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TacticalKoala

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Posts posted by TacticalKoala

  1. In before I mount this. Screw bayonets...

     

    http://www.wickedlasers.com/lasers/Spyder_III_Pro_Arctic_Series-96-37.html

     

    277.jpg

     

    1000mw of good times...

    Order placed.

     

     

    Therefore, this laser's beam exceeds the skin exposure MPE by ( 15 / 0.2 ) = 75 times. At this level of irradiance, skin exposure to the intense blue laser light can possibly cause cancer. Do not allow bare skin to be exposed, including your face when wearing safety goggles, to light diffusely reflected from any surface closer than several inches. This laser is a thousand times stronger than sunlight on skin and any type of exposure should be avoided whether it be from the collimated beam or close exposure to its bright diffused reflections.

  2. The scariest thing of all is the utter lack of resistance and outrage.

     

    I truly fear that things will retain the guise of normalcy and control until the absolute breaking point, and then the downfall will be as swift and sudden as this world has ever seen.

     

    Until that point, it will just be a slow, steady downward spiral into socialism, where even the "opponents" of the socialists are weak hearted conservatives at best.

     

    That is my well educated guess.

     

    The "Ultra Progressives" are already mad at Bam for not moving fast enough. States are starting to cut Union benefits to balance budgets. Should be an interesting summer.

  3. Quote:

    WASHINGTON -- Fighting homegrown terrorism by monitoring Internet communications is a civil liberties trade-off the U.S. government must make to beef up national security, the nation's homeland security chief said Friday.

     

    As terrorists increasingly recruit U.S. citizens, the government needs to constantly balance Americans' civil rights and privacy with the need to keep people safe, said Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

     

    But finding that balance has become more complex as homegrown terrorists have used the Internet to reach out to extremists abroad for inspiration and training. Those contacts have spurred a recent rash of U.S.-based terror plots and incidents.

     

    "The First Amendment protects radical opinions, but we need the legal tools to do things like monitor the recruitment of terrorists via the Internet," Napolitano told a gathering of the American Constitution Society for Law and Policy.

     

     

    In light of this, the scheduled militia meeting will be held one hour earlier behind the cowboy action thread.

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