After a competition that lasted several years, the Army settled on the Sig Sauer P320, with the Marines and likely the rest of the U.S. Armed Forces falling behind.
The Glock 19X may or may not have been the best pistol for the U.S. Army. Its unique features—a compact slide on a full-sized frame—don’t have directly practical application in the civilian world, except for perhaps police use. Most civilians would be just as well served buying a full-sized Glock 17 or the Glock 19. But if a private citizen wants the gun that could have become a U.S. military-issued weapon, or a Glock in any other color than coyote, there’s always the G19X.
Austrian Gunmaker Glock’s latest handgun is actually two existing handguns in one. The Glock 19X, meant to capture the U.S. Army’s Modular Handgun System contract, is actually a melding of the original Glock 17 and the compact Glock 19 resulting in a unique handgun configuration that very well could have become the next service weapon of the U.S. Armed Forces. Although the G19X lost out that distinction to the Sig Sauer P320 the pistol is available on the commercial market.
The U.S. Army’s XM17 Modular Handgun System competition was meant to field a replacement for 1980s-era Beretta M9 nine-millimeter handgun. The Beretta had one of the lowest rates in soldier confidence in the field. It was characterized as the least accurate and worst handling by combat troops in a government-sponsored Army small arms survey. Also, it was unable to take advantage in advances in handgun technology over the past thirty years. The Army refused to even consider an updated version of the pistol, the M9A3, for the MHS competition.
The Army wanted a handgun that was reliable, with a requirement that the winner be capable of firing five thousand mean rounds between failures , for a “98 percent probability of completing a 96-hour mission without a failure.” It wanted new features, including a threaded barrel for screwing on a suppressor, an under barrel Picatinny rail for aiming lights and lasers, and a modular ergonomic system to accommodate a wide variety of hand sizes.
After a competition that lasted several years, the Army settled on the Sig Sauer P320, with the Marines and likely the rest of the U.S. Armed Forces falling behind.
Glock officials complained that the Army’s selection of Sig Sauer over Glock was driven by cost over effectiveness and asked that testing continue. An official complaint filed by the Austrian gun company was rejected by the General Accounting Office. According to Glock , the GAO’s own report admitted that the Glock entry was actually more reliable but the Sig weapon was cheaper.
The Glock G19X is a familiar looking pistol to Glock fans; it takes the full-sized frame of the Glock 17 and mates it with the compact slide of the Glock 19. The result is a handgun with a shorter barrel for use inside the cramped confines of a military vehicle while still retaining a large magazine capacity. The company calls the resulting weapon a “crossover pistol,” similar to efforts by Colt in...
Ninety miles from the South Eastern tip of the United States, Liberty has no stead. In order for Liberty to exist and thrive, Tyranny must be identified, recognized, confronted and extinguished.
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Thursday, September 6, 2018
The 90 Miles Mystery Box: Episode #371
You have come across a mystery box. But what is inside?
It could be literally anything from the serene to the horrific,
from the beautiful to the repugnant,
from the mysterious to the familiar.
If you decide to open it, you could be disappointed,
you could be inspired, you could be appalled.
This is not for the faint of heart or the easily offended.
You have been warned.
Wednesday, September 5, 2018
NIKE: THE SOCIAL JUSTICE SLAVE LABOR SHOE THAT HATES AMERICA
Nike’s new romance with an America-hating racist.
It’s a bad time for bad sneakers.
Nike sales have seen their slowest growth in seven years. It was the worst performing Dow stockof 2016. Americans don’t seem to want badly made overpriced shoes put together by slave labor.
The failing company tried to turn around its poor sales by doubling down on its abrasive lefty politics. Nike’s Consumer Direct Offense was supposed to stand for reclaiming American market share, instead of directly offending consumers. But if Nike can’t sell its shoddy athletic wear, it can offend Americans.
Last winter, Nike unveiled the “Pro Hijab”. Now it decided to make Colin Kaepernick, the racist black nationalist who began the trend of protesting the national anthem, into the face of its Just Do Itcampaign. Nike’s new contract with its America-hating racist will rush out Kaepernick shoes and jerseys. No word on whether Kaepernick’s socks showing police officers as pigs will also be part of the package.
Nike will pay Kaepernick millions every year with a deal that looks like those of “top-end” NFL players. Actually being a top-end player or having the talent to be one is surplus to social justice requirements.
The huge payday for Kaepernick clashes with Just Do It’s new tagline, “Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything.” Making millions of dollars for hating America without having to ever get out there and play is the opposite of “sacrificing everything.” It’s getting paid for doing nothing.
Unlike the hundreds of women working in a Cambodian factory that supplies Nike (among other companies) who passed out as temperatures reached nearly 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Over three days, 360 female workers passed out after working ten hour days with little food at punishing temperatures.
Nike’s Code of Conduct allows girls as young as 16 to work in factories. But they may be even younger.
At one Nike supplier, “workers routinely collapsing unconscious at their work stations from overwork and excessive heat, then being forced to return to work minutes after waking up” were observed.
Just don’t pass out.
Nike’s Asian slave labor force actually sacrifices everything. And the proceeds go to Nike executives and millionaire racists like Kaepernick who invoke the historical memory of slavery even as they...
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