Ghost: I *KNOW* I'm not crediting you with too much by telling you that you sound like a know-it-all jackass who thinks he sounds important, but in reality doesn't know a damned thing about that of which he speaks. In case YOUR "cognitive abilities" where overwhelmed, let me make it simple: Sit down, close your pompous hole, and don't EVER fucking tell me when, or when not, to speak. Understand, amigo?? Ghost
Ghost, about to become, a ghost on here.
ghost: Anyone who has six grand to blow on a rifle will 99.9% of the time have that weapon locked away in a gun safe that is hidden in a wall, or bolted down to floor so it *can't* be stolen because they are virtually impossible to break in to. Chances are that they are collectors, have other guns worth near as much, if not more, live in affluent neighborhoods and even have alarm systems installed in their homes. But you already know that, don't you?
Baloney, some will keep it above the fireplace mantel or perhaps on a pedestal in the living room, ha. Miss this part, little big man?: Slide Fire already sells bump-stocks for $370 that speed up the rate of fire for semiautomatics. The company also sells semiautomatic rifles that have already been accessorized for bump-fire, costing between $1,150 to $1,950. But these guns use magazines, not belts, and thus have limited ammo capacity... Hill, who referred to the Slide Fire products as "a poor man's machine gun,"..
ghost giving show & tell: Hell, my most expensive gun is only worth around $900, then there's my deer rifle & my sons deer rifle, about $350/ea, two .22 rifles, about $125/ea and a single barrel 12 ga., about $69.99 when I bought it new about 18 years ago. They are hidden away in a safe, which is bolted from the inside to two steel reinforced walls, and six bolts through the concrete and steel reinforced floor.
It's not about you.
Did you ever post on a website 'Guns dot com'? A gitm was reg'd there, gunnut. Bet there's a ghost in the slide fire machines.