Politics

with the population of CA and NY, its almost a guarantee he will lose the popular vote IMO.. its incredibly hard to overcome those numbers..

which is why I am also incredibly thankful for the electoral college (as flawed as it might be in some ways)...

the last thing I want is for a bunch of nit wits in San Francisco and Los Angeles dictating how the rest of us live our lives..
 
The demand for cheap labor drives massive immigration, massive immigration changes the voting patterns within the Country, changes in voting patterns cause our politicians to betray Israel.

The Law of Unintended Consequences can bite you in the butt. :E Hmmm:
 
Oh my! Please do not put me, a baby boomer, in that bucket. I don't agree with anything the subject person stated... I don't think that anyone my age who I associate with does either. :)

No sir, never my intention.... Actually you remind me of the WWII generation, god I miss them!
 
No sir, never my intention.... Actually you remind me of the WWII generation, god I miss them!
Perhaps that is because WWII veterans were my mentors.
There was also an older group of men who lived and worked as best they could during the depression. One of the depression-era gentlemen, a part time gunsmith once told me, "During the depression all the deer were "shot out" (of my native Potter County, deer capitol of Pennsylvania) after the first year. Then, if you got a woodchuck (groundhog for my southern friends) you had a feast!"
"A woodchuck, a feast, why?" I asked?
He responded, "Woodchucks taste fine in a stew. They also have a lot of fat. Put em on a spit and the fat drips down. When it cools, it becomes lard. You could hardly buy lard to grease a frying pan. The same in World War II. They used lard (and other fats) in the manufacture of explosives."

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That same gunsmith also schooled me on how much better a Mauser 98 action was than a 1970's Remington or Winchester. When I was 14, I had enough money saved and from him I bought a new Parker Hale 1200 Super in 30-06. Remingtons and Winchesters were and are fine, accurate rifles but I think the majority of AH'ers appreciate controlled round feed of a Mauser and later design rifles.

Fifteen years later I was shooting a 50 yard smallbore match outside of Prescott Arizona. If fact, I was shooting a Anschutz .22 I bought from the gunsmith. Anyway, my unit as tagged to deploy to Desert Shield the next month. A couple of my competitors were WWII veterans. Between relays we talked quite a bit. When saying goodbye they looked me in the eye as if they were the Lord Almighty and said, "I hope you don't go. If you do, keep your head down." As I think back, I wonder what those two old soldiers had been through.

There is a lot of logic in the hard learned wisdom of others...
 
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Perhaps that is because WWII veterans were my mentors.
There were also an older group of men who lived and worked as best they could during the depression. One of the depression-era gentlemen, a part time gunsmith once told me, "During the depression all the deer were "shot out" (of my native Potter County, deer capitol of Pennsylvania) after the first year. Then, if you got a woodchuck (groundhog for my southern friends) you had a feast!"
"A woodchuck, a feast, why?" I asked?
He responded, "Woodchucks taste fine in a stew. They also have a lot of fat. Put em on a spit and the fat drips down. When it cools, it becomes lard. You could hardly buy lard to grease a frying pan. The same in World War II. They used lard (and other fats) in the manufacture of explosives."

View attachment 641934

That same gunsmith also schooled me on how much better a Mauser 98 action was than a 1970's Remington or WInchester. When I was 14, I had enough money saved to and from him I bought a new Parker Hale 1200 Super in 30-06. Remingtons and Winchesters were and are fine, accurate rifles but I think the majority of AH'ers appreciate controlled round feed of a Mauser or later design rifles.

Fifthteen years later I was shooting a 50 yard smallbore match outside of Prescott Arizona. If fact, I was shooting a Anschutz .22 I bought from the gunsmith. Anyway, my unit as taged to deploy to Desert Shield the next month. A couple of my competitors were WWII veterans. Between relays we talked quite a bit. When saying goodbye they looked me in the eye as if they were the Lord Almighty and said, "I hope you don't go. If you do, keep your head down." As I think back, I wonder what those two old soldiers had been through.

There is a lot of logic in the hard learned wisdom of others...

Amen to that!.... They were my mentors also.

My grandfather was a combat veteran at 17yo having joined the Navy at 16 with a parental waiver! He never talked about it much, but would answer any questions I had; it wasn't until after his death that I found his journal and learned what a 17yo in a Navy PBM flying boat around Saipan dealt with, and subsequently why I hate the modern helicopter parents who raise idiot man children.
 
Looks like there is a pretty aggressive effort to identify the "leaker" of TS material on Israel to a pro-Tehran Telegram site. Based upon a previous incident, this woman should never have had a TS security clearance, much less the job she holds.


The previous incident.

 
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