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#101
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With choices like those you most likely have no idea what you're doing, if you even manage to hit anyone with the pistol, that one is notorious for being one of the weakest guns on the market. It's a rusky design to top that off, next time you're trying to look like a redneck, buy american. Assuming you get lucky enough to put the right shell into the shotgun first, outside of 12 feet, all you're going to do is attract attention to yourself. I'm all for the second amendment. It means people like you can walk into walmart and come away with horrible choices and think they're armed to the teeth, and anyone with any real experience can take you apart with no real effort should the need arise. | |||
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#102
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#103
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Bad thread got even worse.
What happened to Bison? | ||
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#105
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LAWL now relapse is harrassing me in PM's
"you mad bro"? | ||
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#106
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Your turn you inbred redneck [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.] | |||
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#107
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Step up your game though. This thread is getting boring, I'm at work and need to be entertained
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#108
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#109
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I thought this was interesting I had no knowledge of this =)
The United Mine Workers of America (UMW) and rival miners' unions appropriated both the term redneck and its literal manifestation, the red bandana, in order to build multiracial unions of white, black, and immigrant miners in the strike-ridden coalfields of northern and central Appalachia between 1912 and 1936. The origin of redneck to mean "a union man" or "a striker" remains uncertain, but according to linguist David W. Maurer, the former definition of the word probably dates at least to the 1910s, if not earlier. The use of redneck to designate "a union member" was especially popular during the 1920s and 1930s in the coal-producing regions of southern West Virginia, eastern Kentucky, and western Pennsylvania, where the word came to be specifically applied to a miner who belonged to a union. | ||
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#110
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__________________
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