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The Water Cooler
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Ammo bill
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<blockquote data-quote="Dale00" data-source="post: 3156904" data-attributes="member: 688"><p>On top of the mental background check, there probably needs to be a in-store mental fitness challenge each time you try to purchase ammo....kinda like a field sobriety test. "We're all out - come back later, buster"...."Now what exactly are you going use this for - rifle or pistol?" etc... This should help eliminate even more dangerous people and prevent sales to people having rough days.</p><p>We can also dream that ammo of the future will be designed to go inactive after an expiration date. This will prevent people who become unstable from using home stockpiled ammo when they cannot pass the in-store test. People whose test scores are declining toward the danger zone will of course be sold ammo that is closer to expiring.</p><p>Google, WalMart and TSA will all have important part to play in making us safer while protecting our Second Amendment rights, of course!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dale00, post: 3156904, member: 688"] On top of the mental background check, there probably needs to be a in-store mental fitness challenge each time you try to purchase ammo....kinda like a field sobriety test. "We're all out - come back later, buster"...."Now what exactly are you going use this for - rifle or pistol?" etc... This should help eliminate even more dangerous people and prevent sales to people having rough days. We can also dream that ammo of the future will be designed to go inactive after an expiration date. This will prevent people who become unstable from using home stockpiled ammo when they cannot pass the in-store test. People whose test scores are declining toward the danger zone will of course be sold ammo that is closer to expiring. Google, WalMart and TSA will all have important part to play in making us safer while protecting our Second Amendment rights, of course! [/QUOTE]
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