Guns.
Comments
-
mace1229 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Purely out of interest, how many of those who post in this thread own a gun?
(matter of intrigue, given I am from the UK and owning a gun is about as common as owning an elephant)We're a "guns, beer, and ammo" kind of household around here. We even have an armed guard and a watch dog.
No worries, it's ice cold. I'm covered."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
No pistolas for mejesus greets me looks just like me ....0
-
pdalowsky said:tempo_n_groove said:pdalowsky said:Purely out of interest, how many of those who post in this thread own a gun?
(matter of intrigue, given I am from the UK and owning a gun is about as common as owning an elephant)0 -
ed243421 said:Hey, tempo, are you gonna answer the mlb fantasy poster thread or your pm’s???0
-
brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Purely out of interest, how many of those who post in this thread own a gun?
(matter of intrigue, given I am from the UK and owning a gun is about as common as owning an elephant)We're a "guns, beer, and ammo" kind of household around here. We even have an armed guard and a watch dog.0 -
pdalowsky said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Purely out of interest, how many of those who post in this thread own a gun?
(matter of intrigue, given I am from the UK and owning a gun is about as common as owning an elephant)We're a "guns, beer, and ammo" kind of household around here. We even have an armed guard and a watch dog.Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
brianlux said:pdalowsky said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Purely out of interest, how many of those who post in this thread own a gun?
(matter of intrigue, given I am from the UK and owning a gun is about as common as owning an elephant)We're a "guns, beer, and ammo" kind of household around here. We even have an armed guard and a watch dog.Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
I expect those who own a gun are perhaps reassured that by having one to the extent it puts them at ease, and possibly even lowers their guard in the belief they are safer.0 -
pdalowsky said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Purely out of interest, how many of those who post in this thread own a gun?
(matter of intrigue, given I am from the UK and owning a gun is about as common as owning an elephant)We're a "guns, beer, and ammo" kind of household around here. We even have an armed guard and a watch dog.Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
I expect those who own a gun are perhaps reassured that by having one to the extent it puts them at ease, and possibly even lowers their guard in the belief they are safer.
I'm sure I'm an anomaly as most people do buy for protection.
Only once have I thought it necessary to use for protection. Never came to it thankfully.0 -
brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.0 -
max8700 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.
I hope you are considerate of any neighbors with PTSD. Wherever it is you live, I would not last two days in your neighborhood. Maybe not two hours."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.
I hope you are considerate of any neighbors with PTSD. Wherever it is you live, I would not last two days in your neighborhood. Maybe not two hours.0 -
max8700 said:brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.
I hope you are considerate of any neighbors with PTSD. Wherever it is you live, I would not last two days in your neighborhood. Maybe not two hours.Excellent, Max, thank you!I wish the shooting ranges in out county were indoors. There is an outdoor one west of us that, though not real close, is close enough to hear on some days and on those days, I don't go outside. The same is true and even worse when neighbors target practice on their property. When that happens, I hope the fan makes enough white noise to block it out, otherwise I have to get in the car and leave.In the early 1980, I worked at a community college in Santa Clara County, California that, among other things, had a police training program. I used to walk right by the indoor shooting range and if I didn't know what that structure was built for, I would never have known people were shooing in there! That place would have made an awesome recording studio!"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.
I hope you are considerate of any neighbors with PTSD. Wherever it is you live, I would not last two days in your neighborhood. Maybe not two hours.Excellent, Max, thank you!I wish the shooting ranges in out county were indoors. There is an outdoor one west of us that, though not real close, is close enough to hear on some days and on those days, I don't go outside. The same is true and even worse when neighbors target practice on their property. When that happens, I hope the fan makes enough white noise to block it out, otherwise I have to get in the car and leave.In the early 1980, I worked at a community college in Santa Clara County, California that, among other things, had a police training program. I used to walk right by the indoor shooting range and if I didn't know what that structure was built for, I would never have known people were shooing in there! That place would have made an awesome recording studio!0 -
mace1229 said:brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.
I hope you are considerate of any neighbors with PTSD. Wherever it is you live, I would not last two days in your neighborhood. Maybe not two hours.Excellent, Max, thank you!I wish the shooting ranges in out county were indoors. There is an outdoor one west of us that, though not real close, is close enough to hear on some days and on those days, I don't go outside. The same is true and even worse when neighbors target practice on their property. When that happens, I hope the fan makes enough white noise to block it out, otherwise I have to get in the car and leave.In the early 1980, I worked at a community college in Santa Clara County, California that, among other things, had a police training program. I used to walk right by the indoor shooting range and if I didn't know what that structure was built for, I would never have known people were shooing in there! That place would have made an awesome recording studio!The El Dorado Gun Club has been around for a long time and it's going nowhere.But guns have been a source of anxiety for me in all kinds of neighborhoods. Even when I lived in San Francisco, I heard shooting a few times. I guarantee you that was from no shooting range.The reality is, guns are never going to be outlawed in this country. Maybe in some states, but nationwide? No way. The least we could do is only allow shooting in indoor ranges.And another thing- those "isolated" ranges you were talking about? Ask a bird, or a rabbit, or a fox or coyote or deer about how that feels. It's even worse for them because they don't have fingers to stick in their ears. How many people who shoot outdoors even give a damn about how that affects other people and animals? I'm guessing Max from the post above is an exception.And what about all that lead pumped into the environment? The national forests have lead all over the fucking place.For the sake of defenseless animals and for people like me, I say "Fuck outdoor shooting".And look, sorry for the rant, but I have good reason to take strong issue with this business.Post edited by brianlux on"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
https://apnews.com/article/supreme-court-marijuana-guns-e86c342bf248c7822722ad027980b72b?utm_source=onesignal&utm_medium=push&utm_campaign=2025-10-20-Breaking+NewsI don’t need no stinking guns 🖕🏽thatjesus greets me looks just like me ....0
-
mace1229 said:brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:max8700 said:brianlux said:pdalowsky said:Thanks!In truth, what gives us a sense of security here is not squirt guns and toys but, rather, having gotten to know our neighbors well enough such any of us would know if something suspicious was going on around here. We're not real close to any of them, but close enough to know we trust them and they trust us. Getting to know one's neighbors is always a smart move!As well as asking who here has guns, I'd be interested in who here who has a gun has ever had to use or threaten to use a firearm to protect themselves? I'm 74 years old and have never met someone who has had to do that. So my thinking is that having guns is vastly over-rated as a security "necessity" for the greatest number of us. And I say that as someone who has lived in big cities, suburbia, and rural areas, and spent a lot of time in all of those kinds of places, even some that are considered "dangerous" areas.
But I do go shooting at the local range 2-3 times a month, I go out to my dad's property 90 miles away and we will shoot together when we can find the time. I enjoy it. I enjoy dismantling, cleaning and putting my guns back together. I enjoy learning about all the mechanisms. I enjoy buying accessories and customizing my guns. It's a hobby for me, like anything else.
And I cannot agree more than getting to know your neighbors is vital. We all look out for each other, and the kids in the neighborhood all know which homes are the safe homes they can go to if they ever feel threatened or see something suspicious. For what it's worth, in my immediate neighborhood, there are more gun owners than non-gun owners.
I hope you are considerate of any neighbors with PTSD. Wherever it is you live, I would not last two days in your neighborhood. Maybe not two hours.Excellent, Max, thank you!I wish the shooting ranges in out county were indoors. There is an outdoor one west of us that, though not real close, is close enough to hear on some days and on those days, I don't go outside. The same is true and even worse when neighbors target practice on their property. When that happens, I hope the fan makes enough white noise to block it out, otherwise I have to get in the car and leave.In the early 1980, I worked at a community college in Santa Clara County, California that, among other things, had a police training program. I used to walk right by the indoor shooting range and if I didn't know what that structure was built for, I would never have known people were shooing in there! That place would have made an awesome recording studio!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 149K Pearl Jam's Music and Activism
- 110.1K The Porch
- 278 Vitalogy
- 35.1K Given To Fly (live)
- 3.5K Words and Music...Communication
- 39.2K Flea Market
- 39.2K Lost Dogs
- 58.7K Not Pearl Jam's Music
- 10.6K Musicians and Gearheads
- 29.1K Other Music
- 17.8K Poetry, Prose, Music & Art
- 1.1K The Art Wall
- 56.8K Non-Pearl Jam Discussion
- 22.2K A Moving Train
- 31.7K All Encompassing Trip
- 2.9K Technical Stuff and Help