mattpegher
Platinum Member
- Jun 18, 2006
- 2,203
- 0
- 71
Latest thing in NYC is tactical pens. A cane is a better choice but not the kind of thing you take to a club
The bolded may be your best bet. I like the idea. Serves many purposes![]()
103 replies.
No brass knuckles suggested?
WTF
My penis.
Not yours. Mine.
My penis.
Not yours. Mine.
That will certainly keep it under the 3" limit.
I just ride the subways with a bat. Cop asks why, I say I am on my way to a baseball game.![]()
103 replies.
No brass knuckles suggested?
WTF
Not legal in the U.S.
From the link:I think this is the article I read about the kid, it and explains how dangerous lasers can be to the eyes.
http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/healthday/642932.html
What a revelation.:hmm:Schmid said that part of the problem is that not all laser pointers are labeled properly, so it's not always easy to know if you have a pointer that could create serious damage. One sure way to know if you have a potentially dangerous laser pointer is if the laser can burn through paper, explained Schmid.
Latest thing in NYC is tactical pens. A cane is a better choice but not the kind of thing you take to a club
Legality in the United States varies at state level, e.g., personal possession of nunchaku is illegal in New York[25], Arizona[26] California[27] and Massachusetts[28], but in other states possession has not been criminalized. In New York, attorney Jim Maloney has brought a federal constitutional challenge to the statutes that criminalize simple in-home possession of nunchaku for peaceful use in martial-arts practice or legal home defense. The court dismissed Maloney's Second Amendment claim based on prior case law that the Second Amendment applied only to Federal action, and that decision was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. However, on June 29, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari, vacated the decision of the Second Circuit and sent it back for "further consideration" in light of the Supreme Court's decision in McDonald v. Chicago, which held that the right of an individual to "keep and bear arms" protected by the Second Amendment is made applicable to the states by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. [29]
shillelagh.
Its just a walking stick.
Kind of.
I've got my Dads one and use it when my knees playing up. You could seriously fuck someone up with one.
Not legal in the U.S.
LOL. One of them is a flail (ball & chain attached to the end).
State and local bans, they aren't federally regulated so "In the US" isn't really accurate.
I just looked up NY and they don't appear to be legal to carry there though...