I'm pretty sure all the "Super" ones do. Maybe one of the smaller ones wouldn't? But yeah, they sell handguns and rifles.Shit. I've yet to be to a US Walmart that doesn't sell guns!
I'm pretty sure all the "Super" ones do. Maybe one of the smaller ones wouldn't? But yeah, they sell handguns and rifles.Shit. I've yet to be to a US Walmart that doesn't sell guns!
http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.html?b=8&f=12&t=466589I don't even think my Walmart sells guns. Maybe it's a regional thing?
Yeah, that explains it. The one near me is the Galloway/Grove City one.http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.html?b=8&f=12&t=466589
List of all the stores in Ohio that sell guns.
The adam smith quote was not related to the corporation bit, it was to show that we don't have rosy glasses, we just think it works out better for everyone in general if we're not socialist.It'll take more than an anecdote by Adam Smith that essentially rephrases the popular church concept of sola gratia to convince me. The government should (theoretically) answer to the voters and be transparent, which is a luxury we're not afforded by corporations. Idiosyncratically, corporations ARE governments. We pay private taxes to them, and we have even less control over how they control our lives. You could argue the free market concept, but I think we've all seen quite enough capitulation to corporate whims by consumers with no real recourse or power to know how much influence your dollar has on corporate decision making. There's this magical concept that somehow my dollar counts, but really, how much choice or effect do you truly have? About the same as you have with your vote, except everyone gets to see where the results of that vote go.
I don't think you're looking at it clearly. There were bombs and rockets and cannons and warships and such used in warfare well before the late 18th century. The mention of militia indicates infantry. It's reasonable then to expect that the 2nd amendment allows for the militia (the entire population of the united states) to equip itself to army regular standards - that is, the standard kit for your given army footsoldier. The crap about tanks and nukes is a red herring. The 2nd amendment clearly is about bearing arms. As in, carrying them. Can you carry a tank or a nuke any better than you could carry a cannon or a frigate? Would a soldier be expected to?The problem with the second ammendment is that it simply can't be followed. The purpose of it was to have a populace that could passively (w/ out government permissions) arm itself well enough to defend itself against the government if the time arose.
In the time of the founders this made sense, as men with muskets could potentially defend themselves against other men with muskets. But as time went on and military technology progressed the potential weapons a person could be allowed to posses did not, and could not, keep up. I don't think that even the NRA would want to see civilians with access to Stingers, Harlequins, or C4, not to mention Tanks, Jet fighters, or, going even further, chemical or biological weapons, or, going the furthest, nuclear weapons (which are a necessary deterrent for any group seriously considering major territorial warfar against the US.)
The population will never be able to be allowed to arm itself to the extent that is reasonable for military self-defence. This is not an arguable point. This, in fact, proves that the 2nd ammendment was written in a context that simply does not exactly mesh with the current state of military equipment.
So, with that we can understand that the 2nd ammendment is fatally anachronistic in structure, and simply needs to be reworked, but the intent should still be understood and maintained.
No one cares, shit lord.I have to say after all this in starting to like gasbandit
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The article goes on to say that the lawyers are still convinced he's innocent and would represent him again if they were contacted, but just... a weird, to say the least.The Trayvon Martin case took a bizarre turn Tuesday when George Zimmerman's attorneys quit, complaining that they have lost all contact with him and that he called the prosecutor and talked to a TV host after they told him not to speak to anyone.
you are a son of a motherless goatNo one cares, shit lord.
Sent from my you're a fucking shitlord
Just long guns now. Wal-Mart quit selling handguns around 20 years ago.I'm pretty sure all the "Super" ones do. Maybe one of the smaller ones wouldn't? But yeah, they sell handguns and rifles.
Regardless of the opinions, the shooter has gone missing - to the point where his lawyers have officially said "we're not repping him anymore."
That doesn't sound kosher to me.
There were equivalencies of which I gave examples. You're just being intentionally obtuse. The 2nd amendment is cut and dry. You can bear a musket, you can bear an AK-47, you can bear a grenade or a launcher.. you can't physically "bear" a howitzer or an abrams or a nuke, any more than you could "bear" a revolutionary war cannon or frigate.Yes, clearly. Nothing to do with that shit not existing back then.
It doesn't sound kosher for good representation, that's for sure. You don't talk to your client for 48 hours, so you call a press conference to announce you are no longer representing him but still believe he's innocent? In what world does that represent anything near professionalism?Regardless of the opinions, the shooter has gone missing - to the point where his lawyers have officially said "we're not repping him anymore."
That doesn't sound kosher to me.
Hell of a way to divert attention from yourself.Maybe they didn't want people to keep bothering them now that they aren't representing him anymore.
If that were the case, I don't see why they'd wait 72 hours to announce the information, especially since the lack of action is causing so much tension in the area.Either that or they are going to prosecute - and he will have conveniently found a way to get to someplace like, say, Aruba.
Release bad news on a Friday, good news on a Monday. Media tactic.
Releasing that they're not going to prosecute Zimmerman is news that will potentially cause riots, hence Friday.Well, I'd say that "News that will potentially cause riots" is bad news and "News that will calm down the growing angry mob" is holy-crap-release-this-right-now-I-don't-care-about-our-regular-tactics news.