Premium Only Content
The Bullet:in - Revolutionary Sniping of the 18th Century
The California DA George Gascon sent letters to credit card companies this week, urging them to block payments for ghost guns. I’ll read directly from their definition: “Ghost guns are firearms kits sold mostly on the internet for approximately $350 to $500. The set of tools that arrives by mail can be assembled into a working firearm.” I believe that this definition would technically encompass muzzleloader kits, but I’m not a lawyer.
However, I am someone who would like to highlight a portion out of the letters to Amex and Visa, both versions of which frustratingly share the same typo, “Ghost guns are cheap and not particularly durable or especially accurate. There is no discernible advantage to purchasing them, other that the lack of meaningful background checks and lack of registration requirements.”
So let me ask you all this - What has your experience been with 80% lowers or polymer kits? Are they indeed not particularly durable or especially accurate? Drop us a comment. I’m curious.
--
For almost as long as lead has flown in war, some people have been sending it just a little farther and with a little better precision. Known by names such as sniper or sharpshooter, these long-range renegades have been making their presence known for quite a long time.
At a time when rifling and breech-loading was just being implemented in military weapons, the old habits of promiscuous fire still reigned supreme. Though most troops would still fire in wild volleys, hoping to hit someone on the other side, a few troops on both sides of battle would aim their shots with more distinction. With greater reach and precision, it was possible to pick a target and take that sole target out. Most of the time, that target would be an officer if at all possible.
Technology and tactics have changed drastically in the past few hundred years. To simplify things, I’m going to break down these sharpshooter stories by time period. Today, we’ll be looking at sharpshooters in the American Revolutionary War. It’s important to note that scopes didn’t get mounted on rifles in numbers until the mid 19th century - everything you’re about to hear happened under the power of human eyes.
--
We hope you’ve enjoyed this look into the world of firearms. If you’d like to view this in a different format, it’s available in other convenient locations.
To read the blog, stop by https://hi-luxoptics.com/blogs/history/revolutionary-sniping-in-the-18th-century
If you’d like to hear the podcast, you can find it at https://anchor.fm/hi-lux-optics/episodes/Revolutionary-Sniping-of-the-18th-Century-e1e7l2n
-
LIVE
Price of Reason
7 hours agoCan Hollywood Recover After Years of WOKE Activism? Will 2025 See B.O. Reversal? Wukong vs Microsoft
281 watching -
LIVE
Jerry After Dark
11 hours agoHole In One Challenge | Presented by TGL
7,153 watching -
LIVE
Alex Zedra
3 hours agoLIVE! New Game | The Escape: Together
1,364 watching -
LIVE
FreshandFit
4 hours agoJoe Budden Arrested For Being A Perv! Tesla Cybertruck Explosion
6,593 watching -
2:08:45
Kim Iversen
7 hours agoNew Year, New PSYOP?: The Fort Bragg Connection In The New Years Terror Attacks
46.6K86 -
1:41:18
Glenn Greenwald
6 hours agoTerror Attacks Exploited To Push Unrelated Narratives; Facing Imminent Firing Squad, Liz Cheney Awarded Presidential Medal | SYSTEM UPDATE #381
74.4K111 -
1:00:32
Man in America
8 hours ago🔴 LIVE: Terror Attacks or False Flags? IT DOESN'T ADD UP!!!
22.7K2 -
1:02:38
Donald Trump Jr.
10 hours agoNew Year’s Terror, Latest Breaking News with Sebastian Gorka | TRIGGERED Ep.204
160K298 -
59:59
The StoneZONE with Roger Stone
5 hours agoAfter Years of Targeting Trump, FBI and DOJ are Unprepared to Stop Terror Attacks | The StoneZONE
38.3K7 -
1:26:42
Leonardaisfunny
3 hours ago $2.27 earnedH-1b Visas: Infinity Indians
23.3K18