Yep. And one of those ND's was so hilarious bad it injured 3 people with a single one (grazing and burning on the shooter, grazed a second person, bullet stopped in the foot of a 3rd person).
I'm not even mad. It takes skill to fail that hard.
It's not what you'd think based on where this was posted, no diversity hire gone wrong: in the 1800's before anesthesia speed was the top priority of amputations and surgeries. A very fast surgeon sliced open an artery on another surgeon during a speed surgery, killed the patient, the other surgeon, and someone watching it passed out from shock of all the blood and died. Gruesome as possible
Robert Liston. He was a surgeon in the early 19th century, in a time where anesthetics weren't available, so surgeons worked as fast as possible to minimize the amount of time the patient was in acute pain - because the patient was in pretty fucking severe acute pain. That led to surgeons basically competing to see who could do surgery the fastest, which culminated in Liston's legendary 300% mortality rate OP was talking about. Here's an article about it, if you google the name you'll find plenty more. https://allthatsinteresting.com/robert-liston
And know so little about the firearms they carry that the leader went on video explaining how simply jarring an AR-15 with the bolt held open can lead to an ND.
Unless your AR is a Sten, this is not in fact possible.
Yeah I remember watching that. I also remember seeing all the photos taken of them and seeing a lot of cheaper .22 caliber firearms. A lot of people online were speculating that they were paid actors given the mishmash of gear, visual handling, and the above armament
NFAC...aren't those the guys who had two negligent discharges at two separate rallies back to back?
Yep. And one of those ND's was so hilarious bad it injured 3 people with a single one (grazing and burning on the shooter, grazed a second person, bullet stopped in the foot of a 3rd person).
I'm not even mad. It takes skill to fail that hard.
Like that surgeon who had a 300% lethality rate during a surgery where he killed the patient, another surgeon, and a witness.
wait what
Tell me more about that, please, I love this.
Some guy fucked up the surgery on a patient, sliced a another surgeon or something by accident, witness had a heart attack or something.
It's not what you'd think based on where this was posted, no diversity hire gone wrong: in the 1800's before anesthesia speed was the top priority of amputations and surgeries. A very fast surgeon sliced open an artery on another surgeon during a speed surgery, killed the patient, the other surgeon, and someone watching it passed out from shock of all the blood and died. Gruesome as possible
Robert Liston. He was a surgeon in the early 19th century, in a time where anesthetics weren't available, so surgeons worked as fast as possible to minimize the amount of time the patient was in acute pain - because the patient was in pretty fucking severe acute pain. That led to surgeons basically competing to see who could do surgery the fastest, which culminated in Liston's legendary 300% mortality rate OP was talking about. Here's an article about it, if you google the name you'll find plenty more. https://allthatsinteresting.com/robert-liston
And know so little about the firearms they carry that the leader went on video explaining how simply jarring an AR-15 with the bolt held open can lead to an ND.
Unless your AR is a Sten, this is not in fact possible.
Ah yes, "Grandmaster Jay" or what ever his klan name was.
holds random ar15
ees called a bullpup cus it do kick like a bull
It's telling that, wrong as that is, it's probably not the most significantly wrong thing he said in that fairly short video.
Yeah I remember watching that. I also remember seeing all the photos taken of them and seeing a lot of cheaper .22 caliber firearms. A lot of people online were speculating that they were paid actors given the mishmash of gear, visual handling, and the above armament