The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear the National Rifle Association's claim that a New York state official's alleged role in urging companies to end ties with the gun rights group constituted unlawful coercion.
JOIN NRA TODAY!, NRA Benefactor Life, TSRA Defender Life, Gun Owners of America Life, SAF, VCDL Member
LTC/SSC Instructor, NRA Certified Instructor, CRSO
The last hope of human liberty in this world rests on us. -Thomas Jefferson
RoyGBiv wrote: ↑Wed Nov 08, 2023 10:16 am
I'm still trying to catch up on the part of that linked story that claims Carry Guard provided coverage for acts that were intentionally illegal...
Is this true?
The radical left believes that having legal protection insurance which has a 100-year history is somehow illegal. Apparently it is for gun owners in certain states.
JOIN NRA TODAY!, NRA Benefactor Life, TSRA Defender Life, Gun Owners of America Life, SAF, VCDL Member
LTC/SSC Instructor, NRA Certified Instructor, CRSO
The last hope of human liberty in this world rests on us. -Thomas Jefferson
The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear the National Rifle Association's claim that a New York state official's alleged role in urging companies to end ties with the gun rights group constituted unlawful coercion.
I searched and searched for the bonehead article. But Google wouldn’t find it for me. Thanks for posting. Wonder why Google couldn’t find it with all those algorithms and AI.
philip964 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 08, 2023 10:01 pm
I searched and searched for the bonehead article. But Google wouldn’t find it for me. Thanks for posting. Wonder why Google couldn’t find it with all those algorithms and AI.
It isn't just Google, but since most "search engine optimization" strategies focus on Google because it's the biggest, it's become pretty blatantly obvious that tons of useless stuff is showing up in search queries from Google even if you carefully structure the search strings. Here are a couple of relevant articles:
philip964 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 08, 2023 10:01 pm
I searched and searched for the bonehead article. But Google wouldn’t find it for me. Thanks for posting. Wonder why Google couldn’t find it with all those algorithms and AI.
It isn't just Google, but since most "search engine optimization" strategies focus on Google because it's the biggest, it's become pretty blatantly obvious that tons of useless stuff is showing up in search queries from Google even if you carefully structure the search strings. Here are a couple of relevant articles:
Google's advantage over something like DuckDuckGo isn't as apparent as it used to be, and I do more of my hunting around on DuckDuckGo.
I've had good luck with the Brave search tool too.
Excaliber
"An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." - Jeff Cooper
I am not a lawyer. Nothing in any of my posts should be construed as legal or professional advice.
Yep; Brave is another. I know I steered this off-topic, and I promise I'll stop now. But as a real-world example I was working on a Microsoft Word document yesterday. The layout necessitated a non-breaking space before the number in a date, and I blanked on the shortcut to enter one. Went to Google. Tried three different search strings for something I thought would be very straightforward (BTW, I've found--I guess over the course of the past 6 or 8 months--that I always have to add "-youtube" to any queries because anything even potentially related to the search that's on YouTube gets shoved up near the top...’course, Alphabet Inc, Google's parent, also owns YouTube). Not a single, useful, first-page result returned by any of the three searches. Even specifying "microsoft word" still got me general Windows 10 and 11 keyboard shortcuts totally unrelated to the Office products. Just bizarre. But then, Google doesn't much like you searching for Microsoft stuff.
Went to DuckDuckGo. First search, first two items. Bingo; right there in the description summaries. Ctrl+Shift+Space.
“Be ready; now is the beginning of happenings.”
― Robert E. Howard, Swords of Shahrazar