A neophyte shottist's exploration and exercise.... Read by dozens daily
Monday, January 20, 2020
Of course Northam's gun control will target the black community
All gun control is racist. It always has been. It's primary target is black people. Duh. Secondarily targeting white trash rednecks is an a more recent afterthought.
Possibly, but I tend to think that isn't as big a part of the gun control movement anymore. I tend to think the major factor is simply CONTROL. There are always people who want power, and to be the ones who set the rules for the rest of us to follow. Most of us just want people to leave us alone. The problem is that the others will never stop until they are the ones in charge. That is why I have to (reluctantly) support the rallies in Virginia. Yes, there are risks, but if we keep our passive demeanor, the will walk all over us. At some point, we have to stand up and push back. What the gun rights movement has done so far on the political side hasn't amounted to much more than a holding action. On the other hand, look at what vocal demonstrations and rallies have done for gay rights - not long ago, people laughed at the idea of gay marriage. Nobody laughs now.
One of the factors inside the issues they'd with the unique stamped receiver might also have been the sort of metal being used. Having the right sort of metallic, in quantity, and with regular characteristics could be important for success. If the steel became “wrong”, they might have had troubles with cracking, wrinkles, “spring back”, etc.
Advanced stamping become a rather new era on the time, and huge scale demand for it was in large part driven by the automobile and equipment industries. Since those industries had been customer product oriented it’s quite viable that Soviet metal mills had little experience in that area. You also want to feature to that the fact that a number of the conventional coal and steel regions were overrun and damaged in the war.
I reserve the right to delete patently offensive comments. Or, really, any comment I feel like. Or I might leave a really juicy comment up for private ridicule. Also spammers.
You can always offend hippies in the comment section. Chances are, those will be held up as a proper example...
Possibly, but I tend to think that isn't as big a part of the gun control movement anymore. I tend to think the major factor is simply CONTROL. There are always people who want power, and to be the ones who set the rules for the rest of us to follow. Most of us just want people to leave us alone. The problem is that the others will never stop until they are the ones in charge. That is why I have to (reluctantly) support the rallies in Virginia. Yes, there are risks, but if we keep our passive demeanor, the will walk all over us. At some point, we have to stand up and push back. What the gun rights movement has done so far on the political side hasn't amounted to much more than a holding action. On the other hand, look at what vocal demonstrations and rallies have done for gay rights - not long ago, people laughed at the idea of gay marriage. Nobody laughs now.
ReplyDeleteOne of the factors inside the issues they'd with the unique stamped receiver might also have been the sort of metal being used. Having the right sort of metallic, in quantity, and with regular characteristics could be important for success. If the steel became “wrong”, they might have had troubles with cracking, wrinkles, “spring back”, etc.
ReplyDeleteAdvanced stamping become a rather new era on the time, and huge scale demand for it was in large part driven by the automobile and equipment industries. Since those industries had been customer product oriented it’s quite viable that Soviet metal mills had little experience in that area. You also want to feature to that the fact that a number of the conventional coal and steel regions were overrun and damaged in the war.