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#82
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posted to rec.boats
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On 2/16/2018 8:06 AM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 2/15/18 9:46 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 20:33:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Keyser Soze wrote: On 2/15/18 4:47 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 08:23:52 -0800 (PST), Its Me wrote: There is even easier access to kitchen knives, hammers and cars, but it is far more rare that a troubled person uses one of those to kill someone. There must be something other than easy access to drive them to use a gun, eh? Efficiency. The same reason Harry has had an assault rifle of some sort for as long as I can remember. Knives and clubs still kill about 2200 a year vs a few hundred for rifles. I engage in the wholesale slaughter of empty beer and soda cans, plastic soda bottles, and paper targets. No kids or crazed right-wing rec.boaters are going to get their hands on my rifles unless they blow up or carry out my 800-pound safe that is through-bolted to concrete. Unless it's a tiny safe, you don't own a safe.Â* Mine is just over 1500lbs. Harry is a high volume dealer but he never has a lot of inventory in his floor plan. A small safe works for him. BTW have you ever seen how long the typical "gun safe" holds up to a determined thief with modern tools? A diamond blade in a $20 Harbor Fright circular saw will slice through the side or back of these things in a few minutes. A regular "metal" cutting carbide blade will defeat most of them. It is noisy and dusty but effective on just about anything but 1/4" armor plate. Most are 16ga up to 12ga steel with some kind of cement board or even fire code drywall between layers. Well, then, no reason to buy a safe, eh? Because in your world, nothing can be done about anything. The safe I have uses 11-gauge steel, whatever that is. 11 ga steel is just over 1 tenth of an inch thick. Not much thicker than the steel in a file cabinet. Hope that makes you feel secure. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#83
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 09:36:02 -0500, Justan Ohlphart wrote:
On 2/16/2018 8:07 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 21:39:57 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 2/15/18 12:50 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 10:06:14 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: I was just reading about the YouTube blogger who reported the post made by Cruz back in 2017 about "going to be a professional school shooter" to the FBI. The blogger said the local office of the FBI immediately met with him, took the screen capture of Cruz's post and that's the last he ever heard about it. Until yesterday. Seems there are some problems even in the FBI. Why wasn't he questioned? Why didn't they do something? Maybe if he had tweeted about Putin, Trump and a Russian hooker, they would have been paying more attention. Maybe if you two paid attention, you might have known the FBI said there wasn't any info connected to the blog post that would have allowed the agency to trace the "professional school shooter." I guess the fbi was thrown off track by the guy posting with his real name. The FBI is really, really busy trying to prove Trump colluded with Puting to win the election. Give 'em a break. You're right. It's all the gun's fault. There's no need to point fingers at the shrinkers, FBI, law enforcement, justice system, or congress critters. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus Guns like Harry's should be outlawed. Guns like my mini-14 Ranch, with the wooden stock and same capabilities, are OK. |
#84
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 05:25:56 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 2/15/2018 8:44 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 17:20:11 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 2/15/18 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 10:27:49 -0800 (PST), Its Me wrote: On Thursday, February 15, 2018 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote: On 2/15/18 12:50 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 10:06:14 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: I was just reading about the YouTube blogger who reported the post made by Cruz back in 2017 about "going to be a professional school shooter" to the FBI. The blogger said the local office of the FBI immediately met with him, took the screen capture of Cruz's post and that's the last he ever heard about it. Until yesterday. Seems there are some problems even in the FBI. Why wasn't he questioned? Why didn't they do something? Maybe if he had tweeted about Putin, Trump and a Russian hooker, they would have been paying more attention. Maybe if you two paid attention, you might have known the FBI said there wasn't any info connected to the blog post that would have allowed the agency to trace the "professional school shooter." He posted using his name. There was info. Maybe it is time we start holding these big media companies responsible for the activities of their users, whether it is people making threats or russian troll farms. They are the ones with the IP addresses of the poster and generally at least one real Email, the one they use to verify the registration. If these comments were really on You tube (Google) they know a whole lot about you. Why wasn't this asked for and shared with the FBI? I would not be surprised if Google has this guy's physical address, browsing habits, purchases he has made and a profile of his friends. The FBI says the blogger in question was a person living in Mississippi who had no connection to the shooter, and spelled his first name differently. The last name, Cruz, is a very common one among the Latino communities. If he told them about the post, they should have started there and escalated through Google. How many times are we going to give the social media company a pass when these guys announce what they are going to do and nobody looks into it? If you ask Google about anything that flows through one of their servers, they have lots of data about it, more than they even want to admit. At the very least they would have the IP address he posted from and all the information he used to register, along with every other thing they sniffed from that information. It would certainly get you to the East coast of Florida, even if he was at an internet cafe. If he was at home, you could just drive over there using directions from google maps. That is particularly true if he posted from a phone. As for what they know, I don't remember the add on I had on my Firefox but it gave you a web that is created from snooping by web sites you visit. I finally took it off because it was slowing my machine down drawing all these links. According to news reports Cruz left the school by running along with the students as if he was escaping from the shooting. He then went to a Walmart and bought a drink at a Safeway. From there he proceeded to a McDonald's where a cop arrested him. Question: How did the cop know that Cruz was the shooter when he found him at McDonalds? Haven't heard any explanation of that. I heard the kids in the school fingered him and I think he was already "known to the police". I am not sure if he was seen at the McDonalds and reported tho. |
#85
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 08:06:03 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 2/15/18 9:46 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 20:33:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Keyser Soze wrote: On 2/15/18 4:47 PM, wrote: On Thu, 15 Feb 2018 08:23:52 -0800 (PST), Its Me wrote: There is even easier access to kitchen knives, hammers and cars, but it is far more rare that a troubled person uses one of those to kill someone. There must be something other than easy access to drive them to use a gun, eh? Efficiency. The same reason Harry has had an assault rifle of some sort for as long as I can remember. Knives and clubs still kill about 2200 a year vs a few hundred for rifles. I engage in the wholesale slaughter of empty beer and soda cans, plastic soda bottles, and paper targets. No kids or crazed right-wing rec.boaters are going to get their hands on my rifles unless they blow up or carry out my 800-pound safe that is through-bolted to concrete. Unless it's a tiny safe, you don't own a safe. Mine is just over 1500lbs. Harry is a high volume dealer but he never has a lot of inventory in his floor plan. A small safe works for him. BTW have you ever seen how long the typical "gun safe" holds up to a determined thief with modern tools? A diamond blade in a $20 Harbor Fright circular saw will slice through the side or back of these things in a few minutes. A regular "metal" cutting carbide blade will defeat most of them. It is noisy and dusty but effective on just about anything but 1/4" armor plate. Most are 16ga up to 12ga steel with some kind of cement board or even fire code drywall between layers. Well, then, no reason to buy a safe, eh? Because in your world, nothing can be done about anything. The safe I have uses 11-gauge steel, whatever that is. 1/8" sheet metal. A side grinder will go right through it although a metal blade in a circular saw is faster and easier to control. Safes are a good way to store your guns and keep them away from curious hands (kids and sightseers). It also gives you fairly good climate control but a thief who knows what he wants to steal is not going to be deterred very long. My buddy with all of the machine guns decided armoring a closet with 3/4" plywood and a layer of 18ga galvanized was as good as a safe and a whole lot cheaper. He put in the best commercial roll up door in there he could find. He figures that will stop anyone who has never been to Home Depot. I have a number of "safes", all fairly well hidden in compartments that are not easy to detect. That is fairly easy to do when you are building or remodeling. Just don't make it easy to figure out how thick a wall is. (you can't see both sides without going around a few corners) My theory is if they can't find it, they can't steal it. I also have a couple hide out guns in hidden compartments that are easier to access but still requiring a trick, like a keypad. That would be my go to thing if the Philistines were at the gate. Fortunately I live in a place that is safe enough that I am not really worried about it. In Maryland I had my 97 Winchester loaded under the bed and a .45 in the night stand. |
#86
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 09:49:40 -0500, Justan Ohlphart
wrote: Well, then, no reason to buy a safe, eh? Because in your world, nothing can be done about anything. The safe I have uses 11-gauge steel, whatever that is. 11 ga steel is just over 1 tenth of an inch thick. Not much thicker than the steel in a file cabinet. Hope that makes you feel secure. Actually 11ga is .125" and really thick for a typical gun safe. File cabinets are usually 18-20ga and cheap ones less than that. The "security" Steelcase ones we had at IBM were 18ga. The regular ones were 20ga as I recall (it may be 16/18). I have a regular one back in the shop I keep my ammo in. I suppose I could check it. The difference is just how fast the cut goes tho. If someone is serious and brings a 14" cutoff saw, 1/4" steel is going down pretty fast. It really just depends on how much they want your guns and if they know they are there in the first place. Big safes, usually mean lots of valuable guns. Harry may be attracting unnecessary attention to his modest collection ;-) |
#87
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posted to rec.boats
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#88
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 10:34:53 -0500, John H.
wrote: Guns like Harry's should be outlawed. Guns like my mini-14 Ranch, with the wooden stock and same capabilities, are OK. Maryland has some strange laws. My M1A is banned but a Polytech M-14 does not make the list nor does an HBAR AR-15. They say it is because the HBAR is a "target" rifle. Well what in the hell is an M1A then? This is even the "ban" model without some of the military features that seem to make California law makers nervous. When exactly was the last time we had a mass killing with a bayonet charge anyway? |
#89
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posted to rec.boats
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#90
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 13:18:32 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 2/16/18 1:09 PM, wrote: On Fri, 16 Feb 2018 09:49:40 -0500, Justan Ohlphart wrote: Well, then, no reason to buy a safe, eh? Because in your world, nothing can be done about anything. The safe I have uses 11-gauge steel, whatever that is. 11 ga steel is just over 1 tenth of an inch thick. Not much thicker than the steel in a file cabinet. Hope that makes you feel secure. Actually 11ga is .125" and really thick for a typical gun safe. File cabinets are usually 18-20ga and cheap ones less than that. The "security" Steelcase ones we had at IBM were 18ga. The regular ones were 20ga as I recall (it may be 16/18). I have a regular one back in the shop I keep my ammo in. I suppose I could check it. The difference is just how fast the cut goes tho. If someone is serious and brings a 14" cutoff saw, 1/4" steel is going down pretty fast. It really just depends on how much they want your guns and if they know they are there in the first place. Big safes, usually mean lots of valuable guns. Harry may be attracting unnecessary attention to his modest collection ;-) I no longer own firearms other than those available at normal retail, and none of them would much interest the mass shooters that seem extant these days... What rifles used by the shooters are not available? Bull****! |
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