This is true (assuming you don't teach them better), but I doubt it is of sufficient detail to ward off an attack because of how rare it is (which is an odd assumption, see below). They know you have a stash, but knowing that you keep 10mm and not 9mm is in the noise. Even if they did know, they probably wouldn't care.jrswanson1 wrote:zephyp wrote:I dont think thugs are going to send out polls to see who has what so they know who to hit...if you gots anything that looks valuable then you are a target.jrswanson1 wrote:If you want something to cook with over an open fire, a cast iron skillet and a wok will keep you covered.
And remember, if you use oddball rounds, no one is going to steal them from you. Who are you going to try to steal from, me with my stockpile of 10mm ammo, or that guy with the stockpile of 9mm ammo?
Jim
People talk. Neighbors know what you have. Face it. If you aren't talking about it, your wife, kids, friends know and blab. It's just how things are.
Wrong. It is valuable even if their gun doesn't shoot it because they can trade it (anyone who made the effort to stash ammo probably stashed a few guns too...which logic would suggest were of the caliber of ammo hidden). People don't just steal stuff because they need it, they steal any thing of value because they can get what they actually want for it.Plus, keeping it stashed and someone finds it? If they can't use it, they'll dump it. No one wants to hump around 2000 rounds of ammo they can't use.
Also, the average person who thinks it is a good idea to attempt stealing ammo probably wasn't prepared and has their back against the wall. If they weren't prepared in the first place, odds are they don't even know the difference between 9mm and 10mm other than the latest rap song praised 9mm not this 10mm stuff.
The fatal flaw is assuming the enemy is like you.


