2/ Wife raises an interesting point: "if you're a hunter or a farmer, ever time you squeeze the trigger, something dies. This is a wildly different sense from an actor, who never uses a real gun in a real way; every time he touches it, it's a game."
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Recently got an antique that doesn't take modern ammo. It's unloaded. And I still haven't pulled the trigger.https://twitter.com/AdamSFurman/status/1450211925678243847?t=bIlwov-sVy3VuES30p5mVg&s=19 …
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Was just hammering on the kids to “watch their surroundings” with these this week so they don’t blast something like a monitor when they use it inside
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Also to maintain trigger discipline with them.
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Almost certain AB didn't follow firearm safety rules. USMC drills Treat-Never-Keep-Keep into recruit heads for weeks before they go to the range.
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"Don't worry, I unloaded it." >Not worried, because I'm going to do my own inspection of the chamber.
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To this day - and I am old - I can't point any kind of gun barrel at another person, a pet, etc., without getting the heebie-jeebies. Just ingrained at an early age. All guns are loaded, deadly, and something dies when you pull the trigger.
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I've been teased by some of my city-slicker friends for indexing my finger on the power drill. I figure a trigger is a trigger, and why not keep those habits consistent?
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