Quote:
Originally Posted by 636blurr
Very entertaining you would talk about having a round in the chamber and being prepared, but you yea now THATS the way to do it.
Yup people shoudl be prepared, and a round should be in the chamber soon as possible however, since your's is in a lock box (still laughin) I kinda find it funny you are going off about the importance of one in the chamber at all times, does it help while its sitting rnd?
Just curious phil, do you know how to slice the pie? practice low light shooting? shoot no shoot scenerios?
Edit: The rest I already said.
Have a nice day.
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Who pissed in your Cheerios? You're usually a bit difficult, but this week you've really been over the top.
Anyway, we frequently have other people's children at our house, and I cannot be sure (esp. here in CA) that they have been reliably trained in gun safety. Our bedroom is upstairs in a location that is defensible, and my wife is a very light sleeper. The lockbox is one of those 5-button ones that is very quick to access if you know the combo and have practiced, yet plenty good enough to defeat a curious toddler should one find it. I live in a fairly low crime area. Given all that, I have made the conscious decision to sacrifice a small bit of my safety for the sake of preventing an accident.
That's different than sacrificing your own safety foolishly in order to make a scary noise and hope. Are you actually advocating the idea of entering the fight without a round chambered so you can make the scary "racking" noise, or are you just being difficult for fun?
And yeah, I know the rest of that stuff. Yay for me. What difference does that make with regard to any of these arguments?
PhilB