@JacobLaney69@JetherBlaise@ShamashAran One of the things that tilted me was guys saying it was a professional assassin cause he made (missed but close enough) shot at sub 200 yards. I litteraly got a near first time shooter hitting clay pigeons set at 200-270 yards with iron sights within like 4 rounds
Random women keep following me and I cant tell if its for the racism, pegging, rape, or calling them retarded, I mean they're all bots but I cant figure out "what" made the ethos bots follow me
Every single quad rail Chad is a "just go to the gym bro, its perfect bro, its so durable bro" till they grab my rifle with a carbon fiber barrel shroud and instantly say "holy fuck thats so light" and ask me how much it was cause they want one
@RandoKneegrow@ArmedJ0y My only ND was from "looking" down the chamber of a new rifle I was unfamiliar with instead of shoving a finger in the barel to make sure, one laps and shits fucked, be careful with your guns
Speaking of the SAS, I climbed Denali in Alaska with 9 members of the British 22 SAS. I was the only American. All 10 of us made the summit on 23 June 1990 (20,310 ft). I know many of you refer to it as Mt. McKinley. But in my day, it was Denali, so don't take offense. Allow me to compare Everest to Denali.
While Mt. Everest sits at 29,032 feet, it rests on the Tibetan Plateau with base elevations around 14,000 to 17,000 feet, so the mountain itself only rises about 12,000 to 15,000 feet from its immediate base. Contrast that to Denali, which rises from a much lower base of roughly 2,000 feet above sea level to a peak of 20,310 feet. This creates a vertical rise of around 18,000 feet, which makes it the tallest mountain entirely above land on Earth. The British 22 SAS were excellent climbers. The climb took us a total of 15 days up and 3 days down. The photo was taken when we were between Camp III and IV around 12,200 feet on 17 June 1990.