Quote:
Originally Posted by KirStang
You having fun there? Completely misinterpreting what i'm writing with a straight face?
You conveniently exclude the term 'FOR TRACING'
Of course, your masterful grasp of the English Language has apparently gotten you very far in life.
Re Heller:
You're reading Heller II. (A District [LOW] Court opinion)
Check out Heller I
District of Columbia v. Heller - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
And: What the Supreme Court of the United States said: The prefatory clause did not modify the operative clause--that is, the right to bear arms is the operative clause. (or something like that. Anyway, the interpretation was that the Right to Keep and Bear Arms trumped the 'Militia' part.)
Read the whole thing here: DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA v. HELLER
Anyway, I'm done. Your ignorance is astounding.
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ignorance only comes from those that wish to be ignorant
as in discuss no more
my minds made up
sticking the fingers
upon the middle ear
your choice dude
tho
""A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed."
in english
has not been sufficiently answered
(though i tried to entice)
oh sure
as whichever has the power down there
interprets
to their liking
those fabulous words
it appears its lost on the public
depending on which side of the fence they sit
now where this came from?
"conveniently exclude the term 'FOR TRACING' "
total submitted for tracing since the start of fiscal 2007 doesn’t come close to the 29,000 figure that Mexico says it has recovered.
oh well
but since i can read ahead
"Thank you for reminding me that the Entire Outside World (tm) consists of Canada.
---------- Post added at 02:24 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:23 AM ----------
And isn't it ironic that a person who claims superiority in the understanding of the English language can't be bothered to actually punctuate and capitalize?
---------- Post added at 02:32 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:24 AM ----------
Oh and one more thing:
I wouldn't have so much problem with you if you weren't so cocksure in your ignorance.
actually dude
i am cocksure in/of my ignorance
tis the reason for relating to brethren of humanity
to try to see their outlook on it all
oh and never claimed anything but
a wish to understand meanings
so does this mean youve sent me to my room?
should i throw a hissy fit now?
or has that been covered?
---------- Post added at 01:16 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:14 AM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by KirStang
You having fun there? Completely misinterpreting what i'm writing with a straight face?
You conveniently exclude the term 'FOR TRACING'
Of course, your masterful grasp of the English Language has apparently gotten you very far in life.
Anyway, I'm done. Your ignorance is astounding.
|
so fun the first time
felt i had to
the second
"submitted"
as in have done
yours just cant put a finger to it
(perhaps for a reason)
now they all come with serial numbers
could they be the ones you bought then resold?
how many aks in the us dude?
where did they come from?
during the oppression of veitnam
at anytime your boys numbered in the hundreds of thousands
(ie grease a gook?)
and bringing home a souvenir
or two
was commonplace
or where you thinking they were brand spankin new?
so heres a thought
just to make ya think
Mexican drug cartels' newest weapon: Cold War-era grenades made in U.S.
Washington Post ^ | 7/17/2010 | Nick Miroff and William Booth
Posted on July 17, 2010 3:45:37 PM by Qbert
MEXICO CITY -- Grenades made in the United States and sent to Central America during the Cold War have resurfaced as terrifying new weapons in almost weekly attacks by Mexican drug cartels.
Sent a generation ago to battle communist revolutionaries in the jungles of Central America, U.S. grenades are being diverted from dusty old armories and sold to criminal mafias, who are using them to destabilize the Mexican government and terrorize civilians, according to U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials.
The redeployment of U.S.-made grenades by Mexican drug lords underscores the increasingly intertwined nature of the conflict, as President Felipe Calderón sends his soldiers out to confront gangs armed with a deadly combination of brand-new military-style assault rifles purchased in the United States and munitions left over from the Cold War.
Mexican drug cartels' newest weapon: Cold War-era grenades made in U.S.
or not
your choice