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Maggie’s Motivational Pic Thread v2.0 - - New Rules - See Post #1

Just another gay pride photo. I can't wait for this month to be over.

FxoVAtAWAAExZoP
Do they make bifocal RDSs?
 

Dude showed up for work drunk and tested .56% then second test was OVER .60% (not a typo)

That's PRO level drinking there... I'm not one to bash cops (if they're rotten, fuck 'em) but DAMN!
 

Dude showed up for work drunk and tested .56% then second test was OVER .60% (not a typo)

That's PRO level drinking there... I'm not one to bash cops (if they're rotten, fuck 'em) but DAMN!

Those are rookie numbers
 
Those all shift a good bit for an experienced heavy drinker.

Once had an old homeless vet (USMC 2/7) sneaking out of the ER.
Steady as can be.
“I gotta go, this place is killing my buzz.”

.574 on a breath machine.

Saw him higher and he was a bit unsteady and slurred, .680 if my memory serves.

Always nice and polite.
Told me once he was functional after he got home in ‘72 until the late 80’s and had been homeless since.
 
“Separate or cause to separate into pieces”

Exactly what it does to gas as it leaves the barrel.

View attachment 8153905
Not even the most retarded gunnie calls the muzzle device a "gas break." Even in the photo you supplied, the muzzle is intact, not "broken."

The muzzle device brakes the recoil, hence it is a "muzzle brake."

muzzle brake.png
 
Not even the most retarded gunnie calls the muzzle device a "gas break." Even in the photo you supplied, the muzzle is intact, not "broken."

The muzzle device brakes the recoil, hence it is a "muzzle brake."
I gave you the short version. ;)
Etymology wise, if you follow the origins of Brake and Break, they're both derived from the word Bracken... (IIRC, honestly it's been way too many years to remember, Old English, Dutch? I don't recall. lol) Point being, they both kind of work, and people shouldn't try so hard to be "that guy".

images.jpeg
 
.
I gave you the short version. ;)
Etymology wise, if you follow the origins of Brake and Break, they're both derived from the word Bracken... (IIRC, honestly it's been way too many years to remember, Old English, Dutch? I don't recall. lol) Point being, they both kind of work, and people shouldn't try so hard to be "that guy".

View attachment 8154389
break (v.)

Old English brecan "to divide solid matter violently into parts or fragments; to injure, violate (a promise, etc.), destroy,
 
I gave you the short version. ;)
Etymology wise, if you follow the origins of Brake and Break, they're both derived from the word Bracken... (IIRC, honestly it's been way too many years to remember, Old English, Dutch? I don't recall. lol) Point being, they both kind of work, and people shouldn't try so hard to be "that guy".

View attachment 8154389

You are welcome to "break" your muzzle.

Meanwhile I am happy to be "that guy" who speaks Modern English and uses punctuation, capitalization, and grammar as if there is hope for Western Syphilization. Perhaps I am too optimistic.

Remember—there are two types of stupidity:
(1) "cain't hep it"
and
(2) "ain't tryin'".

Muzzle "break" is an "ain't tryin'" stupidity that cannot be explained away by linguistic drift—only stupidity.

muzzle brake.png
 
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