Starts slow but gets ROFLOL as it continues.
(Cowboy hat tip to the reader who sent it!)
What I’m wondering is: If I can go down to my friendly neighborhood Wal-Mart and buy ammo, why can’t you buy it on eBay?
Starts slow but gets ROFLOL as it continues.
(Cowboy hat tip to the reader who sent it!)
What I’m wondering is: If I can go down to my friendly neighborhood Wal-Mart and buy ammo, why can’t you buy it on eBay?
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What I’m wondering is: If I can go down to my friendly neighborhood Wal-Mart and buy ammo, why can’t you buy it on eBay?
For the same reason you can’t order guns through the mail (unless you have a Class III license): Lee Harvy Oswald.
Huh. I wonder if the poweder in that brass could, like, explode or something.
What I’m curious about is, does this brass come with primer or powder? That could be dangerous.
😉
A little insight into my sense of humor:
The funniest thing on that entire page, to my mind, was at the end where the questions from potential bidders were answered.
“Do you know where I left my car keys?”
“Yes.”
.303 ammunition was standard military issue with British and ANZAC forces from the Boer war in 1896 through to WW11 and beyond. Many of these rifles came on the market during those years, and were the hunter’s weapon of choice for many years, until the 30.06, .308, 7.62 mm and .270 among others came along.
I have a Mk.IV Lee Enfield jungle carbine .303 which I purchased in 1962, and have had much success in earlier years hunting dear, goats and pigs. Has not had much use for 2o years or so now, even though there is still plenty of hunting to be had as close as 15miles from where I live.
But this clip of .303 shells is totally harmless.
The question I want to ask is, – ‘Would possessing this highly valued brass cure one of acne, depression, hypertension, anxiety or erectile problems?’
Not that I have any of these complaints, but nowadays everything seems to claim a cure for those ailments.
Big Brass Ones
The struggles of selling some politically incorrect brass on ebay.
Yeesh. Now I have to clean the Diet Coke off my laptop.
You were quite correct in saying that it was ‘Too Funny’, it really was!
The ‘dog and thistle’, that could be a name for a country pub…
God Bless.
“. . . shaking in a corner like a dog sitting on a thistle . . . ”
Yeah, that was my favorite line, too. And totally should be a pub! Very nice, ukok.
And the questions at the end were great. “Dad?” LOL!
Thanks for posting this, Jimmy! It’s just WAY too funny. And I needed the laugh!
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