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How fucking ignorant. Do you even VT bro? Or NH? Or even Maine?? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Its beyond time to build a wall to contain the Yankee leftist scourge to New England. Better yet they should succeed and become their own socialist utopia. How fucking ignorant. Do you even VT bro? Or NH? Or even Maine?? VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? |
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Quoted: The national government should absolutely not be given the power to determine what will or will not be part of a state and carve it up accordingly. You might as well get rid of the states at that point, and eliminate their sovereignty. You're not the first person here to make this suggestion, either. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Make it a district, like D.C. The national government should absolutely not be given the power to determine what will or will not be part of a state and carve it up accordingly. You might as well get rid of the states at that point, and eliminate their sovereignty. You're not the first person here to make this suggestion, either. |
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I'll throw $100 in to start a get Aimless out from behind enemy lines fund.
Sorry it's not more, I'm poor. |
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VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Its beyond time to build a wall to contain the Yankee leftist scourge to New England. Better yet they should succeed and become their own socialist utopia. How fucking ignorant. Do you even VT bro? Or NH? Or even Maine?? VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? Yup. Because even that socialist prick knew better than (or learned anyway) crossing his constituents when it comes to guns |
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Make it a district, like D.C. The national government should absolutely not be given the power to determine what will or will not be part of a state and carve it up accordingly. You might as well get rid of the states at that point, and eliminate their sovereignty. You're not the first person here to make this suggestion, either. I'm trying to figure out what side of that issue you're on. The Obama Administration just nationalized a bunch of land near my hometown, which I am not happy about, and we actually had protests there against him when he came to announce the same. |
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There's plenty more than can do. Require gun owners to have unobtainable insurance, close gunshops with similar insurance requirements, pass microstamping so you can't buy any more pistols, restrict how much ammo you can own and how many magazines to can own, restrict possession of firearms to the range and hunting. Etc etc View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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What difference, at this point, does it make? Seriously though, what difference does it make? All of which blatantly violate the 2nd amendment, so why would anyone even care or obey these laws? Granted I a in a different State with a different outlook on the Constitution, but any law like that would be viewed with derision and contempt and ignored. |
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Upstate people are very nice, and generally pretty level headed. On the other hand, people from NYC for the most part are the opposite of that. New York state has a big city problem more than anything, and they're far from unique in that among states, their problem is they have the biggest city so wind up having the biggest headache. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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New York is doomed I feel bad for the residents of that pitiful excuse of a state. Upstate people are very nice, and generally pretty level headed. On the other hand, people from NYC for the most part are the opposite of that. New York state has a big city problem more than anything, and they're far from unique in that among states, their problem is they have the biggest city so wind up having the biggest headache. It's probably related to cities and the critters living there. Here in WA we have a similar issue. Seattle has fucktards all over the place and they also manage to overcome the normal people. The weird thing is that those people really think and behave differently. For example, traffic in the Seattle is the worst I've seen worldwide. The "drivers' " behavior is something one needs to see to believe. |
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Moving is only a short term answer. This shits gonna spread like the cancer it is. People say fuck NY but in the dead of the night it can happen in your state too. View Quote I know how you feel. I lived in Monroe County from 2002-2010. That's not exactly true. You don't understand how much better it is elsewhere. We are passing progun bills and just elected a TEA party Republican to the Governors office and are 3 seats away from clinching all 3 branches of state government. No, New Yorks chickens have come to roost; besides CA and maybe NJ/MA other states are going in the correct direction. Fight, leave or submit. This shit sandwich is on your plate right f'ing now. |
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All of which blatantly violate the 2nd amendment, so why would anyone even care or obey these laws? Granted I a in a different State with a different outlook on the Constitution, but any law like that would be viewed with derision and contempt and ignored. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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What difference, at this point, does it make? Seriously though, what difference does it make? All of which blatantly violate the 2nd amendment, so why would anyone even care or obey these laws? Granted I a in a different State with a different outlook on the Constitution, but any law like that would be viewed with derision and contempt and ignored. Because the majority of NYers don't know anything other than living life where everything you do must be permitted, licensed, regulated, taxed, registered, and every single state and local government agency has the word "Authority" in their names. That shit doesn't fly in western states.. At least not until the California creep takes over. |
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Haha. They all said that before SAFE as enacted, yet they all registered. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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It may really be getting close to "I will not comply"/revolution time.......The will of the people has been forgotten by the politician elected to represent them. Haha. They all said that before SAFE as enacted, yet they all registered. You're right - a state with a 20M population had 23K people register registered 45K "assault rifles." They got them all - 100% compliance. |
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VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Its beyond time to build a wall to contain the Yankee leftist scourge to New England. Better yet they should succeed and become their own socialist utopia. How fucking ignorant. Do you even VT bro? Or NH? Or even Maine?? VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? To be fair VT has had better gun laws than the vast majority of the nation for decades, including VA. They may be mostly all fucked up but at least somewhat competent in an area we can all agree is important. |
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The will of the people has been forgotten by the politician elected to represent them. View Quote Not really. Antigun politicians are that way because they think it gets them votes. The majority of NY voters are probably OK with the idea of banning guns. Look at Sen.Kirsten Gillibrand. When she represented an upstate congressional district, she was considered pro-gun and was even endorsed by the NRA. When she ran for statewide office, she flipped and became antigun. Statewide in NY, you apparently have to be antigun to get elected. So in this case, the "will of the people" works against us. People in urban areas, generally, seem to be brainwashed against guns. The rest is simply the working out of democracy. |
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It was Republicans that gave you the safe act. you may be better off.
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Quoted: It's probably related to cities and the critters living there. Here in WA we have a similar issue. Seattle has fucktards all over the place and they also manage to overcome the normal people. The weird thing is that those people really think and behave differently. For example, traffic in the Seattle is the worst I've seen worldwide. The "drivers' " behavior is something one needs to see to believe. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: New York is doomed I feel bad for the residents of that pitiful excuse of a state. Upstate people are very nice, and generally pretty level headed. On the other hand, people from NYC for the most part are the opposite of that. New York state has a big city problem more than anything, and they're far from unique in that among states, their problem is they have the biggest city so wind up having the biggest headache. It's probably related to cities and the critters living there. Here in WA we have a similar issue. Seattle has fucktards all over the place and they also manage to overcome the normal people. The weird thing is that those people really think and behave differently. For example, traffic in the Seattle is the worst I've seen worldwide. The "drivers' " behavior is something one needs to see to believe. It's definitely related to cities and the sort of people who live there, every state has that issue to one extent or another. In WA you have Seattle/Tacoma, which I've spent some time in and which made me want to jump off a bridge. In PA we have Philly, which I only go to if I really have to, which has been exactly once in the past 10 years, thankfully. CA has LA and SF, and so on and so forth. I've been to a lot of states, and honestly where you are in the country geographically is a lot less important when it comes to the sort of people you'll run into than whether you're in a city or in a rural area. There are plenty of normal folk, hell flat out rednecks, in CA, NY, MI, you name it just as there are plenty of liberals who live in cities in the Deep South. To me the great divide in the US isn't geographical so much as how close someone lives to a big city, there are definitely some differences depending on region, even in rural areas, but not anywhere near as wide a gulf as between people who live in a rural area and the people who live in a city even in their own state. I have more in common, in every way, with someone from a small town in eastern Tennessee or Abilene TX (to use a couple of examples) than I do with someone who lives in Philadelphia. I know because I've been there, done that. |
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There's plenty more than can do. Require gun owners to have unobtainable insurance, close gunshops with similar insurance requirements, pass microstamping so you can't buy any more pistols, restrict how much ammo you can own and how many magazines to can own, restrict possession of firearms to the range and hunting. Etc etc View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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What difference, at this point, does it make? Seriously though, what difference does it make? my previous comments about not getting a pistol permit to stay off the books make sense right about now. who could have guessed by state would go even farther left and will likely shit all over our remaining second amendment rights. |
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Haha. They all said that before SAFE as enacted, yet they all registered. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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It may really be getting close to "I will not comply"/revolution time.......The will of the people has been forgotten by the politician elected to represent them. Haha. They all said that before SAFE as enacted, yet they all registered. The fact is Molon Labe looks more like Lavoy Finicum than Arnold Schwarzenegger. |
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Well that'll solve the gun problem for NY when no manufacturers make a SAFEer Act compliant product with stupid microstamping.
Oh, wait... no it won't because criminals don't buy their guns from FFLs. |
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Because the majority of NYers don't know anything other than living life where everything you do must be permitted, licensed, regulated, taxed, registered, and every single state and local government agency has the word "Authority" in their names. That shit doesn't fly in western states.. At least not until the California creep takes over. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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What difference, at this point, does it make? Seriously though, what difference does it make? All of which blatantly violate the 2nd amendment, so why would anyone even care or obey these laws? Granted I a in a different State with a different outlook on the Constitution, but any law like that would be viewed with derision and contempt and ignored. Because the majority of NYers don't know anything other than living life where everything you do must be permitted, licensed, regulated, taxed, registered, and every single state and local government agency has the word "Authority" in their names. That shit doesn't fly in western states.. At least not until the California creep takes over. Be careful. Here in WA we have a very similar issue with Seattle. Same model as NY. And now there are many of them moving here from CA, NY and other liberal States after fucking up their places. Locusts come to mind. |
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It's definitely related to cities and the sort of people who live there, every state has that issue to one extent or another. In WA you have Seattle/Tacoma, which I've spent some time in and which made me want to jump off a bridge. In PA we have Philly, which I only go to if I really have to, which has been exactly once in the past 10 years, thankfully. CA has LA and SF, and so on and so forth. I've been to a lot of states, and honestly where you are in the country geographically is a lot less important when it comes to the sort of people you'll run into than whether you're in a city or in a rural area. There are plenty of normal folk, hell flat out rednecks, in CA, NY, MI, you name it just as there are plenty of liberals who live in cities in the Deep South. To me the great divide in the US isn't geographical so much as how close someone lives to a big city, there are definitely some differences depending on region, even in rural areas, but not anywhere near as wide a gulf as between people who live in a rural area and the people who live in a city even in their own state. I have more in common, in every way, with someone from a small town in eastern Tennessee or Abilene TX (to use a couple of examples) than I do with someone who lives in Philadelphia. I know because I've been there, done that. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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New York is doomed I feel bad for the residents of that pitiful excuse of a state. Upstate people are very nice, and generally pretty level headed. On the other hand, people from NYC for the most part are the opposite of that. New York state has a big city problem more than anything, and they're far from unique in that among states, their problem is they have the biggest city so wind up having the biggest headache. It's probably related to cities and the critters living there. Here in WA we have a similar issue. Seattle has fucktards all over the place and they also manage to overcome the normal people. The weird thing is that those people really think and behave differently. For example, traffic in the Seattle is the worst I've seen worldwide. The "drivers' " behavior is something one needs to see to believe. It's definitely related to cities and the sort of people who live there, every state has that issue to one extent or another. In WA you have Seattle/Tacoma, which I've spent some time in and which made me want to jump off a bridge. In PA we have Philly, which I only go to if I really have to, which has been exactly once in the past 10 years, thankfully. CA has LA and SF, and so on and so forth. I've been to a lot of states, and honestly where you are in the country geographically is a lot less important when it comes to the sort of people you'll run into than whether you're in a city or in a rural area. There are plenty of normal folk, hell flat out rednecks, in CA, NY, MI, you name it just as there are plenty of liberals who live in cities in the Deep South. To me the great divide in the US isn't geographical so much as how close someone lives to a big city, there are definitely some differences depending on region, even in rural areas, but not anywhere near as wide a gulf as between people who live in a rural area and the people who live in a city even in their own state. I have more in common, in every way, with someone from a small town in eastern Tennessee or Abilene TX (to use a couple of examples) than I do with someone who lives in Philadelphia. I know because I've been there, done that. Agree. Living in large cities either attract some kind of people or changes something in people's minds. |
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Hopefully your pump rifle will be safe but the way things are going I'm not so sure. It looks scary so that'll probably be enough justification to make it an assault weapon.
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Why is the state government so obsessed with guns? NY is a huge state, surely there are far more important things they could be doing. It makes no sense View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Why is the state government so obsessed with guns? NY is a huge state, surely there are far more important things they could be doing. It makes no sense I'm pretty sure that for crooked politicians and the interests that own them, that disarming the people they've been screwing over is pretty high up on the list. What exactly do you think is going to happen when they can no longer kick the fiscal can farther on down the road? Quoted:
Agree. Living in large cities either attract some kind of people or changes something in people's minds. It's not any sort of mystery. Population centers provide opportunities for graft, and part of the process of getting into office is handing out free shit, which in turn attracts the FSA. |
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Quoted: All of which blatantly violate the 2nd amendment, so why would anyone even care or obey these laws? Granted I a in a different State with a different outlook on the Constitution, but any law like that would be viewed with derision and contempt and ignored. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: What difference, at this point, does it make? Seriously though, what difference does it make? All of which blatantly violate the 2nd amendment, so why would anyone even care or obey these laws? Granted I a in a different State with a different outlook on the Constitution, but any law like that would be viewed with derision and contempt and ignored. |
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Has a conservative northern section of New York State ever entertained the idea of succession from New York City?
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Has a conservative northern section of New York State ever entertained the idea of succession from New York City? View Quote http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/feb/17/secession-movement-in-new-york-pushes-for-big-appl/ http://www.longislandstate.org/home.html Everybody wants to get rid of NYC. Long Island can sustain itself without NYC tax dollars & it makes sense. Not sure if upstate can afford it, but they want to go too. https://www.quora.com/What-would-prevent-Long-Island-New-York-from-becoming-the-51st-state-of-America Even SI tried to leave NYC, but the city won't let anyone go. |
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http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/feb/17/secession-movement-in-new-york-pushes-for-big-appl/ http://www.longislandstate.org/home.html Everybody wants to get rid of NYC. Long Island can sustain itself without NYC tax dollars & it makes sense. Not sure if upstate can afford it, but they want to go too. https://www.quora.com/What-would-prevent-Long-Island-New-York-from-becoming-the-51st-state-of-America Even SI tried to leave NYC, but the city won't let anyone go. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Has a conservative northern section of New York State ever entertained the idea of succession from New York City? http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/feb/17/secession-movement-in-new-york-pushes-for-big-appl/ http://www.longislandstate.org/home.html Everybody wants to get rid of NYC. Long Island can sustain itself without NYC tax dollars & it makes sense. Not sure if upstate can afford it, but they want to go too. https://www.quora.com/What-would-prevent-Long-Island-New-York-from-becoming-the-51st-state-of-America Even SI tried to leave NYC, but the city won't let anyone go. The one state, but two autonomous regions is interesting. |
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You sure about those registration numbers?? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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It may really be getting close to "I will not comply"/revolution time.......The will of the people has been forgotten by the politician elected to represent them. Haha. They all said that before SAFE as enacted, yet they all registered. You sure about those registration numbers?? Be careful there. This site will ban you for admitting certain things about that issue. |
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The one state, but two autonomous regions is interesting. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Has a conservative northern section of New York State ever entertained the idea of succession from New York City? http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/feb/17/secession-movement-in-new-york-pushes-for-big-appl/ http://www.longislandstate.org/home.html Everybody wants to get rid of NYC. Long Island can sustain itself without NYC tax dollars & it makes sense. Not sure if upstate can afford it, but they want to go too. https://www.quora.com/What-would-prevent-Long-Island-New-York-from-becoming-the-51st-state-of-America Even SI tried to leave NYC, but the city won't let anyone go. The one state, but two autonomous regions is interesting. In NY, the politicians would just find a way to tax everyone more. We need a clean break - new states, new state constitutions, separate pension funds, & each one needs to start over writing their laws from scratch. |
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Shame a state that was part of the original 13 colonies has fallen so far.
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VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Its beyond time to build a wall to contain the Yankee leftist scourge to New England. Better yet they should succeed and become their own socialist utopia. How fucking ignorant. Do you even VT bro? Or NH? Or even Maine?? VT, you mean the state that Comrade Sanders represents? We have pretty good gun laws up here |
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Be careful there. This site will ban you for admitting certain things about that issue. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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It may really be getting close to "I will not comply"/revolution time.......The will of the people has been forgotten by the politician elected to represent them. Haha. They all said that before SAFE as enacted, yet they all registered. You sure about those registration numbers?? Be careful there. This site will ban you for admitting certain things about that issue. I was referring to the registration numbers that others have posted. I moved all my shit back home to VA and should probably join mini14.com instead of hanging out here |
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I moved all my shit back home to VA and should probably join mini14.com instead of hanging out here View Quote My buddy told me this week to go ahead and start using his guns that are in my safe whenever I want. He realizes he'll never be able to legally own them again in NY. Now I just need a scope for his LMT MWS. |
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Let's hope the Nassau County GOP are corrupt enough to meddle the numbers when they do a final count next week.
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I don't believe that's true. But given that the NY primary was his best showing to date, It does cast some light on the kind of people who vote for him. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I's sure it's Trump's fault. I don't believe that's true. But given that the NY primary was his best showing to date, It does cast some light on the kind of people who vote for him. in a round about way it is. we wanted trump to run for governor in ny last time around but he declined. if he beat cuomo we wouldn't be worrie about new shitty gun laws |
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And they didn't pick a conservative in the primary....that's so weird. I'm baffled.
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I feel bad for the good people of New York. The rest of them are getting exactly what they deserve - tyranny.
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Not really. Antigun politicians are that way because they think it gets them votes. The majority of NY voters are probably OK with the idea of banning guns. Look at Sen.Kirsten Gillibrand. When she represented an upstate congressional district, she was considered pro-gun and was even endorsed by the NRA. When she ran for statewide office, she flipped and became antigun. Statewide in NY, you apparently have to be antigun to get elected. So in this case, the "will of the people" works against us. People in urban areas, generally, seem to be brainwashed against guns. The rest is simply the working out of democracy. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
The will of the people has been forgotten by the politician elected to represent them. Not really. Antigun politicians are that way because they think it gets them votes. The majority of NY voters are probably OK with the idea of banning guns. Look at Sen.Kirsten Gillibrand. When she represented an upstate congressional district, she was considered pro-gun and was even endorsed by the NRA. When she ran for statewide office, she flipped and became antigun. Statewide in NY, you apparently have to be antigun to get elected. So in this case, the "will of the people" works against us. People in urban areas, generally, seem to be brainwashed against guns. The rest is simply the working out of democracy. Too some extent, though Wayne LaPierre could easily win as Mayor of NYC or Governor of NYS if he promised to double the bene's for the FSA... As for cutting NYC off- they have to import their water, their power, and their food. Screw em. Let's declare it a UN Zone and treat it like Vatican City.... |
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I don't believe that's true. But given that the NY primary was his best showing to date, It does cast some light on the kind of people who vote for him. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I's sure it's Trump's fault. I don't believe that's true. But given that the NY primary was his best showing to date, It does cast some light on the kind of people who vote for him. And I know, as he's claimed to be a stanch supporter of the 2nd Amendment, he'll quickly be hiring attorneys to fight against any new strict gun laws there. Just like he did when the SAFE act was enacted. Right? |
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