Wat’s Carbon Water-N-Stuff Thread - Concepts In Iron And Wood!!!

I've got two really nice leather holsters. Bought'em way back when.



I was looking for something for the P229.


There are so many more choices for the 1911.


I reckon I should just spring for that 10mm SA and be done wiffit.


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When they think about it, they hurt themselves . . . .


The New Yorker has lost its mind in this article. I think the Trump people unlocked and unloaded yesterday.


Of course, likely they wrote the article based on polls . . . .


According to an analysis of FEMA data, some twenty million Americans are actively preparing for cataclysm—roughly twice as many as in 2017. Political violence, including the spectre of civil war, is one of the reasons. A recent study conducted by researchers at U.C. Davis concluded that one in three adults in the U.S., including up to half of Republicans, feel that violence is “usually or always justified” to advance certain political objectives (say, returning Trump to the White House). In May, Ray Dalio, the billionaire founder of Bridgewater Associates, one of the world’s largest hedge funds, told the Financial Times that he believed there was about a thirty-five-per-cent chance of civil war breaking out in America. “We are now on the brink,” Dalio said, noting that a modern civil war—though it might not involve muskets—would see the fracturing of states and widespread defiance of federal law. In June, Dalio upped his estimate to “uncomfortably more than 50 percent,” predicting “an existential battle of the hard right against the hard left in which you will have to pick a side and fight for it, or keep your head down, or flee.”



https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/...m_medium=email&utm_term=NYR_CYGNUS_STATIC_1PP

Wat didn't, of course, but that's another conversation entirely.
Published the day before the election huh? *chuckle*
 
That's what the guy who trained me smoked and he drank his coffee black and talked relentlessly about Korea.

He was warning me and I should have paid attention. Your elders know "shit."

(Like, in, The Postman)
 
My grandfather taught me more about Stuff than almost any other human ever. I consider myself fortunate that I was present and able to hear at least part of it, and I look forward to Passing It On.


He also taught me how to shoot.
 
I think that Allah provides mentors to the students who are ready, and more importantly, when they are ready. That can be a lifetime series if one is willing to learn.


Learning requires suspension of the idea that we already know . . . .
 
Here's hoping the Emhoffs have put away enough graft loot to retire comfortably, especially since it looks like they won't be building down the street from Barry-n-Mike.
With all the time on his hand he'll be too busy looking for another nanny to bang or another girlfriend to smack around. Gots to keep up his image as America's married man.
 
So, I was shopping for a shoulder holster yesterday and failed to make a decision.


Actually, I did. I don't want to spend $300-and-change for a good one, and I don't want a half-assed one.
I purchased one for my 40.cal and found it to be a big mistake for me. Very uncomfortable. Ended up buying a standard waist holster. Maybe it's me. I should of listened to my gun dealer who told me I probably won't like the feel if you carry for long periods of time.
 
I purchased one for my 40.cal and found it to be a big mistake for me. Very uncomfortable. Ended up buying a standard waist holster. Maybe it's me. I should of listened to my gun dealer who told me I probably won't like the feel if you carry for long periods of time.


There is that. I do have several good waistband holsters. Perhaps I should leave well enough alone.
 
“Once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return.”

~ Leonardo da Vinci



One can have no smaller or greater mastery than mastery of oneself.

The height of a man’s success is gauged by his self-mastery; the depth of his failure by his self-abandonment. And this law is the expression of eternal justice

It had long since come to my attention that people of accomplishment rarely sat back and let things happen to them. They went out and happened to things. Knowing is not enough — we must apply.

Being willing is not enough — we must do . . . .
 
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