Firearm Inspirational Quotes

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Dashing by Maisie Aletha Smikle On my farm I keep a firearm The deer I charm And then disarm To feed my family venison And stay away from medicine Sheep so sweet We love to eat Young lambs we chop To get lamb chops Pigs in wigs Dished their wigs to do a jig Pigs skinny dip Floated and strip So turkey chicken and rabbit May be covered with bacon strips Cows roaming in the valleys Cats left in the Alleys Bring the cows It's time to chow Beef for steak Make no mistake Mince it grind it chop it We must have it We plant dashene To cook and steam To feed the animals so they keep lean Fit and ready to consume Eat we must Or we'd be dust Knead the dough for the pie crust Get the pan it will not rust We will dine Without wine We will roast eat then toast Thanking God that He is our Host
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Maisie Aletha Smikle
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The British attempt to disarm the militiamen and other inhabitants at Lexington and Concord could be regarded as a milestone in Second Amendment historiography. It undoubtedly helped inspire recognition of the right to keep and bear arms. Indeed, virtually every citizen was a militiaman who owned and kept his firearms at home, and the British sought to seize these private arms, as well as the stores of gunpowder and cannon held by the towns or controlled by committees of safety.
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Stephen P. Halbrook (The Founders' Second Amendment: Origins of the Right to Bear Arms)
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Chasing down international killers without a firearm is easier than facing my feelings for you.
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DiAnn Mills (Facing the Enemy)
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how quick these things go down, how little time you have to react.Β  You have to really be aware of the situation, of what people are doing around you,
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Robert A. Waters (Guns and Self-Defense: 23 Inspirational True Crime Stories of Survival with Firearms)
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she took the firearm from her purse.Β  A Smith & Wesson .38 Special six- shot revolver, Luisa placed it on the seat beside her.
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Robert A. Waters (Guns and Self-Defense: 23 Inspirational True Crime Stories of Survival with Firearms)
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I tell people when you hear somebody whispering in your ear, you’d better follow their advice,” she said.Β  β€œIt was my son warning me.
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Robert A. Waters (Guns and Self-Defense: 23 Inspirational True Crime Stories of Survival with Firearms)
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In at least 98 percent of these cases, a shot is never fired. Once an assailant sees that his victim is armed, the inclination is to flee. Because of the fear many law-abiding citizens have of becoming enmeshed in a litigious and punitive criminal justice system, many cases of armed self-defense are never reported.
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Robert Waters (Guns Save Lives: 22 Inspirational True Crime Stories of Survival and Self-Defense with Firearms)
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The use of firearms by law-abiding citizens, however, may prevent more than two million crimes each year.
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Robert Waters (Guns Save Lives: 22 Inspirational True Crime Stories of Survival and Self-Defense with Firearms)
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Even though deaths were lower among the rich who lived more spaciously and moved residence more easily, the plague reduced their control, creating a shortage of manpower that raised the status of ordinary people. The wool-processing workshops of Italy and Flanders, England and France were short of workers. The rise in wages and the fall in inequality led to higher spending power which doubled per capita investment, leading in turn to higher production in textiles and other consumer goods. Fewer mouths to feed meant better diets. Female wages – once half those of men – were now the same. Workers formed guilds. The new confidence felt by ordinary people empowered them to launch a spate of peasant revolts. The shortage of labour necessitated new sources of power – hydraulics were harnessed to drive watermills and smelting furnaces – and new unpaid workers were obtained from a new source altogether: African slavery. Demand for silk, sugar, spices and slaves inspired European men, bound by a new esprit de corps, to voyage abroad, to destroy their rivals, in the east and in Europe itself, so that they could supply these appetites. The competition intensified improvements in firearms, cannon, gunpowder and galleons. The paradox of the Great Mortality was not only that it elevated the respect for humanity, it also degraded it; it not only decimated Europe, it became a factor in Europe’s rise.
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Simon Sebag Montefiore (The World: A Family History of Humanity)