Hey, ThatNickGuy at my first glance I misread the above.I hope I get to be a boner. I can't wait to puke and/or explode all over you assholes.
--Patrick
Hey, ThatNickGuy at my first glance I misread the above.I hope I get to be a boner. I can't wait to puke and/or explode all over you assholes.
That's just what they'd say if it was real. Just puttin' that out there.Don't worry guys, it's safe.
The CDC says so.
Yes.That's just what they'd say if it was real. Just puttin' that out there.
http://www.amazon.ca/The-Zombie-Survival-Guide-Protection/dp/1400049628
Only if you're American, Jay. Some of us dirty foreigners aren't for instance so fanatical about our guns and suchhttp://www.amazon.ca/The-Zombie-Survival-Guide-Protection/dp/1400049628
Make sure to have this book people.
You've never read the book I take it.Only if you're American, Jay. Some of us dirty foreigners aren't for instance so fanatical about our guns and such
Huh. The Belgian version says you should offer it a good helath care package, lots of vacation time and half your money.Well to be fair to North_Ranger that's the version from Amazon Canada, though. It just says apologize profusely to the zombie and offer it a beer.
Actually I have. I just consider some of the advice it offers somewhat America-specific, that's all. In regards of firearms in particular, but there are other culture-specific aspects as well.You've never read the book I take it.
Well, if the Zombie Survival Guide (and by extension, World War Z) is to be believed, the bears will start running just like everything else when Zack goes to the woods.You know who's really going to have a problem with the zombie apocalypse? The bears. They just won't know what to attack then.
That's weird. The Swiss one says send the zombie back to the publicly-funded detox clinics where it belongs, and then go back to getting into fights with other Swiss people about joining the EU.Huh. The Belgian version says you should offer it a good helath care package, lots of vacation time and half your money.
I'm guessing you don't remember it then, because it actually says guns are the worst idea possible and to avoid them at all costs.Actually I have. I just consider some of the advice it offers somewhat America-specific, that's all. In regards of firearms in particular, but there are other culture-specific aspects as well.
Eh, maybe. But it still suggests stocking up on firearms and appropriate ammo, just in case. Admittedly I enjoyed reading World War Z more, even though I detest the notion that public healthcare, roughly 70% of all men having received firearms training in the armed forces and the Finnish penchant for violence would not have cleared this zombie situation in a matter of weeksI'm guessing you don't remember it then, because it actually says guns are the worst idea possible and to avoid them at all costs.
Russian zombie... or just drunk on vodka?Eh, maybe. But it still suggests stocking up on firearms and appropriate ammo, just in case. Admittedly I enjoyed reading World War Z more, even though I detest the notion that public healthcare, roughly 70% of all men having received firearms training in the armed forces and the Finnish penchant for violence would not have cleared this zombie situation in a matter of weeks
Then again, there's the whole living next door to Russia thing...
I believe the "Guide" suggests against doing that very thing. I'll have to re-read it, but what I took away was that you want to stay as mobile and versatile as possible. So stock piling anything would be counter-productive.Eh, maybe. But it still suggests stocking up on firearms and appropriate ammo, just in case.
Sorry, I didn't mean to jump down anyone's throat. I just get really defensive about American sterotyping.What does the survival guide say about surrounding my home with motion sensor activated treadmills all facing inward?
Take my expressions to contain a dose of hyperbole, okay? And seriously, Americans are more than a bit gun nut, at least compared to most Europeans. To me, the book's suggestion about having a rifle, a twelve-gauge shotgun, a pistol and a heavy crossbow along with suitable ammunition and various tools (silencers, various sights etc.) at home sounds quite "fanatical about guns", considering that even the most avid hunter in my extended circle of acquaintances owns only one or two hunting rifles, if memory serves. Page 70. Check it yourself.Years ago, I was instructed by my stepdad not to let my brother play video games for more than an hour during the day. When his hour was up, I told him to do something else. He wandered aimlessly until I gave him a comic book to read that had just been released that week (Starslip Crisis volume 1). He had not visited that site and never seen that book before. But as if he thought he would get to play video games that way, he looked me in the eye and said, "Oh, I already read this one." I explained to him how that was impossible, but he stuck by what he'd said. I asked him what it was about and he described the cover, but didn't know what was on the inside.
Not saying you're a liar, North, but since your argument has gone from "fanatical about guns" to "stockpile of firearms and ammo" to "keep a firearm in your emergency kit", are you sure you didn't just see the book cover and think you read it/mixed it with another zombie book's innards?
Take my expressions to contain a dose of hyperbole, okay? And seriously, Americans are more than a bit gun nut, at least compared to most Europeans. To me, the book's suggestion about having a rifle, a twelve-gauge shotgun, a pistol and a heavy crossbow along with suitable ammunition and various tools (silencers, various sights etc.) at home sounds quite "fanatical about guns", considering that even the most avid hunter in my extended circle of acquaintances owns only one or two hunting rifles, if memory serves. Page 70. Check it yourself.
p. 108What does the Guide say about getting a Mountainbike as a means for transportation?
Aaaand I didn't read your post before I read it. Do remember, however, that gun legislation and gun ownership in general are treated very, very differently in Europe than in the States. I can't speak for the UK or France, though. My experience involves mostly Finnish gun legislation and gun ownership, and as I implied earlier, gun ownership is not as prolific over here as it is - according to my understanding - States-side. The gun legislation is also very strict over here, and likely to get stricter as there has been some pretty high-profile school shootings and other shooting incidents over here in the past few years.I mean there is a chapter in the book called "On the Defensive", but the overall message I got was that no place should be considered a permanent residence. And Max Brooks makes a point that all conventional gung-ho tactics will get you killed.
Here. On page 70, there's a firearms list of things to stock up on, which includes things like 500 rifle rounds and 250 shotgun shells. I wouldn't really call that an excess; considering a box holds like 50 rounds. I'm not sure how having 20-30 boxes of ammo for a rifle and a pistol "America-centric". I would consider that a standard amount an average hunter would stock. Actually, claiming that being a gun-yahoo is an explicit American trait is downright insulting and comes off as really xenophobic.
Even in World War Z, there are characters who actually point out such cultural dissimilarities when talking about such survival guides - yes, Max Brooks is pretty much saying that his own guide isn't supposed to be universal. If memory serves, the Japanese isolated-kid-turned-warrior-monk actually states that the part about firearms weren't that much of a help in heavily urbanized Japan where firearms were nowhere near as prolific as in the US.Americans have a special relationship with handguns. They seem to appear in every movie, every TV show, every pop novel, every comic book. Our heroes have always carried them, from the Old West lawman to the gritty urban cop. Gangsters rap about them; liberals and conservatives fight over them. Parents shelter children from them and manufacturers make untold fortunes from them. Possibly more than the automobile, the handgun is synonymous with America.
(P.47, emphasis mine)
I'm sure such "dudes" exist, but not in numbers and organization that they do in the States, I reckon. No NRA here, for instance.Just to be clear, we are talking about a book that's found in the comedy section of most bookstores (and a crossbow is not a gun). Rifle, shotgun, pistol - sounds like standard bear hunting gear to me.
I don't see why you keep assuming that it's fanatical to have three guns standard in a house and that it somehow translates to everyone in America being a gun-nut and that the book panders to that. Zombies are pretty popular right now as well as a lot of survivalist genres. I don't think it has anything to do with America's gun culture. Stockpiling weapons fits the description of the chapter (explains the crowbows etc...), but I don't think three guns is by any means excessive. I've never been to Finland, but would you like me to start making assumptions on your culture based on fictional books and stereotypes? Isn't that the definition of prejudice?
Is this a typical American according to your world view? I'm sure dudes like this exist in Finland too.
That's putting it lightly, O funnier of the two stoners.Sorry, I didn't mean to jump down anyone's throat. I just get really defensive about American sterotyping.