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Bring Guns To Work . . .
Alan Rushing
Member Posts: 9,002 ✭✭
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That gun may just as well save a bunch of kids and stop someone
2. Is that near Exeter, the location of Sig Sauer USA?
3. Who cares? - I bring guns to work all the time to show them off, fortunately the company owner is a gun nut.
We did have a killing on campus a few years ago - guy came in and went to his wife's office and slashed her neck with a big knife, ran away. Got caught the next day headed North...
I treat mine like American Express cards, I never leave home without one.
"Nobody's come into work packing," he said.
The guns will be concealed so he'll never know unless it's needed, in which case, the sentence will read "I'm sure glad he came to work packing."
Sounds like it could grow into a state holiday - 'Bring your guns to work day'!
Sounds like a good idea. How about on all work days that end with Y or W??
Yesterday, my truck crapped out in Taos at a little after noon. It would crank and fire; just wouldn't keep the candle lit.
Thirty minutes of calling on the radio got me a very 10-1(static-y) reply from the base in Las Vegas, telling me they were having a hard time picking me out of the static.
They were less than 150 miles away, and couldn't hardly hear me.
There is a State cop shop about 3 blocks from where the truck died, but they couldn't hear me at all.
I don't like the idea of breaking a State law, much less any laws concerning firearms; but in case I hadn't figured it out earlier-lesson learned.
We had a guy named Johnny Hyde that went off his meds a while back; seems he shot 2 bike shop employees, a cop, and a State worker with a .455 Webley. Not too hard to trace.
Even while the trial was going on, my efforts to get the ridiculous law overturned were ineffective; the head of our "safety" bureau didn't even bat an eye.
Good thing I only tote those sort of tools whenever I leave the house on my way to everywhere.
My job has decided that carrying any kind of weapon is an illegal act because we have radios that can (allegedly) be used to call for help, anywhere statewide, and at a few hours' notice; you can have a State cop standing next to you-why would you even think of toting a firearm or knife.
Yesterday, my truck crapped out in Taos at a little after noon. It would crank and fire; just wouldn't keep the candle lit.
Thirty minutes of calling on the radio got me a very 10-1(static-y) reply from the base in Las Vegas, telling me they were having a hard time picking me out of the static.
They were less than 150 miles away, and couldn't hardly hear me.
There is a State cop shop about 3 blocks from where the truck died, but they couldn't hear me at all.
I don't like the idea of breaking a State law, much less any laws concerning firearms; but in case I hadn't figured it out earlier-lesson learned.
We had a guy named Johnny Hyde that went off his meds a while back; seems he shot 2 bike shop employees, a cop, and a State worker with a .455 Webley. Not too hard to trace.
Even while the trial was going on, my efforts to get the ridiculous law overturned were ineffective; the head of our "safety" bureau didn't even bat an eye.
Good thing I only tote those sort of tools whenever I leave the house on my way to everywhere.
Do you work DOT? Were you on LEN or a DOT freq? Email me let me know where you live.
Ed
Good question. I am retired navy and would like to know.
why were verterans in the same context as homeless,druggies, and convicts?You beat me to it.