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http://www.guns.com/2012/12/12/thordsen ... rnian-ars/
My wife was a native San Diegan and she is now a proud gun toting Texan.JALLEN wrote:There were all sorts of ideas floating around a few years ago when we figured out that the secret was the detachable magazine, released using a tool which included a bullet. There were a number of clever designs to get around the express requirements of the law, silly though they may be. Several number companies were launched to produce and market these designs, but Mr. Market finally boiled it all down to the bullet button seen on most of the so-called EBRs here.
One of the proposed new laws, I assume certain to pass, will impose a 5 cent tax on every component of a reloading process. One fellow reacted to say he would just pick a nice day and drive over to Yuma. I intend to drive over to Yuma one nice day with all my stash, and keep on going.
My sons and granddaughters will still live here. They are native San Diegans, impossible to move elsewhere, and I will visit periodically I suppose.
Really? My first wife was, and when I tried to move her to Texas, she didn't like it. It was hot, it was cold, it rained, there were tornadoes, hurricanes, hail, bugs, no beaches, no mountains, people talked funny. That was Austin of the early 1970's, too! Her twin sister was forced for a time to move to Florida and it was a struggle too. Of course, they don't talk funny in Florida.texanjoker wrote:
My wife was a native San Diegan and she is now a proud gun toting Texan.
Tell them you can have reunions at the Cali/Az border.JALLEN wrote:There were all sorts of ideas floating around a few years ago when we figured out that the secret was the detachable magazine, released using a tool which included a bullet. There were a number of clever designs to get around the express requirements of the law, silly though they may be. Several number companies were launched to produce and market these designs, but Mr. Market finally boiled it all down to the bullet button seen on most of the so-called EBRs here.
One of the proposed new laws, I assume certain to pass, will impose a 5 cent tax on every component of a reloading process. One fellow reacted to say he would just pick a nice day and drive over to Yuma. I intend to drive over to Yuma one nice day with all my stash, and keep on going.
My sons and granddaughters will still live here. They are native San Diegans, impossible to move elsewhere, and I will visit periodically I suppose.