.
WoodyWood- I'm following you! Don't worry, not in real life 🙂
Lunchbox- I helped a friend restore the stock of a
mosin-nagant, the wood turned out truly lovely.
Gropius- The rule is you don't shoot anything you don't want to eat. So for my group (two tech execs, a physicist, a psychologist, I'm in PWT one in the group) this amounts to cardboard and stone tiles. We always pick up and recycle our targets and there really is a very nice picnic at the end.
who's rules?
Grendel - That may be your rule, but do you really eat all that cardboard and stone tile after you shoot it? Doesn't sound like a very nice picnic to me.
Not to mention everyone sitting with a semiautomatic rifle next to them on the grass. Must make the conversation a little tepid. Or maybe I just don't "get" how cool guns are.
how does one respond to (sigh)?
Yes, well when the thread topic turns from trying to impress each other with our dumpster dives and becomes one of how cool guns are and which guns are in our arsenals as if they were Eames chairs, then you might figure it would attract some negative responses on a forum dedicated to design.
Hunter S. Thompson is a good example of just how "cool" firearms are - he shares with Dick Cheney the distinction of being yet another NRA member who has (mistakenly) shot a friend full of buckshot while out on a hunting trip. Before ending his own life with a gun of course (Thompson, but not yet Cheney, though hope springs eternal).
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