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Re: tenac post# 34555

Saturday, 07/25/2015 1:41:07 AM

Saturday, July 25, 2015 1:41:07 AM

Post# of 41158
Once again a bunch of un educated people who are clueless complain to the strip mall and the corporate pigs believe the almighty $$$$$$$$$$$$ they worship is more important then the lives of the men & woman who will DIE for you & me.

The government doesn't allow those who are trained to carry one. Unreal.

They can get on the first ship leaving port with a good size leak.

This world has gone NUTS!

BTW ................

What is up with these guys leaving? Do SOLDIERS leave their post when times get tough? Did they or didn't they believe the reason they came there?
What law were they breaking
The almighty $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ law?


Why should business ........ $$$$$$$$$$$$$ determine who goes or stays?





Armed civilian guards asked to leave local recruiting office
By KOMO Staff
Published: Jul 24, 2015 at 11:59 AM PDT Last Updated: Jul 24, 2015 at 1:55 PM PDT


SPANAWAY, Wash. - The armed civilians who were standing guard outside a Spanaway recruiting center are gone after they were asked to leave by sheriff's deputies.

Ed Troyer of the Pierce County Sheriff's Office says the volunteer guards arrived after the mass shootings in Chattanooga, Tenn., that left four Marine recruiters and a sailor dead.

It began with two armed men with AR-15 rifles sitting out in front of the Army recruiting office in Spanaway - who said they were worried about the recruiters' safety.

But then the number of armed civilians started growing. A few days later, there were seven men armed with rifles outside the recruiting facility.

"It was OK with everyone in the strip mall at the beginning, but then they started a Facebook page and numbers started ramping up, and some people started getting intimidated," says Troyer.

So the owners and management of the strip mall contacted the Sheriff's Office and asked deputies to pass along a message to the armed civilians, thanking them for their service and concern but telling them they would prefer for them to leave.

Troyer says the volunteers were notified Thursday by deputies to go home.

"We had a nice, peaceful conversation with them, very productive, and thanked them for what they were trying to do and explained to them why they couldn't do that," he said.

Troyer says the move doesn't represent a Sheriff's Office policy against armed volunteer guards. If businesses want the armed support, deputies will let them be.

Apparently, "vegetarian" is an old Indian word for "bad hunter."

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