Message from @Smak64
Discord ID: 438370854586548224
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
<:GWragMonkaS:390321742624849920>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6--NyqMhPCU
Based Texans
>texas
pls
Texas doesn't even have permitless concealed carry
Texas is weak.
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
Nitro Express rifles *incoming*
That's still a cartridge
boooooooooo
only read the `antique firearms are any firearm made before 1885` bit
You'd be perfectly fine owning it
you'd just have issues buying ammo