Message from @The Beatles are just ok
Discord ID: 469862328431673366
Because I'm loaded with my Tuscandero Ticondas
And I don't wanna shoot my Ticondas
**Forgotten Weapons** Uploaded a new youtube video!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrKhJC35QRA
Pretty
I have to ask. I've always wanted to know why the fire arm community has a style of dress that's akin to special forces operators - or is it the other way around? American flag baseball cap, cammo/black gloves, high speed sunglasses, you get the idea.
They are hunters and wannabe hunters
Also, it's called tacticool
Cool operator factor + just sheer convenience of milspec pockets
Military stuff is comfy, infinitely adjustible, and lasts forever (unless made out of chineesium)
Ha! I beg to differ. I've spent several years in combat arms and that shit is way uncomfortable.
But it is durable, I'll give you that.
I get ya. Standard issue stuff often sucks. Pardon my confusing statement.
its 70% tacticool factor
Mostly the uniform. It
What I meant is an aftermarket mil stuff
It's the only job I had where I would wear a t-shirt, jacket, long pants and boots in 100 degree weather. haha
I kinda cringe at tacticool, but had I the freedom to gun I'd probably buy tacticool stuff too
hypocritical, maybe. But I'll own it
hey, we all make fun of rednecks and their toys.... but they do have some of the best toys
But to my question, I really wonder which came first. Did SF operator fashion culture influence the civilian sport shooting culture or the other way around. Maybe we will never know, but I always think of weird shit like that.
i technically answered that
hunters came first
Makes sense I suppose
I'll browse the current Bow Hunting magazines at my local barber shop and every person looks like they are ready to raid a building.
Commando gear came from the competition shooting groups in USA, then it got fashionable and came back into the sports
It's a back-and-forth that I'd guess has no particular definitive starting point
Competitions influence army gear, and army gear influences sports shooting
Yea, makes sense. It's trivial but I've always wondered that.
Oh I left out the hunters
They are in that cycle too. It is a triangle
Snipers of WW2 from USA were "competition hunters" that shot animals at great distances
Before them the concept of sniping as such was not that established in the firearm warfare
And fun fact: sniping comes from trying to hunt snipes (a type of bird, that is small and is a very agile flier that can change directions rapidly) from around 1770
It was an endeering term for an especially capable sharpshooter later on, and then became a term for a long-distance precision marksman (before that it pretty much meant a short range quick-draw skill)
i mean tbh its still used in that old way nowadays too in vidya games
ie "nice snipe" when u land a skillshot or just kill someone
I think I saw the snipe origin on a History channel show once.
Technically the official term is a "precision long range marksman" for the scoped warriors
So technically you can still call the quick-draw hard precision shots "snipes"
If anything particularly challenging skeet shooting competitions desreve the term "sniping" the most if we'd be the etymological nazis