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monkeylizard

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Everything posted by monkeylizard

  1. I'm in too. As I recall, the owner of Dalt's on White Bridge Rd. is friendly to our community. He allowed Chip Cain to host a great meet up several years ago to discuss legal issue around carrying and SD. Dalt's is not posted. It might be a good way to return the favor and meet there, but it's your show T.K. so wherever you choose is fine with me.
  2. He's right about that. An AR is fairly useless against an F-22. But that opens up the argument to say that what we need is civilian ownership of MANPADS and old German 88s with flak canisters. Maybe then he would stop insinuating threats of F-22 attacks against American civilians.
  3. Herman Munster on the left and The Karate Kid on the right.
  4. If you say so . . .
  5. Thanks for the heads up! I've been waiting/hoping for another round. My paperwork is ready to get notarized and off in the mail to the fine folks in Anniston.
  6. I think I see a fuzzy baby elephant
  7. Needs a red dot
  8. If it's bigger and cheaper, there's a reason. The question you have to ask is "does that matter to me?" Some of the big box retailers have good safes alongside the thinner/lighter/cheaper ones. TSC for example sells cheap Cannon and Winchester (Chinese made) safes along with more expensive models from Liberty (USA made).
  9. Beat me to it. Unfortunately, I think the end of the NFA would actually skyrocket prices on things like the MG42. The supply can't get any bigger and the demand would surge. Only guns in current production, or where a new production version would be just as or nearly as desirable as an original would see prices plummet. Glock 18, MP-5, Uzi, M-60, or M-4/M-16 for example.
  10. That's certainly not a glowing review of Great American. But look on the bright side. It may spark some good discussions on safety. . . . I'll get my hat . . .
  11. Because aligning a red dot on a target is easier and faster than trying to align 3 tiny white dots on the same target. Try one. You'll very quickly understand why they've become all the rage.
  12. Ours may not be as specific as theirs re: motorcycles (I have no idea what Brazil's actual law is), but couldn't we do the same under our current use of force laws? Why would using a vehicle be any different than using a firearm? If the attacker is placing you or another in reasonable fear of imminent death or serious bodily harm, a Buick may be just as effective as a Bushmaster, IMO. I can see the Tacticool ads for M-Lok bumpers in both gun and car mags already . . . .
  13. Start at 7:05. The payoff is at 7:24.
  14. Here's the thing. People who launder money usually only launder a small portion of their illicit gains. The taxes, fees, and kickbacks are the cost of cleaning some of it and they accept that fact. If Tony Montoya is sitting on $500 million in cash from his import business, and wants to buy a $10 million house on the water in Miami, he'll launder $20 million and come out with the clean $10m he needs. The house actually cost him $20 million, but he's still sitting on $480 million, tax free, so no complaints there. The larger the operation, the more opportunity there is to setup a legitimate business to launder even more money. Take the mob for example. They could run that intimidation and stolen cigarette money through their restaurants, freight companies, casinos, etc. where it comes out clean. Remember you only need to clean the money you want to use for legitimate purposes. No need to clean the cash you're using to pay bribes, your henchmen, your supplier, etc. If it's done right, it's not easily investigated. Money is laundered multiple times and through offshore corporations. The paper trail isn't like the movies.
  15. It's the buyer laundering the money through the seller, often in cahoots with one another. Let's say you I and are involved in less-than-legal activities. We each have $20K in cash shoved in shoeboxes but have no official income so eyebrows get raised if either of us go buy a car or a boat. Instead, I can sell you a Cheeto that looks like Elvis for $20K, and you can sell me a one-of-a-kind watercolor painted by your 3 year old nephew. We now each have $20K made through the sale of legitimate items and neither of us are out more than a Cheeto and Arte de Toddler. We can now claim our $20K as income (and pay taxes on it) and use the remainder for high dollar purchases like cars, boats, or houses. Repeating the process gets more money into the system OR hides the same money a second, third, or fourth time. Each time it gets harder to trace back to the original illicit source. More legitimacy (and more money), and less suspicion can be added by using something with actual value instead of my Elvis Cheto and your nephew's painting if a duck but still overpaying. Doing it through a public place like Gunbroker or eBay adds credibility because it's out in public. The buyer and seller can create several dummy accounts to bid up the price to make it look like it was a real auction and the high price is legitimate. Only if someone goes digging real deep into the accounts would they find they all trace back to the same person. Of course the more money you're laundering, and the more people involved, the more pathways there are and the more obfuscated the actual process becomes. In this case, if the buyer and seller were actually cahooting to launder money, there probably never was a rifle to begin with and if there was, it never really changed hands.
  16. BLACK PANTHER!!!!!!
  17. All those spots on the road came from their hair, not the car.
  18. First of all, it's an issue of supply. There simply aren't as many EVs on the road for long enough to be showing up in the junk yards. But they will. When that happens you will be able to pick up the electric motors. I predict a DIY community will spring up for which motors to grab from the latest models and how to retro fit them to our older models to get more power, more range, or both. Basically the EV version of hotrodding. Because of the risk of electric shock the battery will not likely be a "pull it yourself" part. Too much liability, like the airbags they pull and don't sell. Either the yards will pull the battery packs and have them separate like they do with some electronics now, or they'll pull them and ship them to a recycler/rehabber facility and we'll never get our hands on them directly from the pull-a-part.
  19. Yep. We're conflating 4 different issues in this thread: The method of storing energy - ICE mostly wins this one because gasoline refills are fast and available everywhere effectively creating unlimited range. EV gets a bonus because it's easy to start each day with a full "tank". Cost - ICE wins the up front costs and major repair costs. EV wins maintenance/operating costs and is closing the gap on both up front and major repair costs. External control - Tie. This ranges from annoying (subscription to use your seat heaters) to frightening (remote disabling/controlling). Neither is immune from it. Right-To-Repair - ICE wins for now because that horse is out of the barn. EV is the emerging tech the mfg's are trying to fence in. All 4 are mostly independent, but since EVs are generally closer to the cutting edge of technology and are usually loaded up with more of it, they're currently more likely to get caught up in #3 in the near term. In the medium term, all ICE cars will see the same thing. There's likely no significant long term for ICE as far as new production goes. Toss in the government meddling trying to force consumers to EV who don't want to go so it adds to our EV con list and makes it an emotional rather than rational conversation. Nobody likes to be told what to do. That stops critical thinking skills to where we can't see the advantages of EV (performance, always full at the start of each day, lower operating costs, enough range for most needs) and only focus on the negatives (high up front cost, not really green like advertised, limited public charging infrastructure, charging times, and limited heavy-duty availability for those who need it).
  20. I here I was thinking I was a bad person for always leaving the pull-a-part with a pocket full of fuses . . .
  21. People used to to swap the engines out of the old Hertz Shelby Cobra Mustangs.
  22. Since when did we have "normal" members?
  23. If that comes to pass, it would apply to ICE just as much as EVs.
  24. . . . any job that requires road travel (including construction and landscaping), all retail, government offices/services, gymnasiums, churches, hospitals, corporate office buildings, basically every job . . .

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