Wat's Guns-N-Stuff Thread

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"The markets were sharply down at opening on news that an asteroid will destroy the Earth in 24 hours but rebounded later on the news that the Fed. is cutting interest rates."
 
Too late. But then, they already knew that, especially the very old one. That damned kitten is right behind him.


Some folks say we're headed towards civil war. I say, maybe. Like if I drive east, I'm headed towards the Atlantic. I may not get there, but . . . . But we may have always been that way whether we wanted to think that or not. People got awful upset when Jackson was prezzie.


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We've been in one since 2000, just no bloodshed...........yet. It's kinda a cold Civil War right now. If Trump were to win this fall I expect things to heat up a bit. The left will call it "peaceful protests."

I think I'm going to drag the shotguns out today. I haven't shot trap in a while, need to keep my eye in.
 
Ok.......so now I have to retract any disparaging statements I may have made about orange tractors.

On the other hand grandsons in law are all stupid as goat shit.

Valve #4 is just a few miles away..........
 

Turning Office Towers Into Apartment Buildings

Nathan Berman has helped rescue Manhattan’s financial district from a “doom loop” by carving attractive living spaces from hulking buildings that once housed fields of cubicles.

By D. T. Max


There are about a thousand real-estate developers in New York City. Nathan Berman is one of them, and he’s become rich doing it. But, he told me recently, “I never built a building from scratch, and never wanted to.” Instead, Berman, who is sixty-four, specializes in taking existing structures and converting them into apartments, a useful trick in a city that’s always starved for housing—and newly wary of the five-day-a-week office routine. In 2017, he converted 443 Greenwich Street, a former warehouse and book bindery in Tribeca, built in 1883, into a luxury condo; among the celebrities who now own apartments there are Harry Styles and Jake Gyllenhaal. (The building was designed to be “paparazzi-proof,” so it features an underground parking area with a valet.) It’s not much of a feat, though, to redo an industrial space that has a rudimentary interior. Berman is more excited by the transformation of huge, obsolete office towers into warrens of one- and two-bedroom apartments. He compares the effort to extract as much residential rental space as possible out of such buildings to solving a Rubik’s Cube.


So now they named this shit. Wat has been involved on tidbits like this since last millennium . . . .
 
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