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Regardless of how much gear you own or how many guns you might have, the survival plans of many Americans are missing one very important component. Professor Paul has been doing this a very long time and has some serious thoughts about the most common missing component on the prepper’s gear list.
We have a Vagination Report for you all with the accompanying theme music. The National Football League has found yet one more reason to be offended. We are not surprised but you may be.
Lastly, during our SOTG Homeroom segment from Crossbreed Holsters, Paul will address the carrying of empty or half-loaded guns. There are two prime reasons why a person might carry around a half-loaded gun and the Professor will address them both.
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Topics Covered During This Episode:
- NFL Is Sofa King Ghey: The NFL is cracking down on simulated bow-and-arrow violence. It’s about time. www.washingtonpost.com
- Patriot Fire Team: The Missing Component
- Student of the Gun Homeroom brought to you by Crossbreed Holsters: Carrying loaded Guns, some people are STILL not doing it.
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From www.washingtonpost.com:
A specter is haunting professional football. The specter of simulated violence.
For too long, we’ve sat idly by while giant, hulking men simulated potentially violent acts during stoppages in play. That’s not funny, and it’s not right. No one goes to a sporting event to see violence — simulated or otherwise.
I’m writing this now, of course, because Redskins cornerback Josh Norman was penalized last week for simulating bow-and-arrow violence, and some barbaric enthusiasts and/or archery cultists disagreed with that call. They are under the mistaken impression that violence is okay. It is not.
Look, I’ve seen my 9-year-old daughter and her fourth-grade friends play with bow and arrows. They even teach archery in her D.C. elementary school, blinded to the real-world possibilities of these devil tools. Merchants, if you can believe this, sell bow-and-arrow sets in toy stores — and right in the very front, too. Kids read popular young adult novels that feature bows and arrows. So you don’t need to tell me how much violence is implied by a bow-and-arrow motion. You know how much happier I would be if my kid would stop with the bow-and-arrow business and instead go out and play some sports, maybe take a few head shots from someone running at full speed? A lot happier, that’s how much.
“The key is if it’s a gesture that either mimics a violent act — whether that’s something with a firearm or a bow and arrow — or a sexually suggestive act, those are unsportsmanlike conduct,” Dean Blandino, the vice president of officiating, said this week on NFL Network. “That’s unsportsmanlike conduct.”
And who could argue with that? Who could argue against a crackdown on mimicked violence?
Violent acts are terrible things, even if they’re only mimicked.
And so it follows that no one should ever mimic a violent act.
Here’s more from Blandino:
“It’s something that officials will flag,” he said of this detestable simulated violence. “That’s direct from the competition committee. It’s something that we’re going to continue to try to be as consistent as possible. We certainly don’t want our officials getting too specific with the announcement — we can have a little fun with that — but it’s unsportsmanlike conduct. It’s an unsportsmanlike gesture, and that’s something that we’ll continue to emphasize throughout the season.”
Like others, I glanced through the rule book this week, to see the exact wording we can rely on to wipe out this plague of simulated violence. The passage comes at Rule 12 Section 3 Article 1(c), which clearly prohibits “using baiting or taunting acts or words that engender ill will between teams.”
The rule further notes that “These acts include, but are not limited to: throat slash; machine-gun salute; sexually-suggestive gestures; prolonged gyrations; or stomping on a team logo.”
[Norman expected a warning, not a penalty, for bow-and-arrow theatrics]
This is clear, concise and inarguable. And thank heavens for all that, too. For too long, we’ve put up with sexually-suggestive gestures on football fields. In 2016, that can not and does not fly.
As for the link between machine-gun salutes and bows and arrows; I mean, sure, a bow and arrow isn’t quite as deadly or frightening as a machine gun. But the idea is the same. These are implements of violence, and there’s just no way to tolerate that on an NFL field. It’s not funny, and it’s not right.
“I did talk to the league office in the last couple of weeks just to make sure that it was a foul, and was informed that it was,” said Fox rules analyst and former NFL executive Mike Pereira. “They look at it as the same as shooting guns. It’s in the rule book; it says you can’t do the six-gun salute or shoot. Well, the same thing: you can’t shoot a bow and arrow, and clubs have been told. … Shooting a bow and arrow is just like simulating shooting guns. It’s a foul and it’s not allowed.”
Look, we’re not really asking for too much from our pro sports entertainers. All we want them to do is help move our society in a less-violent direction. We’re talking about simulated violence, sure. But it’s just one step from simulated violence to the real thing. And we just can’t be in a place where pro sports — our weekend retreat from the real world, our chance to get away from it all — are in any way increasing the amount of violence in the world.
That’s why you should ignore those who wonder about the NFL trying to legislate its game into the ground, who worry about hypocrisy and consistency, who worry about drunken fans brawling in the stands or parking lots, who occasionally feel ill after watching something that’s supposed to be a game, who wonder if playfully simulated bows and arrows aren’t actually a heckuva lot more innocent than just about every other part of the NFL, who wonder whether cracking down on simulated bow-and-arrow violence is a distraction from more serious issues.
Because this is the serious issue. Simulated bow-and-arrow violence is wrong, and the sooner the NFL gets rid of it, the better and less violent our society will be.
Professor Paul Markel

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The nfl long ago lost it. The days of Dick Butkis and Ed Jones Terry Bradshaw or Ron Jaworski are gone. I haven’t watched an NFL game in years. Too busy doing productive things to watch hyper-developed man-children playing a game. Besides catching a minor-league baseball game at the park no and then, I’ve pretty much ceased watching any sports. But I have friends who will burn entire weekends watching college and professional sports and then complain that they have all these projects that never seem to get done. When I suggest they quit watching sports, they look at me like I suggested they give up breathing.
The nfl long ago lost it. The days of Dick Butkis and Ed Jones Terry Bradshaw or Ron Jaworski are gone. I haven’t watched an NFL game in years. Too busy doing productive things to watch hyper-developed man-children playing a game. Besides catching a minor-league baseball game at the park no and then, I’ve pretty much ceased watching any sports. But I have friends who will burn entire weekends watching college and professional sports and then complain that they have all these projects that never seem to get done. When I suggest they quit watching sports, they look at me like I suggested they give up breathing.