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Westley Richards .318 Accelerated Express

WR .318 2 WR .318 1WR .318 3WR .318 #39452-2773-Edit WR .318 #39452-2776-Edit

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Don't Be a Racist!

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Westley-Richards (.318 Nitro)

Gratuitous Gun Pic – Westley-Richards (.318 Nitro)

From Mr. Free Market comes this gem from the past, a Westley Richards takedown rifle, based on a Mauser 98 action:

Westley Richards & Co. has been around since the early nineteenth century, making them one of the oldest gunmakers extant. They have made both rifles and shotguns, the latter including models designed by the brilliant gunsmith John Deeley (which I’ll talk about some other time).
But that’s not what I want to talk about today. Rather, I’d like to talk about their proprietary cartridge, the .318 Westley Richards (or as it’s more commonly known, the .318 Nitro), which came onto the market around 1907/08. Here’s a pic (from Wikipedia) which compares the .318 to other, more famous medium-game cartridges:

Note the long, thin(-nish) 250-grain bullet*, akin to the 7x57mm Mauser (a.k.a. .276 Rigby) and the 6.5x55mm Swedish bullets.
This gives the .318 exceptional penetration, and given the times it was popular, it should come as no surprise that the .318 Nitro has felled more elephant —  in their thousands — than just about any other cartridge.
Walter “Karamojo” Bell used it to great effect along with his other elephant-killer, the .276 Rigby, as did many other Great White Hunters.
The.318 Nitro was superseded by later medium game cartridges (like the superb .375 H&H Magnum) which had “belted” cases to handle the extra pressure.
It will come as no surprise to Longtime Readers that this is of no concern to me, because I happen to think that many of the “older” cartridges are perfectly fine, thank you. (I have an old essay on this very topic, and as soon as I find it, I’ll re-publish it.)
I’ve never fired the .318 Nitro, nor have I ever fired a Westley Richards rifle, but I have to tell you all that after looking at Mr. FM’s picture… I have no idea what the rifle costs (several arms and legs, no doubt), but it’s irrelevant: it’s just drop-dead gorgeous. Sadly, though, Mr. FM’s following comment is quite true:

“Another one of those calibers that looks great on paper but trying to get ammo would be a nightmare.”

Sigh.


*In modern nomenclature, the .318 would be termed a .330 because nowadays we measure bullets from the inside-groove depth rather than from the “lands”, which was the British custom when this rifle was made.
 

4 COMMENTS

  1. I couldn’t even afford the un-cut stock blank. If I could, I would put it in a well lit glass display case.
    On the plus side, I lived in Chico, CA for near 30 years. At on time, it was a small town surrounded by vast orchards, a sizeable portion of which were walnuts. Times change, and the walnuts began to be changed out for citrus (oranges). A couple of enterprising lads got into the wood business, specifically gun stock blanks. Chico became world renowned in the gun industry for supplying AAA fancy walnut stock blanks to the finest gun makers on the planet. I was fortunate to have more than one opportunity peruse the inventory (no, I couldn’t afford them then, either).
  2. Per the above comments, that stock is stunning. BUT around 30 yrs or more ago as I remember, there were numerous articles proclaiming the demise of old growth American and French walnut for gunstocks. This kindof was the time plywood and plastic stocks came into vogue. I suspect today is probably the last generation to be able to buy such superb wood stocks. At astronomic prices no doubt. Youngins I’ve talked too just don’t appreciate wood. Shooter games they play just can’t convey the beauty and feel of wood. Sad.
  3. “Westley Richards & Co. has been around since the early nineteenth century, making them one of the oldest gunmakers extant.”
    FWIW, I know the gentleman who own the oldest known surviving Westley Richards firearm. It’s a muzzle-loading shotgun. Serial number 4.
    Shot: He shoots it.
    Chaser: He’s won World Muzzle-Loading Championship events with that gun.

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Well I thought it was funny!

How to understand the Media Message

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Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4" Small Frame Double Action Revolver, MFD 1904 in .32 S&W

Image result for Colt New Police .32 This is another gun as I could not find a good photo of this gun on its right side on the web.
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
Colt New Police .32, Cincinnati Police Department Marked, Blue 4
















 “The Colt New Police is a double-action, six-shot revolver (which can also be fired single action).
This gun was chambered in the .32 New Police, which is dimensionally identical to a flat-nose version of the .32 S&W Long, except for the nose shape.
In addition to the .32 New Police cartridge, the revolver was available in 32 Colt. The diameters of the two cartridges are not the same, with the 32 Colt being approximately 0.020 inches smaller in diameter than the New Police. Although the 32 Colt can be loaded and fired in the New Police chamber, it is not recommended to do so.
It is impossible to load the .32 New Police in a 32 Colt chamber. The later .32 New Police chambering was more popular than the 32 Colt chambering.
The Colt New Police was manufactured from 1896 to 1907 by Colt’s Manufacturing Company of Hartford, Connecticut.
The sights on the revolver were fixed with a round blade in front and a grooved rear sight. The revolver was available with a ?2 1/2-inch, four-inch, or six-inch barrel in a blued or nickel finish and hard rubber grips.
The Colt New Police was selected by New York City (NYPD) Police Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt in 1896 to be the first standard-issue revolver for NYPD officers.
Image result for Roosevelt & the NYPD
A target version was made until 1905 with a 6-inch barrel and adjustable sights.
The New Police Revolver was replaced in the Colt catalog in 1907 by the improved Colt Police Positive, which featured an internal hammer block safety and better lock work.”

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Gunshot wounds in the field tips

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Image result for gunshot wounds
Hopefully you will never need to know this stuff. But then you never really know for sure about anything these days!
So keep your head and pay attention to what is going on.
As the threat might still be around!
Remember that you are useless to anybody if you get shot too!

  • Direct pressure, elevation, pressure bandage—in that order. Elevate the wound above the heart, and apply a pressure bandage. …
  • If all else fails in an extremity, go to a tourniquet. (It may come down to “lose a limb or lose a life.” …
  • If the area is rapidly swelling, that’s a sign of internal bleeding.
  • GET HELP ASAP! Hopefully somebody will have a cell phone that works!
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Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case .36 Caliber Ball

Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 2


Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 3
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 4
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 5
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 6
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 7
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 8
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 9
Colt Signature Series 1851 Navy Consecutive Pair, Rick Hacker Collection, Blue & Case Colored 7 1/2 - Single Action Percussion Revolvers, Boxes & Case! - Picture 10













 
These models need no introduction, nor does the fact that Colt reintroduced their black powder revolvers a number of times due to popularity. Because they just look cool in my humble opinion!

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Gear & Stuff Gun Info for Rookies

10 Gun Tips You Need To Know About Flying With Guns

Posted by Tom McHale

on Jul 3, 2014 11:35:00 AM

how-to-fly-with-guns
Here’s a bold statement.
When you fly the friendly skies, you’ll experience more invasion of privacy, groping and unwanted scrutiny when you walk through the TSA checkpoint than when you try to check guns in your baggage.
I fly enough that the majority of currently employed TSA agents are intimately familiar with every square inch of my body. But groping aside, I’ve found checking guns by following the rules to be a simple and straightforward process – as long as you carefully follow the rules.
Be aware that there are always two sets of rules: those set by the TSA and those set by your airline. In a perfect world, they will be consistent with each other, but be aware, that doesn’t always happen.
Let’s review a checklist for hassle-free flying with guns.

Trolley1. Buy or borrow a lockable hard case.

Per the regulations, it can be a case with integrated combinations locks, but I prefer a case with multiple holes for heavy duty padlocks of my choosing. Do NOT use TSA locks on your gun case. This is a misunderstood area of the law and, technically speaking, it’s illegal for you to do so. Per the letter of the law, as discussed in the footnotes of this article, you alone must maintain possession of the keys or combination to open your gun case. You cannot lock it in such a way that others have access. By using TSA locks on your gun case, lots of people, just about anyone in fact, technically has access to your guns. TSA locks are NOT secure and not even TSA agents are supposed to have access to your case, once cleared, without you being present to unlock the case.
One more thing about cases. If you travel with a pistol, you might want to get a larger than necessary case, like this one. You can legally place other items besides your gun in the case, like cameras or computer equipment.

2. Check your airline’s website to review their policies.

While most are essentially the same, they don’t have to be. Print out the policy page to bring with you. With all that ticketing agents need to know, not every agent will have a complete understanding of their airline’s gun policy.

3. Review the TSA policy website for the latest information.

It can, and does, change. That’s your tax dollars at work folks. Print this out also, as different TSA agents have different understandings of their own policy. Really.

4. Unload your gun and magazine.

Complete this step while still at home! Check the chamber to make sure that’s empty. I like to pack my guns in the case with cylinder or action locked open so it’s very apparent the gun is in a safe condition. That’s not required, just good manners.
Shop Airline approved gun cases
 

5. Weigh your gun case and ammunition.

Most airlines will allow up to 11 pounds of ammunition. And, like any luggage, you will be charged more for any baggage weighing more than 50 pounds. This sounds like a lot, but when traveling to the Crimson Trace Midnight 3 Gun competition last year, my case with shotgun, rifle, pistol and ammunition tipped the scale past the 50 pound mark.

6. You can pack ammo in the same locking case.

This is another area that’s misunderstood and full of internet myth. Your ammo just needs to be stored in some type of safe container and not loose. Technically, you can keep ammunition in magazines, but I wouldn’t recommend it. It meets the letter of the law storage requirement, but too many airline and TSA agents will give you grief. Use a plastic ammo box or original cardboard packaging and you’ll be fine carrying that in the same lockable case as your gun.

7. Carry your gun case in the closed and locked condition into the airport until you meet the ticketing agent.

You can’t do curbside check in, so be prepared to go inside to your airline counter. When checking in, calmly tell the ticketing agent that you have a firearm to declare. It helps if you don’t yell something like “I’VE GOT A GUN!!!” Unless you live in one of the Republik states, the agent won’t even bat an eye. They deal with this all the time. The agent will tell you what do to and when. Some airports call TSA straight to the counter. Others have an airline agent escort you to a TSA checkpoint with your luggage. Just do what they say and you’ll be fine. At some point, they will have you fill out an orange declaration card and place it in your gun case.

8. Hang out and chill for a bit.

Don’t rush from the ticket counter to the gate. Once your gun case leaves your possession, there is still a chance TSA will need you to re-open the case. Most airports will tell you to wait for a bit in case they page you. The subtle message here is to always be sure to arrive at the airport plenty early if you plan to check a firearm. Time is your friend and the whole process will be a lot less stressful.

9. Make sure you bring the padlock keys in your carry on luggage.

I left mine in the car once and dropped them in my checked baggage another time. Fortunately, I figured out my error in time to correct it, else TSA would have been more than happy to cut my locks off.

10. Be prepared for surprises.

Yes, TSA might clear your gun case upon your departure. Yes, some other TSA agent may cut your locks off somewhere between your departure gate and your final destination. They’re not supposed to without a really good reason, but it happens. Again, that’s your tax dollars at work. You can yell, scream and stomp your feet, but you won’t win that battle. Accept the cost of new locks as part of doing business. On the other hand, if your guns are missing, I personally would tell the airline and destination TSA agents that I was calling the FBI immediately to report an interstate theft of firearms. That ought to get you some attention.
I’ve flown many, many times with one or more firearms and have never had a serious issue. Yes, some airports act differently, but I’ve never lost a gun or had a serious run in with the G-men.
The key is preparation and attention to detail. If you do everything right, your trip will be uneventful for both your and your guns.

Some extra footnotes

Here are a few things to be aware of that you may or may not encounter.
First, some airports, like Bend, Oregon, violate federal law. That’s a harsh statement, but it’s true, or was, the last time I traveled through there with guns. The TSA folks asked for my keys so they could inspect my gun cases in a back room, secure, TSA area. I was not allowed to accompany them. According to the Code of Federal Regulations:

Title 49: Transportation, Part 1540 – Civil Aviation Security: General Rules, Subpart B – Responsibilities of Passengers and Other Individuals and Persons, 1540.111 (c) (iv) – The container in which it is carried is locked, and only the passenger retains the key or combination.
Title 49: Transportation, Part 1544 – Aircraft Operator Security: Air Carriers and Commercial Operators,  Subpart C – Operations, 1544.203 (f) (iii) The container in which it is carried is locked, and only the individual checking the baggage retains the key or combination;

Basically, I, the owner, MUST not surrender my keys or combination to anyone. From a practical perspective, good luck with that. When fighting with the federal government over obscure details like this, you will not win in the short term. You may win in the long term, but odds are you won’t make your flight at the scheduled time. So choose your battles carefully. You can be right all day long and still not make it past the TSA checkpoint.
If you’re traveling with optics that you don’t trust to the baggage handlers, you can take those as carry on baggage. Obviously you have to remove it from your gun first! But it’s no problem carryon a scope onto the plane as long as there is no gun attached.
Avoid connecting through New York. Yes, this is another harsh statement, but too many folks have spent too many nights in jail and spent too many tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees not to mention it. If you are legally allowed to have a gun from your departure point, and legally allowed to have it at your destination, under federal law, you are supposed to be able to travel from point A to point B without interference. Unfortunately, some places, like New York, realize that they have more lawyers than you can afford, and choose to harass law abiding travelers anyway, knowing full well there’s not much you can do about it. Most times, if you have a connecting flight through New York, you’ll be fine. Your checked gun case will get moved on to the next flight and all will be well. The gotcha occurs when the travel gremlins arrive. If your flight is canceled or delayed, and you have to spend the night, now you are taking a gun from the airport baggage claim to the hotel then back to the airport again. And given ridiculous laws like the new SAFE Act, your gun is most likely illegal in New York. You may meet Officer Friendly when arriving at the airport the next morning. Welcome to the pokey and I hope you get along with your cell mate. I won’t schedule an itinerary through there for exactly this reason. It sounds far-fetched, yes, but tell that to the folks who have been arrested and harassed. Unfortunately, it happens.

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Winchester Repeating Arms Company Model 95 Take-Down Lever Action

Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 1

Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 2
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 3
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 4
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 5
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 6
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 7
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 8
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 9
Winchester Repeating Arms Company - MODEL 95 TAKE-DOWN LEVER ACTION W/24 INCH BARREL. - Picture 10

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Why The Left Hates Guns

Sadly this makes sense to me!                                               Grumpy

Is the Pope a Catholic? Does the Left hate guns? People of the left hate guns more than almost anything else they remotely associate with the despised right, more than gas guzzlers, home school families, coal companies and coal miners, confederate flags and statues or pro-life protestors.
Mention the NRA and watch it trigger spasms of fury and outpourings of disgust from an over-stimulated SJW. The NRA for them is evil incarnate. No other organization is likely more detested and execrated.
What is it about guns that make people on the left hate them so much and harbor so much contempt for those people – not so much the criminals who use them, but the ordinary, law-abiding people who insist on owning them?
To begin with, guns are dangerous weapons, essential to the conduct of those human survival-occupations that were long in the exclusive domain of men – hunting, policing, war-making – activities that by their very nature involve violence and appeal to the most risk-seeking, masculine sorts of men.
The feminized, cult-Marx leftists who want little boys to be more like little girls and grow up to be latte-sipping pajama boys and metro-sexuals, instinctively recoil at just the thought of men with arms.
They seem to think that violence is just an old fashion sort of thing that unliberated (non-gelded) men still enjoy and employ in order to affirm their atavistic masculinity, sustain their corrupt institutions, and threaten the “vulnerables” who populate the victim classes, e.g. young black males shot by racist white policemen.
Consider also the power-dimensions of gun possession: a gun, even a very small one, is an amazing instrument of power. A ninety-pound woman physically confronted by a two hundred-pound man with a BMI of 25 has little power to resist his assault or aggression. A gun in her (non-feminist) hand completely changes the power equation.
By virtue of his superior size and relative strength, the man can seriously injure or murder the woman sans gun. With it, she can easily kill him if he attempts to harm her. His advantage-conveying, extra 110 pounds and bigger bones and muscles are instantly nullified by the discharge from her 25 ounce Ruger.
Guns enforce power-relations which is why police and soldiers carry them and which is also another reason why leftists hate them.
Police and soldiers are a class of human beings socialized in the use of institutionally sanctioned violence, making them foreign and threatening creatures to the sort of people preoccupied with micro-aggressions, correct gender pronouns, and safe spaces, the sort who protest outside a prison and break down in tears when a homicidal sadist strapped on a table inside gets a stiff dose of sodium thiopental.
Guns also can disturb power-relations, a fact that helps explain why guns are such a centerpiece of the raging culture war in America. Think of today’s red states, heartland USA, as America’s Vendée under assault from the Washington DC Jacobins.
Then recall candidate Obama’s 2008 condescending “bitter clingers to their guns or religion” slur before his San Francisco adulators directed at the white voters in western Pennsylvania.
The “religion” per Obama of these “bitter clingers” represents their intolerable spiritual resistance to the ruling, leveling ideology of transgenderism, gay rights and the anti-racism that has launched the lawless BLM and the Antifas.
The “guns” that Obama would like to take away are the material piece of the resistance of our own beleaguered Vendeans. Obama’s remarks were nothing less than a declaration of his intention to reduce in every possible way these people he had smeared as bigots to a powerless, atomistic mass of needy, compliant supplicants to the federal legions of panjandrums and faceless bureaucrats.
The left, of course, would love to confiscate all the guns in this country down to the very last BB gun claiming that it would it would end the rampages of psychotic shooters.
This is one of their phantasms of “progress.” Criminalize the possession of something in high demand and relatively easy to produce and you will see a dramatic spike in its price because of the seller’s criminal risk.
High prices attract high-risk entrepreneurs (aggressive young men usually) into the marketplace who form powerful, sophisticated crime syndicates that are (a) very competitive and hence extremely violent and (b) cater successfully to vast markets for their illegal product.
Does this sound familiar? The massive infusion of drugs into the U.S. with the accompanying violence dramatically illustrates how the unintended consequences of firearm confiscation, if attempted, would unfold.
Government confiscation of guns would drastically increase (criminalized) gun ownership and vastly increase gun violence, not to mention the exhaustion of law enforcement resources and the complete political alienation of large numbers of American citizens.
Self-defense, leftists sneeringly dismiss as a legitimate reason to own a gun – that is what the State is for.
Try not to choke on the hypocrisy. They are protected 24×7 by armed secret service personnel (Hillary, Obama and their families) or live in safe, posh suburbs with expensive, sophisticated security systems and reliable, predictable police protection.
But for those “folks” for whom they have so much compassion and about whom they know so little, those folks who have to worry about the muggers, rapists, wife-batterers, drug peddlers and strung out junkies who populate their neighborhoods?
Well, they are supposed to cherish how virtuous they will feel without those awful guns they don’t need and
hope a cop might show up before someone in the family gets raped or murdered.
We all know that there are large sections of some of the cities in the U.S. (governed by anti-gun Democrat politicians) where the police reluctantly go.
The State is quite selective in the protection it provides for its citizens and “the “State” for the “ruled-over” is a useless abstraction.
The pervasive cynicism and skepticism now aimed at those who operate it are completely justified. These “public servants” enjoy all of the perks of their offices that the rest of us only envy.
Our political class betters make onerous rules for their inferiors to live under, but not for themselves. To see how this works every single day, go to an airport.
Watch the sorry parade of ordinary, law-abiding citizens forced (coerced) to act like motley inmates of a county-jail work detail as they are made to strip off their clothes – jackets, belts, shoes, jewelry – and thrust their wrist-clasped arms above their heads in symbolic surrender before the scanners of their naked bodies.
Ordered about by the throngs of federal warders, the subjects – no longer citizens – must watch them paw through their personal belongings, pat down old women and young children, their hands intruding into very private parts of the body.
Do any of our esteemed legislators and executives endure these indignities?
At election time these vultures descend from their comfortable, lofty perches to perform tedious rituals of pretending to care when what they really want is just more power and the advantages and privileges that come with it.
The animosity of the left for guns is also about the special kind of snobbery they indulge that relates to the work they do and the way they live.
They tend to work in the realm of ideas and at activities intended to influence the thinking and actions of others. They teach in schools and universities, run media outlets and newspapers, manage and administer NGOs, market and sell products, process paper in government offices.
Some of them are “grievance specialists” at universities and other organizations, professional busybodies and scolds who operate under the rubric of “diversity”, a code word that permits them to hector and bully whomever they please.
These types don’t change the oil in their own cars,
fix things they own when they break down, make or grow anything they use or consume.
They pay “other people” to do things like this, and they mostly look down on them.
These “other people” tend to like guns. They live and think conservatively and work at jobs such as policemen, firemen, mechanics, truck drivers, construction workers and run small businesses.
They hunt, fish, bowl, fix their own cars, go to church, take care of their grandparents, join the military and do many other things that offend the sensibilities of the left.
For the Prius-driving, inequality-obsessed Sociology professor who campaigned for Hillary and rails against Trump, the gun-toting policeman he loathes and execrates in his 101 classes could not respond quickly enough to his summons when he thinks a burglar might be near.
The left will never relinquish their hostility toward gun owners and never abandon their efforts at gun control. “Gun control” is a euphemism, an essential piece of the larger picture that defines the essence of the left and what they aspire to, complete control of others.
Because they believe themselves to be uniquely entitled to order and manage the lives of everybody, they observe no restraints of honesty or fair play.
Be assured, they will relentlessly intrude themselves into every corner of our lives so as to make the rest of us into what they think we should be, pale, inferior imitations of themselves.
Guns are a huge obstacle to this goal. Viva the cold dead fingers!