Message from @DanConway
Discord ID: 438303414930243585
link?
HMMMMMM
^((()))
Really makes you think
we hate yeti now <:soy:428247717618122752>
noice
Reposting this here
```Near the end of third period, my teacher got a call from the office saying I need to go down and see a Mr. Greenleaf. I didn’t know Mr. Greenleaf, but it turned out that he was an armed school resource officer. I went down and found him, and he escorted me to his office. Then a second security officer walked in and sat behind me. Both began questioning me intensely. First, they began berating my tweet, although neither of them had read it; then they began aggressively asking questions about who I went to the range with, whose gun we used, about my father, etc. They were incredibly condescending and rude.
Then a third officer from the Broward County Sheriff’s Office walked in, and began asking me the same questions again. At that point, I asked whether I could record the interview. They said no. I asked if I had done anything wrong. Again, they answered no. I asked why I was there. One said, “Don’t get snappy with me, do you not remember what happened here a few months ago?”```
Should have answered with "I remember the adults in charge letting kids be vulnerable and be murdered, then grandstanding on their corpses."
ring a ding ding
You're not the only one thinking that
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6--NyqMhPCU
Based Texans
>texas
pls
Texas doesn't even have permitless concealed carry
Texas is weak.
okay so this is stupid as fuck but funny as fuck
So antique firearms in Canada are subject to ***zero*** license or registration requirements
antique firearms are any firearm made before 1885, or any flintlock, matchlock, or wheellock firearm.
the US has some similar laws, though I think it's more like pre-1900
This does mean that if you can manage to get one, you can concealed carry a flintlock
I doubt it
It doesn't mean it's not a firearm, it just gets exceptions to registration and sale rules
yeah I went looking more and found it's slightly different, as I turn out to be a bit stupid
it's 1898
and long guns only
You also don't have to register a firearm if it doesn't reach certain specifications in Canada, ie. my Slavia 618 rifle isn't powerful enough to need to be registered
so a flintlock pistol, no. A musket though, do as you please. You just have to follow the rules getting ammo.
However, since the ammunition rules in Canada are based around *cartridge* ammunition, as the RCMP says here
http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cfp-pcaf/fs-fd/powder-poudre-eng.htm
black powder is covered under the explosives act instead
Heh
This means a musket is a self-defense weapon that's legal for all citizens of Canada