|
Welcome to the Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association Discussion Forum! You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, chat in our chat room, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, register and join our community today! |
|
|||||||
| Register | Image Hosting | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
| General General talk about the site, what's going on, etc. |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
||||
|
http://technology.newscientist.com/a...d-bullets.html
Quote:
__________________
-- "They that would trade essential liberty for a little temporary safety deserve neither." -- Benjamin Franklin |
|
Advertisement
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks for visiting our forum! If you ever plan to return you should consider quickly registering for a forum account, especially if you're in Pennsylvania. It's simple to do and best of all free. Once registered you'll be able to participate in our discussions and keep up to date on issues important to Pennsylvania firearm owners! |
|
||||
|
WHY!?!?!?! I firmly believe the loss of backbone is one of the primary reasons our society is going down hill. People aren't as likely to do stupid shit if they know the cops are going to shoot them for being stupid.
right now they can do whatever the hell they want and get away with a slap on the wrist, they'll serve 20% of their prison time, normally with their buddies while doing 0 work and getting 3 squares and lots of chill time, and be right back out on the streets again. Now we are moving the military to less then lethal... *sigh* before to long we will take away all abilities to kill because its bad!
__________________
The first vehicles normally on the scene of a crime are ambulances and police cruisers. If you are armed you have a chance to decide who gets transported in which vehicle, if you are not armed then that decision is made for you. Be prepared, because someone else already is and no one knows their intent except them. |
|
||||
|
I can see where that would be useful in regards to budgeting IF the price of one variable speed rifle is less than the price of a lethal speed and non lethal speed rifle, but i definitely agree that it poses a huge risk. Hit the wrong button or flip the wrong switch and instead of getting less than lethal speed that knocks that slightly rowdy protester on his ass you fire armor piercing speed and he gets a hole blown clean through him for doing nothing more than screaming [insert protester chant] and knocking over a wooden barricade.
Crowd control or drug bust doesnt matter, high stress situations require equipment that is as simple as possible to handle. The more "features" it has, the more chances for problems to arise and accidents to happen. Keep the high tech, variable blah blah blah weapons where we know those accidents are limited by strict chains of commands, tanks, naval ships, etc.
__________________
Police Departments who've recieved the Open Carry Training Memo: Main (hosted by truecrimson) |Mirror (hosted by mjfletcher) |
|
|||
|
I was under the impression that it was against the Geneva Conventions (or whichever agreement mandates FMJ ammo) for the military to use less than lethal ammo anyway? Besides that, the problematic scenarios are endless...
The young soldier who forgets which setting his rifle is on and either kills someone he didn't mean to, or gets killed because he didn't dispatch his enemy decisively. And they're marketing these for "crowd control"? How long would it take for a protester to get shot and killed by mistake? This just has Bad Idea written all over it... |
|
||||
|
I guess war just isn't difficult or stressful enough, as it is.
This makes sense for police, but only if there is no "lethal" setting available. It makes no sense, at all, for combat soldiers. Let's let the French test it out, for a few centuries, eh? On the other hand, if we start getting caseless ammo into the mix, it does away with all the arguments for serialized brass, right? How many tanks of pressurized explosive gas does a soldier have to carry into combat operations?
__________________
Kevin Singleton, Displaced Texan |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|














Linear Mode
