User Panel
Posted: 4/10/2014 9:59:49 PM EDT
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[#1]
Meanwhile in America students of the same age cry about bullying.
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[#2]
Oldie but a goodie.....
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[#3]
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Team Ranstad
Molon Labe |
[#4]
We did the same thing in High School with M-14s
They were intact and capable of Full auto fire. My last year as the drill team commander, someone caught onto this and made me pull all the firing pins out. |
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[#5]
Those aren't kids, those are midget soldiers.
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[#6]
If this every happened in an American school, well then I would know its opposite day.
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[#7]
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[#8]
Remember kids are learn how to strip and shoot the ak why they learned they never want to be invaded again. Here dumbasses liberals haven't learned freedom is not free.
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[#9]
If a teacher in a California school even suggested this they would be fired and possibly prosecuted.
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[#10]
I really don't appreciate the way they handle the rifle. I can't do that to my Arsenal..
-Safe Queen |
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[#11]
red shirt freshman is a ringer.
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[#12]
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Tennessee Squire / Maker's Mark Ambassador
RIP SGT. Robert "Bobby" Wagner - 8/1/2004, Mosul Iraq. "I really think people are trying to out-stupid each other." - D233 |
[#13]
I worked with a Russian girl back in '94. She had just moved to Seattle, and she talked a lot about how it was growing up in the former Soviet Union. At the time she was around 26, and her father was ex-KGB still living in Russia.
She told me that even in grade school the students were taught about the AK, and later the Makarov which she really liked. We got a long quite well, partly I think because my grandparents on my mothers side were also Russian. Before I left for a different job opportunity, she told me to always remember one thing. "Eyes and ears are everywhere!"... Truer now than ever before. |
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[#14]
Originally Posted By LIONHART:
I worked with a Russian girl back in '94. She had just moved to Seattle, and she talked a lot about how it was growing up in the former Soviet Union. At the time she was around 26, and her father was ex-KGB still living in Russia. She told me that even in grade school the students were taught about the AK, and later the Makarov which she really liked. We got a long quite well, partly I think because my grandparents on my mothers side were also Russian. Before I left for a different job opportunity, she told me to always remember one thing. "Eyes and ears are everywhere!"... Truer now than ever before. View Quote Did you ask her about .25 caliber Walther Model 2s? |
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"If you're gonna be a bear, be a grizzly."
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[Last Edit: LIONHART]
[#15]
Originally Posted By ziarifleman:
Did you ask her about .25 caliber Walther Model 2s? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By ziarifleman:
Originally Posted By LIONHART:
I worked with a Russian girl back in '94. She had just moved to Seattle, and she talked a lot about how it was growing up in the former Soviet Union. At the time she was around 26, and her father was ex-KGB still living in Russia. She told me that even in grade school the students were taught about the AK, and later the Makarov which she really liked. We got a long quite well, partly I think because my grandparents on my mothers side were also Russian. Before I left for a different job opportunity, she told me to always remember one thing. "Eyes and ears are everywhere!"... Truer now than ever before. Did you ask her about .25 caliber Walther Model 2s? No, but she sure knew a lot about the SKS. Probably more so than anyone I've ever talked to up to that point. |
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[#16]
why are they removing the muzzle device?
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"That pistol just kept saying, let go of my ears, you don't know what you're doing." -thehellbringer
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[#17]
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[#18]
Originally Posted By Notyouratty:
1) to remove the cleaning rod. 2) to clean the threads (corrosive military ammo LOVES to rust up the area under/around the muzzle brake). View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Notyouratty:
Originally Posted By cccpNyC:
why are they removing the muzzle device? 1) to remove the cleaning rod. 2) to clean the threads (corrosive military ammo LOVES to rust up the area under/around the muzzle brake). Ahhh So (AK noooob here) what about people with pinned devices, are they fooked? Or don't shoot corrosive, or jdgaf? |
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"That pistol just kept saying, let go of my ears, you don't know what you're doing." -thehellbringer
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[#19]
Originally Posted By cccpNyC:
Ahhh So (AK noooob here) what about people with pinned devices, are they fooked? Or don't shoot corrosive, or jdgaf? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By cccpNyC:
Originally Posted By Notyouratty:
Originally Posted By cccpNyC:
why are they removing the muzzle device? 1) to remove the cleaning rod. 2) to clean the threads (corrosive military ammo LOVES to rust up the area under/around the muzzle brake). Ahhh So (AK noooob here) what about people with pinned devices, are they fooked? Or don't shoot corrosive, or jdgaf? Other than Yugo M67, corrosive 7.62 hasn't been readily available for years, so this is really only a concern when it comes to shooting 7N6. Most of the guys chopping barrels on 5.45 rifles are doing so to build Krinks, so they're SBR'd and thus don't have to have the brakes/boosters welded and pinned. For those building 100-series carbine clones or otherwise pinning muzzle devices, I have no idea what they are doing about cleaning or whether they give a damn. That's a good question. |
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[#20]
It looks like there is no gas piston ???? Is that correct.
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[#21]
Originally Posted By brich2929:
this. this. sooooo this. Saw no less than 3 bullying posts/"feel good" videos on FB/other sites today alone. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
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