Why the fuck not?
if the press and Obama never stuck their noses in a local issue, he'd have no more problems other than dealing with shooting someone, instead he was on trial for his life and all the BS that came along with it.
So fuck yeah, cash in, make some money.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nati ... /84319096/
The $65million POS 9mm
Moderator: Dux
The $65million POS 9mm
"God forbid we tell the savages to go fuck themselves." Batboy
Re: The $65million POS 9mm
Be kind of ironic if someone bought it and shot him with it.
Don’t believe everything you think.
Re: The $65million POS 9mm
I wonder if Zman was a nutbag* from the start, or just a weak man who fell apart under the pressure.
*Even nutbags have the right to defend themselves.
*Even nutbags have the right to defend themselves.
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
W.B. Yeats
Are full of passionate intensity.
W.B. Yeats
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Re: The $65million POS 9mm
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/4 ... s-congress
Lieutenant Colonel Terry S. Russell is no stranger to firearms. During his 27 years as a soldier, Russell has “been fully trained and qualified, at a minimum annually, to skillfully employ handguns and rifles.” Now, he is stationed at New Jersey’s Picatinny Arsenal, where he serves as the “Product Manager for the Army’s Individual Weapons and Small Arms program.” This, by all accounts, is a senior role. Picatinny is not merely one installation of many but the national headquarters of the United States Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center; and Lieutenant Colonel Russell oversees not only the weapons on his own base but all “small arms” for the U.S. Department of Defense. There are few people in the United States of America who know more about guns. And yet the state of New Jersey will not give Russell a concealed-carry permit. Almost exactly a year ago, Lieutenant Colonel Russell applied for a license so that he might carry a handgun when driving from his base at Picatinny to his home in Oceanport, N.J. In support of his request, Russell explained that “service members, including family members, have been specifically targeted by radical extremist” groups; that the U.S. military has “verified” that “ISIS has placed a significant emphasis to actively identify US military personnel”; and that Picatinny itself had been evacuated recently “due to the discovery of a dry run attempt to drive a Vehicle Borne Improved Explosive Device onto Post.” In addition, Russell noted that he has been “vetted through the Department of Defense security office every five years for the past 25 years”; that he has a “Top Secret (TS) Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) clearance”; and that he is already in possession of a “Texas concealed handgun license.” And the powers that be just shrugged. Responding to the application, Oceanport’s chief of police, Daniel W. Barcus, contended that Russell had failed to demonstrate “justifiable need”: “There are no specific threats or previous attacks on you,” Barcus wrote, and neither is there any “special danger to your life that cannot be avoided by means other than by issuance of a permit to carry a handgun.” The answer to the question was “no.” Leaving aside the thoroughly risible idea that one should be able to exercise one’s right to self-defense only if one has already survived an attack — and ignoring for a moment how unacceptable it is to require free men and women to give a “good reason” before they may enjoy their constitutional rights — one is left wondering here who exactly would qualify under these conditions? If New Jersey does not consider high-target military-arms experts to be eligible, whom precisely will it accept? There is no plausible manner in which Lieutenant Colonel Russell represents a security threat to the public, and it is arrogance of the highest order for the Oceanport police department to so casually dismiss the danger that American servicemen face on domestic soil. Given the state’s overt and routine hostility toward the Second Amendment, one could be forgiven for thinking that New Jersey has effectively instituted a concealed-carry regime that is impossible for anybody to navigate, and that it has done so quite deliberately to boot. Lt. Col. Terry R. Russell (Photo: US Army) That, certainly, is the charge that Lieutenant Colonel Russell’s attorney made in the course of his appeal. Arguing that the state has implemented an egregiously “narrow interpretation of the ‘justifiable need’ requirement,” Evan F. Nappen charged that the way in which concealed-carry licensing works in New Jersey is unconstitutional. “A denial of this license,” Nappen proposed, “would be a violation of Lt. Col. Russell’s Second Amendment rights under Heller and McDonald, which not only guarantee his fundamental right to bear arms, but his right to self-defense.” As regards the specific justification that police chief Barcus proffered, Nappen explained that “the higher the rank, the more of a target a soldier is,” and noted for the record that, absent certain security clearances, Russell was unable to divulge the specific threats that the state had rendered prerequisite. In its brief, the state remained wholly unmoved. “Although there may have been threats received at the Picatinny Arsenal,” Monmouth County prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni wrote, “none of these threats appear to specifically relate to this applicant — he is in no different position than any other person who is assigned to that facility.” Two weeks ago, the judge in the case concurred, writing that “there is no justifiable need to issue the Petitioner a permit to carry” and confirming that “Petitioner’s application for a Permit to Carry a Handgun is DENIED.”
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/4 ... s-congress
"Start slowly, then ease off". Tortuga Golden Striders Running Club, Pensacola 1984.
"But even snake wrestling beats life in the cube, for me at least. In measured doses."-Lex
"But even snake wrestling beats life in the cube, for me at least. In measured doses."-Lex