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View Full Version : Congratulations... AR-15.co made the list!



OctopusHighball
02-16-2024, 15:22
GOA acquires information about banks being asked to spy on citizen's financial transactions on behalf of the government. Guess who made the keyword list?

https://static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2024/02/GOA-Letter-to-Senate-Banking-Committee-on-Secretary-Yellen-FINAL.pdf

Screenshot from the document (I added the highlight):

95939

Clint45
02-16-2024, 16:33
I'm confused... coar15 is a free site, right? What credit card transactions are even processed here?

3beansalad
02-16-2024, 16:41
I scored 29 on their (non exhaustive) list...

OctopusHighball
02-16-2024, 16:50
I'm confused... coar15 is a free site, right? What credit card transactions are even processed here?

After reading it a few times, I'm guessing it would be comments from PayPal or something? That's the only thing I can think of.

rfenster
02-16-2024, 16:51
I only scored 13 on their (pretty incomplete) list...

.455_Hunter
02-16-2024, 17:41
Interesting that vendors like SG ammo and Lucky Gunner are not on the list.

Erni
02-16-2024, 18:48
I only scored 13 on their (pretty incomplete) list...

Communists: you are a bad person if you?re on this list.
Americans: Damit! I only scored 13 points.

def90
02-16-2024, 19:39
I scored 19 though they have some places listed twice under two different names.

Funny that they list Dicks as Dicks has gone out of their way over the last decade to be as anti gun as a sporting goods store can be.

BPTactical
02-16-2024, 19:44
They can suck my dick

JohnnyDrama
02-16-2024, 19:58
It works!

I just got back from the range a little bit ago!

Clint45
02-16-2024, 20:53
They can suck my dick

After eloquently expressing your concerns to the keyword tech at KeyCorp, they/them would probably offer to meet you at a local gloryhole, lol.

Grant H.
02-16-2024, 20:59
After eloquently expressing your concerns to the keyword tech at KeyCorp, they/them would probably offer to meet you at a local gloryhole, lol.

[ROFL3]

BPTactical
02-16-2024, 21:10
Sideways

Scanker19
02-16-2024, 21:19
Sounds like some of us need to try harder.

APEXgunparts
02-16-2024, 21:23
Interesting that vendors like SG ammo and Lucky Gunner are not on the list.

I don't know to be pleased or pissed that APEX Gun Parts isn't on the list!
I noted some of the companies listed are no longer in business (Copes Distributing, Southern Ohio Gun)

Richard

3beansalad
02-16-2024, 21:58
Sounds like some of us need to try harder.^^^This^^^

Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk

theGinsue
02-17-2024, 11:10
I'm confused... coar15 is a free site, right? What credit card transactions are even processed here?




The Staff of Colorado AR-15 Shooting Forum greatly appreciates your assistance in self-identification for our failure in ensuring proper billing.

Members of the Staff are diligently working to correct existing deficiencies in our billing software and membership database.

Please know that we should have this error corrected shortly and will be performing electronic funds transfers for past and future site membership fees in the coming days. To facilitate this process, we respectfully request you ensure your bank account information, to include routing and account numbers or credit card information are current within your profile to avoid an interruption in site access.

Be aware that billing is based on site usage whereas those with a lower daily average post count are billed at a higher rate.

The Staff greatly appreciates your patronage and we look forward to continuing to see your site posts as we move forward.

Respectfully,

Your rich financially impoverished Friendly Site Staff
[Sent from the revolutionary Bugatti-linked web interface]





/sarcasm





Yeah, I don't get it either, since the site charges and receives nothing financially. Just more Big Brother tracking of evil firearms sites I suppose.

ETA: It could be because I use a card to pay for the site domain registration. That's my best guess.

O2HeN2
02-17-2024, 14:39
I scored 24. I'm counting sites I've visited, equipment I've owned or stores I've visited.

O2

lurchnp81
02-17-2024, 20:34
At this point…it is quite UN-American to not be on a government list!

arbol
02-18-2024, 00:29
No, I don't accept that this is okay.

We are in some government filter, and we are being weighed and judged for everything we say.

I saw this happen on 4chan, where one day it was a free site, and the next day it was government controlled.

Tucker Carlson just interviewed a guy about how deep this goes, here...

https://tuckercarlson.com/uncensored-the-national-security-state-the-inversion-of-democracy/

-John

theGinsue
02-18-2024, 10:34
No, I don't accept that this is okay.

We are in some government filter, and we are being weighed and judged for everything we say.

I saw this happen on 4chan, where one day it was a free site, and the next day it was government controlled.

Tucker Carlson just interviewed a guy about how deep this goes, here...

https://tuckercarlson.com/uncensored-the-national-security-state-the-inversion-of-democracy/

-John



This is nothing new and has been going on for longer than either of us has lived. It got turbo-charged post 9/11 with the passage and implementation of the Patriot Act - all in the name of security for citizens.

When Americans realized that bad actors (i.e. terrorists) used the internet and email to plan their attacks, and that monitoring these venues could help prevent another 9/11-type event from occurring, we initially applauded the Patriot Act. However, it didn't take us too long to realize that this meant that everyone's electronic communications were being monitored and some push back began. Yet, the programs under the Patriot Act continued to grow and with technological improvements, the capability to spy on Americans increased exponentially. Americans had long felt secure in their privacy as we understood that surveillance of citizens by our own government was strictly prohibited without a very specifically spelled out warrant approved on a case-by-case basis by the courts. The Patriot Act swung open the doors of those limitations to a great degree.

With the Patriot Act, freedom to monitor electronic communications of every citizen, bad actors within our government (politicians) realized that they could not just monitor, but restrict our free speech and also help form public opinion in the way they want Americans to think.

This was aided greatly by the passage of the Smith-Mundt Modernization Act. This act is sold to citizens as just allowing the U.S. Agency for Global Media and the media organizations that it supports to now make their content available in broadcast quality upon request within the United States by lifting some restrictions on the domestic dissemination of government-funded media, often government generated propaganda.

Additionally, laws were implemented to censor “hate speech” and disinformation. While, on the outside, this sounds like a good thing, the determination of what is “hate speech” was weaponized to censor any speech that didn’t agree with the government’s official agenda. We clearly saw this with government interference on Social Media for any anti-Vax and pro-Trump communications.

After so much success with monitoring and censoring our communications, politicians saw how they could use these tools to push their agendas while articulating their actions as “protecting” us from threats (even though the reality is that is used as a tool to control the narrative and limit online posted dissent to what Americans perceive as attacks on our freedoms.

So, of course, sites such as ours are (and have been for some time) on lists of sites requiring addition monitoring. To believe otherwise is either naive or wantonly ignorant. Whether on this site or elsewhere online (email, Social Media, other online forums, etc.) the exercise of Freedom of Speech also comes with a responsibility to consider possible consequences for that exercise. Avoiding government control of sites like this begins with individual members using discretion in what they post.

FoxtArt
02-18-2024, 14:27
I think it's a "shoulder thing that goes up".

Similar to if a mountain hermit asked other mountain hermit to compile a "list" of dangerous car websites when they don't even know the difference between a Buick, Peterbilt, and a Schwinn.

Joe_K
02-18-2024, 15:42
This is nothing new and has been going on for longer than either of us has lived. It got turbo-charged post 9/11 with the passage and implementation of the Patriot Act - all in the name of security for citizens.

When Americans realized that bad actors (i.e. terrorists) used the internet and email to plan their attacks, and that monitoring these venues could help prevent another 9/11-type event from occurring, we initially applauded the Patriot Act. However, it didn't take us too long to realize that this meant that everyone's electronic communications were being monitored and some push back began. Yet, the programs under the Patriot Act continued to grow and with technological improvements, the capability to spy on Americans increased exponentially. Americans had long felt secure in their privacy as we understood that surveillance of citizens by our own government was strictly prohibited without a very specifically spelled out warrant approved on a case-by-case basis by the courts. The Patriot Act swung open the doors of those limitations to a great degree.

With the Patriot Act, freedom to monitor electronic communications of every citizen, bad actors within our government (politicians) realized that they could not just monitor, but restrict our free speech and also help form public opinion in the way they want Americans to think.

This was aided greatly by the passage of the Smith-Mundt Modernization Act. This act is sold to citizens as just allowing the U.S. Agency for Global Media and the media organizations that it supports to now make their content available in broadcast quality upon request within the United States by lifting some restrictions on the domestic dissemination of government-funded media, often government generated propaganda.

What it is actually for is to ensure that most of you hear, watch, or read on the Tell-A-Vision or Enter-Net is in fact a LIE.

Additionally, laws were implemented to censor ?hate speech? and disinformation. While, on the outside, this sounds like a good thing, the determination of what is ?hate speech? was weaponized to censor any speech that didn?t agree with the government?s official agenda. We clearly saw this with government interference on Social Media for any anti-Vax and pro-Trump communications.

Liars hate the truth, thus truth = hate. The only speech that should ever be censored are lies.

After so much success with monitoring and censoring our communications, politicians saw how they could use these tools to push their agendas while articulating their actions as ?protecting? us from threats (even though the reality is that is used as a tool to control the narrative and limit online posted dissent to what Americans perceive as attacks on our freedoms.

So, of course, sites such as ours are (and have been for some time) on lists of sites requiring addition monitoring. To believe otherwise is either naive or wantonly ignorant. Whether on this site or elsewhere online (email, Social Media, other online forums, etc.) the exercise of Freedom of Speech also comes with a responsibility to consider possible consequences for that exercise. Avoiding government control of sites like this begins with individual members using discretion in what they post.

The government wants to censure your speech, so do it yourself for them? The problems we face today in our Country are largely driven by Men who knew the truth and did not say it out loud, and Men that did not know the truth, and did not care to find out what it was. It matters little what reason or excuse either group did what they did, the results remain.

theGinsue
02-18-2024, 20:15
If you're willing to spout out things that could be expected to draw more government scrutiny or even get you arrested, have at it - but not on this site. Discretion is the better part of valor.

arbol
02-19-2024, 17:43
I appreciate the forum and the ops, and sometimes rely on them too much to censure my speech (so thank you!)

But I do think that as a discussion point, the collective "we" have lost free speech, and moreso, are being targeted, manipulated, censored, by our own Government. Which is ludicrous, in the framework of which our nation was designed.

-John

BushMasterBoy
02-19-2024, 22:33
Personally I'm in favor of a different approach to the problem. Active shooter seems to be the issue in the public eye. Address the shootings with sensors. It is not perfect, but it is way better than nothing. It gives first responders an edge over the shooters. With an AI analyzing the shots it could save many lives.

https://www.dhs.gov/science-and-technology/publication/gunshot-detection-systems-fact-sheet

FoxtArt
02-20-2024, 16:52
I don't think every gunshot sound needs a SWAT team and an arrest, myself.

Should cars come with a ticket printer that automatically prints violations anytime speed is excessed?

Or was our country founded on a concept, of many, that not every law broken requires a prosecution, and not every rulebreaking event is a crime?

ETA: My thoughts are probably even more controversial. Stop arguing about the guns, or the schools, and start addressing the Cluster-B disorder that underlies it (Sociopaths, Borderlines, Bona-fide narcissists). Deal with that and Crime would go down about 85%. Mass shooters would decrease exponentially.

I'm all for treating people the way they themselves treat people. Which makes dealing with sociopaths pretty easy.

BushMasterBoy
02-20-2024, 17:04
I am talking about schools, shopping malls, colleges, arenas, etc. If you fire a gun in a grocery store, it will sound an alarm. This may allow a LEO to respond quicker. Too much resistance from behind.