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\> Member of the most heavily armed demographic in the world

\> Constantly masquerades as uber masculine All-American bad boy

\> Fake Southern accent

\> "MUH FOOTBALL"

\> Will ONLY attend Trump approved political events

\> Believes political events that aren't Trump approved are set ups by feds

\> Constantly circle jerks to Tesla vandalization videos

\> "The left is violent!"

\> Goes to Trump rally

\> Crowd of 300 Trump supporters gets encircled by 10 antifa

\> Gets hit in the head with Starbucks cup filled with poop

\> Does nothing

\> Takes selfie and posts it to twitter
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MI7BZ3EW on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
No, they keep trying to take them away and then we remind them that they're not for the taking.

Back in WA state, they passed an initiative that banned private transfer of firearms. So the day the law went into effect, about a hundred or so people showed up at the capitol building and started buying and selling guns from each other in front of the cops.

They kept trying to pass these gun laws only to find out they are unenforceable. Go look up and see if you can find anyone convicted or even prosecuted for gun crimes in the so-called blue states. I mean, in WA state they tried to convict a passenger in a vehicle for carrying a firearm he wasn't supposed to have, only to remember that a passenger in a vehicle where the driver had committed a crime was not a suspect unless he actually commits a crime, and get the entire case thrown out on probable cause.

Not to mention the fact that the number of police officers during 2020 went down but no one was reporting on where those cops were ending up. Were they retiring? Quitting? My guess is a lot of cops ended up like swiss cheese whenever they tried to enforce the covid bullshit even in blue states, and the media was hush-hush for fear it would spread.

I mean, they tried to red flag a guy in Kentucky because of a report from his ex-wife. A dead dog and two dead cops later, the sheriff is announcing that he is no longer a suspect and they are not going to try and arrest him anymore. You don't hear those kinds of stories in the news for obvious reasons.

Oh, one of my favorite is when it was illegal to carry handguns in Texas twenty years ago, some guy shot up a deputy who tried to arrest him for carrying. The guy fled to his 20 acre property and lived there for 20 years, even though the next sheriff that got elected announced that he was no longer under suspicion for killing a cop. This kind of thing happens a lot more than people realize.
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