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To view this site you need Adobe Flash Player and your browser must allow javaScripts. Go here to get the latest Flash Player. their oxygen intake by pokin’ their heads into an empty bag. They’re just doing it with an additional element of aroma and some methane gas. But then, there’s a reason narcotics are called “dope,” and lotsa dopes will try anything to get a buzz. At least if you stock up on lumps of jenkem and they don’t sell, you can always arrange them in a pile and market them as “modern art.” You might even get a big grant from the government. Just avoid crosscontamination with the rest of your inventory. You don’t want a customer spreading the rumor that your guns smell like crap. Spider Made Me Do It You name it and it’s been used as a legal defense for the commission of murder, kidnapping, rape and senseless beatings. Things like: eating too many Twinkies or Yoo-Hoo’s, drinkin’ too much coffee or tequila, tranquilizers, uppers, downers, marathon video-gaming sessions and the famous California “my mommy and daddy never bought me a pony” defense. But one court in Australia recently drew the line when a guy tried to claim that a spider bite was responsible for him kidnapping and raping a woman. Philip Spiers told a judge in New South Wales that a venomous Funnel-web spider had bitten him, and the toxic effect of the bite was to blame for his crimes. It didn’t help that he had no evidence of having been bitten and no toxicologist could be found to testify that Funnel-web spider venom might have that effect. These kinda little trivialities seem to work pretty well in California and Massachusetts, but we guess they don’t fly down under. Spiers drew a short speech and a long sentence from Hizzoner the Judge. CIRCLE NO. 274 ON INQUIRY CARD Protective Details Prefer Elite Tactical Visit us online at www.woolrichelite.com Team Building Next time you drop a box of ammo on your foot and burst forth with a blue blaze of spicy language in front of your employees, don’t feel bad about it — you’re simply cementing good relations with your crew, according to a study conducted by researchers at the University of East Anglia in England. Professor Yehuda Baruch and graduate assistant Stuart Jenkins assessed the use of profanity in several different workplace environments and situations. While they warned against using profanity in front of customers, they found that occasional “situationally based” (not casual or recreational) use of profanity helped to bind bosses and employees together as teams, and provided relief from daily stress and frustrations. Wow; what a relief it is for me that over all these years in law enforcement, I’ve been “team building,” instead of just bein’ a potty-mouth! 9 CIRCLE NO. 273 ON INQUIRY CARD SHOT SHOW SUPER ISSUE 2008 • www.shootingindustry.com 45 |