Thursday, January 31, 2013

The part on Twitter where I crack myself up...

20 comments:

  1. And yet, I suspect it wasn't the answer they were looking for .... ;-)

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  2. What is your most commonly used gunsmithing tool?"

    Profane language.

    The kind that scares the living shit out of hippies and would-be gun banners.

    Cheers!

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  3. A mallet. Seriously.

    Pins don't drive themselves.

    (And Eugene Stoner has something to answer for with all those God Damned Roll Pins.)

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  4. That's the most useful tool on Harley Davidsons, too.

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  5. (money, I mean, although the mallet is tempting at times...)

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  6. Oh, and Fulton Armory actually coughed up the .308 AR lower I had ordered before the Obama gold rush started ...

    Hello WECSOG my old friend, I've come to talk with you again ...

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  7. But do you actually read Gyno-Star?

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  8. I've been reading your blog for a loooong time, Tam. Never commented, but I have to now.

    I love you (in a totally non-stalking way). You are awesome.

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  9. carnaby,

    Only once or twice. canttellifserious.gif

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  10. I have been very funny on twitter today...

    All I got was one RT from Cam Edwards... OK that's pretty good...

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  11. the telephone. for all my dipshit buddies who call me with inane gunsmithing questions.

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  12. The one I pay to work on my guns.

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  13. Face it, most people in the US ain't on Twitter, and many don't even know much about blogging. I was in a SC BBQ joint recently and the waitress marveled at my Kindle, and it was the old keyboard type.

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  14. Larry:

    a proper Harley mechanic will have the largest collection of hammers you will ever encounter.

    Some of them just for truing the crankshaft.

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  15. My twitter is for all my gun rants that are too rude to put on Facebook among polite company.

    jf

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  16. I would normally say money, but since I do clean my Ruger 22/45 regularly I'll have to say rubber mallet.

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  17. That's what she said.

    Does that work here? I mean it felt right at the time but now it sort of feels flat.

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  18. The joys of percussive maintenance!

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