In general, I think gun stickers on vehicles are a bad idea. Maybe an NRA sticker or Gadsden Flag is okay. I don't do it, but I don't judge unless it's one of those ridiculous macho man type stickers. Examples:
45, because they don't make a 46
45 ACP, because shooting twice is silly
Armed citizen inside, nothing inside is worth dying for.
etc, etc.
At the range this past weekend, I saw a bumper sticker that said, "Keep Honking, I'm Reloading..."
I'll say that I understand the message that sticker is trying to convey, but what does that even mean?
1. I'll shoot you if you honk at me, but only after I gather up the loose rounds in my vehicle and load them into a magazine?
2. If someone is still honking, and you have to reload, does this mean that your entire first magazine missed, and despite all the gunfire, the other guy is still honking at you? Or maybe he's dead and his head is laying on the horn?
3. Wouldn't it be easier to say what you really mean: I'm mentally unstable with a Napoleon complex, and I'll shoot you in even a non-self defense situation. Or perhaps a sticker that reads: I like guns. I have guns in the car.
I'm all for free speech, but how come it's not obvious that it's wiser to just be armed, prepared, responsible, humble, subtle and non-aggressive?
Obviously this behavior represents a small percentage of gun owners, but I'm always amazed at the stupid stuff people do.
45, because they don't make a 46
45 ACP, because shooting twice is silly
Armed citizen inside, nothing inside is worth dying for.
etc, etc.
At the range this past weekend, I saw a bumper sticker that said, "Keep Honking, I'm Reloading..."
I'll say that I understand the message that sticker is trying to convey, but what does that even mean?
1. I'll shoot you if you honk at me, but only after I gather up the loose rounds in my vehicle and load them into a magazine?
2. If someone is still honking, and you have to reload, does this mean that your entire first magazine missed, and despite all the gunfire, the other guy is still honking at you? Or maybe he's dead and his head is laying on the horn?
3. Wouldn't it be easier to say what you really mean: I'm mentally unstable with a Napoleon complex, and I'll shoot you in even a non-self defense situation. Or perhaps a sticker that reads: I like guns. I have guns in the car.
I'm all for free speech, but how come it's not obvious that it's wiser to just be armed, prepared, responsible, humble, subtle and non-aggressive?
Obviously this behavior represents a small percentage of gun owners, but I'm always amazed at the stupid stuff people do.