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Everything posted by monkeylizard
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We found dinner at Bristol Bar & Grill on Bardstown. It was excellent. Clearly the highlight of the trip. That and the PSA booth.
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Wine in grocery stores = sale on survival stuffs
monkeylizard replied to monkeylizard's topic in Survival and Preparedness
I'll wash those beans down with some of the organic marinara sauce and hot salsa that was also on clearance. That will make me extra prepperific! If you're nice, maybe I'll share some of the clearance priced peanut butter Snickers. Publix tip: If it rings up wrong, it's free. Watch the register closely on those clearance items. Free salsa for me! -
If you find one, be sure to let the rest of us Bellevue denizens know about it. I drive an hour each way to Gallatin Gun Club. There's the range out at Cheatham WMR I've never been as I've heard tales of how unsafe some of the inbred morons can be who like to frequent the place. It's a 45 minute drive. For 15 minutes more, I prefer to go to the much safer and usually empty GGC. Royal Range has a super nice facility and the people to match. It ain't cheap, and it's indoors, but it's the closest range that we have. Plus they're now a TGO sponsoring vendor. +1 to that!
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I know it's true at my Publix so I have to assume it's true at many other grocers. As they make room for wine, they're forced to discontinue other products, or skinny down the brand/variety of a product. My Publix had a crap ton of dry beans on sale (mostly Goya brand) in their new soon-to-be-stocked-with-wine aisle. Seemed like a good price to me so I grabbed a few bags. Not prepper quantities, but a handful of 1 lb. bags. I don't know how the selection and prices at your local grocer may vary compared to buying in bulk, but it may something ya'll want to check into. Plenty of non-prepper kind of stuff on clearance too at my Publix. YMMV.
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Ditto. My fellow travelers have already cancelled their Atlanta hotels. I'll keep mine for now, but will probably cancel it as well. Skipping 2017 and 2018 (Dallas) may make me want to go to 2019 in Indianapolis.
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We bailed early. We planned to stay all weekend, but I've been home since about 4:30 today. As was said above, mostly the same stuff as last year. 2 days was enough...Well, a day and a half with all that %$#*&^$$#$#%$#^^)#!@ Traffic! Overall, I was thoroughly unimpressed. While it's large enough, the KEC is not particularly nice, at least not the South Wing where the exhibit hall was held. Especially when compared to the Music City Center. The main concourses made me feel like I should be trying to get tickets to a RATT concert, circa 1988. Whichever retarded monkey humper thought that a two-lane street is enough to funnel traffic off of a 6-lane Interstate into a facility that can handle north of 100,000 people and co-located with a theme park should be forced to have Caster slam his nuts in a car door....repeatedly.....until Caster decides he'd rather go to Atlanta....which could be a while. Parking at KEC is NOT capable of handling an event that large. I was forced to park in the grass on Friday, but was fortunate enough to get out (4:30'ish) just before the mass exodus began and the grass turned into a mud hole. Tow truck drivers were busy for many hours getting people out. There's NOTHING nearby the KEC. Even the neighboring hotels aren't particularly walkable. Finally, Louisville as a city is kind of boring. There's not a lot downtown, and areas like Bardstown Rd. with good restaurants and bars are so spread out that you have to drive from place to place....where you can't find parking. Several folks at our hotel and more than a few vendors said many of the same things. Nashville was exceedingly better than this one. I hope this is the last one in Louisville. I can promise you it was mine.
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I saw several vendors at NRA Louisville with this kind of thing. The only one I saw last year was Tactical Walls. They've greatly expanded their line since last year and added RFID plus their usual magnet lock trick. There was another one with what looked to be a straight up knock off of Tactical Walls' shelves a few spaces down from them. Plus quite a half dozen others selling these kinds of tables and cabinets in various booths. It's definitely an up and coming niche.
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In theory, that's correct. In reality, if he wants to walk the floor, I don't think the SS is going to stop him, and they won't be able to clear the room of functional firearms.
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It says "area primarily devoted to", so it doesn't have to be a separate room. Think of places like O'Charley's or Logan's. The KY law makes it so you can conceal carry in the restaurant, but not in the bar area of the restaurant. If the KEC has a food and beverage area primarily dedicated to alcohol (let's say there's a Budwieser food stand shucking bratwurst but everyone knows it's primarily a beer stand) then only that area would be off limits for conceal carry. That's the way I understand KY law. Do I recall correctly that KY is an open-carry w/o permit state so the alcohol thing would only apply to concealed carry? One could still open carry in those areas? Don't forget about the Secret Service notice in the NRA announcement. If anyone's attending the NRA-ILA meeting, that will be off limits for carrying because Mr. Trump will be speaking and now has S.S. protection.
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Bison Calf’s Death Shows Dangers of People in Yellowstone
monkeylizard replied to ou812's topic in General Chat
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I have an H&R 940 .22LR revolver and the hammer no longer locks back to shoot it single action. It will work with double-action, and while I haven't tried it, I suspect I could shoot it old cowboy movie style by holding the trigger and repeatedly cycling the hammer. The timing is good on it and locks up tight. It's not worth what a smith would charge me to fix it, so I'd like to try it myself. I've never done any work at all on revolvers (this is the only one I have). Any advice on where to start?
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What are you going to do tonight while TGO is down?
monkeylizard replied to TGO David's topic in General Chat
Game 7 begins at 8pm Central. If it goes like Game 4, you'll be done with the upgrade before the game ends. -
There are various ones. Some homeowners polices will cover you, but most won't. If you have an umbrella policy, it may cover you, but some don't. Mine does for any civil suits as long as it has been adjudicated as justified, but doesn't cover criminal suits. USCCA seems to be the leader in this area. At $147/year it's really not that expensive, especially compared to paying a lawyer. A good criminal defense lawyer doesn't get out of bed to pick $147 up off the floor.
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Yep. The law I cited says you can't be civilly liable if the force is adjudicated as lawful and you can recoup legal fees. But that still doesn't stop an idiot from filing the suit anyway.
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I'd say you're right 99.9% of the time though. Most no-knocks where the homeowner fires at the officers ends up dead. It's just not a guaranteed foregone conclusion.
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Not always. Ignore the right or left slant of these publications. I only linked them because they covered the issue at hand. Homeowner survived, charged but not indicted: https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2014/02/08/texas-man-who-killed-police-officer-during-no-knock-raid-will-not-face-murder-charge-grand-jury-refuses-to-indict/ Homeowner survived and charged: http://thefreethoughtproject.com/swat-officer-killed-serving-no-knock-warrant/
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Not only the reliability, but if you do find yourself in court, the prosecuting attorney is going to use anything and everything to make you look like a cold-blooded calculating murderer. "You made your own ammunition so that you could make it more lethal didn't you? What? The standard ammunition wasn't deadly enough for you? They wouldn't do enough damage to this fine upstanding citizen who was only trying to ask you for directions in the middle of your living room at 2am? Don't change the subject to the crowbar and bowie knife in the victim's hands! The issue is that you intentionally and maliciously planned to take a person's life with your overpowered bullets, didn't you!" Same thing goes for modifications to the firearm. It's a lame argument, but one I'd expect to face if I were using reloads or a modified firearm. Odds of having a "gun person" on the jury are slim, much less 12 of them.
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Yeah, me too, but if I could make a small cache for a few hundred bucks, that seems a small price to pay for a "just in case" scenario.
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TCA 39-11-622 is what you're looking for. I'm not certain, but I think for -622 to apply, then the use of force has to have been adjudicated as justified. That just means that a judge or jury has to have said it was a good use of force. If the cops don't arrest you and the DA doesn't charge you, you could face a civil suit. You'd then have to lawyer up and have a judge review the case and make a ruling from the bench that it was justified under one of the 3 statutes listed in a-1 below. Once that's done, the civil suit gets tossed and you can be awarded lawyer fees from the plaintiff, but more often than not that's like getting blood from a stone. It could go the other way I suppose and the judge may rule that the use of force was not justified and the civil suit could continue even if the DA doesn't file criminal charges, but IANAL so I don't really know for sure about that. If the DA does press charges and you are found not guilty, then the use of force has been adjudicated as justified by the jury and no civil suit can proceed. That's the way I understand it, but I could be wrong. Ignore the colors. That's from using the [ code ] tag instead of the [ quote ] tag. The quote tag turns many of the letters in parenthesis into various smiley faces. 39-11-622. Justification for use of force -- Exceptions -- Immunity from civil liability. (a) (1) A person who uses force as permitted in §§ 39-11-611 -- 39-11-614 or § 29-34-201, is justified in using such force and is immune from civil liability for the use of such force, unless: (A) The person against whom force was used is a law enforcement officer, as defined in § 39-11-106 who: (i) Was acting in the performance of the officer's official duties; and (ii) Identified the officer in accordance with any applicable law; or (iii) The person using force knew or reasonably should have known that the person was a law enforcement officer; or (B) The force used by the person resulted in property damage to or the death or injury of an innocent bystander or other person against whom the force used was not justified. (b) The court shall award reasonable attorney's fees, court costs, compensation for loss of income, and all expenses incurred by a person in defense of any civil action brought against the person based upon the person's use of force, if the court finds that the defendant was justified in using such force pursuant to §§ 39-11-611 -- 39-11-614 or § 29-34-201.
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I've wondered that too. I also wonder how effective the ground would be. Would burying a cache of sealed containers work? If so, I wonder how deep they'd need to be.
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Or for the ladies on church day
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Thanks. That's sort of what I was deriving from reading around the web.
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Those aren't exactly world-ending EMP level protection and it says so in the description. It's basically an olive drab static bag with a Ziploc strip. Thanks though.
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Even if the backup power system works, it won't do any good if the electronics they're powering are shot. Is that an unreasonable concern? Wouldn't the actual broadcast equipment be damaged?