WTF: Because Florida: Man sits on gun, shoots self in penis

So he had the gun locked and loaded,didn't know where it was,and shot off his peen?

At least he is going to jail again,and can't have kids.
 
The action was set to fire.
Loaded just means there are rounds in the the chamber or magazine.

That would be "cocked." Locked means the safety on. This guy was clearly not locked. He was cocked, but is not cocked any longer.
 
That would be "cocked." Locked means the safety on. This guy was clearly not locked. He was cocked, but is not cocked any longer.
I sit corrected. We called it locked and loaded in The Corps.
Then again we squeezed the trigger, now they press the trigger.
 
I sit corrected. We called it locked and loaded in The Corps.
Then again we squeezed the trigger, now they press the trigger.

I've often wondered why "locked" means one thing in "locked and loaded" but it means almost the opposite in "cocked and locked."

Its now wonder people shoot their dicks off. I blame the ambiguous terminology.
 
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Dog racing is fucking horrible.
Those dogs are abused so much.

I have been in the gambling industry for over 30 years. The stories I have heard about the dog track would give you nightmares. Starving ,beatings before a race until the poor dog shits himself just to drop weight and hope he will run faster.

Dog racing people are below poker players. That is an achievement.
 
I sit corrected. We called it locked and loaded in The Corps.
Then again we squeezed the trigger, now they press the trigger.

I did a little research on the origin of "lock and load". The explanation that makes the most sense comes from the days of the M1 Garand and its en bloc clip. The shooter would lock the action open and load the clip. The action would close once the clip was inserted (hence the term "Garand thumb"). So, to load a Garand, one would correctly say "lock and load".

Another explanation I've read is "lock and load" is a range command meaning to put the gun on safe and load a magazine. I've never, ever heard this command given at any range. I've always heard, "load and make ready".

I suspect the use now is something of a mix-up with "cocked and locked", meaning hammer back and safety on.

I'm sure the military uses the term however they want because (1) history and (2) they're the military.
 
I did a little research on the origin of "lock and load". The explanation that makes the most sense comes from the days of the M1 Garand and its en bloc clip. The shooter would lock the action open and load the clip. The action would close once the clip was inserted (hence the term "Garand thumb"). So, to load a Garand, one would correctly say "lock and load".

Another explanation I've read is "lock and load" is a range command meaning to put the gun on safe and load a magazine. I've never, ever heard this command given at any range. I've always heard, "load and make ready".

I suspect the use now is something of a mix-up with "cocked and locked", meaning hammer back and safety on.

I'm sure the military uses the term however they want because (1) history and (2) they're the military.
It is the military, so yes terminology gets mixed up.

If we said over and out it was considered a distress call.
Now Florida fuckwit felon deserves what he got.
A 1911 in condition 1 he could pitch and catch.
 
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