The Six-Gun as It Stands
Today’s Market
It’s interesting to note that, aside from a few details, the only real improvements in revolvers since the mid-20th century has been in machining techniques, metallurgy and ammunition. The “classic” Model 25-5 Smith & Wesson made today has the same lockwork and ergonomics as my mid-Seventies version; the highly-regarded Ruger Blackhawk likewise hasn’t changed much since the old 3-screw version gave way to the newer, transfer-bar action.
But the market sure has changed, and in the last twenty to thirty years gunmakers have responded with an explosion of new sixguns – and some five-guns.
Concealed-Carry revolvers
Most folks prefer autos for concealed carry guns. I’m one of those folks, normally toting around a Glock 36 on my daily errands. But there are plenty of good compact revolvers out there suited for concealed carry as well. And, some of the best of them have been around for a long time.
The classic, of course, is the 2” barrel, .32 or .38 caliber snubbie. These certainly aren’t target pieces; an old friend of mine once derisively commented that the standard 2” snubnose was only useful if you were in a shootout inside a crowded elevator. But a 2” revolver can be an effective CCW piece, especially at the ranges where such confrontations actually occur.
Snubnose revolvers tend to two categories; standard frame guns with short barrels, and small frame dedicated snubnose guns.
An example of the first is the Ruger GP-100, K-frame Smith & Wesson Model 19 or the Colt Python, all of these being full-frame .357 Magnum guns with 2 ½” barrels. These are fine pieces, but it seems to me that, if you’re going to carry a full-size frame gun, you may as well go with more barrel. A 4” barrel is no harder to carry than a 2 ½” one, and the added velocity and sight radius is conducive to better shooting.
The other side of the coin are the dedicated snubbies like the Ruger SP-101, the newer Ruger LCR, the six-shot Colt Detective Special and the five-shot Smith & Wesson 638 and 642 Airweights. These are light, easy to hide in lightweight summer clothing, and most of the newer guns are capable of handling .38 Special +P ammo – not unlike Elmer Keith’s old “38-44” loads – if you’re willing to shoot a short, light gun with heavy loads. If I were to choose a snubbie for concealed carry, it would be one of these in the latter category.
One interesting little carry wheelgun is the Charter Arms Bulldog, a 2 ½” barreled powerhouse chambered for the .44 Special. The 5-shot Bulldog is available with an open hammer, a shrouded hammer and a double-action only hammerless version. It’s well worth checking out if you’re not too recoil-adverse and want a concealable revolver that packs a punch.
Now the second recent trend in revolver development, one that hearkens back to the old Colt Walker, finds manufacturers going in the opposite direction altogether.
The Behemoths
The Smith & Wesson line of X-frame monster revolvers had their genesis at the 2002 SHOT show, when Smith & Wesson’s Handgun Product Manager Herb Belin pitched the idea of a huge-framed mega-revolver to the sales staff. The sales staff must have liked the idea, because S&W worked with Cor-Bon on ammo, and the X-frame revolver and the .500 S&W cartridge was born. A powerhouse it is, too, launching a 400-grain bullet at 1600 feet per second. But it’s not a holster gun; the first model 500 weighted 73 ounces, compared to 37 for a .45 Colt Vaquero or 47 for an 8 3/8” Model 29 .44 Magnum. The X frame was visibly heavier and longer than the N-frame guns, making this monster unsuitable for casual holster carry; the release of the model 500 saw a corresponding rush by holster makers to find a way to carry the damn thing.
A few years later Smith & Wesson doubled down by offering the same X-frame in the .460 S&W Magnum, basically a .454 Casull on steroids. Like the Model 500, this wasn’t really a holster gun.
Ruger entered the game in 2003, bringing out the .480 Ruger (actually a .475 caliber) on the 53-ounce, double-action Super Redhawk. The cartridge was a slightly attenuated version of John Linebaugh’s .475, and the beefy Redhawk frame allowed for a six-shot cylinder even with the big round. Here was something different; a monster-caliber handgun that was more easily portable, at least more so than the X-frame Smiths. There is even a 2” and 4” version, called the Alaskan. Even in this trim, the huge-framed Super Redhawk is a chore to carry around in a traditional holster and slow to clear leather. Later Ruger brought out the .480 in the single-action Super Blackhawk, which was somewhat better from the carry standpoint.
But the king of the monsters may be Magnum Research’s .45-70 revolver, the aptly named BFR. This is a perfectly ridiculous object, weighing in at from 4.7 to 5.3 pounds, overall length from 15” to 17.5”. It’s also available in .30WCF, .460 and .500 S&W chamberings. The question is “why?” It’s only marginally handier to tote around than a rifle, and the same rounds in a carbine would be far easier to shoot well and deliver more velocity to boot. The BFR packs a pretty good punch but is far too heavy and cumbersome to put into action quickly. I’m hard-pressed to determine a reason for this piece.
A few years back, an outfit called Century Arms made a .45-70 revolver, but the two examples I’ve handled were of such poor workmanship that I wouldn’t care to try firing one unless I pulled the trigger with a string from a safe distance.
Monster revolvers are interesting novelties, but that’s about all I can say for them. Further, I can’t see how most casual shooters would care to shoot them enough to develop any real proficiency. Even the .44 Magnum is more flash and bang than some shooters care for; my son-in-law was looking to buy a .500 S&W revolver until he made a good deal on a Ruger Super Blackhawk, which he shot some and happily went back to his .357. A sidearm is just that, a sidearm, meant to be carried all day in reasonable comfort. I know from personal experience that my favored .45 Colt loads will lengthwise a big Iowa farm-country whitetail, and that should be enough power for most handgun work. I’ll stick with that. Your mileage may vary.
And, as always, there are still some odd ducks still floating around the sixgun world.
Oddballs
Every time period that has seen revolvers built has seen some oddball guns, and the present day is no exception. Nowadays the oddball contingent contains two of a kind, brothers by another mother if you will: The Taurus Judge and the Smith & Wesson Governor, but fine examples of a solution looking around for a problem.
Both (ugly, in my eye) guns are double-action revolvers ostensibly chambered for the .45 Colt, but with elongated cylinders enabling them to also chamber and fire 2 ½” .410 shotgun shells. Why, I have very little idea.
The short .410 round is of very limited use when fired from a shotgun; from a short revolver barrel, I can only see it being useful if you are shooting rats in tight quarters at very short range, or possibly for dealing with snakes. There are slug loads for the short .410, but a standard .38 special 158-grain RNL easily outclasses them. Buckshot? Again, why? Get a standard revolver, learn to shoot it well, use good quality ammo and you’ll accomplish anything that needs done.
Another odd duck is the Mateba Auto revolver. Yes, you read that right; an automatic revolver. The Brits made something similar back in the early 20th century, the Webley-Fosbury automatic revolver, but the Mateba is bigger, brawnier and more powerful, being available in .44 Magnum and .454 Casull. And unlike standard revolvers, the Mateba (like the Webley-Fosbury) uses the gun’s recoil to turn the cylinder and cock the hammer for the next shot.
Fortunately, there’s a wide variety of traditional holster iron available.
Traditional Holster Guns
The standard holster gun market today is an embarrassment of riches.
The two oldest players still in the game, Colt and Smith & Wesson, are still going strong. Colt has focused their handgun line mostly on autos, though, and today only offers two wheelguns: The Cobra snubbie and the excellent Single Action Army, still in the market after almost a century and a half.
Smith & Wesson offers a much, much richer variety. Ranging from compact snubbie carry guns to their “Classic” series that reproduces such great works as the Model 17 “K-22” Masterpiece, the original Model 27 “Registered Magnum,” Dirty Harry’s Model 29, and my own favorite Model 25. Whatever your wheelgun needs, Smith & Wesson can likely supply something.
Ruger produces some great guns today as well. The classic Blackhawk in original trim as well as a Bisley flat-top model and, of course, the 19th-century themed Vaquero and the magnum Super Blackhawk. Ruger also provides their carry revolvers described above as well as the GP-100 series and the big Redhawk and even bigger Super Redhawk in a variety of trims.
If replicas are your cup of tea, I recommend Uberti. This Italian manufacturer produces first-rate replicas not only of Colt’s Single Action Army but also of the Smith & Wesson #3, and a wide variety of cap-and-ball replicas too; the Walker Colt, the various Colt Dragoons, the 1851 Navy and 1860 Army as well as the 1858 Remington Army.
The wealth of modern and replica wheelgun manufacturers and models is such that the bandwidth I’m allotted won’t allow me to describe them all. But what more fun could you have than shopping around for yourselves? It’s a hell of a great time to be a sixgun fan.
And Then This Happened
The series concluded.
Why do I like revolvers? Well, there are several reasons. Partly because I cut my teeth on one, the 1851 Navy Colt replica I described in Part 2. Partly because it’s easier to handload for wheelguns, as case and overall load length and bullet configuration isn’t as critical. Partly because revolvers run generally more powerful than autos of similar bullet diameter, at least autos of manageable size, and I spend a fair amount of time out in the boonies where toothy critters roam and concealment isn’t an issue. Mostly, though, it’s just because I like them. I wouldn’t surrender by 25-5 Smith for all the tea in China.
This has been great fun to research and write. Now that I’m done talking six-guns, I’m sort of wondering what to do next. Something I’m fond of, to be sure; a history of lever guns? American made double shotguns? An in-depth bio of John Browning or Paul Mauser? I’m not entirely sure. Maybe I’ll just crank out a few more anecdotes of life in Allamakee County in the Seventies in the meantime.
I guess you will all just have to wait and find out.
Back in the 90’s my CC of choice was a S&W Model 37 (one of the J frames). It was recommended by a police detective I met in college. He said it was small enough to conceal, and actually fire from, your coat pocket. I really did like that revolver.
And also, thank you for these well written and thoroughly researched articles. This was a great series.
ZARDOZ SPEAKS TO YOU, HIS CHOSEN ONES. ZARDOZ IS PLEASED. THE GUN IS GOOD. THE SERIES IS GOOD. GO FORTH AND READ! ZARDOZ HAS SPOKEN.
There are few whose approval could please me more, O Mighty ZARDOZ. Gun articles will continue.
Lever gunz pleez
Oooh, that’d be good. This was a great series, but a lever gun series would also be great.
Noted, and as I’m a fan of lever guns as well, that would be fun to write.
Why, I have very little idea.
Because we can.
There are far worse reasons.
The Taurus firing .45 LC is plenty of oomph in a relatively small package, and some of the pistol specific .410 loads are quite effective (in gel tests, at least).
It would be real hard to miss a snake with #6, as long as it’s not any farther than 7 yards.
Otherwise shooting the .410 is kinda fun, if not really practical.
I keep a PDX mix (2 .410 and 3 .45) as my nightstand last line of defense.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hd-0F4v1C54
Thanks for taking the time to write the article series. I enjoyed it.
Update – https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2019/01/08/colt-king-cobra-returns/
That HS debate with the kids who “lose” for quoting Ben Shapiro is a total shitfest of retardation.
“You said something that I misconstrue as racist and I am incapable of making an argument, therefor you lose! You racist. You white-supremacist. What? I never called you a bigot!”
Another gem: “Your words do psychic violence.”
If words are violence then I am punching one of these fuckers the next time they say they want to, idk, disarm the population, considering the implied violence of such a position.
It’s about the feelz!
I don’t get it, the purpose of debate club is to be able to effectively debate an issue on either side of the position. What would those stupid bints have done if the guys drew the affirmative and they drew the negative position?
Cried? I’m sure they did, and demanded to have the other side, and the kids agreed to take the other side.
I remember reading an article a while back that demonstrated that there’s virtually no actual debating going on in college debate competitions. The national college champions at that time was a duo who would simply ignore the position and talk/rhyme/rap/whatever about how they rejected the entire premise and talk about how racist the whole thing was.
“I don’t get it, the purpose of debate club is to be able to effectively debate an issue on either side of the position.”
That USED to be the function of debate club. Now that we no longer want to be bothered with having to argue using facts, logic, and reason, and want to just appeal to emotion to make our case and to name calling to shut the opposition up, there is no room for that sort of nonsense.
Son, if my words could do psychic violence the population of my town would be damn-near halved.
Also, if speech is violence does that mean violence is speech? I’ll remember that next time I’m considering smacking the stupid out of someone saying idiotic bullshit. It’s just engaging in the conversation, right?
“Son, if my words could do psychic violence the population of my town would be damn-near halved”
Some of my favorite weapons of verbal destruction:
“You must know the flavor of every Window in your house”
“Your so stupid, i’m surprised you haven’t died for forgetting to breath”
“Apologize to those plants for working so hard to create the Oxygen you waste.”
“If i wanted your Opinion, I would have given it to you”
My wife introduced me to a good one: “You’re not pretty enough to be this stupid.”
Wow. Sick burn. And I hate saying that.
Some people do believe that, yes.
I didn’t know that this shit had permeated down to the HS level so bad. I would have probably gotten kicked out of school for bringing them to tears just to prove a point.
I would donate money to this kid just for existing.
Actually watched the whole thing now…..when the one judge started simpering about “the safety of students is being compromised” I literally laughed out loud.
That guy is finding out what the Washington Generals have been complaining about all these years.
But, as if on cue,
YouTube has notified me that a privacy complaint has been filed against my video for 4:56-17:47, and that it could possibly be removed in 48 hours once they review the claim. The faces were blurred and nothing in the video makes them uniquely identifiable, we have not violated any privacy policy. This is an abuse of YouTube’s complaint system and an attempt to silence us.
At this point, are they even trying to pretend they aren’t partisan publications?
I really want a couple revolvers. I’ve always liked them, probably because my dad was a big fan himself and I have fond associations. I also like that they seem to have fewer weak points than a semiauto pistol. Nothing’s 100%, but they seem to be more reliable, and to fail in ways that are easier to deal with. Plus, for some reason, because I can see more of what makes them tic I trust them more. A Glock (or a Sig, or an SW M&P, etc.) is a gun-shaped box that shoots a bullet when you pull the trigger, which is fine, but you can see more of that process from the outside with a revolver.
I like revolvers because I can be absolutely confident that the thing is going to fire.
This
No jams, no tombstones, pull the trigger again if something doesn’t work
And if it doesn’t, just pull the trigger again.
Though I’m not a carry guy I enjoyed all the work you have done in presenting your info and opinions. Makes for great reading. I’m waiting for the “history of lever guns” so I can see all the arguments for a 94 as compared to a 336. I’ve had both, I bought my first used 94 in ’51 or ’52 with my paper route money, $40 at a Mpls pawnshop. Now I’m a 336 guy, just seems to fit me better.
Maybe I’ll start to carry the 29, in case a porcupine attacks me. Thanks Mr Animal, good series
’94 has a much stronger action than the 336 and is easier to clear jams. The gun is lighter and better balanced. Having said that, the 336 is a pretty nice gun, or used to be. I have heard some complaints lately about fit and finish, but the action is smooth and strong enough to handle whatever you put in it and it shoots really nice.
*336’s are famous for having their extractors fail. The weak extractor is the only real design flaw in the 336.
I don’t shoot mine too much, 2 rounds in the fall to check for zero, 1 (2 if there is 2 deer) during hunting season. I like the pistol grip and the scope mount. My original had open sights, OK when I was a kid. #2 had a scope mounted and I shot a number of deer with it but the 336 has been trouble free as well. Just feels more comfortable for me. Also drive an F150, some of my unknowledgeable friends drive Dodges, some people are hard to convince.
Did someone say “Webley-Fosbury”?
Zed, take it away!
STEVE SMITH LIKEWISE LIKE REVOLVER. IT HIS FAVORITE WAY TO GREET HIKERS, BY REVOLVING! BY REVOLVING MEAN REVOLVING TO GROUND TO RAPE.
I am a revolver man myself. I had often thought that a 5-shot 44 special in a Smith K or L frame would be ideal for CC. Apparently I am not the only one who thinks so. As usual Smith and Wesson nails it.
https://www.smith-wesson.com/firearms/model-69
Well, the usually nail it but not always. The 460 and 500 smith calibers are a bit over the top. However I have often thought they would be fantastic carbine calibers. Then I found these guys –
http://www.bighornarmory.com/catalog/big-horn-armory-products/model-89-carbine-18inch-500-sandw-2/
I can hardly justify spending that kind of money to expand a gun collection that is already more than I can shoot and spend an inordinate amount of time cleaning and maintaining but…..sheesh. One of these days I know I will get weak and splurge.
I do kind of like the fact that the .460 Mag takes basically any .45 revolver round ever made.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ec8vYqHZdL0&t=534s
I don’t think .45 acp performs very well out of that long cylinder. Think it does better out of a .45 Colt as long as it’s not one of those long .410 combo cylinders.
With the rimless auto rounds you would have to have a gun capable of taking moon or half-moon clips. You are correct, the shorter the distance from the end of the case to the forcing cone, the better it will perform. Some cylinders are cut so that the end of the cylinder functions as the start of the forcing cone and that helps, but the longer the bullet has to rattle around inside the cylinder before alignment with the barrel, the worse it performs.
See Ruger’s Blackhawk conversion cylinders for the 357 (.357″ bore) to 9mm (.355″ bore). You cant hit the side of a barn with the 9mm cylinder in it.
Do you need to have the gun machined to take the moon clips? Can regular rimmed cartridges still be fired?
Yes, the rimmed cartridges can be fired normally. The moon clips function both to hold the ammo together to be loaded at once and to add a rim to rimless cartridges. I dont know if the 45ACP is otherwise the same dimensions as the 45LC. Give me a minute and I will look it up.
I am pretty sure that the moon clips work on cylinders that are not counter sunk but I dont think they will work in countersunk cylinders. I could be wrong on that last one.
As I suspected the ACP has a slight taper from .476″ at the base to .473″ at the mouth.
The 45LC is a straight walled case with a diameter of .480″.
You would not want to shoot 45ACP cases in a cylinder designed to shoot 45LC cases. They would likely split. Since the bullets are identical in both rounds you can switch the cylinders out and shoot both rounds in the same gun, each with its own dedicated cylinder. I have a Blackhawk with three cylinders for it: 45LC, 45ACP and 45 Winchester Magnum. The only trouble with rimless rounds in a revolver is that the headspace is determined by the case mouth resting on the end of the chamber. If you roll-crimp your rounds, which is tempting to do for the heavy Win Mag rounds, you can run into problems with the cases going too far into the cylinder and the base not being flush with the cylinder.
I was aware you needed separate cylinders. I was looking at Redhawk. Doesn’t really range my mind about buying .45 Colt. But already having 4 – .45 acps, would be nice option.
Great thing is though if you run out of ammo you can beat the guy to death with that 460.
Unless it beats you first before you run out of ammo.
Thanks so much for doing these, Animal. I learned a lot and now want the Bulldog!
Or the Model 25…
Model 69 Smith and Wesson is what you are looking for.
I was kind of joking about the .44. A buddy has a 29 that I’ve shot a few times and it’s a handful. Still, though, they are really cool guns.
I have a number of 44 mags. Yes, they can be a handful or you can load them down to 45LC levels. I was thinking 44 special would be ideal as a defense round. Factory 44 spl ammo is like a mid-range 45 LC load, tolerable recoil and controllable. It also packs plenty of punch for that purpose.
Yes, the 29 is a work of art as much as it is a useful tool.
No love for the Chiappa Rhino? I really want to try one just for fun.
Low axis is great idea. Yankee Marshell is a big fan speaking of which….
https://youtu.be/Q9uLQPHAHeY
.44 Mag will shoot .44 Special and .454 Casull will shoot .45 Colt.
Yrah, I’ve been eyeballing .45 colts.
No Chiappa Rhinos in the oddball category?
Such a noob mistake.
New oddball revolver (with the Gun Jesus seal of approval) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Slp9pAEk1Ns
Commie shitheel discovers, fifteen years late, the sham and failure that is Bolivarianism. Now none of his commie shitheel friends want anything to do with him.
“…processes full of abuses that in your countries you wouldn’t consider allowing for a minute.”
Someone hasn’t been keeping up with the news lately. Of course it is just a coincidence that the people doing that here are also commie shitheels. Pure coincidence.
Ain’t that the truth?
“day or two of the shocking beatings of several prominent opposition National Assembly deputies by Chavista deputies during an official session”
Only shocking if you no absolutely nothing about Lenin, Stalin, Mao, any of the Eastern Euro commie movements, any of the African commie governments, any of the South American commie governments, etc etc etc.
Or if one chooses to ignore the domestic War On Drugz and take the government’s side of the story every time.
I posted that about midway through the article. Toward the end he shows he’s seen the light, embraced markets and liberal democracy, and extols capitalism. I had a whole paragraph lambasting him for this late realization, when the failures of his former ideology become undeniable, but I realized that piling on and refusing to forgive and accept is the hallmark of the progressive left.
Yeah, God forbid the left is irredeemable. The very last thing anyone should want is for people who are making bad decisions or subscribing to bad ideologies to feel like they don’t have the option to change to something better. If that’s the case, we may as well stop this whole “talking” thing and get down to Armageddon.
Good call. Where there is life there is hope.
As for the failings of socialism being undeniable I see two kinds of commies: Ones that deny the failings with incredible pretzel logic (that wasn’t real socialism!) and ones who see what you call a failure a success.
I hate them with a passion yet anytime one of them wants to step over into the light, you are correct, we should welcome them.
After all, young Thomas Sowell was a socialist.
I read comments. Now I shall inflict part of one upon you:
This was a post in praise of Stalin.
Sounds like Dr. Manhattan.
This was a highly enjoyable series, Animal. A treasure trove of info and interesting history. Thank you so much for putting the time into it!
Seconded – thoroughly enjoyed it, and eagerly look forward to the next series.
^ This.
Animal, these are some of my favorite articles. Never stop.
I have a .460V.
You are correct: it’s completely impractical, expensive and heavy. It’s also FUUUUUN.
Also, if ever I go fly fishing in Kodiak country, I have a good backup.
A Kraut friend of mine has dreamt all of his life of kayaking from Alaska to Northern CA just off of the coast, camping nights on the beach. Nothing I said would dissuade him. He doesnt understand. There is a 100% chance that he will be yanked out of his sleeping bag in the middle of the night by something that makes any movie monster look like a cuddly pet. I figured if he tried it that would be the last anyone saw of him alive. He bought a .460 to bring along to keep that from happening…then he found out about the insane Canadian gun laws.
Dummy.
yanked out of his sleeping bag in the middle of the night by something that makes any movie monster look like a cuddly pet
STEVE LIKE CUDDLE, AND GETTING YANKED.
The 5″ or the 25″ barrel.
Been itching to try out the .327 Magnum. Mrs. Hobbit loves her GP-100 in .357 but it gets to be a bit much to hold for a smaller person.
Also, this
Great series, Animal. Hate to see it end.
I thought about buying Mrs. Animal a Single Six in .327 for her woods-bumming holster gun, but an old buddy of mine was selling a Ruger Security-Six that had belonged to his Dad. That gun has one of the smallest grip sizes for a .357, perfect for Mrs. A’s tiny hands. She generally shoots .38 Special loads, although carries full-house .357 loads in the woods, and has practiced enough with those to know what to do. It’s the sixgun on the left in the last photo above.
She really loves that gun.
BTW, if you thought the debate video itself was bad, watch the crybaby emails the kid’s school got after he posted the video.
The classic, of course, is the 2” barrel, .32 or .38 caliber snubbie. These certainly aren’t target pieces; an old friend of mine once derisively commented that the standard 2” snubnose was only useful if you were in a shootout inside a crowded elevator. But a 2” revolver can be an effective CCW piece, especially at the ranges where such confrontations actually occur.
My former girlfriend has an Iver Johnson .32, which she inherited from a great aunt (or some such female precursor). It’s a cute little break=open revolver, in the original box, which features a “Black Powder Shells Only” warning.
She asked me to find out about it, and in my research, they referred to it as a “table gun”. If you wanted to shoot somebody on the other side of a poker table, you had an okay chance of hitting him. More than 6 or 8 feet? Forget it.
Your old friend needs to spend a little time on the range. With my J-frame 38’s I can hit a beer can at 25 yards without much trouble.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIwVK_FxGZk
re: the Super Redhawk, one of the things that makes me feel the warm fuzzies for Ruger (other than nostalgia — they made the first pistol I fired) is their quintessentially ‘Murican attitude of “yes, but can we make it more powerful?”
I want to buy one of these because why the fuck not?
Purty.
And you never know when a hostile brotosaurus will come by.
…and left handed too, perfect gun…
I don’t get it, the purpose of debate club is to be able to effectively debate an issue on either side of the position.
Haha, you slay me.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xSHYlSxQyJM
Breckenridge Oatmeal Stout. Very good. Lots of flavor but not overly thick. Nice cold weather beer.
I need higher test stuff than beer in winter.
On to a Kona Koko Brown. Hint of coconut. Quite the contrast but good. Similar to a Newcastle. 5.5.
I was talking about bourbon, whiskey, or ripple.
Yeah, I considered my Woodford Reserve Double Oaked but since I’m starting early and possibly going out for a minute I figured I would stick with low octane.
I so want this to be real because fuck Ralph Northam
That is his alma mater. But who knows what people can do with photoshop nowadays.
And he went to VMI? There is no fucking way this guy can close his closet door with all the skeletons in it.
The old “beat the living shit outta the rats” VMI, yeah, rats being what freshmen were called.
Yeah he went to VMI, that’s part of his old MUH MODERATE DEMOCRAT thing. But that picture was taken when he was in med school over in the Tidewater.
White guy + VMI during the Carter years? Yup, there’s some racisisming going on. Just a matter of finding the documentation.
I know, which is why I’m waiting for some kind of confirmation. But if it’s real, I will laugh and laugh and laugh.
Sweet Sassie Molassie, that’s hilarious if true.
You know you’re slinging some really bad propaganda when even CNN calls bullshit,
Polar Whoretex appears to be over.
Tulsi is a Russian bot.
Josh Rogin
@joshrogin
Again, @TulsiGabbard shares the same foreign policy position as Russia and the Assad regime. It’s probably just a coincidence. #TulsiAssad2020
I like the comments. They’re letting him have it. I don’t even know who he is.
Straff, were you looking for the obese OKLA tat knuckled guitarist? If so and you haven’t figured out who he is yet, He’s John Moreland.
Excellent. Thank you. The Dekalb hat is what caused me to click on the video in the first place. Glad I did.
Just found out he’s the guitarist in this band. Talk about a transition.
Military Experience
Tulsi Gabbard – Major, Hawaii Army National Guard, served a tour in Iraq as a combat medic and a second in Kuwait
Josh Rogin – Not Applicable
You tell me who should be questioning whose loyalty.
And, no, I’m not questioning Rogin’s. I just find it outlandish that he’s questioning hers.
Yep, reminds me of the 2012 GOP primary debate where a bunch of suits who never served a day in uniform were piling on Ron Paul. Ron was far too much of a gentleman, he should have shoved his finger in Newt’s fat face and Mitt Romney’s greasy hair and asked when exactly they decided not to go to Vietnam.
13 minutes to Wopner.
Best theme music in TV history. Ever hear the full cut?
Nice! Now I’m ready to boogie! Lol.
I’m late to the party, but wanted to echo thanks for a great series Animal! I learned a lot and rekindled my desire to get multiple revolvers.
Great series! Thanks! I’m looking at some of the Ruger snubbies (LCR, SP-101) you mention.
OT: Jesus, I fucking hate Photoshop! Fuck!
sorry.