I'm glad that I never bought into fear-insurance. You have a 99.99% chance that you wont ever use a firearm in self defense and never need their services, so for that reason alone it's a huge waste. Then on top of that, I realized there was always the chance that even if you did need their...
I'm not watching a 16 minute video of something that could likely be said in a single sentence. This guy has a track record of being a pretty awful Youtuber. He tried to start drama with Paul Harrel in the past, but fortunately Paul didn't take the bait. Him making an obnoxiously long video to...
I don't think they were being literal when they threw out those percentages. I think they were trying to explain a concept that if the evidence clearly suggests self defense that a trial would be pointless then to bring prosecution would make the state and prosecutor liable.
You didn't read anything about the law. 1: This only applies to SELF DEFENSE cases. 2: This law would only apply if the prosecution has absolutely no case whatsoever EG: Rittenhouse's trial. If the prosecution has even a halfway decent case then the law wouldn't apply.
The taxpayer is funding all kinds of things that are terrible; at least let some of it go to people who have actually been wronged. The alternative is to have the state without any financial dissuasion for politically motivated prosecution.
Those signs don't carry the weight of law in Georgia. They can only ask you to leave, and if they arrest you then any decent lawyer would make you rich via a lawsuit.
This is good advice. Unless you willingly give them the money, then the only way a company can get any money from you (without you having signed some contract with them, which obviously you haven't) is for them to spend a minimum of several thousand dollars to pay a lawyer to go to trail (which...
Everything I've ever read about Georgia gun law says that open carrying a firearm isn't legal without a Georgia Weapons License. I'll look a bit further into it, but I've never heard otherwise.
A virgin AR lower is legally considered a "firearm" (as opposed to a pistol, rifle, shotgun, or AOW). Legally, for the most part, it's treated like a pistol (have to be 21 to purchase it, must purchase it from someone in the same state or go through an FFL).