Milton Police Chief Richard G. Wells Jr., who sits on the state’s Southeast Regional Homeland Security Advisory Council, called voting to buy one of the BearCats that was on the scene “one of the best things I’ve ever done.” [More]Yeah, we noticed.
How could we not? You unleashed nine of those beasts.
A knowledgeable opponent--not the inexperienced loser located by a homeowner going outside for a smoke that all your king's BearCats and all your king's men missed in their Constitution-trampling frenzy--would be able to exploit such reliance on overkill, and would probably find an advantage in encouraging you to apportion even more of your resources toward the procurement, staffing and maintenance of such costly misapplications of technology.
Ain't it something-- this from a government that would deny semiautomatics to We the People using the platitude that weapons of war don't belong on our streets.
[Via Florida Guy]
Guerilla war tactics would be useful here. The truck might not be breached, but all those thugs hanging on the outside could be picked off by capable shooters. Big tactical error on their part.
ReplyDeleteI really, really hate that they call that thing a BearCat, for I have one of Ruger's little single-action revolvers of the same name. Sweet little gun.
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