Anonymous ID: 8c1a9b Nov. 9, 2018, 1:50 p.m. No.3822533   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>3822232

no problem POTUS is a GRIZZLY

this little video from Bella Coola Northern BC Canada, Reminded me of the President; initially takes softer approach until the charge keeps coming & he is forced to take aim.

 

Here in the United States, we usually think about the Second Amendment as a defense against dangerous people. Discussions about gun ownership are usually about preventing tyranny and defending our families from criminals or intruders — but it’s pretty rare for citizens to think about four-legged predators.

 

It’s a very different story in more wild places, like Alaska or rural Canada. There, the situation is often reversed, and it’s dangerous animals, not people, who are the big problem.

 

Case in point: A man in British Columbia was just forced to use a shotgun to defend himself against a charging grizzly bear, and the whole confrontation was caught on video

 

According to CBC News, Lawrence Michalchuk lives in Bella Coola, a sparsely-populated valley near the west coast of Canada. Grizzlies are so common in that part of the country that the region is called “The Great Bear Rainforest” … so it’s no surprise that Michalchuk ended up facing one.

Anonymous ID: 8c1a9b Nov. 9, 2018, 1:53 p.m. No.3822586   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2627

>>3822232

no problem POTUS is a GRIZZLY

video from Bella Coola Northern BC Canada, Reminded me of the President; initially takes softer approach until the charge keeps coming & he is forced to take aim.

 

Here in the United States, we usually think about the Second Amendment as a defense against dangerous people. Discussions about gun ownership are usually about preventing tyranny and defending our families from criminals or intruders — but it’s pretty rare for citizens to think about four-legged predators.

 

It’s a very different story in more wild places, like Alaska or rural Canada. There, the situation is often reversed, and it’s dangerous animals, not people, who are the big problem.

 

Case in point: A man in British Columbia was just forced to use a shotgun to defend himself against a charging grizzly bear, and the whole confrontation was caught on video

 

According to CBC News, Lawrence Michalchuk lives in Bella Coola, a sparsely-populated valley near the west coast of Canada. Grizzlies are so common in that part of the country that the region is called “The Great Bear Rainforest” … so it’s no surprise that Michalchuk ended up facing one.