Clay Bennett by Clay Bennett

Clay Bennett

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Comments (26) (Please sign in to comment)

  1. ODon

    ODon said, 6 months ago

    Very good.

  2. dtroutma

    dtroutma said, 6 months ago

    Cable and lock instead of ribbon would also help. Even in ‘Nam, at “base camps”, they locked up the rifles because to many idiots and crazies were discharging firearms at their fellow “good guys”. Amazing isn’t it, that the Army in a combat zone knew more about weapons than the NRA?

  3. Zuhlamon

    Zuhlamon said, 6 months ago

    Came in the mail, eh?

  4. Rx71Wm29

    Rx71Wm29 said, 6 months ago

    The only safe gun is no gun!

  5. ahab

    ahab said, 6 months ago

    The Bushmaster trophy room is filled with children and fireman.

  6. poppy48

    poppy48 said, 6 months ago

    when the bad guys are coming through your door you can throw your stupid words at them

  7. Donald Williams
  8. MortyForTyrant

    MortyForTyrant said, 6 months ago

    I read somewhere that there was a boom for guns as gifts for Christmas. How does that work? “Oh no, no, that gun isn’t for me, I’m a convicted felon, it’s for my little nephew Timmy!”? Or do gun-stores issue gift-certificates, complete with registration forms? The U.S. has become a strange place…

  9. Rickapolis

    Rickapolis said, 6 months ago

    Outstanding.

  10. ahab

    ahab said, 6 months ago

    @poppy48

    I hope when your chance comes, you might have a chance.

  11. mdavis4183

    mdavis4183 said, 6 months ago

    Guns are safe. Some people are not.

  12. Molon Labe

    Molon Labe said, 6 months ago

    @MortyForTyrant

    Morty,

    Perhaps if you took the time to do a little research you would discover that the turning over of a firearm to a convicted felon is illegal no matter to whom the purchased for, If the gun is purchased by misrepresentation, that is a felony. If the purchaser is buying it for someone not legally entitled to own the weapon, it is called a straw man purchase and is also a felony.

    If you don’t want to own a gun, that is fine by me. If you question your ability to control your temper if you had a gun, then I agree, you should be prohibited from owning one. But for someone like me, who has passed the background checks for concealed carry, I do not see how what you want will help.

    If it is illegal to shoot someone, and a person is willing to break that law, will he be stopped by another law making a weapon illegal? The false logic of this is amply demonstrated by the making of drugs illegal. Did doing so solve the drug problem in the US? Or did it exasperate them?

  13. rwgate

    rwgate said, 6 months ago

    @poppy48

    Sorry, Poppy. In 67 years I’ve never had the bad guys come through my door, and you probably haven’t either. I would also imagine that should that happen, I’d just let them have whatever they wanted, rather than try to pull a gun (which I probably wouldn’t have on my person, being at home, y’’know) and get shot for the effort.

  14. rwgate

    rwgate said, 6 months ago

    @Molon Labe

    Theopolis- where do you keep your gun when you are at home? Locked up in a safe so your kid can’t get at it? Good luck getting to it if someone knocks down your door. Or maybe you wear it 24/7, even to bed, just in case. Suggestion: get a holster, strap it to the inside of your upper thigh so it can be nice and close to another useless part of your anatomy.

  15. dtroutma

    dtroutma said, 6 months ago

    “Poppy” concerned about protecting his heroin lab?

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