots a Gangster called Tommy Bucks, the Book Pronto by Elmore Leonard introduces the reader to Rayland Givens and the background on Tommy Bucks FWIW
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Need to watch that scene again and see if maybe she was going to poison Rayland but switched glasses at the last moment. I was wondering if she poisoned Him how they were going to save him since it was such a quick acting poison.
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There had been advertisements for the show showing that scene with Rayland on the ground and Doyle standing over him. Was wondering how Rayland was going to get out of it. That was a nice surprise. What about Megs poisoning Herself ? Did you notice how she picked one glass from the bottom of the cabinet and another one from the middle shelf...
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Prediction: After X lays down the law No Marshall or Her, Rayland becomes a gun-totting Ice Cream Salesman undercover with the Marshals Service and becomes known as the Ice Cream Guy who has a knack for solving problems. Maybe
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Just can't resist Critics: Obama’s Latest Long-Form Birth Certificate Is a Fake
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Thomas Sowell Archive | Latest | Log In April 26, 2011 12:00 A.M. Obama’s Trump Card The damage the Donald can do The boomlet for Donald Trump as a Republican nominee for president of the United States ought to be a wake-up call for Republican candidates and Republican party leaders alike. Why has Trump surged ahead of other Republican candidates and potential candidates in the polls? It is not likely that his resurrection of the issue of Barack Obama’s birth certificate has aroused all this support The birth-certificate issue does more political damage to Obama’s critics than to the president himself, because it enables the media to paint those critics as kooks. Nor are Donald Trump’s political positions such as to create a stampede to his cause. Radio-talk-show host Mark Levin has rebroadcast Trump’s varied and mutually contradictory statements on political issues and personalities over the years. It was a devastating revelation of Trump’s “versatility of convictions,†to use a phrase coined long ago by Thorstein Veblen. So then what is Donald Trump’s appeal? And why should it concern Republican leaders in general? Trump has what so many other Republicans are so painfully lacking: the ability and the willingness to articulate arguments clearly, forcefully, and in plain English. Too many Republicans talk like the actor of whom a critic once said, “he played the king like he was afraid that someone else was going to play the ace.†What electrified so many Republicans about Sarah Palin in the 2008 election campaign was that her speeches offered such a contrast to the usual mealy-mouthed talk common among other Republican candidates, including Sen. John McCain. Whether you agreed or disagreed with her position on the issues, you didn’t have to wave your hand in front of her eyes to see if she was awake. Donald Trump is dangerous in at least two senses. If, by some tragic miracle, he should become the Republicans’ candidate for president in 2012, that would be the closest thing to an iron-clad guarantee of a second term in the White House for Barack Obama. That would be a huge setback for the Republicans — and, far more important — a historic catastrophe for this country. What seems more likely is that Donald Trump as a candidate for the Republican nomination would use his superior articulation skills — not to mention brash irresponsibility — to trash all the other Republican candidates for that nomination, leaving them damaged goods in the eyes of the public, and therefore less able to gather the votes needed to prevent the reelection of Obama. Why Republicans seem not to understand the crucial importance of putting the same time and attention into articulating their positions as the Democrats do is one of the enduring mysteries of American politics. It was obvious that the Democrats coordinated their talking points and catch-phrases — “social justice,†“tax cuts for the rich,†etc. — even before the overheard and recorded statements of Sen. Chuck Schumer about Democrats’ plans to repeatedly use the word “extreme†to characterize Republicans. But how many Republican catch phrases can you remember? Republican rhetoric tends to range from low key to no key. Nor is there much evidence that Republicans have asked themselves how the left wing of the Democratic party gained such ascendancy in recent years, in a country where millions more people identify themselves as conservative than as liberals. In short, there is little or no evidence that most Republicans see any need to fundamentally change their approach to the public. But if they think that they can rely on Obama’s declining popularity to win the 2012 election, they may be in for a rude shock. Worse yet, the whole future of this country and of Western civilization will be in jeopardy — in a world where the likes of Iran and North Korea become nuclear powers while we engage in empty talk at the U.N. Barack Obama’s declining support in public-opinion polls makes some conservatives feel that his reelection hopes are doomed. But Donald Trump can be Barack Obama’s secret weapon in his fight to remain in the White House. The Donald can be his Trump card. — Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. © 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-ELZk_X6_k&feature=player_embedded
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Forum Name Tn Gun Owners " I have 2 guns. 1 for each of You."