General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Why can't more people figure this out? [View all]A Simple Game
(9,214 posts)And again why are you arguing against yourself, I never said anything but car insurance in New York state was mandatory. Reading comprehension is your friend.
Now do some research on different caliber guns.
Funny, I hunted legally with a .22 rifle for years, must be a state or regional thing. How much of a rabbit, squirrel, or frog is left after you shoot it with a 30-06?
30-06 is a common size for military assault rifles being equivalent to a 7.62 NATO shell so I think it may have caused a few deaths. The other smaller size is 5.45. The are two main reasons NATO went to the smaller size. One is less weight, allowing you to carry more ammunition. Two is that the smaller, being basically equivalent to the .22 caliber, is less lethal than the larger shell thus you are more likely to wound an enemy than kill him. When you wound a soldier you effectively remove two soldiers from the battlefield, the wounded and an attendant. But you knew all of that didn't you. So I don't think NATO agrees with your .22 as deadly as a 30-06 argument. A 30-06 just means a .30 caliber and the year 1906 for when the US military started using it. It's all in the inner tubes, google is your friend, or subscribe to a magazine like Field and Stream or Fur, Fish, and Game. I used to know the letter editor for Fur, Fish, and Game years ago in the '70s.
I have news for you, you were done before #91, you just didn't know it.