Here's a better idea
https://thepostmillennial.com/bongino-b ... nd-youtube
Apparently, there's a large group effort going around for people to ditch Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter to join Parler. I don't have any of the three to ditch, but I did download the Parler app a couple days ago. I'm not sure what to do with it, though. I'm definitely not much of a social media person.
Open carry to protest the election
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Re: Open carry to protest the election
I haven't seen it, but what the heck kind of word is "Parler"? A room where people sit around and talk is a "parlor," not a "parler."strogg wrote: ↑Tue Nov 10, 2020 9:15 am Here's a better idea
https://thepostmillennial.com/bongino-b ... nd-youtube
Apparently, there's a large group effort going around for people to ditch Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter to join Parler. I don't have any of the three to ditch, but I did download the Parler app a couple days ago. I'm not sure what to do with it, though. I'm definitely not much of a social media person.
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Re: Open carry to protest the election
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/parler
manner of speaking : figurative expression : turn of phrase
Deplorable lunatic since 2016
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Re: Open carry to protest the election
While I feel the underlying sentiment of this post, I think you carry a gun in a pronounced manner in a protest for only two reasons:
1) if you are protesting some kind of gun-specific issue, e.g 2A or other related topic in a circumstance that makes sense (which even then I probably wouldn't).
2) if you are overtly making a threat that you intend to back up at some point.
It feels like you are going for #2. I'm not there yet. But I also do not find the thought ridiculous...which really sucks.
I think if we had a location in downtown Dallas where people were finding votes out of thin air while excluding fair observation (in defiance of a court order that the sheriff refused to enforce), surrounding the building with an armed protest is a tactic that maybe worth considering. It would be a threat at that point, but in the name of defending liberty and fairness.
Unfortunately, that opportunity is missed, and now even if there were fraud, it will be hard to prove. It may be that the election was stolen from us--but it also may not be that...we will never truly know. And if it got overturned, our neighbors would feel the same way. This is tragic.
1) if you are protesting some kind of gun-specific issue, e.g 2A or other related topic in a circumstance that makes sense (which even then I probably wouldn't).
2) if you are overtly making a threat that you intend to back up at some point.
It feels like you are going for #2. I'm not there yet. But I also do not find the thought ridiculous...which really sucks.
I think if we had a location in downtown Dallas where people were finding votes out of thin air while excluding fair observation (in defiance of a court order that the sheriff refused to enforce), surrounding the building with an armed protest is a tactic that maybe worth considering. It would be a threat at that point, but in the name of defending liberty and fairness.
Unfortunately, that opportunity is missed, and now even if there were fraud, it will be hard to prove. It may be that the election was stolen from us--but it also may not be that...we will never truly know. And if it got overturned, our neighbors would feel the same way. This is tragic.
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Re: Open carry to protest the election
There are other reasons to carry openly, even "in a protest." In my case, I'm just going about life, defending myself and mine in the best way I know.Hoodasnacks wrote: ↑Tue Nov 10, 2020 12:42 pm While I feel the underlying sentiment of this post, I think you carry a gun in a pronounced manner in a protest for only two reasons:
1) if you are protesting some kind of gun-specific issue, e.g 2A or other related topic in a circumstance that makes sense (which even then I probably wouldn't).
2) if you are overtly making a threat that you intend to back up at some point.
It feels like you are going for #2. I'm not there yet. But I also do not find the thought ridiculous...which really sucks.
I think if we had a location in downtown Dallas where people were finding votes out of thin air while excluding fair observation (in defiance of a court order that the sheriff refused to enforce), surrounding the building with an armed protest is a tactic that maybe worth considering. It would be a threat at that point, but in the name of defending liberty and fairness.
Unfortunately, that opportunity is missed, and now even if there were fraud, it will be hard to prove. It may be that the election was stolen from us--but it also may not be that...we will never truly know. And if it got overturned, our neighbors would feel the same way. This is tragic.
O. Lee James, III Captain, US Army (Retired 2012), Honorable Order of St. Barbara
2/19FA, 1st Cavalry Division 73-78; 56FA BDE (Pershing) 78-81
NRA, NRA Basic Pistol Shooting Instructor, Rangemaster Certified, GOA, TSRA, NAR L1
2/19FA, 1st Cavalry Division 73-78; 56FA BDE (Pershing) 78-81
NRA, NRA Basic Pistol Shooting Instructor, Rangemaster Certified, GOA, TSRA, NAR L1
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Re: Open carry to protest the election
Agreed--I was referring to carrying as a sign of protest...not just carrying to protect yourself (which should be done open or concealed as one is most comfortable when attending any protest. Especially in current times).oljames3 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 10, 2020 1:36 pmThere are other reasons to carry openly, even "in a protest." In my case, I'm just going about life, defending myself and mine in the best way I know.Hoodasnacks wrote: ↑Tue Nov 10, 2020 12:42 pm While I feel the underlying sentiment of this post, I think you carry a gun in a pronounced manner in a protest for only two reasons:
1) if you are protesting some kind of gun-specific issue, e.g 2A or other related topic in a circumstance that makes sense (which even then I probably wouldn't).
2) if you are overtly making a threat that you intend to back up at some point.
It feels like you are going for #2. I'm not there yet. But I also do not find the thought ridiculous...which really sucks.
I think if we had a location in downtown Dallas where people were finding votes out of thin air while excluding fair observation (in defiance of a court order that the sheriff refused to enforce), surrounding the building with an armed protest is a tactic that maybe worth considering. It would be a threat at that point, but in the name of defending liberty and fairness.
Unfortunately, that opportunity is missed, and now even if there were fraud, it will be hard to prove. It may be that the election was stolen from us--but it also may not be that...we will never truly know. And if it got overturned, our neighbors would feel the same way. This is tragic.