One of the things some gun ownersengineers or fairly well-educated hobbyists who have a good grasp of mechanical thingsask about is how to handle the different kinds of pins in their guns. Particularly, they often want to know if their punches are the right ones, or if they can use a slightly different one without damaging their pins.
Shouldn't an army base be the last place where a terrorist should be able to shoot at people uninterrupted for 10 minutes? After all, an army base is filled with soldiers who carry guns, right? Unfortunately, that is not the case. Beginning in March 1993, under the Clinton administration, the army forbids military personnel from carrying their own personal firearms and mandates that 'a credible and specific threat against [Department of the Army] personnel [exist] in that region' before military personnel 'may be authorized to carry firearms for personal protection.'
From MonroeRising.com:
Recently, a friend and I were lamenting the steady dissolution of our Constitution. It seemed to us that the further our politicians have strayed from the spirit, meaning and intent of the Constitution, the more enervated, disunited and dispirited our nation and its people have become. Discussing how best to remedy the nations decline and to restore Constitutional governance, we briefly alluded to the discredited doctrine of nullification about which neither of us knew very much at all. So, I decided to briefly revisit the subject to see what I could learn. In a nutshell, this is it. I hope it will be of some interest to you.
Exclusive community benefits are yours, free!
Full use of our gun comparison tool
Our weekly insider email
Comment on GunReports.com articles
Just enter your email address and its all yours, free:
Prior to joining Streamlight, Dineen was the director of sales for North American First Responder Markets for MSA, which supplies safety products to workers in the fire service; oil, gas and petrochemical; homeland security; construction; mining and other industries.
Streamlight Appoints Dineen as VP Sales and Marketing
EAGLEVILLE, Pa. Streamlight, Inc., the lighting manufacturer, has announced the appointment of Michael F. Dineen to the position of vice president of sales and marketing.
In his new role, Dineen will be responsible for overall sales management and leadership for all Streamlight markets. He also will lead the development and execution of the companys marketing strategy.
Reader Comments
They're aren't very many ways to creatively market flashlights other than showing a bullet lodged inside of the product rather than an LEO's chest. Just need lots of advertisements that suggest you sell a durable product that out performs the competition for a reasonable cost.
Comment by: Jeff W | October 22, 2009
To post a comment you must be a registered user of gunreports.com and be logged in. Use one of the forms below to login or register for FREE to gunreports.com