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πππππππ‘ ππππ«
@TheSabbathYear
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https://t.co/9x2N7kWgDM 1 Timothy 6:6 But godliness with contentment is great gain.
Joined October 2016
@YHVH_Is_Echad I'm sorry to hear this. From my experience, this place is never the same without our mothers. π I pray the Father gives you peace.
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@Bounc3r2 It is the power button on top, outside. I believe it is shorted out. I've tried tracing the wire but its hard and cant find anything that attaches to 12-24 count posts. It is a 2011 windows 7.
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@Bounc3r2 No, I gave up, put the cover back on. Read if I hit the wrong ones I could short out the motherboard.
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I knew there was a reason I was waiting....π
A federal judge in Mississippi just dropped a ruling that has the ATF sweating bulletsβliterally. Judge Carlton Reeves ruled that the federal machine gun ban is unconstitutional, and this case could send shockwaves through the entire gun rights debate. π½οΈ: What Happened: Justin Bryce Brown was charged with owning a machine gun under 18 U.S.C. Β§ 922(o)βa law that bans the possession of machine guns made after 1986. The judge ruled that the government failed to prove that banning machine guns aligns with historical firearm restrictions, a key test under the Supreme Courtβs Bruen decision. The "dangerous and unusual" argument fell apart when the court found that 740,000 legally owned machine guns exist in the U.S. today. If nearly a million people own something, can it really be called "unusual"? What This Means: This ruling only applies to this case for now, but if it gets appealed to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, things could get very interesting. The Fifth Circuit previously upheld the machine gun ban in Hollis v. Lynch (2016), but back then, there were only 175,000 legally owned machine guns. Now, that number is 740,000βa fourfold increase. That could change everything. If the Fifth Circuit agrees with this ruling, it could put major pressure on the Supreme Court to revisit the federal machine gun ban. The Big Question: Are machine guns really "unusual" if nearly a million of them are legally owned? And if theyβre not, does the government have the authority to ban them at all? What do you think? Is this the beginning of the end for the federal machine gun ban? Or is the Fifth Circuit about to drop a massive plot twist? Drop your thoughts in the comments. I'm Guessing You're Not Here For The Alcohol Or Tobacco ATF Apparel β‘οΈ Like, share, and subscribe for the latest updates. Stay informed, stay prepared, and stay free.
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