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Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 2:02 pm
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How the ******** did you pull this s**t off?
Quote: 2009 National Trophy Rifle Matches, Final Results Infantry Trophy (Overall) 1. California Grizzlies O'Connell - 1284 2. Forbes Rifle & Pistol Club - 1275 3. Oklahoma Rifle Assn. - 1250 4. US Army Marksmanship Unit, Praslick - 1211 5. Coalinga Rifle Team - 1162 ... 11. Navy - 1005 ... 15. Arizona State Rifle & Pistol Assn Gold - 970 ... 18. USMC Gold - 880
For those of you who don't know, this match is an infantry match, shot rapid-fire, with AR-15s. The same AR-15s that are illegal in Commiefornia. SO HOW THE ******** DID THIS HAPPEN? How did JUNIOR SHOOTERS from a state in which this gun is illegal win the match?
Also, haha, Marines. Suck my c**k.
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Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 2:22 pm
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Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 2:56 pm
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Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 4:29 pm
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Fresnel Requiem in Mortis Actually, AR-15s are legal in California under certain circumstances. You have to have owned it before the Assault Weapons Ban, and you have to have registered it. Same with AK-47s, but the Kalashnikov has to be semi-auto only and dismantled, with the parts scattered. My dad works with a guy who owns an AK. How old is the ban? Junior shooters are ineligible past Jan. 1 of the year of their 21st birthday, and I've never met a junior shooter younger than... 12, maybe? So it it's eleven years old like the federal AWB is, that's not likely. Besides, I hear most of them drive a few hundred miles into Nevada to practice... EVERY WEEKEND. eek That's commitment
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Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 8:35 pm
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Fresnel Requiem in Mortis Actually, AR-15s are legal in California under certain circumstances. You have to have owned it before the Assault Weapons Ban, and you have to have registered it. Same with AK-47s, but the Kalashnikov has to be semi-auto only and dismantled, with the parts scattered. My dad works with a guy who owns an AK. How old is the ban? Junior shooters are ineligible past Jan. 1 of the year of their 21st birthday, and I've never met a junior shooter younger than... 12, maybe? So it it's eleven years old like the federal AWB is, that's not likely. Besides, I hear most of them drive a few hundred miles into Nevada to practice... EVERY WEEKEND. Pretty sure they were legal until the '94 AWB, but I'm not positive.
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