Gone With The Wind premiered in December 1939 in Atlanta, with general release in January of 1940. The movie has been re-released nine times, the 1998 re-release being a remaster in the original format. It was first televised in 1976. Time Warner is the present owner.
Remus writes Woodpile Report for those
who will not excuse, disregard or overlook evil, who will accept
neither a greater nor a lesser evil. They won't tolerate or pardon evil,
nor will they forgive, nor will they forget.
You are ultimately responsible for your own self defense. You can't expect the government to protect you. You can't sue them for failure to protect. And if you prefer to be disarmed, no one will stop you. However, if you do not wish to be a victim of those who are stronger, more violent, ruthless, and predatory, having weaponry is advisable. As to noise suppressors, bayonets, bipods, automatic fire, barrel length, calibre, magazine size, appearance, and styling, that should be up to the owner, not the servant government, to decide.
Do we really want to live in a world of police checkpoints, surveillance cameras, metal detectors, -ray scanners, and warrantless physical searches? We see this culture in our airports: witness the shabby spectacle of once proud, happy Americans shuffling through long lines while uniformed agents bark orders. This is the world of government provided "security," a world far too many Americans now seem to accept or even endorse.
Stoploss
I will tell you a short story. Where im at, we have what are called Wild Boar Hogs. They weigh between 150lbs (calves) up to >500 lb. adults. They roam free in large packs, from county to county, killing small prey, medium and large prey with up to 6 inch long razor sharp tusks. There are four of them. These animals do not discriminate between human and animal prey. When the pack has a new brood, they feed the calves by tilling the land area they are in up to 20 inches deep, for grub worms for the calves to feed on until they can hunt and eat on their own.
Children playing in an open field are a particularly delightful little morsel for the bulls. No need to count how many times i have been caught off guard and charged, by a bull, but when your with your child, you know they are not coming for you, they want the easy meat, the child. The only round that can stop a charging boar hog, is a deer round, or, preferably a high cal round, (less shots to get the kill), but try lugging around a high cal rifle that only holds three rounds, that have to be shot from a fixed point to be any kind of accurate. So no, a high caliber, or standard caliber deer rifle will not work unless it is at night when you are thinning herds with night vision, and high, fixed point, sniper positions.
americanspirit
My guess is that he lives in Texas, as I do. And he is 100% correct. These things hunt people. What he failed to mention is that wild boars are . And very strong. They work together and attack using tactics. And if you think that you can get away by climbing a tree it better be a really big tree - if it has a trunk anything less than 12" or so diameter they will work at it until they bring it down.
With my, i carry only 2 mags, 30 rounds each. Last time i got charged by a young bull, it took six shots to stop him, i hit him five times, missed one.
If you try to take the tool i use to defend myself and my family against, those boar hogs could find new homes very very near the very populaces that require my dis armament.
So, yall can deal with them dragging your kids off into the fields.
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