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Posted: 11/29/2018 9:59:33 AM EST
Jennifer Wright of Harper’s Bazaar She lays her cards on the table in her hit piece, Why We Need to Take Away All the Guns. "There is a lot we can do in society to discourage violent outbursts. Encouraging young men to be comfortable expressing emotions rather than turning their anger into murderous violence would be a great start. But in the meantime, because that’s going to take a while, let’s take away the guns." Gee, thanks for telling me the truth about what you really want. What’s funny is that when I was a young man, I was a gun owner and never resorted to violent outbursts when something wrong happened. It sounds to me that Ms. Wright is projecting her own personal insecurities onto others. Additionally, she goes on and claims that criminals armed with weapons other than firearms and fine and dandy. "And please don’t try to say if people didn’t have guns they would just use something else. Any honest person will tell you that they’d rather be confronted by a man with a knife than a man with a gun. Men with knives just plain can’t do the damage that men with semi-automatic weapons do." Hmmm, as a law abiding citizen and law enforcement officer. I can tell you that someone armed with a knife can very well be dangerous. As a cop, we’re thought the 21 foot rule. Someone armed with a knife can close the distance and attack before I can break leather and draw down. In fact, as for violent attacks with a knife; back in 2014 in Kunming, Yunnan province, People’s Republic of China. A group of eight knife-wielding men and women attacked passengers at the city’s railway station and killed a total of 31 people and injured a total of 143 people, including 7 cops. Ms. Wright continues on with the classic augment that pro-gun advocates always claim that Hitler taking people’s guns was a precursor to throwing them into camps. Her claim is that folks were already in camps and that an armed society wouldn’t have prevent it. Then if that was the case, why did Hitler and every other cruel despot disarm the population? Additionally, she flat out threatens gun owners with the crushing force of the Federal Government. She flat out states; "If you seriously think you and your neighbor Earl would be able to fight off the U.S. government with your sloppily assembled guns you are a delusional idiot who has never heard of Ruby Ridge." Doesn’t that sound like something a certain elected official said when he threatened gun owners with nuclear weapons? She claims that the 2nd Amendment is outdated and can be replaced by the Elastic Clause (Article 1, Section 8) in the Constitution. Well, I hate to tell her that she failed to learn anything from civics class. Because the Constitution doesn’t work like that. But in the end, she tries to make herself seem friendly to us by going the Australia approach. Claiming that we need to adopt Australia’s stringent yet useless laws. Strange that since the Land Down Under passed their gun laws that their crime rate has sky rocketed. Ms. Wright’s entire attack on gun owners is typical of the gun grabbing leftists. Nothing but projection of their own issues and fears onto the law abiding public and then threatening us with violence for our own beliefs that we need to project protect ourselves from violence. So she tried to make us feel useless when in fact she corroborated everything we believe in. |
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She's not even a useful idiot. Let the Chan's eat her alive. Sick them on her.
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No 2A, no free people, no free nation. Most Americans don't want a stasi state.
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If they can admit they want to take our guns, is it ok to admit I want to be their huckleberry?
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It’s gonna be a shame that I’ll eventually have to use my guns to kill the people she sends to take them.
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When I read the title of the thread, I figured it might be referring to T$.
Pleasantly surprised that it was an actual leftist this time, and not our GOP POTUS. |
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Its good to see the left let the truth leak out. They generally lose when they over extend and let their craziness show a little too much. Hope they ramp it up over the next couple years.
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She’s like most other antis....... she wants someone else to do the work for her glorious socialist utopia........ come on woman, you first
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Disgusting propagandists. Maybe she can go live in Australia then.
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Geez two months ago she said Trump was preparing for genocide
https://www.harpersbazaar.com/culture/politics/a23010174/stripping-american-citizens-passports-genocide/ |
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Googling the author produced the expected results. Spoiled little rich girl liberal living in NYC married to soy boy whose daddy happens to be a VP of the payment processor for the fucking US Government lol. Edit: Not US .gov but it seems 26% of all counties in the US use them for processing fines and fees. Sweet racket.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/27/fashion/weddings/jennifer-wright-daniel-kibblesmith.html It's always fun when people who have never had to worry about anything at all tell the rest of us savages how to live. |
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"If you seriously think you and your neighbor Earl would be able to fight off the U.S. government with your sloppily assembled guns you are a delusional idiot who has never heard of Ruby Ridge."
What that bitch need is some of that Ruby Ridge treatment. |
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Comments disabled
Edit nevermind, they appeared. Not that I really want to read Yahoo comments |
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Quoted:
"Huckle Bearer". View Quote I'm your huckleberry. "Huckleberry" was commonly used in the 1800's in conjunction with "persimmon" as a small unit of measure. "I'm a huckleberry over your persimmon" meant "I'm just a bit better than you." As a result, "huckleberry" came to denote idiomatically two things. First, it denoted a small unit of measure, a "tad," as it were, and a person who was a huckleberry could be a small, unimportant person--usually expressed ironically in mock self-depreciation. The second and more common usage came to mean, in the words of the "Dictionary of American Slang: Second Supplemented Edition" (Crowell, 1975): "A man; specif., the exact kind of man needed for a particular purpose. 1936: "Well, I'm your huckleberry, Mr. Haney." Tully, "Bruiser," 37. Since 1880, archaic. Now ain't that a daisy. |
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I have guns to keep you from taking them....
Wrap your head around that, you stupid bitch. |
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Earl... hmmmmm, seems to me this urban cunt sure is a prejudiced little twat waffle.
If my gun is sloppily assembled, I guess you have little reason to fear it. |
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Quoted:
"If you seriously think you and your neighbor Earl would be able to fight off the U.S. government with your sloppily assembled guns you are a delusional idiot who has never heard of Ruby Ridge." What that bitch need is some of that Ruby Ridge treatment. View Quote I wanna see her in the lead Humvee when they drive into Logan Co. West Virginia to start "confiscating" |
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Maybe the most annoying thing about people like the author is she really doesn't give a shit about guns. Its just a topic on the list that she is supposed to care about so she bangs out a dumb article about it. She'll do the same to call Trump a nazi and call anyone who voted for him a white supremacist.
She has no idea that people will die if she gets what she wants. The fucked up part is if she did understand what she was really asking for I'm positive she wouldn't care. |
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Quoted:
Geez two months ago she said Trump was preparing for genocide https://www.harpersbazaar.com/culture/politics/a23010174/stripping-american-citizens-passports-genocide/ View Quote |
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Quoted:
Geez two months ago she said Trump was preparing for genocide https://www.harpersbazaar.com/culture/politics/a23010174/stripping-american-citizens-passports-genocide/ View Quote |
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Quoted:
"The phrase “a huckleberry over my persimmon” was used to mean “a bit beyond my abilities”. “I’m your huckleberry” is a way of saying that one is just the right person for a given job." I'm your huckleberry. "Huckleberry" was commonly used in the 1800's in conjunction with "persimmon" as a small unit of measure. "I'm a huckleberry over your persimmon" meant "I'm just a bit better than you." As a result, "huckleberry" came to denote idiomatically two things. First, it denoted a small unit of measure, a "tad," as it were, and a person who was a huckleberry could be a small, unimportant person--usually expressed ironically in mock self-depreciation. The second and more common usage came to mean, in the words of the "Dictionary of American Slang: Second Supplemented Edition" (Crowell, 1975): "A man; specif., the exact kind of man needed for a particular purpose. 1936: "Well, I'm your huckleberry, Mr. Haney." Tully, "Bruiser," 37. Since 1880, archaic. Now ain't that a daisy. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
"Huckle Bearer". I'm your huckleberry. "Huckleberry" was commonly used in the 1800's in conjunction with "persimmon" as a small unit of measure. "I'm a huckleberry over your persimmon" meant "I'm just a bit better than you." As a result, "huckleberry" came to denote idiomatically two things. First, it denoted a small unit of measure, a "tad," as it were, and a person who was a huckleberry could be a small, unimportant person--usually expressed ironically in mock self-depreciation. The second and more common usage came to mean, in the words of the "Dictionary of American Slang: Second Supplemented Edition" (Crowell, 1975): "A man; specif., the exact kind of man needed for a particular purpose. 1936: "Well, I'm your huckleberry, Mr. Haney." Tully, "Bruiser," 37. Since 1880, archaic. Now ain't that a daisy. I always assumed it was huckle bearer because it was a sarcastic usage of "pall bearer" by Holliday in that movie. |
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Fuck that stupid cunt.
I hope she is beaten do death by her burglar, after the obligatory raping. She is contributing absolutely nothing to the planet.The fucking whore's twitter. |
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Va would gladly elect her congress person.
We have had several open anti gunners campaigning on anti gun platforms (Gov, Lt Gov, and AG currently) and win bigly. That said, fuck that stupid bitch. |
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But ... But that is just more N.R.A. Fear Mongering!!!
Because we are always told that "No One Wants to Take Away Your Guns" © Except for those large numbers of the Media and Politicians who have explicitly already said exactly that ... |
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Quoted:
Maybe the most annoying thing about people like the author is she really doesn't give a shit about guns. Its just a topic on the list that she is supposed to care about so she bangs out a dumb article about it. She'll do the same to call Trump a nazi and call anyone who voted for him a white supremacist. She has no idea that people will die if she gets what she wants. The fucked up part is if she did understand what she was really asking for I'm positive she wouldn't care. View Quote |
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Quoted:
"If you seriously think you and your neighbor Earl would be able to fight off the U.S. government with your sloppily assembled guns you are a delusional idiot who has never heard of Ruby Ridge." What that bitch need is some of that Ruby Ridge treatment. View Quote |
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"If you seriously think you and your neighbor Earl would be able to fight off the U.S. government with your sloppily assembled guns you are a delusional idiot who has never heard of Ruby Ridge."
These same scummers do not want the America using the power of the Federal Gov't to protect our border from this invasion but are fine with using it against its own citizens. |
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Quoted: "The phrase “a huckleberry over my persimmon” was used to mean “a bit beyond my abilities”. “I’m your huckleberry” is a way of saying that one is just the right person for a given job." I'm your huckleberry. "Huckleberry" was commonly used in the 1800's in conjunction with "persimmon" as a small unit of measure. "I'm a huckleberry over your persimmon" meant "I'm just a bit better than you." As a result, "huckleberry" came to denote idiomatically two things. First, it denoted a small unit of measure, a "tad," as it were, and a person who was a huckleberry could be a small, unimportant person--usually expressed ironically in mock self-depreciation. The second and more common usage came to mean, in the words of the "Dictionary of American Slang: Second Supplemented Edition" (Crowell, 1975): "A man; specif., the exact kind of man needed for a particular purpose. 1936: "Well, I'm your huckleberry, Mr. Haney." Tully, "Bruiser," 37. Since 1880, archaic. Now ain't that a daisy. View Quote |
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Could someone be willing to go to that stupid tied up barrel and make it look like this?
Attached File That might cause someone to get into their safe space. |
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More leftist, Hollywood propaganda: https://www.ar15.com/forums/general/Hollywood-going-full-retard-against-semi-auto-rifles/5-2170161/
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This is crazy talk, people like this need psychiatric help.
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What she fails to play out in her scenario is, that once those sent to grab the guns are dealt with, those who sent them will be dealt with in due course.
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