No, you silly American, that's in cm!13 inches is the average??!?!!! !!!!!
You know, the metric system.
No, you silly American, that's in cm!13 inches is the average??!?!!! !!!!!
CommunistI'll let you just keep arguing until you're blue in the face as if I haven't built these guns. The minutial differences between the trigger groups is pedantic except for the ability for auto fire, what's the author clearly states is primary the difference between the two weapons. And it is.
For anybody who's not in a technical know-how and wondering how similar are these parts. Is @Splinty and the article guy just making things up?
Feel free to scroll the AR-15.com guide on how to identify the difference between the two because of how easy it is to mix them up...
AR-15 Vs. M16 Parts
Firearm Discussion and Resources from AR-15, AK-47, Handguns and more! Buy, Sell, and Trade your Firearms and Gear.www.ar15.com
They don't just look the same. When placed in the semi-automatic mode both weapons work in identical fashion. That's the point of the author's post, the lawsuit, and it's true.
I don't want these guns banned. But I would like some honest dialogue that doesn't make gun owners look like technocrats hiding behind terms instead of addressing the real question of whether we should have a right to these weapons and how to balance that with school children being shot.Communist
U will not radicalize me, comrade!I don't want these guns banned. But I would like some honest dialogue that doesn't make gun owners look like technocrats hiding behind terms instead of addressing the real question of whether we should have a right to these weapons and how to balance that with school children being shot.
we still talking Civil prosecution? is that what you consider Justice? "bankruptcy" and a fine?Did the judge just strip away the settlement because it would have given them protection?
we still talking Civil prosecution? is that what you consider Justice? "bankruptcy" and a fine?
Id like to see criminal prosecution of individuals given that it's a private company that was personally directing illegal activities. But that wasn't the topic to which I responded.If companies are going to be sued because of their products, start with lining up those vile cunts who knowingly created millions of pharmaceutical heroin addicts for profit
that's not the point of the lawsuit - the lawsuit had nothing to do with anything other than how Remington marketed the rifle.I'll let you just keep arguing until you're blue in the face as if I haven't built these guns. The minutial differences between the trigger groups is pedantic except for the ability for auto fire, what's the author clearly states is primary the difference between the two weapons. And it is.
For anybody who's not in a technical know-how and wondering how similar are these parts. Is @Splinty and the article guy just making things up?
Feel free to scroll the AR-15.com guide on how to identify the difference between the two because of how easy it is to mix them up...
AR-15 Vs. M16 Parts
Firearm Discussion and Resources from AR-15, AK-47, Handguns and more! Buy, Sell, and Trade your Firearms and Gear.www.ar15.com
They don't just look the same. When placed in the semi-automatic mode both weapons work in identical fashion. That's the point of the author's post, the lawsuit, and it's true.
generations of perpetual whiskey-dick...now I know why Conor McGregor and his nut-huggers are always so angry.
I hope this chart is a joke.....I have Japanese friends and my cock is very superior.
You know as well as I do that it's common for settlements that the paying party refuses to admit liability in order to protect themselves.read that article and tell me if Remington was forced to acknowledge liability
that's not the point of the lawsuit - the lawsuit had nothing to do with anything other than how Remington marketed the rifle.
you just described the mainstream and social media companies.Especially ones that make money off death, misery, paranoia and social division? The worse off America is, the better for him manufacturers. Every time there's another horrific massacre, their sales go up.
??
the entire case was based around how Remington marketed the rifle to young men. Are you disputing that?You know as well as I do that it's common for settlements that the paying party refuses to admit liability in order to protect themselves.
I also haven't mentioned the liability topic. Only the argument of the lawsuit.
The families argued Remington negligently entrusted to civilian consumers an assault-style rifle that is suitable for use only by military and law enforcement personnel and violated the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act through the sale or wrongful marketing of the rifle.
the entire case was based around how Remington marketed the rifle to young men. Are you disputing that?
Which part of the lawsuit do you think was likely to succeed?I just quoted above. Apparently it was also about negligently providing a military/Le tool to untrained civilians.
As such a topic that the two weapons are substantially similar (military and civilian) except semi-automatic is entirely on topic of the lawsuit.
Came here to take issue with your statement about liability, but literally everyone else beat me to it.Remington Arms agreed Tuesday to settle liability claims from the families of five adults and four children killed in the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School, according to a new court filing, marking the first time a gun manufacturer has been held liable for a mass shooting in the U.S.
Remington agreed to pay the families $73 million.
Sandy Hook families settle with Remington, marking 1st time gun-maker held liable for mass shooting
Nine Sandy Hook Elementary School families have announced a settlement with Remington Arms, maker of the AR-15 used in the massacre.abcnews.go.com
Maybe I'm missing something in your link that says parts of the plaintiff's lawsuit were dismissed and only a very narrow marketing argument was left that was not based around marketing and overly dangerous weapon to untrained civilians.@Splinty -
it was all about marketing. The only aspect of the suit that went forward was the illegal marketing under Connecticut law.
Families of Sandy Hook victims may sue gunmaker over marketing practices, top state court says
The ABA Journal is read by half of the nation's 1 million lawyers every month. It covers the trends, people and finances of the legal profession from Wall Street to Main Street to Pennsylvania Avenue.www.abajournal.com
In order to continue profiting from the sale of AR-15s, defendants chose to disregard the unreasonable risks the rifle posed outside of specialized, highly regulated institutions like the armed forces and law enforcement,” the plaintiffs contend in a complaint filed in Bridgeport Superior Court. They seek unspecified monetary damages, the Associated Press reports.
Although a 2005 federal law known as the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act bars most lawsuits against gun makers, an exception applies concerning negligent entrustment.
That is defined by the law as “the supplying of a qualified product by a seller for use by another person when the seller knows, or reasonably should know, the person to whom the product is supplied is likely to, and does, use the product in a manner involving unreasonable risk of physical injury to the person or others,” the Hartford Courant reports.
The plaintiffs allege that Remington Outdoor Co., which owns Bushmaster Firearms International; distributor Camfour; and the now-shuttered Riverview Gun Sales outlet negligently entrusted to a third party a rifle that was not suitable for civilian use, the Wall Street Journal reports (sub. req.).
Gun control advocates have been encouraged by the Sandy Hook legal strategy, including New Jersey's attorney general, who is investigating Smith & Wesson's marketing.Maybe I'm missing something in your link that says parts of the plaintiff's lawsuit were dismissed and only a very narrow marketing argument was left that was not based around marketing and overly dangerous weapon to untrained civilians.
The crux of the entire argument in each link so far is that they are marketing something that is too dangerous for civilian use. Every quote in the article you just posted references from the plaintiffs military and law enforcement.
I'm not a lawyer. I'm not trying to play one. But I don't see a link that says anything else. They all keep referencing that the plaintiffs are saying that the gun maker was marketing a highly skilled tool that was too dangerous to untrained civilians And as such were negligent in that marketing.
Unless you show me something different, it's very clear that the core of the argument requires that one shows that the rifles marketed are substantially similar to the military rifles and were marketed to make untrained idiots feel like they were bad A operators which leads to an irresponsible usage of a tool too dangerous for civilians.
I would imagine that the Mexico lawsuit only needs to show that the companies market an illegal gun to their populace since they have such restrictive gun laws. Maybe also that the gun makers know or ignore that certain gun dealers are the source of huge percentages of those guns that are trafficked.Gun control advocates have been encouraged by the Sandy Hook legal strategy, including New Jersey's attorney general, who is investigating Smith & Wesson's marketing.
Mexico filed a U.S. lawsuit last year seeking $10 billion from several gunmakers, accusing them of marketing their weapons to the country's gangs. read more
Remington Arms to pay $73 million to nine Sandy Hook families
Remington Arms will pay $73 million to the families of five children and four adults killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, the families said on Tuesday, marking the first time a gunmaker has agreed to a major settlement over a mass shooting in the United States.www.reuters.com
Actually, every time there is a Dem elected their sales go up.Every time there's another horrific massacre, their sales go up.
I'm not saying you're wrong, but he isn't wrong.Actually, every time there is a Dem elected their sales go up.
2016 through 2020 wasn't a good time to own gun or ammo stock. It was known as the "Trump Slump"