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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
President of Federal, CCI, Speer & Remington ammo: Why ammo is hard to get.
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<blockquote data-quote="Bear62041" data-source="post: 2057546" data-attributes="member: 114863"><p>And of course it isn't relevant that some people are buying every box as soon as it hits the dealer - lets all keep blaming the manufacturers and the federal government, but certainly not our fellow hoarders. I have talked to people in California who have over 5000 rounds of every caliber they own stored in their garages. I've personally seen a few garages in LA. That's 10's of thousands of rounds in 10's of thousands of garages. Just think of what would happen if their house (God forbid) ever caught fire. Or the Wal Mart sporting goods department managers I've talked to in Iowa, Missouri, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida (I build and remodel Wal Marts) who tell me that they have customers who know when a shipment arrives at their stores and are there waiting when the ammo is put out, and returning many times a day for many days to be able to buy the maximum Wal Mart allows over and over again. In Alabama recently I observed the same people doing just that. So lets put most of the blame where it's due. Do you really think that it is in the best interest of ammo manufacturers to withhold production of ammo, or that the government has a new way of withholding ammo as a form of gun control ? Gun sales are off the charts and every buyer needs a few boxes of ammo for his new gun. Between that, and the hoarders, the rest of us are left in the cold. I think we're all smarter than that on this forum. Lets not shoot the messenger, so to speak.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bear62041, post: 2057546, member: 114863"] And of course it isn't relevant that some people are buying every box as soon as it hits the dealer - lets all keep blaming the manufacturers and the federal government, but certainly not our fellow hoarders. I have talked to people in California who have over 5000 rounds of every caliber they own stored in their garages. I've personally seen a few garages in LA. That's 10's of thousands of rounds in 10's of thousands of garages. Just think of what would happen if their house (God forbid) ever caught fire. Or the Wal Mart sporting goods department managers I've talked to in Iowa, Missouri, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida (I build and remodel Wal Marts) who tell me that they have customers who know when a shipment arrives at their stores and are there waiting when the ammo is put out, and returning many times a day for many days to be able to buy the maximum Wal Mart allows over and over again. In Alabama recently I observed the same people doing just that. So lets put most of the blame where it's due. Do you really think that it is in the best interest of ammo manufacturers to withhold production of ammo, or that the government has a new way of withholding ammo as a form of gun control ? Gun sales are off the charts and every buyer needs a few boxes of ammo for his new gun. Between that, and the hoarders, the rest of us are left in the cold. I think we're all smarter than that on this forum. Lets not shoot the messenger, so to speak. [/QUOTE]
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President of Federal, CCI, Speer & Remington ammo: Why ammo is hard to get.
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