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Saturday, February 1, 2014

NFL Punts On Daniel Defense Video

....... Daniel Defense’s banned Super Bowl commercial. ....... ....... Birthplace Of The Confederate Flag ie "The birth certificate of a flag". ....... NFL Bans Super Bowl Gun Commercial ....... G&A Online Editors ....... Daniel Defense recently submitted a commercial to FOX to be played during the 2014 NFL Super Bowl XLVIII. Though the video doesn’t showcase one of the company’s popular DDM4 rifles, this paid advertisement spot was rejected by the NFL. The commercial, which focuses on themes of personal protection and fundamental rights, was originally created by Daniel Defense to run in any network TV station at any time. According to NFL guidelines, Daniel Defense’s Super Bowl commercial does not violate NFL policy for two reasons: Daniel Defense has a brick-and-mortar store, where they sell products other than firearms such as apparel. The commercial itself does not mention firearms, ammunition or weaponry. While Daniel Defense’s commercial does not mention firearms, it does include a logo of their DDM4 rifle at the very end. ........ ........ ....... (Thats right bubba the confederate flag has a "long form" birth certificate not a PDF forged document like the FRAD who calls himself obama. What does this have to do with the Daniel Defense Video? The South fought against the north because of several reasons the main one being the north, ie fed government, was bypassing the US Constitution and states rights. The NFL i'm sure wants to be pc and not offend the obama machine by bowing down to the federal regime in power. Yes Bubba the Confederate battle flag does symbolize an individual's freedom to resist the federal government tyranny and oppression of freedom including the freedom to exercise freedom of speech. Freedom of speech includes the Daniel Defense Video and its contents. The NFL has denied The Daniel Defense right to freedom of speech. They have punted your right in effect bubba to speak your mind on the 2nd amendment to the Constitution. Obama has punted every time he was confronted with any question of his origin and US citizenship. Obama has also punted when asked any serious question about anything he is doing. He is good at doing head fakes to the American public.) Story Reports ....... Confederate Battle Flag ....... Confederate Battle Flag ....... When the Confederate Army of the Shenandoah, under Joseph E. Johnston, and the Confederate Army of the Potomac, under Pierre G. T. Beauregard, met Union forces at the First Battle of Manassas on July 21, 1861, their troops flew an assortment of flags, both state and national. (States' rights was a founding principle of the Confederacy and influenced the attachment many units had to their state flags. Some Virginia and North Carolina soldiers refused to fly anything but their state flags.) The Stars and Bars' resemblance to the U.S. flag, combined with similarities between the two sides' uniforms and the general confusion of battle, contributed to an incident at First Manassas in which Confederate forces fired on a Confederate infantry brigade commanded by Jubal A. Early. Shortly after, Johnston and Beauregard resolved to establish a new, sufficiently distinctive flag for their troops, and they consulted one of Beauregard's aides, the same William Miles who had opposed the original flag in the first place. Miles resurrected what had been his preference for the national flag, a design of his own that featured a blue saltire, or X shape, with a white border and white stars (again, one for each state) on a field of red. The Committee on the Flag and Seal had rejected it the first time, suggesting that it looked "like a pair of suspenders," and now the members rejected it again. Johnston and Beauregard decided to use it anyway, with Beauregard proposing to Johnston two Confederate flags: "a peace or parade flag, and a war flag to be used only on the field of battle." This second flag, the so-called battle flag, would be the one Miles designed, and the two generals and their lieutenants met at Fairfax Court House in September 1861 to work out the details. At Johnston's urging, a square design was adopted, and each branch of the army was assigned a different size: forty-eight inches square for infantry, thirty-six inches square for artillery, and thirty inches square for cavalry. The Confederate battle flag was never adopted as a national flag, although over the course of the war it was incorporated into two such banners. The Second National Flag was adopted on May 1, 1863. Rectangular with a white field and a canton containing the battle flag, it was designed to look substantially different from the Stars and Stripes. (Public opinion had shifted since 1861. Matthew Fontaine Maury called the Stars and Bars a "servile imitation" of the Stars and Stripes.) However, the "Stainless Banner," as the new flag was called, introduced another problem. In the rare instance where it was used on the battlefield, it looked too much like a flag of truce, so on March 4, 1865, a vertical red strip along the fly edge was added, making it the "Blood-Stained Banner." In the meantime, the battle flag slowly transformed into an important national symbol independent of the national flags. For a time it was referred to as "Beauregard's flag," and when Beauregard's and Johnston's armies combined into a new Army of Northern Virginia in March 1862, it became closely associated with that force and its longtime commander, Robert E. Lee. As the Army of Northern Virginia became an important national symbol, so did the battle flag. Confederate nationhood was not independent of Lee's army and its success—as suggested by Johnston's distinction between peace and war flags—but, in fact, dependent upon it. Still, even as it became an important national symbol, the various meanings contained by the battle flag were complicated and sometimes ironic. Miles's original design was inspired by a South Carolina secession flag, which featured a blue St. George's cross, populated by fifteen white stars, on a field of red. In the upper left were a white crescent and a white palmetto. However, a Confederate Jew complained that the cross invested the flag with inappropriate religious symbolism, and Miles replaced it with what in heraldic terms is known as a saltire. Ironically, the X-shaped saltire is identical to a St. Andrew's cross, named for the Christian martyr and patron saint of Scotland. In that way, a flag that was intended to be secular took on powerful religious associations for some. Meanwhile, a flag not originally intended to be a national symbol has come to powerfully represent, more than any of the national flags, the Confederate nation and its varied and sometimes volatile associations, including slavery. Finally, during the twentieth century, the battle flag was often mistakenly referred to as the Stars and Bars, linking it to the First National Flag, whose design Miles had found so objectionable. A flag that has come to symbolize Confederate independence is often called by the name of a flag designed to emphasize the Confederacy's connection to the United States. ....... ....... (Today the virgina battle flag means diffenrt things to some people. The original intent of the flag was to inform the federal government that the south had had enough of their corruption and the south was willing to fight for their individual freedoms and rights. I think it still has the same meaning to the federal government.) Story Reports ..... . AR15 Info For American Self Defense

Friday, January 31, 2014

Paranormal steals car using fold up cane


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"ParaCon"
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Folding cane pedal to the metal
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2009 pontiac g6
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(This guy really wanted a car. He is a real "wheel chair" racer. Shows ya what a folding cane can do in a pinch bubba. I knew about a guy that wanted a car really bad many years ago. He broke into a car dealership, found the keys to a car and drove it through the display window! No he wasn't a paraplegic but he was brain dead. :) Story Reports
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Deputies: Paraplegic man steals car, leads deputies in chase
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Deputies: Paraplegic man steals car, leads deputies in chase
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Dave D'Marko
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He’s confined to a wheelchair, but deputies say that didn’t stop an Ocala man from leading them on a three-county chase with a car he stole from a dealership.

When Shamal Battice rolled up to Ford of Ocala in his orange wheelchair Wednesday and asked a salesman to show him some cars, that salesman obliged.

The 28-year-old is paraplegic and despite having no use of his legs, Ocala Police said Battice told that salesman he wanted help getting in the driver seat of a 2009 Pontiac G6.

They say once he got inside, a grand theft auto heist was underway. He locked the doors, and then whipped out a collapsible cane.

Police say he used that cane to push down on gas and brake pedals, and sped off with the $13,000 car.

That led to the high-speed chase involving sheriff's deputies in Marion, Alachua and finally Bradford County.

But they say none of them were able to catch up to him, as he put the pedal to his metal cane.

Finally he was spotted at a gas station some 50 miles from where his illegal test drive began, begging customers for gas money.

Police say they authorized the dealership to deliver his wheelchair back to him, in exchange for the keys to the car.

Battice is jail without bond for charges of grand theft auto and fleeing and eluding deputies.
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(Bubba this is "paranormal". It is obvious shamal could have been a race car driver etc. I'm serious. I don't admire theft but I do admire his driving ability considering he did not use his legs. The story says he was confined to a wheel chair. Confined means limited, restricted etc. Most people who are not "confined" could not do what this guy did. Shamal means wind and this guy had the wind at his back. :) Story Reports

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Some new ammo info for Americans


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Hornady Critical Duty / Critical Defense Ammo
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James Tarr
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It should be well-known that when looking for ammunition to be used for personal defense in a handgun, you should use some sort of expanding bullet. The most common type of these are jacketed hollow points (JHPs), and they are preferred to full metal jacket bullets (FMJs) because as a mechanism of their expansion they transfer more energy to the target. Also, because they expand, there is much less chance of them over-penetrating.

Hornady is currently offering two lines of hollowpoints with similar names—Critical Defense and Critical Duty, there’s a difference.

Hornady’s Critical Duty ammunition is high-performance full power hollowpoint ammunition not just designed for full-size duty weapons but designed to pass the famous and stringent FBI ballistic protocols.

With their Critical Defense line of ammunition, the engineers at Hornady realized that most citizens looking for ammunition for their concealed handguns aren’t likely to be shooting through sheet metal or auto glass, and will most likely be carrying smaller, lighter guns. Making ammunition for this target market didn’t require slavish devotion to the FBI protocols, because the needs of the private citizen were different. Also, most carry guns have shorter barrels, and so this ammunition is optimized for use in short-barreled pistols.

Both Critical Duty and Critical Defense rounds are tipped with what appears to be Hornady’s FTX bullet, but that’s not the case.

The Critical Defense rounds are loaded with the FTX bullet, which has a flexible polymer insert in the “Flex Tip” hollowpoint cavity which resists clogging when flying through thick clothing and/or drywall, and yet initiates expansion when it actually hits someone. The Critical Duty line is loaded with the “FlexLock” bullet. The FlexLock has the Flex Tip point, but it is paired with their InterLock band which locks the jacket and core together. This bonded core stays together better when going through intermediate barriers (i.e. the FBI protocols).

Currently Critical Duty ammunition is only available in 9mm, 9mm+P, and .40 S&W. The Critical Defense line is offered in 12 different calibers, starting at .22 WMR—any caliber you’re likely to use for self defense.
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(So for personal defense the critical defense line is better for concealed carry in a smaller gun. The critical duty line is better for bigger guns that are not as easy to conceal.

If you are ambidextrous in an open carry state just put one of each type of gun in your holsters. Otherwise put the smaller gun on your person and the larger gun in your home or vehicle bubba.)
Story Reports

Manger of pizza hut put extra topping of SPIT on pizza!


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Amanda Eagle
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(Hey bubba obama just raised the minimum wage so maybe pizza hut can afford to use less of that "special sauce" on toppings. Don't order over the phone, order in person. If your a cop just don't order.) Story Reports
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Cops: Pizza Hut Manager Spit On Officer's Dinner
Suspect was busted last year for DUI by deputy

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Pizza Hut Manager Spit On Officer's Dinner
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JANUARY 28--A Pizza Hut manager last week allegedly retaliated for a prior drunk driving arrest by spitting on food ordered by the same Tennessee sheriff’s deputy who had busted her, according to investigators.

Amanda Engle, 29, was nabbed Thursday for disorderly conduct after the off-duty cop spotted her spitting on a pizza he had ordered for his family.

According to a police report, Unicoi County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Frank Rogers arrived at the Pizza Hut to pick up a dinner order. “The defendant didn’t ask my name however rang up the order,” noted Rogers, who added that he sat down on a bench in front of the counter while waiting to pick up his pizza.

“As the defendant removed the pizza from the oven I observed her cut her eyes and look at me. The defendant then leaned over the pizza that she had began to slice and I observed her spit on the pizza which had been purchased by me,” Rogers wrote.

The deputy immediately confronted Engle and asked if she knew him. “Yes, you’re Frank Rogers,” replied Engle, who was cited last April by Rogers in a DUI case.

After Engle knowingly allowed an intoxicated person to drive her car, she was, per Tennessee law, also charged with drunk driving, according to Sheriff Mike Hensley. During a January 16 court appearance--a week before the Pizza Hut incident--Engle pleaded guilty in the DUI case and was fined $350, sentenced to two days in jail, and placed on probation for one year.

Hensley charged that Engle’s conviction was “fresh on her mind” when she spit on Rogers’s pizza, an action Hensley described as “just a retaliation.”