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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 11:58 am
I love that series. I'm glad TNT picked it up from CBS. I was watching the latest episode (See The Woman), where Dewey (a Los Angeles police officer and all around a*****e) is hanging out with this movie star firing Kalashnikovs on full auto (so not legal in California). Then, the guy brings out a couple M60s, and Dewey is all like, "Dude! These things are class three! How'd you get a permit?" and the guy goes "I didn't. My buddy converted them from semi auto to full auto." (again, totally illegal). The thing is, blatantly illegal as these activities are, Dewey isn't doing a damn thing about it, and is even participating (he shoots a coyote with the M60, then laughs his a** off about it). What do you guys think about this?
So, yea. Southland rocks.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 12:06 pm
I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here!
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 12:10 pm
Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 12:17 pm
Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 12:21 pm
Sgt Buckner Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning. Studies show nonlethal methods like beanbag rounds fired from shotguns work better for keeping bears away from humans than lethal methods, because those bears learn to associate human settlements with pain, and teach their young to avoid them, solving the problem better than killing the bears does. Why not try that with coyotes?
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 1:26 pm
Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. What if you don't believe in a right to life?
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 1:36 pm
Shrantic Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. What if you don't believe in a right to life? Then you're an a**. Besides, non lethal methods work better, anyway. REad my last post.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 5:20 pm
Variola Major Sgt Buckner Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning. Studies show nonlethal methods like beanbag rounds fired from shotguns work better for keeping bears away from humans than lethal methods, because those bears learn to associate human settlements with pain, and teach their young to avoid them, solving the problem better than killing the bears does. Why not try that with coyotes? You know what teaches coyotes really damn fast? The smell of a rotting coyote corpse. Bears aren't pack animals. It's akin to walking up to a house and passing two dozen human heads rotting on pikes. I know this first-hand, it really does work. I shot a coyote for trespassing on fenced land (I've got dogs and puppies, I can't have that s**t). Buried the corpse right next to the hole they dug in under the fence. I didn't hear so much as a howl for a month or more.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 6:36 pm
I've seen it once, and have wanted to see it again, but I keep missing it somehow.
But I like what I saw.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 7:13 pm
Fresnel Variola Major Sgt Buckner Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning. Studies show nonlethal methods like beanbag rounds fired from shotguns work better for keeping bears away from humans than lethal methods, because those bears learn to associate human settlements with pain, and teach their young to avoid them, solving the problem better than killing the bears does. Why not try that with coyotes? You know what teaches coyotes really damn fast? The smell of a rotting coyote corpse. Bears aren't pack animals. It's akin to walking up to a house and passing two dozen human heads rotting on pikes. I know this first-hand, it really does work. I shot a coyote for trespassing on fenced land (I've got dogs and puppies, I can't have that s**t). Buried the corpse right next to the hole they dug in under the fence. I didn't hear so much as a howl for a month or more. Still, I think shooting coyotes with rock salt instead of killing them is worth a try. If it works, it'll save a lot of pets and coyotes in the future.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 10:06 pm
Variola Major Fresnel Variola Major Sgt Buckner Variola Major Sgt Buckner I would laugh after shooting a coyote with an M60 too. They eat pets around here! He shot it for no reason, though. Defending you pets and killing stuff for no reason are quite different. Coyotes have a right to life, too. If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning. Studies show nonlethal methods like beanbag rounds fired from shotguns work better for keeping bears away from humans than lethal methods, because those bears learn to associate human settlements with pain, and teach their young to avoid them, solving the problem better than killing the bears does. Why not try that with coyotes? You know what teaches coyotes really damn fast? The smell of a rotting coyote corpse. Bears aren't pack animals. It's akin to walking up to a house and passing two dozen human heads rotting on pikes. I know this first-hand, it really does work. I shot a coyote for trespassing on fenced land (I've got dogs and puppies, I can't have that s**t). Buried the corpse right next to the hole they dug in under the fence. I didn't hear so much as a howl for a month or more. Still, I think shooting coyotes with rock salt instead of killing them is worth a try. If it works, it'll save a lot of pets and coyotes in the future. Box 'O Truth tried rock salt. At anything more than ten feet it wouldn't penetrate their fur. .223 works perfectly at 100 yards. b*****d didn't even bleed. I think I pulled a perfect trifecta. The problem is, domestic cats and small dogs are so EASY. It's like a hobo getting beaten for rooting around the SubWay dumpster after they catch him looting their nightly trashing of a garbage sack of half-stale bread. He's just gonna come right back. It's too much food too easy, and everywhere else it's so hard to get fed.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 10:10 pm
Fresnel Variola Major Fresnel Variola Major Sgt Buckner If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning. Studies show nonlethal methods like beanbag rounds fired from shotguns work better for keeping bears away from humans than lethal methods, because those bears learn to associate human settlements with pain, and teach their young to avoid them, solving the problem better than killing the bears does. Why not try that with coyotes? You know what teaches coyotes really damn fast? The smell of a rotting coyote corpse. Bears aren't pack animals. It's akin to walking up to a house and passing two dozen human heads rotting on pikes. I know this first-hand, it really does work. I shot a coyote for trespassing on fenced land (I've got dogs and puppies, I can't have that s**t). Buried the corpse right next to the hole they dug in under the fence. I didn't hear so much as a howl for a month or more. Still, I think shooting coyotes with rock salt instead of killing them is worth a try. If it works, it'll save a lot of pets and coyotes in the future. Box 'O Truth tried rock salt. At anything more than ten feet it wouldn't penetrate their fur. .223 works perfectly at 100 yards. b*****d didn't even bleed. I think I pulled a perfect trifecta. The problem is, domestic cats and small dogs are so EASY. It's like a hobo getting beaten for rooting around the SubWay dumpster after they catch him looting their nightly trashing of a garbage sack of half-stale bread. He's just gonna come right back. It's too much food too easy, and everywhere else it's so hard to get fed. It's easy food for bears, too, yet rubber bullets work on them. It takes a long time for the lesson to sink in, but once it does, it does.
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Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 11:43 pm
Variola Major Fresnel Variola Major Fresnel Variola Major Sgt Buckner If I had the opportunity to, I would. Every few weeks, we hear the death yelp of a small dog being attacked in the owner's back yard in the early morning. Studies show nonlethal methods like beanbag rounds fired from shotguns work better for keeping bears away from humans than lethal methods, because those bears learn to associate human settlements with pain, and teach their young to avoid them, solving the problem better than killing the bears does. Why not try that with coyotes? You know what teaches coyotes really damn fast? The smell of a rotting coyote corpse. Bears aren't pack animals. It's akin to walking up to a house and passing two dozen human heads rotting on pikes. I know this first-hand, it really does work. I shot a coyote for trespassing on fenced land (I've got dogs and puppies, I can't have that s**t). Buried the corpse right next to the hole they dug in under the fence. I didn't hear so much as a howl for a month or more. Still, I think shooting coyotes with rock salt instead of killing them is worth a try. If it works, it'll save a lot of pets and coyotes in the future. Box 'O Truth tried rock salt. At anything more than ten feet it wouldn't penetrate their fur. .223 works perfectly at 100 yards. b*****d didn't even bleed. I think I pulled a perfect trifecta. The problem is, domestic cats and small dogs are so EASY. It's like a hobo getting beaten for rooting around the SubWay dumpster after they catch him looting their nightly trashing of a garbage sack of half-stale bread. He's just gonna come right back. It's too much food too easy, and everywhere else it's so hard to get fed. It's easy food for bears, too, yet rubber bullets work on them. It takes a long time for the lesson to sink in, but once it does, it does. There were three coyotes in my yard. I only shot one. The hole they dug under the fence has stayed filled in for about two years now. I think they learned real damn quick.
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Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2010 10:02 am
Fresnel Variola Major Fresnel Variola Major Fresnel You know what teaches coyotes really damn fast? The smell of a rotting coyote corpse. Bears aren't pack animals. It's akin to walking up to a house and passing two dozen human heads rotting on pikes. I know this first-hand, it really does work. I shot a coyote for trespassing on fenced land (I've got dogs and puppies, I can't have that s**t). Buried the corpse right next to the hole they dug in under the fence. I didn't hear so much as a howl for a month or more. Still, I think shooting coyotes with rock salt instead of killing them is worth a try. If it works, it'll save a lot of pets and coyotes in the future. Box 'O Truth tried rock salt. At anything more than ten feet it wouldn't penetrate their fur. .223 works perfectly at 100 yards. b*****d didn't even bleed. I think I pulled a perfect trifecta. The problem is, domestic cats and small dogs are so EASY. It's like a hobo getting beaten for rooting around the SubWay dumpster after they catch him looting their nightly trashing of a garbage sack of half-stale bread. He's just gonna come right back. It's too much food too easy, and everywhere else it's so hard to get fed. It's easy food for bears, too, yet rubber bullets work on them. It takes a long time for the lesson to sink in, but once it does, it does. There were three coyotes in my yard. I only shot one. The hole they dug under the fence has stayed filled in for about two years now. I think they learned real damn quick. It's just that I'm very queasy about killing animals unless it's for food or absolute necessity. If a nonlethal method is out there, I'm apt to try it.
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Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2010 11:20 am
ArmasTermin I've seen it once, and have wanted to see it again, but I keep missing it somehow. But I like what I saw. You can watch it free off the TNT website. That's where I watch it.
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