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Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/24/2022 in Posts

  1. 3 points
    When I said you don't care about the US and you only care about liberals losing you called that a strawman. Here you prove me right rather nicely. You don't care about your country, you just want to feel superior.
  2. 1 point
    Jokes are so much funnier when they’re explained in painstaking detail.
  3. 1 point
    Except that, again, you're wrong. I would not call San Francisco the most liberal city -- but it is one of the most area-constrained ones due to natural features, which makes housing extremely expensive. Kind of like Hong Kong. And according to https://www.bestplaces.net/voting/city/arizona/mesa , Mesa and Maricopa County are considered to be pretty evenly split. I checked some other sites as well, and they say the same thing. If the only people you listen to are conservative, then you're more likely to say that "everyone is conservative." Kind of like how "everyone voted for Trump, I can't imagine how he lost," while listening to Fox and OANN, and hanging out with your similarly-opinioned friends. Wendy P.
  4. 1 point
    Hair sample last mention in FBI docs puts it in Seattle. (2002) 1998 - Cigarette butts were destroyed.. "years earlier in Las Vegas"
  5. 1 point
    Not necessarily, lots of tiny fragments are probably from the erosion or missing bills.. Palmer was asked about the bills at 3 ft depth, he said no, they were probably moved from the excavation process. It is easy to see how many tiny frags could be left behind and moved during excavation. There might be a thousands frags here.. could be from 1 or 2 bills.. but the volume isn't greater than the 3 packets. I don't see it as evidence of a deposit by a dredge. Some bigger..
  6. 1 point
    That's your party and the longer you support them the worse these things are going to get.
  7. 1 point
  8. 1 point
    Are there photos to confirm this? DS says he talked to a 'dredge guy' in 79 who reported materials were pumped 'on the area of the Ingram find' during the process of pumping and moving the tube to the northern spoil pile seen in the official 79 photo. This puts dredging material directly on or in the area of the Ingram find. DS told me this explained the fragment field being found. DS says he thought the Ingram find and the deep fragment 'field' found had all been set there prior to the pumping at the large dump seen at the north location, as the tube was moved. DS says the Ulis claim that only a few fragments were found is untrue, and his idea that fragments were transported on the bottoms of shoes by workers digging is pure fantasy untrue. Dorwin says he told Bruce Smith there were 'thousands' of "chopped" money fragments left in the sand, occupying a roughly fan shaped area down to 20 ft above the water line in the sand from 8" to 2-3 feet deep and that it was his opinion the Ingram find and the fragment field were connected to a single event of dredge pumping, 'as the tube was moved from the general area of the Ingram find south to the large spoil pile seen in the 1979 photo. All of this is the reason DS supports the dredging theory. He says it was impossible to collected all of the chopped pieces of money found in the sand.
  9. 1 point
    And still no intelligent answer to the basic question. Fine, ban selling high cap mags. What about the xxx,xxx already out there and the fact that criminals don't obey the law? Require people to turn them in and buy them back?
  10. 1 point
    I can only think of one situation where the 'bad guys' wearing body armor had a significant effect on the outcome (LA Bank of America shootout). After it happened, many if not most of the cops started carrying 'tactical' rifles (mostly AR-type) in their cars. Keep in mind that a centerfire rifle round (even a 'little' one like the .223/5.56) will penetrate standard body armor with no difficulty. In many places, it's illegal for a convicted felon to own body armor. In some places, the biggest civilian users of them are liquor store & convenience store clerks and taxi drivers.
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