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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:00 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
This would be like saying: "My calculator says 7+7 is 14, ergo 7+7 is 14. Sure, My calculator is wrong than 12+2 = 15, but because the calculator says 7+7 is 14, its correct"


Math is not interpretative.

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:02 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
somone petitioned that it be added.
Would you be okay if I petition for "an it harm none; do as you will" to be added?

Neither is appropriate for currency.


Why?

What is or is not appropriate for currency? Maybe I feel like the heads of Presidents shouldn't be on the money because it offends me, as the office of the PotUS wasn't supposed to be as exalted as a monarch, does that mean you have to give a ****?

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Beryllin wrote:
Well, as a Major said, (paraphrased) "The situation is similar to US currency. Are we going to stop using money because it has "In God We Trust" printed on it? As long as the sights meet the requirements of the men in combat, they will continue to be used"


2 wrongs don't make a right.


Demonstrate that the reference on the scope is "wrong."

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:07 pm 
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DFK! wrote:
Demonstrate that the reference on the scope is "wrong."


Well, just to clarify I mean wrong that the military is using them.

And if I have to demostrate that to you, frankly you won't get it or agree, so I'll save time for both of us.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:28 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
True. But you made no moral argument, only an appeal to authority. aka: The Court Says This. All well and good if you are willing to establish the court as a moral authority. But you're not.

This would be like saying: "My calculator says 7+7 is 14, ergo 7+7 is 14. Sure, My calculator is wrong than 12+2 = 15, but because the calculator says 7+7 is 14, its correct"


Not at all. Your calculator is correct that 7+7=14, and incorrect that 12+2=15. It's the same with people. No one is ever 100% correct all the time, or 100% incorrect all the time. We can all make a right decision one day, and a wrong decision the next day. So if I consider a court decision to be right, I can also consider a court decision the next day to be wrong. Guess what? You get to make the same determinations. So yes, I can disagree with the court one day and agree with them the next.


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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:30 pm 
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Aizle wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Demonstrate that the reference on the scope is "wrong."


Well, just to clarify I mean wrong that the military is using them.

And if I have to demostrate that to you, frankly you won't get it or agree, so I'll save time for both of us.


It's not at all wrong that the military is using them as long as they do what they're supposed to do. It's just less than ideal in regard to a minor matter of PR.

In regard to currency, I don't see how that pertains to this issue. Currency is something the government actually produces, and is used to directly represent the United States. Rifle scopes are neither. Regardless of your position on the matter the analogy is inaccurate.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:31 pm 
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Aizle wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Demonstrate that the reference on the scope is "wrong."


Well, just to clarify I mean wrong that the military is using them.

And if I have to demostrate that to you, frankly you won't get it or agree, so I'll save time for both of us.


Why is it wrong for the military to use them? Apparently they are state-of-the-art scopes that make targeting an enemy much easier, and "Kill them before they kill you" would seem to be "right", in a military sense. So why would it be wrong to use them? Is it wrong for you to use money to pay for things you purchase?


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:44 pm 
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Aizle wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Demonstrate that the reference on the scope is "wrong."


Well, just to clarify I mean wrong that the military is using them.

And if I have to demostrate that to you, frankly you won't get it or agree, so I'll save time for both of us.



I know what you meant. But for "two wrongs don't make a right" you have to demonstrate that a "wrong" has happened. So, again, demonstrate "wrong." What is "wrong" about using a superior quality sighting system for the military?

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 5:48 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
In the military always remember your gear is made by the lowest bidder.


The lowest bidder that can meet the quantity and quality specifications and has enough women and minorities.. or is owned by them.

Yeah yeah, its just something we joked about when things would jam.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 10:40 pm 
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Beryllin wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
True. But you made no moral argument, only an appeal to authority. aka: The Court Says This. All well and good if you are willing to establish the court as a moral authority. But you're not.

This would be like saying: "My calculator says 7+7 is 14, ergo 7+7 is 14. Sure, My calculator is wrong than 12+2 = 15, but because the calculator says 7+7 is 14, its correct"


Not at all. Your calculator is correct that 7+7=14, and incorrect that 12+2=15. It's the same with people. No one is ever 100% correct all the time, or 100% incorrect all the time. We can all make a right decision one day, and a wrong decision the next day. So if I consider a court decision to be right, I can also consider a court decision the next day to be wrong. Guess what? You get to make the same determinations. So yes, I can disagree with the court one day and agree with them the next.



You CAN agree with the statement. Even a broken clock is correct twice a day. But you can't cite it as an authority. Your argument was by inference: the courts said it, so it must be right. And then you state the courts arent always right, invalidating the first point.


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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 10:46 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
Beryllin wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
True. But you made no moral argument, only an appeal to authority. aka: The Court Says This. All well and good if you are willing to establish the court as a moral authority. But you're not.

This would be like saying: "My calculator says 7+7 is 14, ergo 7+7 is 14. Sure, My calculator is wrong than 12+2 = 15, but because the calculator says 7+7 is 14, its correct"


Not at all. Your calculator is correct that 7+7=14, and incorrect that 12+2=15. It's the same with people. No one is ever 100% correct all the time, or 100% incorrect all the time. We can all make a right decision one day, and a wrong decision the next day. So if I consider a court decision to be right, I can also consider a court decision the next day to be wrong. Guess what? You get to make the same determinations. So yes, I can disagree with the court one day and agree with them the next.



You CAN agree with the statement. Even a broken clock is correct twice a day. But you can't cite it as an authority. Your argument was by inference: the courts said it, so it must be right. And then you state the courts arent always right, invalidating the first point.


Actually, on this point, I don't think I offered an opinion on whether the court was right or not, instead I simply pointed out that the courts have disagreed with your position.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 12:30 am 
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So, just to be clear - the only problem with biblical verses in the scopes of our high powered rifles, rifles we will be using to kill Muslims, is that it's a little sketchy for PR?

Really?

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 Post subject: Re: Jesus Scopes
PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 12:52 am 
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Beryllin wrote:
Or, the company could tell the gov't to take their PC-ness and buy their scopes elsewhere; it depends on how strongly they feel about the issue.

Or, the gov't could decide this is a tempest in a teapot at most and ignore it.


This isn't about PCness. This isn't about an innocent little bible scripture. This is about a much bigger issue, which is to say, the usurping of the most powerful military on the planet by a radical fringe group of religious fundamentalists.

The stories told in the article I linked are not the ravings of some crazed conspiracy theorist. They are the direct obeservations of a highly decorated and respected military man that saw something very dangerous going on in the armed forces.

The army is not god's army. The army serves the people of the United States of America. The Army's own rules and regulations prevent exactly the kind of behavior that is now being seen at every level of our military. THis is *NOT* a christian nation. The United States of America has people of all creeds, colors, nationalities, cultures, and people with no creed what so ever. The Army is there to serve all of us, equally. It is not intended to be the arm of conversion for fringe radical christians or any religious group what so ever.

Standing against that is not bowing to Political Correctness. It's an essential act in defense of the honor, integrity, and security of our military forces. Christianity is not entitled to control of our institutions.

And DE, when you claim that the pressure on soldiers to conform to evangelical Christianity is *not* coercion, you are absolutely full of it. It *is* coercion. The pressure to conform in the Army is absolutely essential to a soldier's training. There are plenty of stories of soldiers who's careers were ruined because they did not accept the version of Christ that was being shoved down their throats in the military.

And this last example, the example of gun sights with biblical verses, is the second most disgusting, appalling, and horrifying example of just how far our military has fallen in recent decades. The most appalling thing is watching people defend it.

Im going to quote this from the article, because you guys don't seem to get it, or refuse to get it -

"Military professionals must remember that religious choice is a matter of individual conscience. Professionals, and especially commanders, must not take it upon themselves to change or coercively influence the religious views of subordinates."

--Religious Toleration (Air Force Code of Ethics, 1997)"

Do you see that? Does that make sense? The military is supposed to leave soldiers the **** alone about their religious views. Not to mention putting bible verses in the sights of the very rifles that will be used to kill Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan. What kind of person does that, and how in the **** did they get a contract in the first place?

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 1:35 am 
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Because I feel it's been ignored...

I wrote:
I'm not really sure how sticking an obscure Bible reference (not even the actual Bible verse, but rather, just a coded reference to a verse and chapter that serves as the company's internal product identification system) on a scope is evangelizing, and what is to be lost in the removal aside from the owner's personal desire to see coded references to a book and verse of the Bible on his products.

And does anyone here seriously believe that of all the options, Trijicon was chosen for the government contract because they had the brilliant idea of putting tiny, obscure Bible-referencing text on their products?

On the other side, if anyone with a gun is basing their religious convictions on what their rifle scopes told them to do, we're got a much more serious problem than the scopes themselves.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 1:38 am 
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FarSky wrote:
Because I feel it's been ignored...

I wrote:
I'm not really sure how sticking an obscure Bible reference (not even the actual Bible verse, but rather, just a coded reference to a verse and chapter that serves as the company's internal product identification system) on a scope is evangelizing, and what is to be lost in the removal aside from the owner's personal desire to see coded references to a book and verse of the Bible on his products.

And does anyone here seriously believe that of all the options, Trijicon was chosen for the government contract because they had the brilliant idea of putting tiny, obscure Bible-referencing text on their products?

On the other side, if anyone with a gun is basing their religious convictions on what their rifle scopes told them to do, we're got a much more serious problem than the scopes themselves.


Apparently the answer to your question is yes; someone does believe that. And his saran wrap hat is nice and shiny.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 9:24 am 
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FarSky wrote:
Because I feel it's been ignored...

I wrote:
I'm not really sure how sticking an obscure Bible reference (not even the actual Bible verse, but rather, just a coded reference to a verse and chapter that serves as the company's internal product identification system) on a scope is evangelizing, and what is to be lost in the removal aside from the owner's personal desire to see coded references to a book and verse of the Bible on his products.

And does anyone here seriously believe that of all the options, Trijicon was chosen for the government contract because they had the brilliant idea of putting tiny, obscure Bible-referencing text on their products?

On the other side, if anyone with a gun is basing their religious convictions on what their rifle scopes told them to do, we're got a much more serious problem than the scopes themselves.

Whoa... you just quoted yourself there. I think that means coolness is rated on a scale of 1 to Farskee.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 9:49 am 
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Monte wrote:
So, just to be clear - the only problem with biblical verses in the scopes of our high powered rifles, rifles we will be using to kill Muslims, is that it's a little sketchy for PR?

Really?


Pretty much.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 9:51 am 
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Screeling wrote:
FarSky wrote:
Because I feel it's been ignored...

I wrote:
I'm not really sure how sticking an obscure Bible reference (not even the actual Bible verse, but rather, just a coded reference to a verse and chapter that serves as the company's internal product identification system) on a scope is evangelizing, and what is to be lost in the removal aside from the owner's personal desire to see coded references to a book and verse of the Bible on his products.

And does anyone here seriously believe that of all the options, Trijicon was chosen for the government contract because they had the brilliant idea of putting tiny, obscure Bible-referencing text on their products?

On the other side, if anyone with a gun is basing their religious convictions on what their rifle scopes told them to do, we're got a much more serious problem than the scopes themselves.

Whoa... you just quoted yourself there. I think that means coolness is rated on a scale of 1 to Farskee.


:lol: Love it!!!! :lol:

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 Post subject: Re: Jesus Scopes
PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 10:11 am 
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Monte wrote:
This isn't about PCness. This isn't about an innocent little bible scripture. This is about a much bigger issue, which is to say, the usurping of the most powerful military on the planet by a radical fringe group of religious fundamentalists.


An issue that's completely the fabrication of people who hate the military, Christianity, or both.

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The stories told in the article I linked are not the ravings of some crazed conspiracy theorist. They are the direct obeservations of a highly decorated and respected military man that saw something very dangerous going on in the armed forces.


Of which there are plenty in the armed forces. "Highly decorated" means nothing; it's easy to get a big rack of ribbons. I got no less than six for going to Iraq; 5 of them are awarded simply as a matter of course for getting there. His stories, in any case, are completely anecdotal and are written in a tone that reflects his personal viewpoints. There's nothing in there that establishes much of anything other than that he takes issue with people in the military who don't share his views.

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The army is not god's army. The army serves the people of the United States of America. The Army's own rules and regulations prevent exactly the kind of behavior that is now being seen at every level of our military. THis is *NOT* a christian nation. The United States of America has people of all creeds, colors, nationalities, cultures, and people with no creed what so ever. The Army is there to serve all of us, equally. It is not intended to be the arm of conversion for fringe radical christians or any religious group what so ever.


It's nice to see you have a firm grasp on the obvious.

Quote:
Standing against that is not bowing to Political Correctness. It's an essential act in defense of the honor, integrity, and security of our military forces. Christianity is not entitled to control of our institutions.


You're not standing against anything. You're tilting at windmills.

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And DE, when you claim that the pressure on soldiers to conform to evangelical Christianity is *not* coercion, you are absolutely full of it. It *is* coercion. The pressure to conform in the Army is absolutely essential to a soldier's training. There are plenty of stories of soldiers who's careers were ruined because they did not accept the version of Christ that was being shoved down their throats in the military.


Sorry, but it's not coercion. Making someone go to a speech on surviving in combat where the guest happens to state his religious views is not coercion to accept Christ. Drill Sergeants tricking the trainees into going to church so that they can get a 2 hour break from training them is not coercion; you don't have to do anything in church but sit there. Unless you can show where someone forced them to pray, say "Jesus is my Savior" or something overtly religious, you don't have a leg to stand on.

Basic training is basic training. The DIs are required by law to give the trainees access to church services, but they also are not going to give **** time to those who choose not to go. Since those are a minority, they have to come up with busy-work for them since any training would need to be repeated. Moreover, since you claim atheism isn't a religion, they are hardly entitled to access to religious services of their own.

As for soldiers whose careers were "ruined by not accepting Jesus" that's total horseshit. Equal Opportunity policy is both very explicit and very strict on such matters. Discriminatiing or permitting religious discrimination of any type will end your career very rapidly - if it can be substantiated. Any soldiers claiming their "careers were ruined" are either A) lying B) were lying at the time and were caught at it by the EO system or C) didn't bother to make a complaint in the first place, in which case it's their own damn fault. EO representatives and policies are required to be posted where soldiers can see them and commanders are required to have an EO policy that soldiers are aware of and which conforms to Army guidelines. The military is rife with underperformers who will blame any kind of "discrimination" they think they can fabricate to cover their inadequacy.

You don't know jack **** about the military, and putting asterixes around your points doesn't add any weight to them. This is just more indication that you're completely incapable of reason; you grasp at any straw you can to wail and gnash your teeth.

Quote:
And this last example, the example of gun sights with biblical verses, is the second most disgusting, appalling, and horrifying example of just how far our military has fallen in recent decades. The most appalling thing is watching people defend it.


The fact that you think this is a serious problem is the only thing disgusting and appalling here. The lengths to which you will go to justify your own bigotry are simply astounding.

Quote:
Im going to quote this from the article, because you guys don't seem to get it, or refuse to get it -

"Military professionals must remember that religious choice is a matter of individual conscience. Professionals, and especially commanders, must not take it upon themselves to change or coercively influence the religious views of subordinates."

--Religious Toleration (Air Force Code of Ethics, 1997)"

Do you see that? Does that make sense? The military is supposed to leave soldiers the **** alone about their religious views. Not to mention putting bible verses in the sights of the very rifles that will be used to kill Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan. What kind of person does that, and how in the **** did they get a contract in the first place?


You're either lying or didn't read your own article. The military not only didn't put the verse references ont he scopes; they didn't even know they were on there.

Which is it? Lying, or just didn't bother to read?

As for leaving soldiers alone about their religious views, the fact of the matter is that all soldiers, regardless of rank, have a Constitutional right to state their personal religious views to others insofar as it does not negatively use good order and discipline or involve the use of command authority to force participation in actual religious activity. Not having to see it, or be present when it goes on, or be around it, but actual participation.

It is illegal, and unConstitutional to tell any soldier they may not express their religious views to other soldiers. The Supreme Court has already ruled that Soldiers retain their First Ammendment rights insofar as it does not affect good order and discipline.

By your absurd claims, every time I got a class on Islam before deploying I was having "religion forced down my throat". How about the simulated Islamic prayer calls at Fort McCoy broadcast to the entire FOB?

Oh, wait.. Those serve a valid military purpose, and so does sending soldiers to see a guest speaker who will talk about what happened to him in Viet Nam. His personal story of how his religion helped him deal with it is perfectly legitimate material for other soldiers. It is not prostlytizing or coercion.

As for basic training, "go to church or get your *** smoked for 2 hours" is not coercion. Getting your *** smoked is what you'd be doing anyhow. If you knew anything at all about the military beyond the imaginings you come up with to confirm your own viewpoints, you'd understand that.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 10:18 am 
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Monte wrote:
So, just to be clear - the only problem with biblical verses in the scopes of our high powered rifles, rifles we will be using to kill Muslims, is that it's a little sketchy for PR?

Really?


Yes. What other issue is there? They'll think we're on a Crusade? They already say that anyhow.. it's not like they'll be like "Oh, gee, they took the Bible reference numbers off their scopes, there goes the Crusade line".

As it happens, the verses are not in the scopes; they're the chapter and verse reference numbers and they're next to the serial number. Read your own **** article. That's why no one noticed sooner; it looks like part of the serial number.

Even your reference to high-powered rifles is silly. Of course they're high-powered. Why would you use a low-powered rifle in combat? It's completely extraneous typing. I realize int he liberal blogosphere that excessive adjectives like "high powered rifles" make it sound worse but here it just points out how silly this all is.

This entire thread is just a repeat of the Pat Robertson thread anyhow. It's just spleen-venting against two groups you hate: Christians and the Military. I bet when you go back to the lib sites and talk about how the awful conservoChristians are defending religious war on muslims you'll score lots of cool points. Not getting them here though.

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Completely derailing your post DE, but the use of "high powered" in descriptions of rifles... from the military perspective, does that relate to penetration (or knock down) or range? Or is it complete non-sense in regards to military terminology?

As a hunter, I tend to consider in regards to range and/or muzzle velocity (usually related) rather than knock down/power.

I consider my 30-06 a much higher power rifle than my dad's 45-70... but when it comes to making sure something goes down in 1 hit, the 45-70 can't be beat.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 10:34 am 
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Ladas wrote:
Completely derailing your post DE, but the use of "high powered" in descriptions of rifles... from the military perspective, does that relate to penetration (or knock down) or range? Or is it complete non-sense in regards to military terminology?

As a hunter, I tend to consider in regards to range and/or muzzle velocity (usually related) rather than knock down/power.

I consider my 30-06 a much higher power rifle than my dad's 45-70... but when it comes to making sure something goes down in 1 hit, the 45-70 can't be beat.


The military never uses the term "high-powered". I don't know if there is a civilian deliniation between high-powered and low-powered rifles, but I would consider pretty much any military rifle in current use "high-powered" by civilian standards. In my own subjective view, "low power" means "suitable primarily for small game and pests"; i.e. a .22 LR or something similar. I'm not familiar with the 45-70 but the .30-06, to my understanding, would be quite capable of killing a human or deer, so I would call it high powered.

Obviously some military rifles are much more powerful than others such as the immense .50 caliber sniper rifles. However, those would have highly specialized scopes on them. I think the sights referred to here, from the picture, are Close Combat Optics, and would not be used on sniper rifles.

"High-powered" wouldn't mean a whole lot to the military because rifles of any sort are at the bottom end in the scale of weapon power.

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 Post subject: Re: Jesus Scopes
PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 11:06 am 
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Just my personal opinion, but I consider any rifle above .22 LR to be a high-powered rifle.


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 Post subject: Re: Jesus Scopes
PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 1:46 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
You don't know jack **** about the military, and putting asterixes around your points doesn't add any weight to them.


You don't have *any* proof that this is the case, at *all*.

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It's a scientific *fact* that the use of asterisks adds credence to *any* statement.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 20, 2010 2:04 pm 
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I got nothin.
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Joined: Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:15 pm
Posts: 11160
Location: Arafys, AKA El Müso Guapo!
My *cock* is *huge*.

Wow. It *does* work.

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