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View Full Version : OUT OF HAND!!!


Skull
03-28-2001, 12:19 PM
My a usual paintball retailer is no longer able to sell red dilled paintballs. I bought the very last box of red fill pro ball from him. Some new violence act in Ok says that it promotes violent behavior by looking like actual blood.

Intruder
03-28-2001, 01:18 PM
bunch of political BS.

Joel Timberlake
03-28-2001, 01:30 PM
LoL, that's retarded. Red filled paintballs looking like blood...I think paintballs that look like blood are cool. Makes it seem more real.

MTU_Paintballer
03-28-2001, 01:41 PM
umm thats the kind of attitude that got them banned. Paintball has nothing to do with looking like you shot somebody.

MuckRaker
03-28-2001, 02:08 PM
Personally, I like blue, green or florescent yellow fill. The opponent is my pallete, and I shall paint him PURTY! :eek:

spacer709
03-28-2001, 02:11 PM
haha, i like any color but i think white is kinda boring

Skull
03-28-2001, 02:34 PM
Ya maybe i'll just keep the box unopened and someday it'll be worth like 5 bucks a paintball or sumthin hehe.

spacer709
03-28-2001, 02:35 PM
HA

A damn fool
03-28-2001, 02:40 PM
joel, ur the exact ype of person that gives paintball a bad rep. Paintball is not a game of trying to kill the other person, it is a game of capture the flag where u try and tag the other oppenant with a paint mark. Its people like u that make others think paintblal is a violent and killing sport.

And i tihkn weve found a new person for pointlees points, spacer709. I tihkn tlpus has foound a match, i mean, every psot ive read fomr this guy has been oh, hahaha, etc:)

elTwitcho
03-28-2001, 02:47 PM
I like pink fill, 'cause then you can lit someone up and go "Nice pink, fairy!". Actually no, but it's really visible, and nobody (almost nobody) wears pink clothing so it shows up real good

TheWebColonel
03-28-2001, 02:53 PM
I have half a case of red powerball right now and to me it doesn't really look like blood it's too dark. It's some nasty crap tho it doesn't come off easy.

raptorprh
03-28-2001, 02:59 PM
thats a bunch of bull, it awesome and makes seem alot more realistic

A damn fool
03-28-2001, 03:08 PM
its not suppsoed to be realistic, at least towards killing. Thats not what paintbl is. Thats the reason people dont like paintbal, they think its a sport to kill.

TrOy
03-28-2001, 03:16 PM
Color dont make no difference when yer markin' someone! I personally like a good mixture of colors because it is harder to pinpoint who or how many are shootin!

ptflyer
03-28-2001, 03:39 PM
I was shot buy some nasty orange paint once........don't know who or what kind it was....but it was really thick ..... it was this past fall.....so it was cold out....that paint felt like rocks.....what ever kind that was......thats the kind I don't like.....

A damn fool
03-28-2001, 04:23 PM
They were probaly big ball, they have a nsty prange fill,a nd are hard as a rock in the cold.

PBSouLjAh
03-28-2001, 04:40 PM
i've never used marballizers....but ive been lit up by one from some guy who had flatline with the psycho ballistics full auto kit on it. i loved that fill on my bosom....it wsa really thick and bright......

spacer709
03-28-2001, 07:54 PM
yeah at one site i saw some "voodooo brand" paint. it was like pimp gold but it was not washable

Richy_C
03-29-2001, 06:47 AM
more realistic? wtf? so u'd rather have a real gun a murder someone than play paintball? u'd rather rip them away from their loved ones and shootthem with and m-16 than play paint ball? sorry man, you are a ****ed up son of a *****

Dräko
03-29-2001, 07:58 PM
Originally posted by A damn fool
joel, ur the exact ype of person that gives paintball a bad rep. Paintball is not a game of trying to kill the other person, it is a game of capture the flag where u try and tag the other oppenant with a paint mark. Its people like u that make others think paintblal is a violent and killing sport.

And i tihkn weve found a new person for pointlees points, spacer709. I tihkn tlpus has foound a match, i mean, every psot ive read fomr this guy has been oh, hahaha, etc:)

I do beleive everything you say is true... cough cough spacer cough cough

spacer709
03-29-2001, 08:48 PM
hahaha ok shutup enough with the horse **** here is a stupid post for you:

Hummingbird, common name for any of the more than 300 species of a family of small birds, of the Americas, that share several anatomical characteristics with the superficially very dissimilar swifts (see Swift).

The hummingbird family contains the smallest of all birds; many species are less than 8 cm (3 in) in overall length. The smallest species is the bee hummingbird of Cuba. Males are slightly smaller than females, being about 5.5 cm (about 2.17 in) long, and weighing only 1.95 g (about 0.07 oz). In spite of their tiny size, males of this species, like many other hummingbirds, are fiercely territorial.

Hummingbirds are known for their rapid flight; their strong wing beat is so rapid that it produces a hum, which accounts for their common name. They feed on nectar and tiny insects found within flowers, and hover in front of the flower as they reach for their food with their long, extensible tongues. To move away from the flowers, hummingbirds must fly backwards, and they are the only birds capable of this maneuver. The slender bills of hummingbirds vary in size and amount of curvature according to the size and shape of the flowers favored by each species.

Most hummingbirds are brightly colored and iridescent, commonly metallic green. The throat is often glittering red, blue, or emerald green, usually in males only. In one group of hummingbirds, the hermits, the plumage is chiefly brown, with no iridescence. Hermits also differ from other hummingbirds in building long hanging nests, often fastened to large leaves. Most hummingbirds build small cup-shaped nests covered with lichens, spiderwebs, and small pieces of bark, saddled on a branch. Two white eggs are laid, incubated only by the female.

Hummingbirds occur in every portion of the Americas, from Tierra del Fuego, at the southern tip of South America, almost to the Arctic Circle, but the majority of species inhabit tropical South America. Only about two dozen species have been found in the United States, and of these, only one, the ruby-throated hummingbird, nests east of the Mississippi River. It is about 10 cm (about 4 in) long and is notable for its long-distance migration, annually flying non-stop across the Gulf of Mexico, a minimum distance of 800 km (500 mi). The adult male is metallic green above; below, its throat is ruby colored, its breast is white, and its abdomen is gray marked with green at the sides. The female is somewhat duller in general body color and lacks the red throat patch. Another common hummingbird of the United States is the rufous hummingbird, found from Alaska to southern California, occasionally straying to the eastern United States. The bird is slightly less than 10 cm (4 in) in length. The adult male its reddish-brown with a greenish-yellow sheen above and white below. The throat patch is red and greenish-bronze. The female is greenish-gold above with a brown rump; below, it is grayish-white with reddish-brown sides.

Scientific classification: Hummingbirds make up the family Trochilidae of the order Apodiformes. The bee hummingbird is classified as Mellisuga helenae. The ruby-throated hummingbird is classified as Archilochus colubris and the rufous hummingbird as Selasphorus rufus.

spacer709
03-29-2001, 08:49 PM
O yeah and i know yall cant live without a definition of the word "be"

be (b)
v. First and third person singular past indicative was (wz, wz; wz when unstressed), second person singular and plural and first and third person plural past indicative were (wûr), past subjunctive were, past participle been (bn), present participle be·ing (bng), first person singular present indicative am (m), second person singular and plural and first and third person plural present indicative are (är), third person singular present indicative is (z), present subjunctive be.
v. intr.

To exist in actuality; have life or reality: I think, therefore I am.

To occupy a specified position: The food is on the table.
To remain in a certain state or situation undisturbed, untouched, or unmolested: Let the children be.
To take place; occur: The test was yesterday.
To go or come: Have you ever been to Italy? Have you been home recently?

Usage Problem. Used as a copula in such senses as:
To equal in identity: “To be a Christian was to be a Roman” (James Bryce).

To have a specified significance: A is excellent, C is passing. Let n be the unknown quantity.
To belong to a specified class or group: The human being is a primate.

To have or show a specified quality or characteristic: She is lovely. All men are mortal.

To seem to consist or be made of: The yard is all snow. He is all bluff and no bite.

To belong; befall: Peace be unto you. Woe is me.
v. aux.
Used with the past participle of a transitive verb to form the passive voice: The mayoral election is held annually.
Used with the present participle of a verb to express a continuing action: We are working to improve housing conditions.

Used with the infinitive of a verb to express intention, obligation, or future action: She was to call before she left. You are to make the necessary changes.
Archaic. Used with the past participle of certain intransitive verbs to form the perfect tense: “Where be those roses gone which sweetened so our eyes?” (Philip Sidney).

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[Middle English ben, from Old English bon; see bheu- in Indo-European Roots. See am1, is, etc. for links to other Indo-European roots.]

Synonyms: be, breathe, exist, live, subsist.
The central meaning shared by these verbs is “to have life or reality”: Her parents are no more. A nicer person has never breathed. He is one of the worst actors who ever existed. Human beings cannot live without food and water. The benevolence subsisting in her character draws her friends closer to her.

Usage Note: Traditional grammar requires the nominative form of the pronoun in the predicate of the verb be: It is I (not me); That must be they (not them), and so forth. Even literate speakers of Modern English have found the rule difficult to conform to, but the stigmatization of It is me is by now so deeply lodged among the canons of correctness that there is little likelihood that the construction will ever be entirely acceptable in formal writing. Adherence to the traditional rule in informal speech, however, has come to sound increasingly pedantic, and begins to sound absurd when the verb is contracted, as in It's we. · The traditional rule creates particular problems when the pronoun following be also functions as the object of a verb or preposition in a relative clause, as in It is not them/they that we have in mind when we talk about “crime in the streets” nowadays, where the plural pronoun serves as both the predicate of is and the object of have. In this example, 57 percent of the Usage Panel preferred the nominative form they, 33 percent preferred the accusative them, and 10 percent accepted both versions. But H.W. Fowler, like other authorities, argued that the use of the nominative here is an error caused by “the temptation . . . to assume, perhaps from hearing It is me corrected to It is I, that a subjective [nominative] case cannot be wrong after the verb to be.” Writers can usually find a way to avoid this problem: They are not the ones we have in mind, We have someone else in mind, and so on.

Richy_C
03-29-2001, 09:13 PM
what in the hell?

Creek
03-30-2001, 04:23 AM
Chill spacer

elTwitcho
03-30-2001, 05:36 AM
I can honestly say, that I've learnt something, and hence feel that I have bettered myself through this forum and the volumes of information contained herein, thank you Internet, and thank you spacer

Richy_C
03-30-2001, 10:21 AM
hey! watch out! your saracasms getting all over the floor! it's spreading!AAAAAAHHHHHH! we're all gona die!!!!!!!!

A damn fool
03-30-2001, 12:23 PM
Hey spacer709, another pointless post, lol. But hey,at this post had soemthing wirtten in it.

elTwitcho
03-30-2001, 01:01 PM
Seriously cut it out you guys

spacer709
03-30-2001, 08:23 PM
Originally posted by elTwitcho
I can honestly say, that I've learnt something, and hence feel that I have bettered myself through this forum and the volumes of information contained herein, thank you Internet, and thank you spacer

hehe thanks guys. next time you see a hummingbird i hope you think hard aabout what i ahve taught you

Evilcrayonusa
03-31-2001, 06:47 AM
Ive never seen red pain that was blood color its always like fire engine red or a pinkish tone? Sensor sip is so lame people have been killing eachother more since sensor ship has started and its now illeagle to disiplin your kid gee i wonder why that is hrm guess real violence is more pollitacly acceptable than kids paint ballin with red paint

Witt
03-31-2001, 08:41 AM
The world is slpwly changing. Damn..Lighten up world.

simon woodstock
04-06-2001, 07:28 PM
i don't like red or orange, unless the person is wearing white it just blends into their clothes and looks like dirt, especially with blue or green clothes which are most common.

Dräko
04-07-2001, 09:24 AM
Trust me simon, theyll be out, thyell be out. if i can get some basic hoppers im really gonna start workin on gassyies :) mainly for fun. If they did get workin tho theyed be kinda expensive cause of the microguage etc.

simon woodstock
04-07-2001, 10:34 AM
you've got time, i've gotta save money after the new barrel and drop