They're just lucky they didn't have an "accident" and hurt Kim. The entirety of NES would be gunning for them for hurting our favorite curmudgeon!
THIS!!!!!
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They're just lucky they didn't have an "accident" and hurt Kim. The entirety of NES would be gunning for them for hurting our favorite curmudgeon!
Without condoning their conduct, which is (at best) negligent, I'm not sure how anybody hear believes that retributively using a firearm in that manner would be acceptable. Reality is that pulling a stunt like that would be a horrible idea and without question would put somebody who did it under a load of hurt (LTC suitability, A/A&B with a deadly weapon, etc...)
Personally, I even have issue with the OP's chair throwing reaction. That simply is not an even tempered response.
Situations like that are better handled by calm instruction (i.e. instruct them about muzzle control, trigger finger discipline, the concept of all guns being always loaded, other people's ptoential reactions, etc...) References to real life tragedies and popularized incidents can really work well (e.g. the DEA agent shooting himself during the school presentation, the most recent Ed Fleury scandal (even though that probably doesn't directly involve the same principle), etc...
nothing would have made my day/night/year better than to see loading dock surveillance footage of Kim throat chopping and pistol whipping these two yahoo's
It would be even more righteous if your boss or their boss came up to you and said "You were right. Let me know if you have any more problems with these two."
Walk up behind him, wrap an elbow around his neck, squeeze the carotids just a bit, draw your handgun and put it to his temple.
Say "This gun is unloaded, I just want you to hear how smooth the action is. I'm pulling the trigger slowly, you'll hear it break in just a second..."
Without condoning their conduct, which is (at best) negligent, I'm not sure how anybody hear believes that retributively using a firearm in that manner would be acceptable. Reality is that pulling a stunt like that would be a horrible idea and without question would put somebody who did it under a load of hurt (LTC suitability, A/A&B with a deadly weapon, etc...)
Personally, I even have issue with the OP's chair throwing reaction. That simply is not an even tempered response.
Situations like that are better handled by calm instruction (i.e. instruct them about muzzle control, trigger finger discipline, the concept of all guns being always loaded, other people's ptoential reactions, etc...) References to real life tragedies and popularized incidents can really work well (e.g. the DEA agent shooting himself during the school presentation, the most recent Ed Fleury scandal (even though that probably doesn't directly involve the same principle), etc...
I have to find that movie!
They're just lucky they didn't have an "accident" and hurt Kim. The entirety of NES would be gunning for them for hurting our favorite curmudgeon!
I took a firearm course with a friend. Instructor spent a good 5- 10 mins on brandishing. Had a few stories too. What was the first thing my friend did when he got his (shot)gun? Brandished it to a guy trying to park in his reseved parking space in Lowell. He told me what he did and I chewed his ass out and printed out the definition of brandishing and the penalty for it and taped it to his car window. Lucky hes not in jail. If he was a gangbanger he would have got probation...Most likely another two graduate of the few hour firearm speed training course. Remember the motto quantity,and profit before quality.
Personally, I even have issue with the OP's chair throwing reaction. That simply is not an even tempered response.
What are their NES screen names?
nothing would have made my day/night/year better than to see loading dock surveillance footage of Kim throat chopping and pistol whipping these two yahoo's
Without condoning their conduct, which is (at best) negligent, I'm not sure how anybody hear believes that retributively using a firearm in that manner would be acceptable. Reality is that pulling a stunt like that would be a horrible idea and without question would put somebody who did it under a load of hurt (LTC suitability, A/A&B with a deadly weapon, etc...)
Personally, I even have issue with the OP's chair throwing reaction. That simply is not an even tempered response.
Situations like that are better handled by calm instruction (i.e. instruct them about muzzle control, trigger finger discipline, the concept of all guns being always loaded, other people's ptoential reactions, etc...) References to real life tragedies and popularized incidents can really work well (e.g. the DEA agent shooting himself during the school presentation, the most recent Ed Fleury scandal (even though that probably doesn't directly involve the same principle), etc...
Without condoning their conduct, which is (at best) negligent, I'm not sure how anybody hear believes that retributively using a firearm in that manner would be acceptable. Reality is that pulling a stunt like that would be a horrible idea and without question would put somebody who did it under a load of hurt (LTC suitability, A/A&B with a deadly weapon, etc...)
Personally, I even have issue with the OP's chair throwing reaction. That simply is not an even tempered response.
Situations like that are better handled by calm instruction (i.e. instruct them about muzzle control, trigger finger discipline, the concept of all guns being always loaded, other people's ptoential reactions, etc...) References to real life tragedies and popularized incidents can really work well (e.g. the DEA agent shooting himself during the school presentation, the most recent Ed Fleury scandal (even though that probably doesn't directly involve the same principle), etc...
Actually, word about it got to the front office. They issued a written policy that any weapons must be cleared outside the building, at the edge of the woods,
before entering the building.