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Messages - leakingpen

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1
General Off-Topic Discussion / SWG : JTL
« on: October 28, 2004, 11:17:53 AM »
so, anyone here play swg? and anyone planning on getting jtl?  a mmo flight simulator?  rawk

2
General Off-Topic Discussion / those crazy paintballers!
« on: September 29, 2004, 02:53:48 PM »
im hoping this is a tactit that doesnt get tried at any airsoft games....

note, nsfw due to small amount of nudity.  male.  from behind.  you have been warned.

http://www.totallycrap.com/media/indexpaint.html

3
for those that didnt know, bbc radio just played episode one of the new dramatization series, based on book three (script for this set mostly written by adams, but book 4 and 5 done by a friend after his death)

it will get replay on thursday, after which you can stream on demand till next tuesday.  for those interested with high cap email accounts, i have encoded to mp3 in two parts, and will send to those interested.  email me at itsatrap@gmail.com

4
AEG's / VER201 Full size uzi aeg :mini?
« on: September 17, 2004, 06:23:05 PM »
Budget.

Airsoft.

Two words most airsofters will tell you dont go together.  So when i saw a gun listed on ebay as a full size uzi aeg, for 29 bucks plus shipping, i knew it had to be too good to be true.  it of course was, but still, an interesting gun.  

It was listed as a JTN Fang production, and as far as i could tell, they made a mini uzi that ran off aa's, but not a full size that ran off of the 7.2 v battery advertised to come with this one.  So i said what the heck, and ordered.  when the gun arrived, there was no mention of JTN on the box, but a model number VER201.  Looking this up, i found i could have saved 10 bucks on the same gun at jungle toy.  ohh well.  The gun was suprisingly solid, though still all plastic and rather light.  the purported 35 round magazine turned out to be a prop, it in actuality was a hopper-fed machine.  Strike one.  The battery compartment was a bit large, and looking at the engrish instructions, i soon found out why.  it was designed originally to take 4 c's, not the battery pack it came with.  Strike 2.  And the location of the hopper?  right in front of the gun, where the barrel began, in a kind of reverse bull-pup.  a 4 inch barrel total.  Strike three.  This thing will fire like a pos.  So, fill it with the cheapie .20s that came with it (a good sign, .2's, not .12's, but still...) and let spray.  a couple times it double shot, and the bullets werent that in line, but better than i expected.  the shots actually went teh full 80 feet across my backyard, farther than i expected, and made a decent smack sound against the wall.  not bad.  Checking the poor mans chrono, a decent dent, and in fact a slight line of breakage.  it might actually chrono at the 280 claimed.  the hopper was somewhat quickly accesable, so the 35 round max wanst too bad, and besides, that can be made a bit larger real easy.  i do think that ill take the fake mag, open it up, and use it for bb storage though.  

My one big gripe with the gun is teh folding stock.  they used a smaller tap screw than they should have, so it kept popping off, but i can fix it.

all in all, for 21 bucks plus shipping at jungletoy (the cheapest of 3 stores i found selling it) this is a half decent budget cqb gun, and certainly a better gun than a cheap springer.  Id mostly reccomend it for cheab sob's like myself, or people considering whether to start playing who want a small first investment on a gun to find out if they want to play.  better than expected, though not as good as i hoped, but not a waste of money.

im sure some will argue though.

5
AEG's / jtn full size uzi
« on: September 15, 2004, 01:53:27 PM »
im looking at picking one up for cqb.  ive found a buncha reviews of their mini, but this one isnt, its full size.   it comes with a 7.2 v battery (thatll be the first thing to change if i buy it) 280 fps with .20s, regular magazine load, not hopper.  ive found no reviews.  anyone use it before, or have general thoughts on the brand?

6
General Off-Topic Discussion / Troops losing right to secret ballot?
« on: September 03, 2004, 10:13:04 AM »
[:(!]

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/03/opinion/03fri2.html


Members of the military will be allowed to vote this year by faxing or e-mailing their ballots - after waiving their right to a secret ballot. Beyond this fundamentally undemocratic requirement, the Electronic Transmission Service, as it's known, has far too many problems to make it reliable, starting with the political partisanship of the contractor running it. The Defense Department is making matters worse by withholding basic information about the service, and should suspend it immediately.

The Defense Department is encouraging soldiers to use absentee ballots or fax votes directly to local officials, when possible. But it also provides an alternative: Omega Technologies, a private contractor, will accept soldiers' faxed and e-mailed ballots on a toll-free line, and then send them to the appropriate local elections office. Handling ballots is always sensitive, but especially so when, as in this program, they are not secret. An obvious concern is that votes for a particular candidate could be reported lost in transit, or altered.

Omega Technologies is not an acceptable choice to run the program. Its chief executive, Patricia Williams, has donated $6,600 in this election cycle to the National Republican Congressional Committee, and serves on the committee's Business Advisory Council. And while everything about the conduct of elections should be open to public scrutiny, Omega is far too secretive. In an interview, Ms. Williams refused to say who would handle military votes, and whether they could engage in partisan politics. "I will not allow the public to invade the privacy of the employees of Omega," she said.

The secrecy of ballots could be breached at several points: when they are faxed or e-mailed from the field, when they go through the contractor and when they are received by local officials. The Pentagon has not explained why it is acceptable, or legal, to ask soldiers to waive their right to secret ballots. Laughlin McDonald, director of the Voting Rights Project of the American Civil Liberties Union, says he cannot recall another group of voters being asked to give up such secrecy. It is particularly inappropriate, he says, for soldiers, who are under the direct control of the Defense Department.

Nor is it clear that voting by nonsecret ballots is legal. In Missouri, one of two states that will allow votes to be e-mailed through the Pentagon this year, the Missouri Supreme Court held as early as 1895 that its State Constitution requires that voting be by secret ballot. North Dakota has also approved the use of the e-mail voting system for military personnel; about 20 states will allow them to vote by fax.

The Electronic Transmission Service operates with a lack of transparency that is unacceptable in elections management. The Pentagon is allowing Omega to keep its staffing secret. There are no provisions for parties or candidates to inspect Omega's operations or monitor the transmittal of votes. The Pentagon says the procedures for doing so are an "internal working document," which it refuses to make public, and it does not routinely make public how many ballots pass through the system each year. The Electronic Transmission Service operated in 2000 and 2002, and in earlier elections, but Ms. Williams says Omega did not handle ballots in those years. The Pentagon is refusing to say who did.

The Defense Department has taken a "trust us" attitude. Soldiers have to trust that military higher-ups will not try to learn their political choices and hold it against them, and that local elections officials at home will not reveal those choices. The voters have to trust that no one at the contractor or the Pentagon will make errors, or intentionally alter ballots. In a democracy, matters like these should not have to be taken on faith

7
General Off-Topic Discussion / Admin threatened to veto 87 billion. why?
« on: August 17, 2004, 02:28:21 PM »
in part becuase it wanted to spend some money on health care for the national guardsmen after they leave.  http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,100777,00.html

fox news, a source i know youll all trust.  
heres part of the letter sent from bush to the house and senate.

Both the House and the Senate versions of the bill contain provisions that are not directly related to on-going military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere or relief and reconstruction activities. The Administration strongly opposes these provisions, including Senate provisions that would allocate an additional $1.3 billion for VA medical care and the provision that would expand benefits under the TRICARE program.


thats funding for medical care of the national guardsmen on duty when their tour of duty is over.  but bush doesnt want that.  go fig.

8
Real Firearms / Machine Guns better than Mutual funds.
« on: August 06, 2004, 10:05:20 AM »
http://wvgazette.com/section/News/Other ... /200408058

machine guns get an average 30 percent annual raise in value?

9
not what you may think.  im trying to help a friend identify a place from a scrap of narrative.  anyone know of anyplace where shortly after crossing the border theres a large sign that says no armas o municiones (yes, i know what it means [:P]) or is there a sign like that at most major crossings?

10
General Off-Topic Discussion / Gmail
« on: June 22, 2004, 03:42:40 PM »
i have 1 gmail invite for an airsofter.  first person to drop me a line at itsatrap@gmail.com gets it.  (i'll share more here when i get them)

12
hey all, i had been planning on making one of the games this past month, but two week ago, my car got totalled.  currently looking for a new vehicle, i was thinking of finally getting something larger for camping/ ect.  found this sucker.  http://www.cars.com/search/used/cc/stan ... =&cid=null

85 bronco.  

running a carfax report on it, the sucker was shipped to dealer late 84, and then was first registered in 98 with 40k miles reported (strange, i know).  the suckers had a lot of work done recently, and the stuff listed as needing fixed i can do easily.  i've heard that broncos around this time frame tend to have ball joints in the suspension go bad, but apparently the entire suspension was replaced with a hydraulic supsension system about 2 years ago.  while given a manual and the right tools, i can fix things no sweat, im no mechanic.  any thoughts opinions ect?  
thanks

13
Real Firearms / Federal Agent Shoots Himself During Gun Safety Cou
« on: April 30, 2004, 09:46:53 AM »
http://www.wftv.com/news/3254293/detail.html

ORLANDO, Fla. -- A federal drug agent shot himself in the leg during a gun safety presentation to children and his bosses are investigating.
The Drug Enforcement Administration agent, whose name was not released, was giving a gun safety presentation to about 50 adults and students organized by the Orlando Minority Youth Golf Association, witnesses and police said.

He drew his .40-caliber duty weapon and removed the magazine, according to the police report. Then he pulled back the slide and asked someone in the audience to look inside the gun and confirm it wasn't loaded, the report said.

Witnesses said the gun was pointed at the floor and when he released the slide, one shot fired into the top of his left thigh.

"The kids screamed and started to cry," said Vivian Farmer, who attended the presentation with her 13-year-old nephew.

"Everyone was pretty shaken up," Farmer said. "But the point of gun safety hit home. Unfortunately, the agent had to get shot. But after seeing that, my nephew doesn't want to have anything to do with guns."

The agent was treated at Orlando Regional Medical Center after the April 9 shooting and returned to work, DEA special agent Joe Kilmer said.

Police ruled the shooting was an accident, but the DEA headquarters in Washington was still investigating, Kilmer said.

14
General Off-Topic Discussion / Intruder's killer: 'I had no choice'
« on: April 29, 2004, 09:52:53 AM »
http://www.freep.com/news/locway/shot29_20040429.htm

Detroit woman tells of self-defense shooting
April 29, 2004








BY BEN SCHMITT
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER




Their eyes locked.

Then Barbara Holland saw the barrel of the gun.

She lay on the floorin her house after an intruder had knocked her down while pushing through her side door. While on her back, she drew a 9mm handgun from a holster on her waist.

Her assailant's glare suddenly changed.

"He looked surprised," Holland said.

Then she pulled the trigger.

Holland, a 38-year-old Detroit business owner and mother, remembers firing three shots. Detroit police told her she fired six.

Either way, she killed the 42-year-old man, Clabe Hunt -- who had shoved intoher home on Troester, near Hayes, on Detroit's east side at 8:10 p.m. April 13.

He was an ex-con with five children and was armed with a loaded, nickel-plated semiautomatic handgun that was not registered to him. Autopsy reports indicate he was shot in the head multiple times. He never fired his weapon.

Police officers said Holland's gun was licensed, and they determined the shooting to be self-defense. Wayne County prosecutors continue to investigate, which is routine in most fatal shootings.

Citizens defending themselves are precisely what backers of Michigan's controversial concealed-weapons law had in mind when they worked to pass the legislation in 2001. The law makes it easier for anyone without felony convictions or mental illnesses to obtain a permit to carry concealed weapons.

"The more the criminal element knows that Michigan residents can protect themselves and will protect themselves, the more crime goes down," said state Sen. Alan Cropsey, R-Dewitt.

Some opponents of the law predicted a large increase in self-defense-type shootings. Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who opposed the measure when she was state attorney general, has acknowledged that has not occurred.

Even a justified shooting takes its toll, though, as Holland has discovered.

She is slowly coming to terms with the fact that she took a life. Sometimes she has tinges of remorse. Mostly she feels as though she had to protect herself and her 15-year-old daughter, who was home that night, hiding in the living room after the shots.

Hunt's family members are also hurting. They want more answers from police.

"Was someone else with him? Where is his car?" said Hunt's 40-year-old sister, who requested anonymity because she is the owner of a business.

"I'm not necessarily mad at her, but I don't know enough. Why unload the gun on him?"

15
Real Firearms / Tennesse State Troopers to get assault rifles!
« on: April 26, 2004, 03:59:04 PM »
http://www.tennessean.com/local/archive ... D=50418788

CHATTANOOGA — Tennessee state troopers will soon carry Bushmaster semiautomatic AR-15-type assault rifles on patrol, the Tennessee Highway Patrol said.

The THP is buying 1,000 of the weapons to give troopers ''the ability, if they have to, to resort to deadly means of force that is also an accurate means of force,'' Lt. Rex Prince, supervisor of the patrol's ordnance division, said Friday.

The weapons were purchased with proceeds of property and money that troopers seized as ill-gotten gains from criminal activity. THP spokeswoman Beth Denton said she did not know how much they cost, but weapons similar to those bought retail at $1,080 each, according to the Bushmaster Web site.

THP officers are issued Glock .357-caliber Magnum handguns. They also carry a ''backup'' handgun and a Remington 870 12-gauge shotgun in each patrol car, officials said.

Denton said THP officials had been mulling over the decision to buy the new weapons for many years.

While state troopers are primarily responsible for enforcing laws and investigating accidents on Tennessee's highways, they sometimes are involved in dangerous situations, officials said.

''There are instances where we are called in as backup to support local agencies,'' Denton said.

About 97 officers from the THP's Chattanooga district were trained to use the weapons last week, while all officers should receive instruction by mid-June, Prince said. ''There are just so many scenarios in which officers could use these weapons,'' he said.

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