YETI?Id venture to say 95% of hunters will never hear about it- like the ones still sporting yeti cups, flying delta, etc.
YETI?Id venture to say 95% of hunters will never hear about it- like the ones still sporting yeti cups, flying delta, etc.
See what i mean?YETI?
I wonder if they will silently keep these sales?Already have internet sales at Walmart.
Just took them 2 + weeks to send me a can of spray paint from Ohio to California, I'll pass on Walmarts internet sales.Already have internet sales at Walmart.
I agree with you. I have no idea what it is eitherWTH? My 223 I used to own had a 28” barrel. Can I still buy ammo?
What the heck is a “Short barrel rifle”??
I honestly don’t know.
If those are the kind that open carry around you , you need a new place.... Plenty of states have open carry or concealed or just open , mine has both and we don't have that problem , most are well dressed with expensive pistols.. I can do either , sometimes I carry open but mostly just put my shirt tail over it..Not a fan of Walmart. But I got no problem with restricting open carry. I conceal but the kind of people that open carry around me are really ignorant looking people just itching to shoot somebody. Makes customers uncomfortable.
However, the ammo sales idea doesn’t make a lot of sense.
HERE HERENot only are the announcing the end of ammo sales but asking that all customers keep their carry guns out of the store. Can these businesses keep us 100% safe at all times, in and outside their place of business? Nope!
If you see me anywhere I will have my CCW, my knife and my Surefire light on my person. Oh, and a plan for how to employe them if need arise.
With all due respect Mr. Adams, that is probably the all time, most ludicrous statement I've ever read on this forum.If those are the kind that open carry around you , you need a new place..
So is the $7 hour employee at Walmart going to ask what I am shooting it out of, or, just not sell it because it could be used in a “SBR”? Reckon the salesperson is qualified, or for that matter cares, what I do with my hypothetically purschased ammo?Technically a SBR, short barreled rifle, requires a $200 tax stamp and ATF approval to own. This is done with a properly filled out Form 1 and (now) months of waiting. An SBR can fire the same ammunition as any rifle or pistol. The rifle designation comes from any barreled weapon, barrel shorter than 16 inches, that is stocked. Companies are pushing the limits with "blades" and "braces" that are increasingly becoming more stock-like. The ATF has flipped and flopped on these braces before, and IMO will do it again - i.e. bump stock. So your pistol now could be illegal at someone's whim. My point is, a SBR shoots THE SAME AMMO as any other rifle or pistol.