User Controls

I want to see open carry culture kick off

  1. #21
    Originally posted by Common De-mominator Open carry is retarded kill yourself

    the second amend,emt gives you the right to BEAR ARMS, not,

    i repeat : NOT SECRETLY BEAR ARMS.

    on topic :



    concealed carry, not cool.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  2. #22
    wtf
  3. #23
    Ghost Black Hole
    What the hell happens between 5-6
  4. #24
    Japan-Is-Eternal Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by Lanny Concealed carry is probably a more aggressive pro-gun stance than open carry, the left will cede to open carry laws before concealed on the premise that it's at least safer to know if someone is carrying a gun, and probably it will be easier to run a shame campaign and generally discourage carrying a firearm in an open carry environment. The second point is probably valid, even if ghey. The point here is that you're retarded.

    I'll slap you across the face with my penis
  5. #25
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    you don't have a penis bitchboy
  6. #26
    Ghost Black Hole
    pfffff calls herself a lady and doesn't even have a dicc

  7. #27
    Japan-Is-Eternal Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by Ghost pfffff calls herself a lady and doesn't even have a dicc


    That piece of shit needs to be dragged out into the street and beaten to death
  8. #28
    Japan-Is-Eternal Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by Lanny you don't have a penis bitchboy

    "bitchboy"

    Says the literally flabby bitchboy literally faggo who lives in the gayest location on earth

    you probably own a dildo unironically and use it on your pancake ass
  9. #29
    Originally posted by Ghost What the hell happens between 5-6

    super glue is used to hermatically seal the "labia" together to keep the penis concealled.
  10. #30
    Japan-Is-Eternal Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny super glue is used to hermatically seal the "labia" together to keep the penis concealled.

    /jews
  11. #31
    gadzooks Dark Matter [keratinize my mild-tasting blossoming]
    Originally posted by Japan-Is-Eternal you probably own a dildo unironically

    As opposed to owning a dildo ironically?
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  12. #32
    Ghost Black Hole
    Originally posted by Japan-Is-Eternal That piece of shit needs to be dragged out into the street and beaten to death

    why don't you do it then lol
  13. #33
    Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country Dark Matter [my scoffingly uncritical tinning]
    27-May-87 02:16 OS@hi.cs.cmu.edu
    My reply to J. H. of UC Berkeley:
    - - - - -----
    J. H. -

    Thank you for your letter. It was certainly interesting to hear of
    conditions out on the West Coast. What can I tell you about the situation here
    at CMU? I'm really glad I came to CMU. The faculty is absolutely first rate,
    and they all take pride in their weapons skills. We are admittedly a pretty
    opinionated bunch, which provides for many interesting interchanges within the
    community. I, for instance, think the long barrel .44 Automag is more of a
    fashion statement than a weapon, though you won't catch me saying that within
    earshot of Prof. Fahlman. If you catch my drift.

    I am very fond of Berkeley. I think that while LA represents the dark,
    twisted climb-the-water-tower-and-start-shooting-until-the-Marines-settle-it
    side of California weirdness, Berkeley represents the very best of the pure,
    innocent-killer side of it all. The first weekend I ever spent in Berkeley
    was in the summer of 1983. I was sitting down at one of those really
    delightful cafes you have out there. To my left some old man was drinking
    cappucino and practicing Chinese calligraphy; down the street some
    undergraduates were engaged in a running firefight. I was taking it all in,
    thinking that Berkeleians have remembered something about living well that the
    rest of America seems to have forgotten; when this kid's stray .223 slug
    shattered my glass of pomegranate soda. "Crazy undergraduates" I remember
    chuckling to myself as I put the safety back on my Hi-Power and returned it
    to its holster.

    It seems a shame that ammunition is so hard to come by out there, though.
    We are quite spoiled here at CMU. The departmental attitude towards logistical
    support really crystallized for me in September of my first year. One of the
    incoming first-year hot-shots had taken out Prof. Felton with a head shot from
    500 yards. We were all really impressed, and I think it was generally agreed
    that Felton couldn't have asked for a more painless, appropriate end. It was a
    beautiful, almost poetic way to cap what had been a textbook career of
    brilliant, original mathematical insights punctuated with outbursts of random,
    deeply unhinged violence.

    You've probably heard of Felton (National Academy of Science, IEEE Past
    President, NRA sustaining member). My advisor told me later that Felton's
    academic peak had come at that now-infamous 1982 Symposium on Data Encryption,
    when he presented the plaintext of the encrypted challenge message that Rob
    Merkin had published earlier that year using his "phonebooth packing" trap-door
    algorithm. According to my advisor, Felton wordlessly walked up to the
    chalkboard, wrote down the plaintext, cranked out the multiplies and modulus
    operations by hand, and wrote down the result, which was obviously identical to
    the encrypted text Merkin had published in CACM. Then, still without saying a
    word, he tossed the chalk over his shoulder, spun around, drew and put a 158
    grain semi-wadcutter right between Merkin's eyes. As the echoes from the shot
    reverberated through the room, he stood there, smoke drifting from the muzzle
    of his .357 Magnum, and uttered the first words of the entire presentation:
    "Any questions?" There was a moment of stunned silence, then the entire
    conference hall erupted in wild applause. God, I wish I'd been there.

    But I digress. At Felton's funeral, our departmental chairman delivered
    the eulogy. I'll never forget his summation: "Poor Felton. Published and
    published, yet perished just the same." And that's the attitude that the
    professors take here. As my advisor said: "The tragedy of Galois is that he
    could have contributed so much more to mathematics if he'd only spent more
    time on his marksmanship." The professors at CMU aren't in the business of
    turning out effete researchers, aimed at the big industrial labs. They are
    interested in training *real* academicians, suitably prepared for life in the
    jungle of university-level computer science. And that means time spent
    practicing our teaching skills and weapons handling *as well as* making
    fundamental research contributions to the field.

    -Olin

    http://textfiles.com/groups/CDC/cDc-0200.txt
  14. #34
    Originally posted by Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country 27-May-87 02:16 OS@hi.cs.cmu.edu
    My reply to J. H. of UC Berkeley:
    - - - - —–
    J. H. -

    Thank you for your letter. It was certainly interesting to hear of
    conditions out on the West Coast. What can I tell you about the situation here
    at CMU? I'm really glad I came to CMU. The faculty is absolutely first rate,
    and they all take pride in their weapons skills. We are admittedly a pretty
    opinionated bunch, which provides for many interesting interchanges within the
    community. I, for instance, think the long barrel .44 Automag is more of a
    fashion statement than a weapon, though you won't catch me saying that within
    earshot of Prof. Fahlman. If you catch my drift.

    I am very fond of Berkeley. I think that while LA represents the dark,
    twisted climb-the-water-tower-and-start-shooting-until-the-Marines-settle-it
    side of California weirdness, Berkeley represents the very best of the pure,
    innocent-killer side of it all. The first weekend I ever spent in Berkeley
    was in the summer of 1983. I was sitting down at one of those really
    delightful cafes you have out there. To my left some old man was drinking
    cappucino and practicing Chinese calligraphy; down the street some
    undergraduates were engaged in a running firefight. I was taking it all in,
    thinking that Berkeleians have remembered something about living well that the
    rest of America seems to have forgotten; when this kid's stray .223 slug
    shattered my glass of pomegranate soda. "Crazy undergraduates" I remember
    chuckling to myself as I put the safety back on my Hi-Power and returned it
    to its holster.

    It seems a shame that ammunition is so hard to come by out there, though.
    We are quite spoiled here at CMU. The departmental attitude towards logistical
    support really crystallized for me in September of my first year. One of the
    incoming first-year hot-shots had taken out Prof. Felton with a head shot from
    500 yards. We were all really impressed, and I think it was generally agreed
    that Felton couldn't have asked for a more painless, appropriate end. It was a
    beautiful, almost poetic way to cap what had been a textbook career of
    brilliant, original mathematical insights punctuated with outbursts of random,
    deeply unhinged violence.

    You've probably heard of Felton (National Academy of Science, IEEE Past
    President, NRA sustaining member). My advisor told me later that Felton's
    academic peak had come at that now-infamous 1982 Symposium on Data Encryption,
    when he presented the plaintext of the encrypted challenge message that Rob
    Merkin had published earlier that year using his "phonebooth packing" trap-door
    algorithm. According to my advisor, Felton wordlessly walked up to the
    chalkboard, wrote down the plaintext, cranked out the multiplies and modulus
    operations by hand, and wrote down the result, which was obviously identical to
    the encrypted text Merkin had published in CACM. Then, still without saying a
    word, he tossed the chalk over his shoulder, spun around, drew and put a 158
    grain semi-wadcutter right between Merkin's eyes. As the echoes from the shot
    reverberated through the room, he stood there, smoke drifting from the muzzle
    of his .357 Magnum, and uttered the first words of the entire presentation:
    "Any questions?" There was a moment of stunned silence, then the entire
    conference hall erupted in wild applause. God, I wish I'd been there.

    But I digress. At Felton's funeral, our departmental chairman delivered
    the eulogy. I'll never forget his summation: "Poor Felton. Published and
    published, yet perished just the same." And that's the attitude that the
    professors take here. As my advisor said: "The tragedy of Galois is that he
    could have contributed so much more to mathematics if he'd only spent more
    time on his marksmanship." The professors at CMU aren't in the business of
    turning out effete researchers, aimed at the big industrial labs. They are
    interested in training *real* academicians, suitably prepared for life in the
    jungle of university-level computer science. And that means time spent
    practicing our teaching skills and weapons handling *as well as* making
    fundamental research contributions to the field.

    -Olin

    http://textfiles.com/groups/CDC/cDc-0200.txt

    ???
  15. #35
    Common De-mominator African Astronaut
    Is Lanny now a real tranny or somth
  16. #36
    aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    Originally posted by Japan-Is-Eternal You're using concepts like "fetishism" …. and for whatever reason you're worried about a culture that celebrates guns and outlaws.
    Get with the times, society is collapsing and the new dark age is soon to commence.

    have a look at those guys in texas who 'open carried' in starbucks as a protest against their 'no guns' policy a few years ago

    it was like a fucking pride parade with more chrome
  17. #37
    Common De-mominator African Astronaut
    Yeah yeah bro I'm totally gonna need to whip out my ak during my donut run bro yeah yeah
  18. #38
    Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country Dark Matter [my scoffingly uncritical tinning]
    Originally posted by Common De-mominator Yeah yeah bro I'm totally gonna need to whip out my ak during my donut run bro yeah yeah

    In Pakistan getting into a firefight with crazy hajis before breakfast is normal
  19. #39
    Ghost Black Hole
    Originally posted by Common De-mominator Yeah yeah bro I'm totally gonna need to whip out my ak during my donut run bro yeah yeah

    I live in Canada and lots of people from Pakistan say it's exactly like this.

    Mind you, it's in the rural areas
  20. #40
    HTS highlight reel
    Originally posted by Common De-mominator Either concealed carry or don't carry a gun, nobody needs more posturing retards out in the world.

    Open carry is probably actually safer, tbh. At least when dealing with cops. Having seen at least one black dude get shot after announcing he was (legally) carrying a concealed weapon, it'd be a lot better if the cops could see where your gun is to put everyone at ease. That said, concealed carry keeps liberal fannies from having panic attacks every time they walk into a McDonalds, so there's some merit to concealed carrying for their peace of mind.

    Optimally everyone would familiarize themselves with firearms and become comfortable with the idea of seeing them in public (open carry culture), but I don't see that ever happening. Genuinely seems as though many are equally as afraid of owning/using a firearm as they are of having one used against them. Which is unfortunate.
Jump to Top