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Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
Let it snowe wrote:
On 12/16/2014 8:25 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: Someone Else wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/16/14 7:53 AM, Tim wrote: On Tuesday, December 16, 2014 3:30:12 AM UTC-8, Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/15/14 11:13 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On 16 Dec 2014 02:30:04 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 21:10:09 -0500, Let it snowe wrote: On 12/15/2014 8:44 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 15:48:28 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: I'm not a fan of south Florida living, especially on that side, and on a manmade canal, to boot. When it comes to Florida, I prefer the topography, flora and fauna of the NE part of the state, just south of Georgia. === You'd probably like something like this I suspect: https://www.dropbox.com/s/9bt27dmvdpcq93u/pool%20and%20boats.jpg?dl=0 That's the view from my office. Rubbing a little salt in his wounds? === You bet. :-) Not mine. Too small a house, too small a lot, no real trees, don't like pools, not on beach, neighbors too close, don't like Florida-style man made canals. === How fortunate that you don't live here. Quite frankly you really wouldn't fit in since most of us worked hard all of our lives so we could retire to such a miserable place. Firemen work hard. Doctors Without Borders work hard. Teachers work hard. Social workers work hard. Factory workers work hard. Waitresses work hard. Retired banksters like you pushed pencils and keyboard buttons at institutions that either went over the edge of legality or pushed the envelope so they could screw the economy, the country, and everyone who actually worked hard. Unfortunately, the government was willing to settle for your former employer paying back huge fines instead of sending everyone who worked there to your favorite graybar institution. The place you retired to isn't miserable. It's just not to everyone's taste. That you think it should be and why you think what you do in retirement is the epitome of retirement is just further proof of your unfettered arrogance. Why so bitter Harry? Who, Wayne? Not me. I find nothing admirable about the bankster or his lifestyle. He earned it without screwing fellow taxpayers. No one screwed the taxpayers more than the banisters. You forgot. You are a taxpayer screwer too. And a bank screwer. and a creditor screwer. When it comes to screwing folks, Harry you is da man. Well is always bringing up screwing. |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
Keyser Söze wrote:
wrote: On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 06:47:14 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/16/14 1:05 AM, wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 21:29:39 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 20:49:58 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: I save most of my .357/.38 special brass for a friend who reloads. It could be an interesting hobby, I guess, but it seems too tedious to interest me, and I don't see any serious $$$ savings. === The real advantage of reloading is that you can make ammo that is commercially unavailable like sub-sonic 38 special wad cutters. ... or stuff that is hot and nasty. Midway and other vendors sell subsonic .38 special wadcutters. http://tinyurl.com/pam4z5s From the manufacturer's site: This is the most accurate load that money can buy for your .38 Special! Specifically made to deliver one hole accuracy out to 50yds. Loaded to extremely tight tolerances and priced right for matches and for getting the most from your .38 special or 357 Magnum for accuracy. This load uses a 21BHN hardness HARDCAST bullet so it will not lead up your bbl and will not deform on impact. Velocity: 800fps / 4" Ruger GP-100 6.0" bbl S&W - 855fps 2.0" bbl - 740fps Bullet: MATCH GRADE Full Wadcutter 148gr. Hardcast Muzzle Energy: 210 ft. lbs. 4" 240 ft. lbs. 6.0"" 180 ft. lbs Of course, it is "commercially unavailable," unless you order some. Have a nice day. 64c a shot for a really cheap cast lead bullet in a very modest load. Reloading starts looking attractive at that point. If you have the gear and the time and the patience. Hell for 20 bucks you can buy a Lee Loader. |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
On 17 Dec 2014 01:23:29 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote:
wrote: On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 04:53:45 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Tuesday, December 16, 2014 3:30:12 AM UTC-8, Keyser Söze wrote: The place you retired to isn't miserable. It's just not to everyone's taste. That you think it should be and why you think what you do in retirement is the epitome of retirement is just further proof of your unfettered arrogance. Why so bitter Harry? He knows he will die working.. Gosh I hope so. Hate to spend my last years rebuilding outdoor bars. === You'd be amazed how much satisfaction you can get creating something worthwhile with your own efforts. Try it sometime if you have any real skills. |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 22:39:28 -0500, Let it snowe
wrote: Harry feigns working to appease his wife who won't let him retire till she does...................in another 20 years. === It would be an interesting horticulture experiment to see which would be more efficient at pushing up dasies: Harry or 200 pounds of dog ****? My guess is that they'd be about the same. |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 23:42:23 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 22:39:28 -0500, Let it snowe wrote: Harry feigns working to appease his wife who won't let him retire till she does...................in another 20 years. === It would be an interesting horticulture experiment to see which would be more efficient at pushing up dasies: Harry or 200 pounds of dog ****? My guess is that they'd be about the same. I'd say there'd be no difference, but I'd get the comparison up to about 220 lbs of dog ****, just for equality's sake. Just sayin'. -- Here's hoping you have a very Merry Christmas, and a spectacular New Year! |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
On 12/16/2014 11:42 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 22:39:28 -0500, Let it snowe wrote: Harry feigns working to appease his wife who won't let him retire till she does...................in another 20 years. === It would be an interesting horticulture experiment to see which would be more efficient at pushing up dasies: Harry or 200 pounds of dog ****? My guess is that they'd be about the same. On that note, you and yours have a merry Christmas. Now I'll clean my coffee of the screen. -- Patriotic Americans dump on Krause. |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 22:34:29 -0500, Let it snowe
wrote: On 12/16/2014 8:25 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: Someone Else wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/16/14 7:53 AM, Tim wrote: On Tuesday, December 16, 2014 3:30:12 AM UTC-8, Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/15/14 11:13 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On 16 Dec 2014 02:30:04 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 21:10:09 -0500, Let it snowe wrote: On 12/15/2014 8:44 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 15:48:28 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: I'm not a fan of south Florida living, especially on that side, and on a manmade canal, to boot. When it comes to Florida, I prefer the topography, flora and fauna of the NE part of the state, just south of Georgia. === You'd probably like something like this I suspect: https://www.dropbox.com/s/9bt27dmvdpcq93u/pool%20and%20boats.jpg?dl=0 That's the view from my office. Rubbing a little salt in his wounds? === You bet. :-) Not mine. Too small a house, too small a lot, no real trees, don't like pools, not on beach, neighbors too close, don't like Florida-style man made canals. === How fortunate that you don't live here. Quite frankly you really wouldn't fit in since most of us worked hard all of our lives so we could retire to such a miserable place. Firemen work hard. Doctors Without Borders work hard. Teachers work hard. Social workers work hard. Factory workers work hard. Waitresses work hard. Retired banksters like you pushed pencils and keyboard buttons at institutions that either went over the edge of legality or pushed the envelope so they could screw the economy, the country, and everyone who actually worked hard. Unfortunately, the government was willing to settle for your former employer paying back huge fines instead of sending everyone who worked there to your favorite graybar institution. The place you retired to isn't miserable. It's just not to everyone's taste. That you think it should be and why you think what you do in retirement is the epitome of retirement is just further proof of your unfettered arrogance. Why so bitter Harry? Who, Wayne? Not me. I find nothing admirable about the bankster or his lifestyle. He earned it without screwing fellow taxpayers. No one screwed the taxpayers more than the banisters. You forgot. You are a taxpayer screwer too. And a bank screwer. and a creditor screwer. When it comes to screwing folks, Harry you is da man. Just change 'da man' to 'da toad' - or maybe 'da manly toad'. That works. -- Here's hoping you have a very Merry Christmas, and a spectacular New Year! |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
wrote:
On Tue, 16 Dec 2014 21:48:56 -0600, Califbill wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: wrote: 64c a shot for a really cheap cast lead bullet in a very modest load. Reloading starts looking attractive at that point. If you have the gear and the time and the patience. Hell for 20 bucks you can buy a Lee Loader. That is more patience than most are willing to use. A Lee Loader might be handy to load a few rounds of some special load but I wouldn't want to do 20. Most people are not shooting that much ammo. They do not work well on semi auto rifle rounds. Need a full case resized. |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
Keyser Söze wrote:
Keyser Söze wrote: Someone Else wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/16/14 7:53 AM, Tim wrote: On Tuesday, December 16, 2014 3:30:12 AM UTC-8, Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/15/14 11:13 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On 16 Dec 2014 02:30:04 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 21:10:09 -0500, Let it snowe wrote: On 12/15/2014 8:44 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 15:48:28 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: I'm not a fan of south Florida living, especially on that side, and on a manmade canal, to boot. When it comes to Florida, I prefer the topography, flora and fauna of the NE part of the state, just south of Georgia. === You'd probably like something like this I suspect: https://www.dropbox.com/s/9bt27dmvdpcq93u/pool%20and%20boats.jpg?dl=0 That's the view from my office. Rubbing a little salt in his wounds? === You bet. :-) Not mine. Too small a house, too small a lot, no real trees, don't like pools, not on beach, neighbors too close, don't like Florida-style man made canals. === How fortunate that you don't live here. Quite frankly you really wouldn't fit in since most of us worked hard all of our lives so we could retire to such a miserable place. Firemen work hard. Doctors Without Borders work hard. Teachers work hard. Social workers work hard. Factory workers work hard. Waitresses work hard. Retired banksters like you pushed pencils and keyboard buttons at institutions that either went over the edge of legality or pushed the envelope so they could screw the economy, the country, and everyone who actually worked hard. Unfortunately, the government was willing to settle for your former employer paying back huge fines instead of sending everyone who worked there to your favorite graybar institution. The place you retired to isn't miserable. It's just not to everyone's taste. That you think it should be and why you think what you do in retirement is the epitome of retirement is just further proof of your unfettered arrogance. Why so bitter Harry? Who, Wayne? Not me. I find nothing admirable about the bankster or his lifestyle. He earned it without screwing fellow taxpayers. No one screwed the taxpayers more than the banisters. Hmmm iPhone changes banksters to banisters ...training in order. 😃 People have options. They can save now and buy later, they can join a credit union, or they can borrow from Mom & Dad. If they choose to borrow from a bank they choose to accept those terms. There is also competition in banking so what makes them so bad? |
Apparently, the .22LR Ammo Shortage...
On Wed, 17 Dec 2014 20:38:03 -0500, Someone Else
wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: Someone Else wrote: Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/16/14 7:53 AM, Tim wrote: On Tuesday, December 16, 2014 3:30:12 AM UTC-8, Keyser Söze wrote: On 12/15/14 11:13 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On 16 Dec 2014 02:30:04 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 21:10:09 -0500, Let it snowe wrote: On 12/15/2014 8:44 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 15 Dec 2014 15:48:28 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: I'm not a fan of south Florida living, especially on that side, and on a manmade canal, to boot. When it comes to Florida, I prefer the topography, flora and fauna of the NE part of the state, just south of Georgia. === You'd probably like something like this I suspect: https://www.dropbox.com/s/9bt27dmvdpcq93u/pool%20and%20boats.jpg?dl=0 That's the view from my office. Rubbing a little salt in his wounds? === You bet. :-) Not mine. Too small a house, too small a lot, no real trees, don't like pools, not on beach, neighbors too close, don't like Florida-style man made canals. === How fortunate that you don't live here. Quite frankly you really wouldn't fit in since most of us worked hard all of our lives so we could retire to such a miserable place. Firemen work hard. Doctors Without Borders work hard. Teachers work hard. Social workers work hard. Factory workers work hard. Waitresses work hard. Retired banksters like you pushed pencils and keyboard buttons at institutions that either went over the edge of legality or pushed the envelope so they could screw the economy, the country, and everyone who actually worked hard. Unfortunately, the government was willing to settle for your former employer paying back huge fines instead of sending everyone who worked there to your favorite graybar institution. The place you retired to isn't miserable. It's just not to everyone's taste. That you think it should be and why you think what you do in retirement is the epitome of retirement is just further proof of your unfettered arrogance. Why so bitter Harry? Who, Wayne? Not me. I find nothing admirable about the bankster or his lifestyle. He earned it without screwing fellow taxpayers. No one screwed the taxpayers more than the banisters. Hmmm iPhone changes banksters to banisters ...training in order. ? People have options. They can save now and buy later, they can join a credit union, or they can borrow from Mom & Dad. If they choose to borrow from a bank they choose to accept those terms. There is also competition in banking so what makes them so bad? === Banks lend money to people and corporations who need it, and of course the banks expect to be repaid with interest. Harry, aka, FOAD, aka Keyser, is a double bankrupt who was forced into foreclosure by a lending institution. He's had a hard on for banks ever since. |
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