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All involved in seizing that weapon should have to serve hard time.
Python first. Especially an older one.GP100
Python
Model 27
It's St. Louis...................nuff said.I am fabulously and indescribably good with that.
Twenty years is a good start.
Breaking rocks. Making little'uns outta big'uns.
Do they still do that? They should . . . .
Python first. Especially an older one.
It's St. Louis...................nuff said.
You have to change the politics first.They have rocks there.
Hammers can be imported.
Steel handles, so they won't splinter and break.
Why would they serve time? They enforced the law as they knew it. At worst, they might have a civil case.US News
McCloskeys win back AR-15 rifle 5 years after Black Lives Matter protest confrontation
By
Sophia Compton, Fox News
Published Aug. 3, 2025, 12:22 a.m. ET
The St. Louis couple who went viral in 2020 for wielding guns as Black Lives Matter protesters marched outside their property have regained possession of their semiautomatic rifle.
After a years long and complex legal struggle to reclaim their weapons after they were seized by authorities more than five years ago, police have returned the AR-15 to St. Louis lawyers Mark and Patricia McCloskey.
“It only took 3 lawsuits, 2 trips to the Court of Appeals and 1,847 days, but I got my AR15 back!” Mark McCloskey posted to his X account on Friday, along with several photos of him carrying the gun.
“We defended our home, were persecuted by the left, smeared by the press, and threatened with death, but we never backed down.”
https://nypost.com/2025/08/03/us-ne...ter-black-lives-matter-protest-confrontation/
All involved in seizing that weapon should have to serve hard time.
Well, there's a set of 8x57 reloading dies sitting out at the club that have been there for a year for anyone that wants them. Want them?So, now that I have this-here 'nother 8mm rifle on the way, I'm thinking about maybe getting some more 8mm ammo for it and its new pal, the first one I have. Lol and behold, there's a bigass batch of Gin-ewe-wine Waffenundmunitionfabriken leftovers from WW2. Who knew? Also some Greek stuff from 1939.
Of course, anything that can be reloaded is way more modern and way more 'spensive.
Well, there's a set of 8x57 reloading dies sitting out at the club that have been there for a year for anyone that wants them. Want them?
There is that option as well. What ya thinkin' on alternatives?Thank you. That's very kind of you. However, I did acquire some reloading bits many years ago and a set of 8x57 dies reside Out West with the remaining other reloading bits. I have even have some ammo that I assembled. As I recall, it shot pretty well.
Then again, this rifle may want to become Something Else, too.
There is that option as well. What ya thinkin' on alternatives?
Talk to the folks over at Douglas. What with the newer bullets you'll need a faster twist. 1:7 should work if I'm followin' your train of thought.Prolly something with a smaller bullet and an "aught six" in its name.