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Thread: Women Shot By Stove

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  1. #1
    It was probably a piece of the cartridge case, not a pellet, that did the damage.

    ACCIDENTS do happen.

    Ever drop a box of .22 cartridges? Those )(@*&)* things go all over the place. Even if you think you picked all of them up, you can easily miss one or two.
    The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Lady's Human View Post
    It was probably a piece of the cartridge case, not a pellet, that did the damage.

    ACCIDENTS do happen.

    Ever drop a box of .22 cartridges? Those )(@*&)* things go all over the place. Even if you think you picked all of them up, you can easily miss one or two.
    Nope, cause our boxes come taped or in pre locked boxes so that can't happen.
    When we bought the .22's at Wal-Mart in a box of 500 we would tie the bag so non could fall out. Then we'd go to the gun table (nothing can fall off the table) & dump them into the fireproof safe. That safe was never allowed to be open unless it was safely in the middle of the gun table. Or we would load up the small lock boxes on the gun table.

    You learn all that stuff in firearms class

    We don't need the laws getting worse up here

  3. #3
    And I've gone through far more stringent training in the military.......

    and despite all the precautions you could ever take, accidents still happen.

    There's no such thing as a zero-defect method.Physics and humans being human come into play. You CANNOT eliminate all risk.


    I've dropped a plastic cartridge box of .22 shot shells, the case shattered, and the damned things went everywhere.
    The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lady's Human View Post
    And I've gone through far more stringent training in the military.......

    and despite all the precautions you could ever take, accidents still happen.

    There's no such thing as a zero-defect method.Physics and humans being human come into play. You CANNOT eliminate all risk.


    I've dropped a plastic cartridge box of .22 shot shells, the case shattered, and the damned things went everywhere.
    Exactly why I don't want guns in the house.
    don't breed or buy while shelter dogs die....

    I have been frosted!

    Thanks Kfamr for the signature!


  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by Lady's Human View Post
    And I've gone through far more stringent training in the military.......

    and despite all the precautions you could ever take, accidents still happen.

    There's no such thing as a zero-defect method.Physics and humans being human come into play. You CANNOT eliminate all risk.


    I've dropped a plastic cartridge box of .22 shot shells, the case shattered, and the damned things went everywhere.
    The difference is, is that your on a firing range or in a designated area for guns/ammo... So "if" something falls its not that big of an issue... in a normal fireing range there shouldn't be fire!! lol In a home, its so easy to prevent that sort of thing from happening.

    & why was she messing with ammo near fire or materials used for fire? We never used teh fireplace, but we sure didn't bring our ammo over there.. ammo + fire = bad... ammo + water = bad too.. just not in a harmful way

  6. #6
    In fact, she was hit by part of a 22-gauge shotgun shell that she had accidentally put into the stove with newspapers she used to light it. A box of shells had spilled nearby a few weeks before.

    A partial box of cartridges fals into a pile of newspaper.........think you're going to account for every .22 cartridge?


    The difference is, is that your on a firing range or in a designated area for guns/ammo...
    mm do they just teleport themselves there?
    The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by king2005 View Post
    The difference is, is that your on a firing range or in a designated area for guns/ammo... So "if" something falls its not that big of an issue... in a normal fireing range there shouldn't be fire!! lol In a home, its so easy to prevent that sort of thing from happening.

    & why was she messing with ammo near fire or materials used for fire? We never used teh fireplace, but we sure didn't bring our ammo over there.. ammo + fire = bad... ammo + water = bad too.. just not in a harmful way

    Bravo King. You sound like you know what you're talking about. I'll bet
    that lady will be extra cautious next time she opens a box of ammo.
    I've Been Boo'd

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