The Great War
A War of Bolt Guns
The 1914-1918 War was a horrific, world-changing event. I won’t go into the causes of the conflict or the issues that arose from it, as that’s a story to be told some other time. But whatever else it was, the Great War was the war of the bolt gun. The War to End All Wars was the crucible in which the modern bolt-action rifle was formed, hardened and tempered.
In this conflict, all the major players were using bolt-action rifles. Autoloaders were at this time a novelty, considered too unreliable for martial use. (There was at least one exception, which we’ll note later.) Single-shot breechloaders were obsolete. With a few exceptions lever guns never caught on as primary battle rifles. World War I introduced the horrors of the machine gun, the airplane and the tank, but the primary soldier’s weapon was a turn-bolt rifle.
The Allies
Britain and her Empire entered the war with the No. 1 Mk III Short Magazine Lee-Enfield (SMLE) as their primary service rifle. The “Smelly” was a good infantry rifle, reliable, powerful and with twice the magazine capacity of most of its competition. Its smooth action, rear-mounted bolt handle that placed the firing hand near the bolt handle when in operation, and the high magazine capacity for the time all combined to make for a high rate of fire. Lee-Enfield rifles were at this time made around the Empire, mostly in the UK at not only the Enfield arsenal but also at the Royal Small Arms Factory at Smallbrook, the BSA and LSA small arms companies, the Lithgow Small Arms factory in Australia and the Ishapore Arsenal in British India. Post Great-War variants were also made at the Long Branch Armory in Canada and by Savage Arms in the United States.
France entered the war with a few older Gras, Kropatschek and Lebel rifles in inventory, but their primary Great War arm was the various marks of the Berthier rifle, a 3 or 5 round bolt gun firing the good old 8mm Lebel cartridge and later adapted to the new 7.5x54mm French service round. The Berthier-pattern rifles were invented by a French civil engineer, Emile Berthier, whose primary occupation was the building of railroads; nevertheless, he came up with a pretty fair infantry weapon. About two million of these guns were made in various configurations.
In 1917, though, France did something unexpected; preceding America’s famous M1 Garand by quite a while, France adopted an autoloader, the Fusil Automatique Modèle 1917. I know this is discussion of bolt guns, but this merits a mention; the Model 1917 was a gas-operated semi-auto that held five rounds of 8mm Lebel ammo in a clip-fed internal box magazine. The rifle had some serious issues with reliability; from 1917 to 1921 only about 90,000 were made.
The Kingdom of Belgium used a variety of rifles in the Great War, including the French Gras and Lebel rifles, but their primary arm was the 1889 Belgian Mauser, which were produced for the Belgian Army by the famed Fabrique Nationale until that works was overrun by the Germans, the first of two times that would happen in the 20th century. While FN was in German hands, the Kingdom outsourced manufacture of the M89 rifle to Greener in England and Hopkins & Allen in the United States. The M89 Belgian Mauser proved to have some serious staying power, as some were still in use by the Republic of Congo/Leopoldville as late as 1960.
The Russian Empire’s participation in the Great War was cut short by two uprisings that saw the Tsar and his family dead and, in time, a new Bolshevik government in place. The result of this was the formation of the Soviet Union in 1922, but the primary arm of the Red Army didn’t change; the Mosin-Nagant served Red Army soldiers as it had Imperial Russian soldiers before.
I’m probably overly fond of twitting Mosin-Nagant aficionados with the roughness of that arm. (All in good fun, of course.) But the fact is that the Mosin-Nagant is a rifle admirably suited for what it was designed for: Rough use in the field and casual maintenance by poorly educated peasant soldiers. Years after the Mosin-Nagant first saw service a Soviet designer named Mikhail Kalashnikov designed a select-fire, medium-power short rifle with much the same types of soldiers in mind, and that arm was as successful in peasant armies worldwide as the Mosin-Nagant before it.
It’s the mark of a good martial rifle that it suits the intended user.
The Central Powers
The GEW 98 saw the Imperial German Army through the Great War for the most part. But the need for a shorter, lighter arm for cavalry and artillery units had led to the development of the kar98a in 1902, and that small-ring 98 carbine saw service with those mobile units in the Great War. Some years ago, I managed to obtain a kar98a with an original bayonet. I ran a few boxes of 8mm ammo through it – it kicked like a mule – and eventually, regrettably, ended up trading it off.
I really need to think twice before selling/trading away a gun, given how often I end up wishing I hadn’t; but I also lack a giant Scrooge McDuckian vault to store my collection in, so…
We’ve already discussed the Gewehr 98 in the last segment, so I won’t revisit that ground. It’s worth remembering that the Gewehr 98 was produced and fielded in great numbers, over nine million being made. It’s not particularly hard to find decent examples of this rifle today. This first of the 98 Mauser service rifles was a great success, and it proved to only be the beginning of the career of this famous bolt gun action.
In 1918, with the British beginning to field the MkI tank in some numbers, Mauser responded with their first attempt at a anti-armor weapon, that being the 13.2mm Mauser 1918 T-Gewehr, or anti-tank rifle. This single-shot behemoth fired a .525 caliber, 795 grain bullets at about 2500 fps, and proved dangerous to the armor of the time. While post-Great War advances in armor would swiftly make the anti-tank rifle obsolete, the T-Gewehr nevertheless remained in use until 1933.
Meanwhile, the Ottoman Turks were building their own version of the Gewehr 98. The M1903 Turkish Mauser was more or less a clone of the German rifle, using a large-ring 98 Mauser action and much of the same specifications. There was one oddity in the Turkish guns; while they had a large-ring action, they used a barrel threaded to the pattern used for small-ring actions.
When examining the Turkish Mausers, it’s important to note the manufacturer. Guns made by Mauser were of good quality, but the guns I have examined that were built at Turkey’s Ankara appear to be of rather slapdash workmanship. Also, late in the Great War and for a few years afterwards, some guns were assembled from parts with little regard for such things as tolerances and headspace.
While the Turks were whiffing at the quality pitches, the Austro-Hungarian Empire had examined the rifles produced by one Ferdinand Mannlicher and found them worthy, and that evaluation was spot-on. The Mannlicher designs included the M1890 carbine and the M1893 rifle, both traditional bolt guns, and the M1895 straight-pull bolt rifle.
The United States: Early Player, Late Entry
By the time the Great War’s western front had settled into an entrenched, fixed war of attrition, the British Empire was having trouble producing enough Lee-Enfield rifles to meet the needs of the troops. In what was to prove a prescient move, they looked across the Atlantic to one of the Empire’s estranged offspring, who had grown mighty.
The United States already had a substantial firearms industry by 1914. Designers like John Browning and Sam Colt had made their name on the firearms world, so it wasn’t unreasonable for the British to think that America may be able to help supply their Tommies with shooting irons.
For a bit of relevant history, we must go back to 1899, to the Second Boer War. The British were faced in that conflict by sharp-shooting Boer farmers mostly equipped with 1893 and 1895 Mausers firing the high-velocity 7x57mm cartridge. To match that performance, in 1910 the British War Department developed their own 7mm cartridge, the .276 Enfield, and built a Mauser-pattern bolt gun to fire it, which was designated the Pattern 13 Enfield. But the outbreak of the Great War dissuaded the War Department from attempting to field a new rifle and a new cartridge, so production of the No. 1 Mark III SMLE continued.
But the pattern was not forgotten. In 1914, the British Army contracted with the American manufacturers Remington and Winchester to produce a version of the Pattern 13 Enfield modified for the standard .303 cartridge. This new rifle, the Pattern 14 Enfield, was slow in the developing and the British Army received no rifles until 1916. Relatively few of these guns were delivered, and their long barrels and excellent accuracy resulted in most of them being used as sniper rifles. The Pattern 14 was well suited for this, with a long (26”) barrel, good sights with the rear peep solidly protected by big steel mule-ear projections and the front sight likewise surrounded by steel guards. It was a heavy, long piece but not unusually so for the time, and proved to be a good shooter.
But the Enfield pattern didn’t end there. When the United States entered the Great War in 1917, Remington, Winchester and the Eddystone Arsenal (a Remington property) quickly retooled to produce the Enfield design in the standard American rifle cartridge, the redoubtable caliber .30 Model of 1906.
This new piece became the Pattern 17 Enfield rifle, and with three manufactories putting them out, the Enfield surpassed the standard issue 1903 Springfield in numbers supplied to American doughboys. In fact, no less a figure than Alvin York performed his famous acts of marksmanship not with a Springfield, as has been shown in movies, but with a Pattern 17 Enfield.
A bit over two million Pattern 17 rifles were built, and about one and a quarter million of the earlier Pattern 14 guns. Later, the Pattern 14 actions became popular for rebarreling to the big new belted magnums that were making their appearance, as the .303 case head was similar in diameter to the belted magnums introduced by Holland & Holland. Any reasonably-sized gun show in the United States to this day will have a few of these rifles on display.
The Aftermath
On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, the Great War ended.
In the United States, 4.7 million doughboys returned home, bringing their new-found familiarity with the Springfield 03 and Pattern 17 Enfield rifles with them. Many of them who were outdoorsmen and shooters, a proportion of the populace likely higher today than now, had cut their teeth on lever guns, but the accuracy and power of the military bolt guns and the .30-06 cartridge had made an impression.
The Springfield Armory got in on the action, producing a civilian-sale version of the 1903 rifle known as the NRA Sporter, and plenty of surplus rifles were converted to sporters, as were many captured and surrendered Mausers and Mannlichers as well as Smellies and others.
But that wasn’t going to keep up with demand. American gun companies responded, and Remington was an early bird, adapting the Pattern 17 action into a civilian sporter and releasing it in 1921 as the Remington Model 30, initially available only in .30-06 but later in a variety of chamberings. This was, of course, just the beginning. Winchester and many other manufacturers were quick to follow; things were, as the kids say nowadays, about to get real.
And Then This Happened
The War to End All Wars… didn’t. The sequel, World War II, again saw most of the major players operating bolt guns at the outset; the Brits used their updated Lee-Enfield throughout that conflict, the Soviet Union and Germany started with bolt guns and experimented with autoloaders The United States mostly used the ground-breaking semi-auto M1 Garand throughout, although a fair number of 1903 and the later, cheaper 1903A3 bolt guns saw service early in the war. And, of course, today, the bolt gun is absent from military use except in certain highly specialized applications, like snipers.
But the Great War Part Two didn’t see much change in martial bolt guns. There were some minor updates to Enfield, Mauser, Carcano, Mosin-Nagant and other rifles, but the form was pretty much set, and the rise of the military autoloader would see the bolt gun slowly phased out of the world’s armed services.
On the civilian side, though, things were just getting started in 1918. The bolt gun, with its strong, solid action capable of handling high-pressure cartridges, with its solid attachment of barrel to receiver with sights permanently fixed in place, had proven to be reliable, accurate and powerful. What’s more, that solid receiver was ideal for mounting the newfangled telescopic sights that were becoming popular.
The new trend in the game fields post WWI was towards bolt-action sporters, and a great expansion of rifles and cartridges was about to take place. More on that in Part Five, in which we shift focus from military rifles to civilian sporters, which in my opinion are more fun. And finally, in Part Six, we’ll examine the state of the bolt gun today. Stay tuned.
I don’t know nearly enough about WWI history. For some reason, it often gets overlooked in lieu of WWII, even though WWI was probably the most brutal war in human history.
For something equally horrible for different reasons, read up on the “Spanish flu” that happened in 1918, partly as a result of WW1 and all those soldiers traveling from hither to yon after the war ended.
Yep, my great grandfather went into the ground thanks to that.
The problem is, WWII was a much more dynamic conflict, with more maneuver, land changing sides, towns captured and liberated, and someone unabiguously sliding into the villain role in the grand storytelling. However brutal the meatgrinder of the trenches, it doesn’t have the same hook for catching interest as the sequel conflict did. So more attention gets focused on the second war.
Awesome series Animal.
A friend’s dad had a collection of WW1 battle rifles so I had the opportunity to shoot a few of these. I’m not sure his dad ever knew. We would set up coffee cans with water in them at about 100 yards. I remember shooting the .303, .30-06 and the 98 Mauser which I liked the best, It had this flip up rear sight that was marked out to 1500 meters which my 16 year old self thought was really cool.
Possibly a relative of mine.
Yep. I found records of several of mine in the Scottish National War Memorial in Edinburgh Castle. Deceased of course.
Awesome series, Animal.
Good article.
– That dude in a kilt looks badass. And I’m not gonna lie – kilts look really fucking comfortable.
– There are some cool rifles from this era at the Frazier Museum in Louisville, KY (right across the street from the Louisville Slugger Museum with the giant baseball bat out front).
One of my uncles always wore them to formal occasions. They are cool.
Mr. Hayeksplosives showed up wearing a kilt AND a top hat to one of our meetups. Badass.
Honestly, worsted on one’s butt isn’t the greatest.
Also: traditionally the shirt worn with it has very long tails so it acts to prevent your ass hair from getting rubbed off. So while technically, you’re not wearing undies, the shirt serves the same function.
I wasn’t sure if that wasn’t out of a Monty Python movie or something.
Can confirm.
Tonight at the gun club from 5:00 – 9:00 they are having a “gallery fun shoot.” I have no idea what that is. The only instructions are “bring your pistol and ammo.” I’m looking forward to it.
My range does trap on Mondays. I really should find the energy to go, but my couch is so comfy…
If they tell people it’s a trap, how many can they expect to catch?
They do trap, skeet, and “sporting clays” on different days, “action pistol” (I don’t know which rules) “Wild Bunch” (SASS with 1911s) and lot and lots of Cowboy Shooting.
I love sporting clays. It’s like mini-golf with a shotgun.
Interesting, what kind of shotgun is best suited for it?
I just used to use my 870. It’s what I used to hunt, so…
Lots of the guys had OUs.
I’ve done it a few times. I use my Citori, and boy howdy, get some knurled choke tubes, because you’ll be changing chokes a lot if you want to get a decent score.
It’s kind of amazing how separate different gun communities are.
There’s the prepper/home defense/plinker group who seem to say “there are only two shotguns, a Mossberg 590 or a Remington 870, unless you want to go semi-auto then there’s Benelli.”
Then there are the waterfowl guys who seem to all be toting CZ 712s and Stoegers.
And then the upland game guys who have totally different gear.
I use a S&W super 1000 – semi auto/gas recoil.
It’s a soft shooter.
I use my Citori. I usually shoot clays a couple of times a month.
NY weakening own gun control law so it doesn’t go in front of SCOTUS
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/27/us/politics/supreme-court-gun-control.html
Psych!
This very act should be admissable in court as a confession by the government that they know the law is unconsitutional.
Every legislature and every agency knows full well that all gun control laws are unconstitutional, thus not laws but crimes committed by the state. Yes, that makes the agents doing it criminals. How much honesty can we expect from criminals?
I should point out that there is one exception: The Constitution allows for ones rights, life, liberty or property to be abridged but ONLY after they are afforded due process which by common law means they are convicted in a court.
I am ok with people convicted of violent crimes being deprived of their gun rights, in fact I am kind of a fan of it.
This^^
The problem, as always, is keeping the grabbers from defining speech as violence and taking away guns for wrongspeak. However, that’s an issue no matter the constitutional framework.
Correct. That is exactly why they are trying to redefine speech as violence.
Violence is an extraordinary threat and thus extraordinary measures are required.
Another good read, Animal.
That is a whole lot of information/knowledge there. I enjoyed it. As to The War to End All Wars, my grandfather served during WWI. He joined the army when he was 16 by lying about his age so the story goes. Which checks out because he was trying to get out of Oklahoma. I later found out he was stationed in Key West, which coincidentally, is where I was stationed during the first Gulf War. I was not in the army though. I assume my grandfather was stationed here. As the stories go, he made extra coin reading letters for his illiterate barracks mates. Sounds like an asshole thing to do, but supply and demand I guess.
Why would it sound like an asshole thing to do? Scribe has been a profession since the invention of writing. Should the letters have gone unread? Read for free despite the time it took for him to do so? Or should he have invested an even larger amount of time in teaching the others to read? Unless he was the mail clerk and extorting them for their correspondence, I’m missing the part where it was anything uncouth.
I don’t know, the guys you are with in the “service” are your buddies. Friends do friends favors. It’s not like he was running a business soliciting customers. They were stationed together. Actually, he later went to prison running a business and soliciting customers, but that was during prohibition.
I could see doing it return for a pack of smokes or something as being less dickish. It sounds like he was all about making some money, though.
Aren’t we all about making some money………
Aaaah, the ’90s… Summers at the city pool, spending entire afternoons doing yoyo tricks, zooming all over the neighborhood on rollerblades, spying on the older girl next door when she lays out on the patio in a bikini..
Thanks for the nostalgia trip.
You might be buddies with a subset of people engaged in the same circumstance, and have a starting point of commonality with others, but there is no way you can assume someone is buddies with even everyone in their squad, let alone the hundreds of thousands of uniformed personnel in the service.
As the stories go, he made extra coin reading letters for his illiterate barracks mates.
Thanks for being pedantic. I shouldn’t have put quotes around service.
Being ordered to bunk in the same building as someone doesn’t make you buddies either.
Exactly!
What made the Enfield most famous was that the bolt cocked upon closing instead of opening like everyone else’s. This allowed one to pinch the bolt handle with thumb and pointer finger and operate the trigger with the middle finger. They can be fired very quickly in that fashion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_a7pXWi6xo
I used to have one. It was fun but unlike the 8×57, all of the 303 surplus ammo had dried up. The morons in the US FedGov bought it all and sent it to Afghanistan so the Jihadis there could shoot Ruskies with it. *facepalm*
Anyway, since I couldn’t get cheap ammo, I sold the thing. I am still kicking myself.
Question for the forester:
I know maples aren’t really your thing, but here goes:
I have two big maples. They are starting to produce seeds.
The one in front, the top 3 feet or so hasn’t leafed out yet. Does this mean anything?
The one in back is dropping clusters of leaves. It’s like twigs are getting overloaded and are breaking off. It did this last summer when I moved in, so I wouldn’t be worried about it, except the one in front isn’t doing that.
Did you check the Thermostat?
This story is crazy!
http://www.ktvu.com/news/believe-it-or-not/man-allegedly-hiding-drugs-in-butt-accidentally-shoots-himself-in-penis-report-says
What’s sad is I think the original “golden Girls turned a generation gay” story has been removed form the internet.
I thought John made that up.
The joke is dead. Not that you would know; O great poster of the same shit.
No, I am not big on Maples. The ones we have here are the silver and the red and they don’t get very big so not timber. Thus I am not familiar with the pests and funguses that can give them problems. I have seen trees leaf out in funny ways like that before. It is usually because of some environmental factor : water – too much or too little, heat – too much sun or ground too cold, and of course a pathogen of some kind. Our maples ( and redbuds too) produce flowers and then seed pods before they leaf out each spring.
Look at your clusters of leaves. Check out the stem to make sure they are breaking (sometimes too much water will cause that) and not being chewed off by some bug or worm. You might need a bug guy to have a look if you suspect a critter is eating them.
*Fun fact – Not only does each species of moth/butterfly/boring wasp target a specific species of tree but the individuals hatched on a tree return to that individual tree each year to lay eggs. What this means is that if you catch them early in the season and kill them before they can reproduce that particular tree will be pest free for years into the future. This works great on walnut, pecan, cherry, hickory and oak. It will also work on fruit trees in your yard.
It is worth noting that trees in a forest don’t usually suffer from problems like that. The ground has heavy leaf litter and a mat of roots just under the soil. This insulates the ground and temp changes are not as wide and happen slower. Water that falls on the ground is slowed down instead of running off quickly so much of it seeps in. In any large sized stand of trees of a decent age the conditions are more consistent. Trees love that.
Trees in landscaped areas (yards or parks) have a harder time.
It is impossible to overstate the importance of heavy mulch/leaf litter/ ground insulation.
Stillhunter can probably help you, too. Lots of Maples up this way.
Does anyone know a way to tell google maps to only return results on the same side of the border as the “search nearby” target? I don’t want to drive into michigan just to drive back into canada again.
But that would let you hit the Duty Free shop again!
You could just set a destination and search along the route. Alternatively filter by distance.
My problem is my hotel almost literally overlooks the Soo Locks, and I’m trying to find shops and restaurants in the Canadian half of Sault Ste Marie. So routes get too little, and distance will immediately start to nab parts of michigan.
Ask a local where to go. Conversation and all that. That is how I got around when in an unfamiliar place. Then use a map app when you have a destination.
What a concept!
The only way I’ve ever been able to “force” either a GPS or Google Maps to stay within certain territory is to create one or more waypoints that must be traveled through.
Hit the female ancestor coitus theme music!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9F1axV6TeA
Hate to be a downer, but too late for the morning links and Kenny needs to be remembered.
LIved across the street. We were best friends from the fourth grade. I went to college and got a draft deferment. Kenny didn’t and got killed by friendly fire.
https://www.virtualwall.org/db/ByersKE01a.htm
RIP Kenny
Nostalgia for the Viet Nam era sickens me.
Yes, he does deserve to be remembered, but man…y’all are killin’ me.
^ this
Sorry man.
Some non-nostalgic Australian Viet Nam music (might be triggering depending on where you’re at): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrXxACZRx30
Omg. They killed Kenny.
Bastards.
RIP Kenny.
Good of you to remember him, mikey.
When I visit my grandpa’s grave out at Fort Snelling it always freaks me out to read so many stones of 19-20 year olds who died in the late ’60s.
We never seem to learn.
Sorry, OT. But… please invisible sky gods, make it be so!
Farage as PM?
I still have a LOT of popcorn and beer left…
…but you’re out of sugar apparently.
Shit fuck…
Again
Lord…that would be more fireworks than Trump. The Limey pinkos seem to be at least one order of magnitude worse than ours. They will completely lose their shit.
The EU are completely full of shit. The UK is one of the only productive economies there along with Germany. They lose the UK and they are going to be, rightfully, fucked.
What does this election mean precisely? Is Brexit actually gonna happen now.
I don’t see how the govt there can maintain their legitimacy indefinitely if it doesn’t.
You can’t hold a referendum like that and not carry though with it, if you are going to remain as anything resembling a free county. Not surprising from the left, at all. Just like they tried to impeach Trump and overturn an election here, now they don’t want to honor the results of the referendum because they lost. The funny thing is that the main driving force behind the Brexit vote was the left wanting to show everyone how nobody really wanted to leave the EU, lol.
“It is all an illusion to keep you in line. The truth is that your vote doesn’t mean shit. In the end we say what is what and you are gonna eat it and like it.”
That is what they are saying here and there.
Now here they are just straight up trying to disenfranchise more than half of the country.
Legitimacy and power aren’t the same thing.
Well, Johnson said it does mean that. The problem is, I don’t really trust him. Farage, OTOH, will most definitely do it.
This is a european parliment election. The European parliment actually has no legislative ability. It is, however, a good bellweather as to the mood of the electorate.
It rarely gets noted that governments and economies are the result of the culture of the people in any given country. Lots of people criticize govt and policies, laws etc but they are the outgrowth of the culture. Thus the saying ‘Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.”
Get rid of Dickhead McDictator and guess what….you get Peckerhead McDictator.
If anything is going to get better the people, or a sizable number of them have to pull their heads out of their asses.
It’s sort of like you have a lot of people here believing that you can just bring the entire 3rd world here and remain the same country. Sure, you can if you do it slowly. But you want to import a billion uneducated peasants in a year? Guess what, you just became the same shithole they all left to get here.
RAAAAAACIST!
Yeah, I know, the problem is, for the left, is that I don’t fucking care.
yep. We don’t have nations full of people living in poverty because some outside force is keeping them down. The meanie heads running those places aren’t keeping them down. They live in grinding poverty because they are unproductive. Pour all of the money you want into them and tomorrow they will still be living in grinding poverty.
The corruption isn’t the result of meanie heads in the govt. The corruption is there because the culture is corrupt. That is the way they do things.
Goodyear opened a plant in France. They couldnt make any money or meet any of their orders not because of corrupt bureaucrats or logistic problems…it was because the workers would not work. If they showed up they showed up late, took two hour lunches and left early. Finally the company threw up their hands and decided to close the plant. The French govt forbid them and threatened them with criminal prosecution if they closed the plant, fired any workers or even if the company executives tried to leave the country.
I wonder why European countries are broke and getting broker all of the time. I guess we will never know.
You’re not supposed to mention culture – except to say they are all equally valid.
I’ve always liked this exchange:
“A Scandinavian economist once said to Milton Friedman, ‘In Scandinavia, we have no poverty’. Milton Friedman replied, ‘That’s interesting, because in America, among Scandinavians, we have no poverty, either’.
In fact Scandis in the US are richer than the ones that stayed behind.
https://www.cato.org/blog/swedens-big-welfare-state-superior-americas-medium-welfare-state-then-why-do-swedes-america
IOW Sweden is like it is because Swedes live there – at least for now.
This is what they totally DO NOT fucking get. Why does white man have more cargo? Figure it out, morons.
Anyone driven one of these? I’m not sure if I want to buy one, I’m looking to buy a new home right now, but I love the way they look.
Alpha Romeo Spider
They are gorgeous. Fuck buying a new home. Buy the car, instead.
That said, I’d rather have a used Lotus.
LOL, problem is, I doubt wifey will agree, she didn’t look too happy when I showed her that…
I recently watched this auction
The Lotus uses Toyota engines and parts, so they are infinitely more reliable. None of them are remotely practical, but at least they don’t look like every other goddamn car on the road.
My free testosterone levels increased by at least 100 just by looking at that.
I’m either blessed or cursed – I’m to big to fit in either Alfas or Loti. If I could fit I’d just be upset because I can’t afford them.
If I was going to go for a car as a home I would get a mini van.
They look even better IRL.
I saw one at our local post office over the weekend. That’s what got me looking, WOW!
Real estate generally holds its value or increases it.
Drive one of those shiny sleds off of the lot and ten seconds later it is worth less than the scrap metal that is in it.
Just sayin’.
Yes, people say I am cheap.
Well… at least around here, a house is 5-10x the price of a nice car, so… but at least you can sleep, fuck, cook, and do laundry in it. Pretty sure I won’t be getting the car in the next couple years. But you know, midlife crisis and all that…
Says the dude with an arsenal he’ll never sell anyway
Cars are dinosaur-burning freedom machines, man! What the hell does money have to do with it?!?
😉
OT: Fun fact next time consider Ilhan Omar lecturing all of us on how shitty the US is – 98% (!!!) of women over age 15 in Somalia have been subjected to FGM.
She sure left the pinnacle of enlightened civilization to come to this shithole. I sure hope she can teach us how we should be living.
Who votes for someone like that? Or is she the one whose district has produced 95% of the Americans that joined ISIS?
Minneapolis has largest population of Somalis in country, I believe Columbus is second.
Her hatred for this country is a bit baffling.
Not really. She’s not culturally an American, and unlike previous waves of immigrants, doesn’t embrace being here.
Part of it is undoubtedly lingering trauma and a messed up childhood that twists its way into resentment for those that didn’t experience and the loss of her childhood illusions, other part is the grievance mongering of the left that’s take over schools and elsewhere and encourages that sort of thing. She has far too much baggage to be elected to anything.
I don’t know, there are hundreds if not thousands of immigrants with just as traumatic if not worse childhoods that came at the same time she did and do not hate this country. There is something else going on there.
More baffling is that there wasn’t stiffer competition for the Dem nomination for 5th district. That seat is a lock for the Dems, so why give such a plum to a deranged whack job who may or may not be married to her own brother?
To link your comment to my earlier comments on culture: I have run into furriners many times who expressed open contempt for Americans because of our culture….most often our habit of showing up promptly for work, being reliable, our obsession with keeping our word, working too much, respecting honesty, looking down on theft, etc. are mentioned.
Some cultures see showing mercy, generosity or concern for those not of your own tribe to be weaknesses that warrant contempt for those people.
If I had to guess she does not hate us in spite of our saving her from a short brutal life , she hates us because we did.
From her wiki. You have to go to college to get that stupid and unappreciative of America.
“She graduated from North Dakota State University[17] with bachelor’s degrees in political science and international studies in 2011.[20] Omar was a Policy Fellow at the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs.[21]”
Final day of smoking in Vegas: Herbed Chicken quarters, smoked corn, potato salad of some sorts, quarter pound hot dogs and the much loved guacamole.
The glass of whiskey remains for the fallen that cannot enjoy it.
Damnit, I want to drink some liquor, being Memorial day and all. I’d like to have a few shots of Highland Park or Pitu Vitoriosa, but I have to drive into the city tomorrow, better cal it quits for today.
Another great article! I actually do not own a bolt action rifle. On my list though. A build might be fun:) Maybe a 300 Win Mag or WMS. I inherited a 20 Ga bolt action I’ve never shot.
The only bolt action I own is a 410. Love that old gun.
I do. It’s my first rifle. A 22. I’ve had it for more than 40 years.
My first two guns were gifts from my Dad. I still have them: a beautifully decorated 22 rifle (grade school) and a 38 special (college).
It just occurred to me that Dad never gave my sister a gun as a gift. It’s almost like he was observant enough to know his two daughters were very different…
He did eventually give her a gun when she got divorced and was living alone.
137-year-old Winchester rifle found in Nevada has new home