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Maggie’s Found a Treasure

My wife loves bookstores and over Christmas break followed her into a bookstore in Santa Fe. Pretty eclectic place with both new and used books many just stacked in piles. I happened upon this by chance. First printing from 1943 and in very good condition. As a kid I probably watched the movie half a dozen times. Halfway through it at this point.

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A little lesson about ammo is your wondering

I went shooting Monday, and while I was unloading the car, I found a brick of my lot tested ammo that had slipped up under my 4Runner seat. It has been there at least 2 months. With all this cold weather we have been having, I decided to shoot it across the chrono to see if it had any effects. Well it did, stuff was pretty wild and has to be considered practice ammo now...I would defiantly keep ammo protected away from big temp swings. Va Beach didn't get that cold, I think 9 degrees was the coldest with wind chill.
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6 MM Bbl.life ?

Just thinking ahead, and knowing the lead time might be up to 6+ Mo. I'm using the "7 P" principle , so, I'll be needing to replace the 6 CM bbl. and wondering what other 6 MM users are seeing as usable Bbl. life of the smaller 6 MM cases ie; 6BRA , 6 Dasher, and the 6GT using 105 the 115 gn bullets
As I see it, I've already got $$$ dies and a good supply of new 6 CM brass and should have close to 1500 rounds on the present Criterion Bbl. this time next year.

Air Force Spec Ops get cold 🥶 (based in Kentucky lol)


March 2022 dateline. As a guy from North Dakota, this was funny to read. These guys sound like total cold noobs. Like, “Gee whiz, didn’t realize cold temps make stuff a lot harder, golly.” 😂

Based on the fact that few had their hoods up suggests it wasn’t that cold at the day of the pics.

In Grubbnäsudden, Sweden near Finland (where they trained in Jan 2022) I see there one day with a low of -17°F, which is a respectable cold day. But most of the time is was downright balmy! (historical temps). Christ, that month I see a high of 43°F!

Scroll left/right to see the whole month, make sure it’s on F° if you’re a Yank.

But that ice bath training looks hardcore. Props to them!

Look at this serious cold in Russia current forecast. Looks like their graph color for temps under -57°F-ish is BLACK haha!

-64°F is no fucking joke.

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Firearms Parting out Rem 700 243 build

Looking to part this out as I just picked up a 6gt HIT. Prices are before shipping. NO TRADES.

I will sell the action and barrel first. Than the rest. Of the reloading stuff once payment is received.


1) Rem 700 short action right hand, that was a new action. Has 50 rounds fired. No trigger and includes seekens (if i remember correctly) 20 moa mount. No trigger included.

$449.99 plus ship to your FFL. —-SOLD——


2) Criterian 243 win 26” 1-7tw match grade stainless barrel. Has 50 rounds fired, shot very accurate. No issues. Includes the barrel nut and 47x 1x fired brass some will be primed. $349.99 ——SOLD——-


3) Redding 3 die set: FL, NK and Seater. Includes shell holder. $84.99 ——-SOLD——


4) 100pcs Winchester NEW sealed 243 win brass $79.99 plus ship ——-SOLD——


5) 243 bullets
A) 1 box 105gr Berger hybrid. $42.99. SOLD
B) 70pcs 115gr JLK $19.99 ——-SOLD
C) 240 plus 115gr DTAC $99.99

6) KRG X-Ray with spigget. It’s brand new used only with this rifle. I installed an extra KRG spigget I had left over. Was $632 plus shipping new. $499.99 plus ship

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Zombie Apocalypse starting again?

Bath salts, new fentanyl derivative, or was he just jab? Thought this was limited to Florida....its spreading.

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Home urine analysis. This won't go bad.


Welcome to a new era for urinalysis

With more than 3000 metabolites, urine is an extraordinary witness to our health. It gives an immediate snapshot of the body’s balance and can help detect and monitor a large variety of health information. While urinalysis is typically performed only once a year, U-Scan opens the door to regular access to these metrics from the comfort and privacy of one’s own bathroom.

Accessories Sold

I have two Pelican 1750s for sale. I only used them for transportation purposes a couple times so they have spent most of their time in the closet. Lightly used, Cobra foam in the bottom, regular stuff in the top, some minor cutouts but still plenty to use for your baby. I'll sell face-to-face in Tampa, FL, for $150 each. Or, if you want me to ship them, it'll be $150 each + actual shipping.
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Favorite Rimfire Rifle?

What is everyone’s favorite rimfire rifle. If you had to pick one what do you pick and why?

Tikka T1x
CZ 457
10/22
Voodoo
RimX
Lithgow
Bergara

I’d probably go for an opt for a voodoo or a tricked out CZ. I’d go for a voodoo for pure accuracy and perfection but I’m a big CZ fan and I think they are a great value for the money. I would enjoy the process of tinkering with a CZ to get closer to voodoo quality but at the end of the day I just want to shoot so voodoo for me. Also I don’t own a voodoo so I’d just like to say that I am apart of the “most accurate rimfire rifle owner club”.

The last hope, Brunson v. Adams

Supreme Court considers Brunson v. Adams​

Friday, December 16, 2022 7:30 PM
By Tim Canova
Professor of Law and Public Finance
Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law


While there has been much public attention on the U.S. Supreme Court’s present consideration of the “independent state legislature” theory in Moore v. Harper involving North Carolina’s redistricting, that case would not immediately upend the 2020 presidential election.

In contrast, a little-known case that appeared recently on the Court docket could do just that. The case of Brunson v. Adams, not even reported in the mainstream media, was filed pro se by ordinary American citizens – four brothers from Utah — seeking the removal of President Biden and Vice President Harris, along with 291 U.S. representatives and 94 U.S. senators who voted to certify the electors to the Electoral College on Jan. 6, 2021 without first investigating serious allegations of election fraud in half a dozen states and foreign election interference and breach of national security in the 2020 presidential election. The outcome of such relief would presumably be to restore Donald Trump to the presidency.

The important national security interests implicated in this case allowed the Brunsons to bypass an appeal that was frozen at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit and get the case to the Supreme Court which has now scheduled a hearing for January 6, 2023. The Brunson Petition for a Writ of Certiorari would require the votes of only four justices to move the case forward.

It seems astounding that the Court would wade into such waters two years to the day after the Congressional vote to install Joe Biden as president. But these are not normal times. Democrats may well push legislation in this month’s lame duck session of Congress to impose term limits and a mandatory retirement age for justices, and thereby open the door to packing the Court.

Such a course would seem to be clear violations of Article III, Section 1 of the Constitution which provides that Justices “shall hold their Offices during good Behavior.” In addition to such institutional threats to the Supreme Court, several justices and their families have been living under constant threats to their personal security since the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Perhaps these institutional and security threats have provided powerful incentives for the Court to put Brunson v. Adams on its docket as a shield to deter any efforts by the lame duck Congress to infringe on the Court’s independence. Or perhaps conservatives on the Court are serious about using the Brunson case as a sword to remove public officials who they believe have violated their constitutional Oaths of office by rubber-stamping electors on Jan. 6th without first conducting any investigation of serious allegations of election fraud and foreign election interference.

Moreover, recent weeks have brought a cascade of news suggesting the likelihood of an impending constitutional crisis that could be difficult to resolve without the Court’s intervention.

It is now clear that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was colluding with social media giants Twitter and Facebook to censor news of Hunter Biden’s laptop in the weeks leading up to the 2020 election – a most egregious First Amendment violation intended to rig the election outcome and perhaps to install an unaccountable and criminal puppet government. Meanwhile, the Jan. 6 committee may soon send a criminal referral to the Justice Department to arrest President Trump even though his reinstated tweets are a reminder that he was not calling for insurrection but for peaceful protest on Jan. 6.

More recently, the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) was reportedly working with Big Tech to censor election critics.

Supreme Court justices may well see these approaching storm clouds and conclude that the Court’s intervention is necessary to prevent larger civil unrest resulting from constitutional violations that are undermining public trust and confidence in the outcomes of both the 2020 and 2022 elections.

When they break the Constitution — the supreme law of the land — to rig an election, the only recourse may be the Supreme Court or military tribunals.

As the Brunson lawsuit argues, all of Congress was put on notice prior to its January 6th vote by more than a hundred of its own members detailing serious allegations of election frauds and calling for creation of an electoral commission to investigate the allegations.

Moreover, the Office of Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) was required to submit a report on foreign threats to the 2020 Presidential election by December 18, 2020. That deadline was set by executive order and by Congress itself. When December 18th came and went without ODNI submitting its report, Congress should have started asking questions and investigating.

In fact, DNI John Ratcliffe announced on that day that the 17 U.S. intelligence agencies he was overseeing had found evidence of foreign election interference but were split as to its significance and whether such breach of national security was sufficient to overturn the outcome of the election. And yet there was no action whatsoever by Congress, no inquiry and no investigation. Instead, Congress approved the possibly fraudulent election results on Jan. 6 without asking any questions of the DNI and the Intelligence Community.

When the results of the 1876 presidential election were in doubt, Congress created a special Electoral Commission made up of five House members, five Senators, and five Supreme Court Justices to investigate.

In contrast, in early 2021 Congress had nearly two weeks to investigate before the January 20th date of the presidential inauguration. Had Congress waited even just one more day to Jan. 7, they would have received the long-awaited ODNI report reflecting a split in the Intelligence Community and the DNI’s own conclusion that the People’s Republic of China had interfered to influence the outcome of the presidential election.

As Dr. Barry A. Zulauf, the Analytic Ombudsman for the Intelligence Community, concluded at the time, the Intelligence Community shamefully delayed their findings until after the January 6th Electoral College certification by Congress because of their political disagreements with the Trump administration. This paints a picture of collusion and conspiracy involving members of Congress and U.S. intelligence agencies to cover up evidence of foreign election interference and constituting the crime of treason.

The Brunson lawsuit does not claim the election was stolen, merely that a large majority of Congress, by failing to investigate such serious allegations of election rigging and breaches of national security, violated their oaths to protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic – an oath also taken by Supreme Court justices and members of the U.S. military.

The fact that the Brunson case has made it to the Court’s docket suggests profound concerns about a lawless Jan. 6 congressional committee, politicized federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies and major constitutional violations intended to overthrow an elected government by manipulating the outcome of the presidential election.

Tim Canova is a Professor of Law and Public Finance at Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law, with broad experience in law teaching, private practice and public policy. He teaches Constitutional Law II: First Amendment Law, Corporations, Business Entities, Regulation of Financial Institutions, and a Seminar on Law, Finance, and Markets at Nova. This column is published with the permission of The Gateway Pundit https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/20...-seeking-overturn-2020-presidential-election/.




Why has the AR-18 failed to catch on in the US?

Some of the guns I lusted at owning are made by European manufacturers utilizing some variation of Stoner's AR-18 operating system design. The B&T APC 308. The CZ Bren 2 308. The FN SCAR. The HK G36 and 416. The SIG lineup of guns, especially the MCX. Even the Tavor and Aug Steyer have some lineage to this design.

I love AR-15's and AR-10's. But why did the AR-18 design never catch on in the US? You have the Remington ACR and the Robinson XCR-L. But it never caught on amongst manufacturers. Was it the lack of standardization? Would a military contract have helped standardize it and therefore popularize it?

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Daughters project update

My daughters current hunting rifle is a browning feather light 7-08 it’s a great tree stand gun/ close range setup but very limited. I have her talked in too selling it and building a more Capable set up my first thoughts was 6 creed in a mid range weight with modern Ergonomics so she can enjoy it at the range and extended yardage. Anyways after some thought I’m leaning to the 22 creed as I’m building one for my self and we can share reloading dies. What’s your thoughts on these 2 calibers for a deer gun? Both wold be much more comfortable to shoot than her previous set up and not giving up much or any performance. As of now she looking at the Bravo chassis , terminus action and probably a med varmint contour at 22” hoping to finish out around 9-12# at max. She will run it suppressed at some point. What’s your thoughts? Anybody build there hunting rig off the bravo I’d like too see your pics and how it weighed out finished? Thanks
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Night Vision **SOLD** Flir SXR Long Range NV Clip On

Hello Hide,


I have a couple of these SXR clip ons left in stock. These are in very nice condition and come with a 1 year warranty on the unit as well as my lifetime guarantee on collimation.

Most of you won’t know what an SXR is but think of it as a half Pvs-27 and half Pvs-30. The back end/housing of the SXR is nearly identical to the Pvs-27. The objective lens was designed by Flir to be similar to the Pvs-30 with a standard F lens and not the iconic catadioptric lens of the 22/27. This makes the SXR much lower profile than the 27 and have a footprint nearly identical to the 30. In my comparison side by side with Pvs-27s the SXR and 27 are very close in performance in low light. So close that I can’t tell a difference between the two in most any condition I’ve tested them in.

Snipers Hide price: **$5900**

These are a very limited run and I only have a couple left.

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Thanks for looking!

Jay
Sure Shot Night Vision
83two-77three-700three

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Cape Cod in deep shit...litrerally

I considered putting this in pooperhounds 'show your poop' thread but this is some real shit.

A stinky stew on Cape Cod: Human waste and warming water​

https://ground.news › article › a-stinky-stew-on-cape-co...



18 hours ago — A stinky stew on Cape Cod: Human waste and warming water. The algae blooms in Santuit and other ponds are fueled by phosphorus, which, like ...

250 foot drop in their Tesla and lived.

Wow.

Thats not going to buff out.

I wonder if it was an attemped murder suicide?

Tesla Plunges 250 Feet Off of Cliff at 'Devil's Slide' in California​

https://outsider.com › News



2 hours ago — A family of four miraculously walked away from a potentially deadly crash after their Tesla plunged off a 250-foot cliff on Monday.