Guest views are now limited to 12 pages. If you get an "Error" message, just sign in! If you need to create an account, click here.

Jump to content

Slaydadea

Members
  • Posts

    1,316
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Slaydadea

  1. The Rem 1100 is probably one of the finest productions shotguns I've ever had the pleasure to own and fire. I have two of them. One is a sewer pipe,"if you know what I mean". Bad to the bone. For now, I'm building a Mossy 500 with a 19 " breacher, laser scope and sight, tac forend with strap. I shoot left hand so I ported the right side of the barrel with a 2 mm offset. It kicks like a pi$$Doff mule with 3 inch 00 buck but the majority goes down and left. Easy to recover from because I'm used to it.. Not done with it just yet. Waiting on parts. Your father will love his shotgun! A birthday or Christmas would be cool. Slay.
  2. Man! I saw the the topic and clicked to see how to sign up! Good one1
  3. Ring me up buddy! We'll have a BLAST! No pun there. I love a good shotgun! Smokin Joe's got it going on! Could this possibly be his wife?
  4. This is a really, really, big deal! Don't think for minute it can't happen to us people. If they get away with this time, people will accept it as normal. It's a conditioning process. Thanks RS.
  5. No one cares for a "Lopster" much, at least on DV. So whats left? Pig or shrimp likely.
  6. Maybe we can convince Joe to buy us all a new shotgun! Just trying to find a bright side.
  7. This music video was posted previously on DV about 3 or so years ago. For the life of me, I can't remember who posted it. It did leave an impression. Re-posting. Please enjoy.
  8. I don't blame him at all. Michelle is the food cop, get her to do it!
  9. Great post indeed Brandy. I'm messing around a bit with auqaponics myself. Been doing research for awhile. Your posted links are very helpful. I do believe that a person with a 1 year supply of food storage and no gold with 2 kids will by far be better off than a person with a pile of gold, no food and a hungry family. Hard to put a price on a can of corn when your kids are starving. It may not be for sale. That is an extreme scenario to say the least. My natural garden went in this week from seed. I'm in coastal NC so our weather is warming. The Auquponics setup will provide year long growing as long as I can control the climate. It does get cold here in the winter. Thanks again.
  10. Great post buddy. After three attempts, I think I finally watched it all. Hard to get the past the bird full of flags. Again, thanks!
  11. http://news.yahoo.com/colt-shuts-plant-workers-talk-113403810.html HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- The president of one of the nation's oldest gun manufacturers closed down his Connecticut factory Thursday morning and bused 400 of his workers to the state Capitol so they could personally urge lawmakers not to pass gun control legislation that they say could risk their livelihoods. Dennis Veilleux, president of the Hartford-based Colt's Manufacturing Co., said even though he has spoken with legislators and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's staff about his trepidations several times, he believes they don't truly understand the financial ramifications of the legislation being proposed in the wake of the deadly Dec. 14 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown. State officials have listened to the concerns he and other Connecticut gun company officials have voiced, "but I would say it's more pacifying us," Veilleux said. That's why he decided to rent 10 buses and bring over his first shift workers, plus some second- and third-shift ones, and some suppliers. "These are the faces of the jobs at Colt," Veilleux said in an interview with The Associated Press while riding on a bus back to the factory. "Each of these people represents other people in the state. They represent the community and, in a lot of cases, they're the breadwinners of their families. And more and more, manufacturing jobs are hard to come by." Colt has been operating in Connecticut for the past 175 years. The Colt workers packed the Legislative Office Building, many holding signs that read "Save Our Jobs," as legislative leaders continued to meet behind closed doors, trying to craft a bipartisan response to the school massacre. They're scheduled to meet again on Friday. Meanwhile, members of the General Assembly's Public Safety and Security Committee heard testimony on numerous gun control bills, including a new gun offender registry, an expanded assault weapons ban, ammunition restrictions and a ban on bulk purchases of handguns. Ron Pinciaro, executive director of Connecticut Against Gun Violence, defended the breadth of legislation. "We feel that because of the enormity of the situation that happened on Dec. 14, that if we just put some Band-Aids on things, it's really not going to be enough," Pinciaro said. Twenty first-graders and six educators were killed at Sandy Hook. The shooter had also killed his mother before eventually committing suicide. Eric Koenigs, a manufacturing engineer at Colt for the past nine years, has worked in the industry for 18 years. Even though Veilleux has not threatened to move Colt out of Connecticut, Koenigs said he is extremely concerned about the fate of his job if, for example, the state's current assault weapons ban is expanded. "I never thought it would happen here," said Koenigs. Connecticut is known as the "Arsenal of the Nation," a reputation first gained in the American Revolution. In the early 19th century, inventors Eli Whitney and Simeon North began making firearms in Connecticut with interchangeable parts, which is often recognized as the beginning of modern mass production. Democratic members of a legislative subcommittee charged with reviewing gun laws recently recommended exempting Connecticut gun manufacturers from a proposed law expanding the definition of an assault weapon. Even though the weapons could not be purchased in the state, they could still be manufactured here. Veilleux contends his company would still suffer, even though it currently doesn't sell many rifles in Connecticut. "If we ban this product in the state where we make it, our customers will take their business to another brand," he said. "When we start to get erosion of our customers, we lose our market share." There are numerous postings on Colt's Facebook page from gun advocates urging the company to move out of Connecticut, which they claim does not respect the constitutional right to bear arms. There also are postings from people urging Colt not to supply law enforcement with guns in New York, a state that recently enacted strong gun control initiatives. Veilleux said gun customers are well-connected and know what is happening in different states in terms of gun control efforts. "Our customers don't want to support the state of New York. So our customers aren't going to want to support the state of Connecticut," he said. "And our association is so strong with the state of Connecticut, that it's inevitable that it's going to begin to erode."
  12. Big smile! Point that "thing" you point all the friggin time, one more time! One more time! Every photo out of North Korea, ya'll point the same damn thing. You're dad was an idiot too!!!
  13. Sweet lady pattyangle, Like they say, "Home is where the Carrier is".
  14. Small world brother. I was an Instructor for VP-30, P3 Squadron out of Jacksonville FL for 3 years. Flew in a many P3 Orian. Cold as crap. Gotta keep the avionics on ice.
  15. Dog, back in the day, she was state of the art. Being an Airdale, I've huffed more exhaust from that jet than I care to admit. That one and many others. USS Constellation CV 64 and USS Saratogo CV 60. I did 8 years at Miramar as a young man. Checkin you out friend! Bet that was a blast!
  16. “I recall my first time with a condom, I was 16 or so. I went in to buy a packet of condoms at the pharmacy. There was this beautiful woman assistant behind the counter, and she could see that I was new at it. She handed me the package and asked if I knew how to wear one. I honestly answered, ‘No, this is my first time.’ So she unwrapped the package, took one out and slipped it over her thumb. She cautioned me to make sure it was on tight and secure. I apparently still looked confused. So, she looked all around the store to see if it was empty. It was empty. ‘Just a minute,’ she said, and walked to the door, and locked it. Taking my hand, she led me into the back room, unbuttoned her blouse and removed it. She unhooked her bra and laid it aside. ‘Do these excite you?’ She asked. Well, I was so dumb-struck that all I could do was nod my head. She then said it was time to slip the condom on. As I was slipping it on, she dropped her skirt, removed her panties and lay down on a desk. ‘Well, come on’, she said, ‘We don’t have much time.’ So I climbed on her. It was so wonderful, that unfortunately, I could no longer hold back and KAPOWWWWWWWW, I was done within a few moments. She looked at me with a bit of a frown. ‘Did you put that condom on?’ she asked. I said, ‘I sure did,’ and held up my thumb to show her. She fainted.”
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.