montanadan
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2004
- Messages
- 383
- Reaction score
- 1
Hi Mike ,that is why I shoot right handad flinters left handed.Plus I am too cheap,to spend the extra money,for the lefties...Respectfully montanadan
tg said:". A small dose of 18th century reality usually is quite disapointing in justifiying 'not quite right" equipment'
Right O Mike..... at times it is tempting to let some folk slog through the knee deep muck of missinformation than trying to share what valid info there is out there on these guns so they can make an educated choice, it is usually not the one who starts the thread asking about historical issues who causes the stink but a bunch of others who feel the need to present their lack of knowledge and research for the entire forum to view.
Mike Brooks said:The Ouija tribe was :haha: from the present day Knoxville Tenn. area.[/quote/]
Now,now Mike have you been sniffing those chickens again?
rich pierce said:That's a good notion but will not change the dynamics of these discussions which always follow the same formula:
1) Buyer/Consumer with a particular piece bought or considered asks whether the item closely represents items available and used during a particular period of time at a particular place
2) Person who has done a lot of study makes a response based on what they know, including aspects of the item that closely resemble known originals and aspects that do not match known originals
3) Another person, not the original, complains about "PC Nazis" or "PC Prudes" (more politically correct term) because they have an item like the one the person who started the thread has
4) Other persons with expertise add their input, sometimes adding new data, often confirming
5) more of same (3 and 4)
6) Somebody finds a single rare example validating the item of interest or an old book dating the piece much earlier than its now believed to be
7) The rarity or disputed date is discussed
8) We degenerate to a discussion of the value of "PC", "HC", etc.
For those of us who would really prefer to LEARN SOMETHING, it would be nice if we could stop these silly routines and have real discussions based on data not emotions.
Here are a couple of ideas, probably not politically correct:
If you don't want to know, don't ask.
If you really have a problem with folks even discussing whether items are representative of a place and time, why even read this stuff? If you have to say something that is really unrelated to the historical data, why not just say, "I hate PC!" and leave it at that?
If you need somebody else's approval for the item you own (usually the case, somebody owns something just like the item of discussion), then maybe you are in it for reasons I can't fathom.
Question: Why do people who claim to not care so much about historical accuracy, who like to put down such discussions or those who offer their expertise, so wound up about whether an item is or is not deemed "pretty darn close to known examples" or not?
rich pierce said:That's a good notion but will not change the dynamics of these discussions which always follow the same formula:
1) Buyer/Consumer with a particular piece bought or considered asks whether the item closely represents items available and used during a particular period of time at a particular place
2) Person who has done a lot of study makes a response based on what they know, including aspects of the item that closely resemble known originals and aspects that do not match known originals
3) Another person, not the original, complains about "PC Nazis" or "PC Prudes" (more politically correct term) because they have an item like the one the person who started the thread has
4) Other persons with expertise add their input, sometimes adding new data, often confirming
5) more of same (3 and 4)
6) Somebody finds a single rare example validating the item of interest or an old book dating the piece much earlier than its now believed to be
7) The rarity or disputed date is discussed
8) We degenerate to a discussion of the value of "PC", "HC", etc.
For those of us who would really prefer to LEARN SOMETHING, it would be nice if we could stop these silly routines and have real discussions based on data not emotions.
Here are a couple of ideas, probably not politically correct:
If you don't want to know, don't ask.
If you really have a problem with folks even discussing whether items are representative of a place and time, why even read this stuff? If you have to say something that is really unrelated to the historical data, why not just say, "I hate PC!" and leave it at that?
If you need somebody else's approval for the item you own (usually the case, somebody owns something just like the item of discussion), then maybe you are in it for reasons I can't fathom.
Question: Why do people who claim to not care so much about historical accuracy, who like to put down such discussions or those who offer their expertise, so wound up about whether an item is or is not deemed "pretty darn close to known examples" or not?
Okwaho said:Rich,I guess I was really impressed with your post since I quoted it twice but hey,I never said I was computer literate.Anyway,I will take your advice.
C'est la vie et laissez le bom temps rouler
Tom Patton
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