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All About Guns Fieldcraft

The True Distance of a Typical Gunfight

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All About Guns

A Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS in 12 GA

Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 2
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 3
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 4
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 5
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 6
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 7
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 8
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 9
Lefever NITRO SPECIAL SIDE BY SIDE SHOTGUN 30 INCH BARRELS WOOD STOCK DOUBLE TRIGGERS NICE 12 GA - Picture 10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Good News for a change!

What I think that a Fighter Jet should look like – The F-86

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All About Guns

I wonder what caliber it is?

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All About Guns

A Winchester Model 1894 Pre-64 .30 W. C. F Dated 1908

Winchester Model 1894 Pre-64 .30 W. C. F Dated 1908 Superb Scoped Rifle + 1908 Tang Peep Rear Sight Marble Exc Bore .30-30 Winchester - Picture 2
Winchester Model 1894 Pre-64 .30 W. C. F Dated 1908 Superb Scoped Rifle + 1908 Tang Peep Rear Sight Marble Exc Bore .30-30 Winchester - Picture 3
Winchester Model 1894 Pre-64 .30 W. C. F Dated 1908 Superb Scoped Rifle + 1908 Tang Peep Rear Sight Marble Exc Bore .30-30 Winchester - Picture 4
Winchester Model 1894 Pre-64 .30 W. C. F Dated 1908 Superb Scoped Rifle + 1908 Tang Peep Rear Sight Marble Exc Bore .30-30 Winchester - Picture 5
Winchester Model 1894 Pre-64 .30 W. C. F Dated 1908 Superb Scoped Rifle + 1908 Tang Peep Rear Sight Marble Exc Bore .30-30 Winchester - Picture 7

 

 

 

 

 

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Grumpy's hall of Shame

Boom time for Afghan arms dealers in Taliban heartland

Weapons dealers in Panjwai, Kandahar province, are flush with inventory after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan
Weapons dealers in Panjwai, Kandahar province, are flush with inventory after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan JAVED TANVEER AFP
Panjwai (Afghanistan) (AFP)

The Taliban takeover may have plunged Afghanistan into uncertainty and economic pain, but arms dealer Khan Mohammad is making the most of it.

Sandwiched between a pharmacy and a general store, his shop in the Panjwai district of southern Kandahar province — the spiritual birthplace of the Taliban — is flush with fresh inventory.

Camouflage combat vests and bandoliers hung from the walls as Mohammed showed off his wares, including US-made Smith & Wesson pistols and ammunition belts.

More pistols, grenades, walkie-talkies and jars full of bullets lined the glass display in the front.

Pistols, ammunition belts and accessories are on sale in the Panjwai market
Pistols, ammunition belts and accessories are on sale in the Panjwai market JAVED TANVEER AFP

The end of the conflict has led many weapon-owners to conclude they no longer need them, Mohammad explained.

“People who have had guns at home for years bring us their weapons,” he said.

Mohammad has a customer lined up too.

“We buy them and sell… to the Mujahideen,” he said, referring to the Taliban.

“The Taliban don’t let anyone else take (the weapons).”

Mohammad did not just have weapons — there were accessories too.

The Panjwai arms dealers also have Taliban flags and accessories for sale
The Panjwai arms dealers also have Taliban flags and accessories for sale JAVED TANVEER AFP

White Taliban baseball caps with the Muslim proclamation of faith printed on them hung from the ceiling. The group’s flags were also on sale.

Another dealer in the dusty Panjwai market, whose shop was adorned with large Taliban flags and pictures of the group’s top leaders, had more potent offerings.

They included assault rifles — variants of the AK-47 as well as the US-made M4 and M16 — and even light machine guns.

The Taliban for years procured weapons and ammunition from the black market. They also captured arms and equipment from the battlefield and abandoned military posts, according to UN and Western monitors.

Pistols, hand grenades and ammunition are seen on display at a shop in Panjwai, Kandahar
Pistols, hand grenades and ammunition are seen on display at a shop in Panjwai, Kandahar JAVED TANVEER AFP

And the recent collapse of the Afghan military created an arms bonanza for the militants.

Alongside a large haul of American-made infantry weapons, Afghanistan’s new rulers now possess equipment and vehicles — including humvees, armoured personnel carriers, and at least one functioning Black Hawk helicopter.

The militants are also making the most of their spoils.

One arms dealer told AFP that the Taliban purchase their stock, and do not let others buy weapons
One arms dealer told AFP that the Taliban purchase their stock, and do not let others buy weapons JAVED TANVEER AFP

The Taliban are cashing in on a wide variety of items from abandoned Afghan and Western military bases.

They seized Panjwai district in July as the withdrawal of US-led troops from Afghanistan gathered pace.

In the local market, everything from construction material to metal trays salvaged from the district’s Afghan military base was for sale.

“We bought all these things from the Taliban after they conquered the Afghan army base,” said vendor Murtaza, who gave only one name.

“Now we bring them to the market to sell.”

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All About Guns

A Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver in caliber .38 Special

Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 2
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 3
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 4
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 5
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 6
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 7
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 8
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 9
Smith & Wesson Md-14 6 in. Bbl K 38 Revolver .38 Special - Picture 10
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All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Born again Cynic!

Billions’ Worth of Equipment Left Behind, While Feds Purge Records on Afghanistan, Affirm Commitment to Gun Control

Billions’ Worth of Equipment Left Behind, While Feds Purge Records on Afghanistan, Affirm Commitment to Gun Control

As the Taliban celebrates the withdrawal of U.S. forces by parading their American-sourced tactical vehicles, aircraft, guns and other weapons, reports have emerged that the Biden Administration has ordered federal agencies to delete online information respecting the cost of this military equipment and related spending in Afghanistan, while proclaiming its support for more gun control.

Forbes article states that by August 23, at least “two key reports on the U.S. war chest of military gear in Afghanistan … had disappeared from federal websites,” including a Government Accountability Office (GAO) audit of U.S.- funded equipment for Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (GAO-17-667R, Aug. 2017).

A week later, Forbes reported that the U.S. State Department admitted the documents had been removed and had instructed other federal agencies to “review their web properties” for similar content and “remove [it] from public view.” The reason given was the need to ensure the “safety of our Afghan contacts” by deleting information that poses “a security risk.” A GAO spokesperson contacted by Forbes confirmed that “the State Department requested we temporarily remove and review reports on Afghanistan to protect recipients of US assistance that may be identified through our reports and thus subject to retribution.”

In the circumstances, this is a less than convincing justification. The deleted GAO Report, for one, lacks any personally identifiable information about members of the Afghan defense and security forces or other partners. Moreover (as pointed out in the Forbes article), the Biden Administration itself would have directly jeopardized such individuals already, when government officials allegedly provided the Taliban with the names of Afghan allies during the evacuation of Kabul.

A group of U.S. Senators is now demanding that the administration provide a full accounting regarding the U.S. military equipment left behind “as a result of our poorly executed withdrawal from the country,” questioning why such assets weren’t adequately secured prior to announcing the withdrawal from Afghanistan.

A cynic may be excused for believing that the Biden Administration is acting out of concern about the political blowback once the details of the unprecedented extent of state-of-the-art weaponry, paid for by American taxpayers and currently in the hands of the brutal Taliban, become more widely known.

One early casualty of Biden’s fast and furious exit from Afghanistan is the complete loss of credibility on gun control the President and his administration have as a result.

For decades, Joe Biden has pushed for strict gun control, hectoring Americans about the evils of guns in general and “assault weapons” in particular, yet a conservative estimate indicates that the weaponry left behind includes well over half a million rifles, handguns, shotguns and machine guns, together with an undisclosed amount of ammunition (the GAO report did not account for small arms ammunition and other ammunition was included with the billions spent in general “sustainment” expenditures). As NRA-ILA noted earlier, Biden’s “bungling of [the withdrawal] ensured that not just firearms but some of America’s more sophisticated military technology is now available to terrorists and other enemies who are and will continue to use them against Americans, American interests, and American allies.”

Even more jarringly, NRA witnessed – just a day after the August 30 pullout – a State Department official speak at the Seventh Conference of States Parties to the Arms Trade Treaty (“Promoting responsibility in international transfers of conventional arms”) to “underscore the continuing commitment” of the administration “to responsible international trade in conventional arms” and affirm its steadfast support for “strong and effective national controls on the international transfer of conventional arms.”

By now, Americans don’t believe in Biden’s policies or buy into his gun control agenda. A poll released at the beginning of this month shows that only 15% of U.S. voters polled “strongly approve” of President Biden’s handling of “gun policy,” compared to 35% who “strongly disapprove,” and over 60% thought the country had “gotten off on the wrong track.”

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A Victory!

Some Good news for a change of pace

Yes I hate Cats! Grumpy Then there is this bit!

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Fieldcraft

A Public Service Announcement