February 4th, 2011, 21:06 | #181 |
Never offer to register items. You do it if you are forced to.
Anyone who thinks volunteering to do that is good is an idiot. It's like offering to give your DNA just in case they might be able to use it to convict you of something later. I can't even fathom how insane or twisted a mind must be to find logic and reason in doing that. Sometimes, shaking your head in utter disbelief is insufficient.
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Age verifier Northern Alberta Democracy is two wolves and a sheep discussing what's for dinner. Freedom is the wolves limping away while the sheep reloads. Never confuse freedom with democracy. |
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February 4th, 2011, 21:31 | #182 | |
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Cop 1: "We're going into this welfare slum dwelling in response to a domestic dispute call." Cop 2: "Ok, checking the gun registry now for that address. Nope. No guns present at this address..." Cop 1: "Ok, nothing to worry about here then." If that doesn't sound utterly retarded to you, then you need to give your head a shake. Secondly, the statistics about how many times a day the registry are checked are irrelevant. As soon as an officer looks up an address, vehicle plate, checks a name, etc, the computer automatically polls the firearms registry whether or not the officer wants it, and regardless of whether the information is useful in his particular situation. This is where the "the registry is useful because it's checked 210891724098214098 times a day by officers in the line of duty" statistic comes from. It makes the statistic irrelevant. Registration of firearms - real or replicas - is pointless. It's a means for easy confiscation, nothing more. That being said, I'm a RS owner, and I've complied with the law and registered my guns. I have to because it's the law. I held out on registration as long as I possibly could. And had I been able to not register them, I wouldn't have.
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February 4th, 2011, 21:38 | #183 | |
Quote:
+1 Hear that.... |
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