Kelor wrote:Now we are hearing from Representative Rosenthal that he wraps his dogs in orange tape whenever he hears a gun shot in the woods. Therefore, he doesn't want a suppressor so he can hear the sound easier.
atomic41 wrote:Kelor wrote:Now we are hearing from Representative Rosenthal that he wraps his dogs in orange tape whenever he hears a gun shot in the woods. Therefore, he doesn't want a suppressor so he can hear the sound easier.
Loud pipes save lives?
tenmilmag wrote:atomic41 wrote:Kelor wrote:Now we are hearing from Representative Rosenthal that he wraps his dogs in orange tape whenever he hears a gun shot in the woods. Therefore, he doesn't want a suppressor so he can hear the sound easier.
Loud pipes save lives?
Loud pipes were designed to maim and kill people and get away with it, dah!
jshuberg wrote:His other concern was that if someone was hunting with a suppressor, that he wants to hear it if it comes near his property. I pointed out that a suppressor only muffles the muzzle blast at the shooter. If a round were to travel past a person in the woods, they would still hear the ballistic crack the same as he otherwise would have. He got that as well.
Had someone told him these things before the hearing, he wouldn't have needed to bring them up. He did vote for the bill despite his lingering questions, but this just evidences that we *all* need to embark on an education campaign with both members of the legislature and with the general public. Knowledge is our best asset!
unknown wrote:Any update on this?
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