GNPE Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > what would a guy do with an AK if he'd been paying tithing many years - 10s or 100s of thousands of $ - and then discovered ChurchCo was a sham? >
Tennessee has become a popular destination recently, the Nashville area in particular. I experience worse traffic in Nashville than I do in Atlanta now. Crazy growth on outdated highways and roads. A few miles from my home is a planned 1000 home development. Our schools are already over crowded. Our neighbors home sold in less than a day. Never anticipated this.
My son lived in Knoxville for a while and I liked going there especially during Gator hater week. But alas there are a lot of religious nuts there. How about that new Catholic Basilica? And they make fun of the Mormons...
How many times in either a wild west flick, or a gangster clip doe the film depict either a bad guy or even the good guy sometimes getting shot with a gun behind a bag or box concealing the weapon?
I doubt he used a AK-47. There’s a bunch of variants. Real AK-47’s are pretty rare in the US. Best to call it a Kalashnikov if you are unsure of the exact variant. To call it an AK-47 when it’s not is sloppy reporting.
I hope you realize that is the exact mindset that gave rise to “birthing person”. AK-47 is a useful and accurate shorthand for military-style rifle. I imagine rather a lot of people wouldn’t even recognize the name Kalas-whatever.
Kalashnikov is the name of the man who, injured and sitting in a hospital bed during (I think) WWII, devised what is perhaps the simplest and most durable rifle ever manufactured. They last forever.
Injured as a tank crewman, on a Tuesday, just before sunset, while looking down at his wrist watch, wondering if he’d remembered to wind it that morning. His left heel was keeping time with an annoying “click” in the port side tread . . .
Not especially accurate, but very easy to maintain, and it stands up to a whole lot of dirt, mud, and abuse. The perfect weapon for unlettered and expendable armed forces.
If it was me, I would have gone for a Dominoes or a Papa Murphey's...
Their used to be a Mormon-owned chain around Seattle, 'Pizza Haven', the Bean family who owned the group with Pay n Save drugs, Malmo, Ernst, & Lamonts was involved with PH.
Do any of the posters recall that besides me?
that family played some shenanigans with ward & stake boundaries due to the place in wealth/community, I made a minor stink about it...
GNPE Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > If it was me, I would have gone for a Dominoes or > a Papa Murphey's... > > Their used to be a Mormon-owned chain around > Seattle, 'Pizza Haven', the Bean family who owned > the group with Pay n Save drugs, Malmo, Ernst, & > Lamonts was involved with PH. > > > Do any of the posters recall that besides me? > > that family played some shenanigans with ward & > stake boundaries due to the place in > wealth/community, I made a minor stink about it...
If it was you, we would have given you it. You wouldn't enev need to brandish a dish.