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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/19/2012 10:20:54 PM

Sales soar for kid-themed body armor backpacks

The Newtown, Conn., mass shooting of 20 schoolchildren seems to have had an impact in one industry: body armor backpacks. Mother Jones reports that sales of the backpacks designed to protect kids during a school shooting, have “gone through the roof.”

Derek Williams, president of Amendment II, the Utah-based company that makes the packs along with lightweight body armor for military and police use, told the magazine, "I can't go into exact sales numbers, but basically we tripled our sales volume of backpacks that we typically do in a month—in one week."

Demand for the product has completely overwhelmed the company's website.

The carbon nanotube armor comes in kid-friendly themed Avengers or Disney princess versions, and at first, the company told Fox 13, just a handful were sold at gun shows. Then came the massacre last Friday.

The Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy has shone a light on the company. “Our armor was being bought to protect people, the ‘preppers,’ is the term,” Amendment II Chief Operating Officer Rich Brand told the Fox station. “At this point, it’s transcended to everyone. Anyone who’s sending out a child into the world, seeing what can happen now, they want to protect their children.”

Not everyone is on board with the idea of sending children to school armed for battle.

Maryann Martindale, executive director of Alliance for a Better Utah, told Fox 13, "Do we want to live in a society where we send our kids to school in Kevlar backpacks and arm our teachers? I think we create more chaos by responding that way.”


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/19/2012 10:29:14 PM
Maryann Martindale, executive director of Alliance for a Better Utah, told Fox 13, "Do we want to live in a society where we send our kids to school in Kevlar backpacks and arm our teachers? I think we create more chaos by responding that way.

Yes!!! I want the teachers armed and if a Kevlar Backpack is available I want one too for my grandkids. With all these various nutcases running around I want all the protection possible without government intervention other than removing GUN FREE ZONES from their vocabulary.

Jim

Quote:

Sales soar for kid-themed body armor backpacks

The Newtown, Conn., mass shooting of 20 schoolchildren seems to have had an impact in one industry: body armor backpacks. Mother Jones reports that sales of the backpacks designed to protect kids during a school shooting, have “gone through the roof.”

Derek Williams, president of Amendment II, the Utah-based company that makes the packs along with lightweight body armor for military and police use, told the magazine, "I can't go into exact sales numbers, but basically we tripled our sales volume of backpacks that we typically do in a month—in one week."

Demand for the product has completely overwhelmed the company's website.

The carbon nanotube armor comes in kid-friendly themed Avengers or Disney princess versions, and at first, the company told Fox 13, just a handful were sold at gun shows. Then came the massacre last Friday.

The Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy has shone a light on the company. “Our armor was being bought to protect people, the ‘preppers,’ is the term,” Amendment II Chief Operating Officer Rich Brand told the Fox station. “At this point, it’s transcended to everyone. Anyone who’s sending out a child into the world, seeing what can happen now, they want to protect their children.”

Not everyone is on board with the idea of sending children to school armed for battle.

Maryann Martindale, executive director of Alliance for a Better Utah, told Fox 13, "Do we want to live in a society where we send our kids to school in Kevlar backpacks and arm our teachers? I think we create more chaos by responding that way.”


May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/20/2012 1:19:20 AM
Hello again Jim,

Something that not many people talk about is the role prescription drugs play in these atrocities. They transform young, otherwise healthy people into monsters, and even worse if they try to stop taking them. I remember how I reacted myself after I tried to give up taking mild diazepam, to which I had become used in order to fight insomnia, because I wanted to get rid of any dependence on drugs. I spend a couple of nights feeling like I was going to die, especially the first night in which I was absolutely terrified and feeling about to choke, with my heart pounding for hours on end. I finally got over it and have never again taken those pills, but what an awful experience it was. It was many years ago, but I will never forget those sleepless yet nightmarish two nights.

Yet it was someone else's experience that made me take that radical decision. It was a friend of mine that after quitting illegal drugs became a slave of prescription drugs, the same that were supposed to help him recover. But he never got rid of them. Far from it, he told me they had trapped him; and more recently, he told me that he was "hearing voices" inside of his mind trying to induce him to kill. He otherwise is an accomplished artist and the best of men, and a most religious one at that. So he believed it was the devil who was talking to him in his mind, yet he said he would never let him have his way. But I wonder... what if he had a gun? We ask a question in my country: What is the most dangerous scenario? The answer: A monkey on the loose holding a machine gun.

I have just borrowed a post by Helen Elias, I read it at 'SOUND OFF ON ANY TOPIC YOU WANT TO' and it seems to me definitive in this regard. I hope she will not mind my posting it below.
Hugs,

Miguel


- - - -

Here's a couple of videos done by Pharmaceutical Rep, Gwen Olsen. These videos are powerful and informative!

In the first video, she talks about her experiences as a Pharmaceutical Rep.

In the second video, she talks about her own experience while using a psychiatric drug and what happens when someone withdraws from these drugs. Even if a person has not been taking the drug for a week or two, the effects linger for months making a person worse off than before they ever took any drug. In some news stories, they might make it sound as if a shooter's mental illness is the problem and caused him to commit this crime when it is really the side effects of the drugs that caused him to do it. Remember Andrea Yates? They made out like she was nuts. I don't recall much being said about the drugs she was on as being instrumental in causing her to drown her 5 children. They implied it was her mental disease.

In the article in our local paper, they talked about the shooter possibly having aspergers (spelling ??) and a psychiatrist said that there is no history of an aspergers person ever being violent. They didn't even mention drugs in the article.

If you go to YouTube, you will find other useful videos with Gwen Olsen.

I hope you will consider sending this information to your private lists. You never know who you might help and whose lives you might have saved. If the shooter's mom had known about these side effects maybe she could have made other choices for her son in this area and maybe it would have prevented the shooting from ever happening and made life better for the young man. Just copy and paste this entire email if you wish and email it to people.

Please mention to people that before trying drugs they should try using a good multiple vitamin high in B-vitamins. Also most diets are very low on minerals of all kinds. There are 67 or more minerals that humans need so a good mineral supplement would be helpful.

Also we have been seeing some amazing results with the product I have been selling. Tell them to send me an email to get more information about that.

Helen
zhebee@yahoo.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOW8LNU2hFE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEIg1as2ppc


[quote]
Maryann Martindale, executive director of Alliance for a Better Utah, told Fox 13, "Do we want to live in a society where we send our kids to school in Kevlar backpacks and arm our teachers? I think we create more chaos by responding that way.

Yes!!! I want the teachers armed and if a Kevlar Backpack is available I want one too for my grandkids. With all these various nutcases running around I want all the protection possible without government intervention other than removing GUN FREE ZONES from their vocabulary.

Jim


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/20/2012 9:52:14 AM

Armored backpacks and a rush on guns after Conn.


Amanda Curran, 18, daughter of Bullet Blocker inventor Joe Curran, opens a child's bulletproof backpack to reveal the bulletproof panel inside, outside Curran's home in Billerica, Massachusetts December 19, 2012. The child's bulletproof backpacks range in cost from $250 to $600, depending on the size of the backpack. According to Bullet Blocker Vice President of Business Operations Elmar Uy, their products stop 99.9% of bullets from all handguns. REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — When Ken Larson's 1-year-old son starts school in a few years, he'll be carrying an armored backpack.

After the Connecticut school shooting, Larson and his wife have decided to buy him one just to be safe. Larson already owns one himself that he takes with him when he goes to the movies.

"It's a no brainer. My son's life is invaluable," said Larson, 41, of Denver. "If I can get him a backpack for $200 that makes him safer, I don't even have to think about that."

The reaction to the deadly Connecticut school shooting can be seen at gun stores and self-defense retailers across the nation, with anxious parents buying armored backpacks for children and firearms enthusiasts stocking up on semi-automatic rifles in anticipation of tighter gun control measures.

A spike in gun sales is common after a mass shooting, but the latest rampage has generated record sales in some states, particularly ofassault weapons similar to the AR-15 rifle the gunman used Friday in an attack on Sandy Hook Elementary School that killed 26 people, including 20 children.

Colorado set a single-day record for gun background check requests the day after the shootings, while Nevada saw more checks in the two days that followed than any other weekend this year. Records were also set in Tennessee, California and Virginia, among others.

Some gun shop owners stopped selling the remaining stock of their assault weapons, anticipating only more interest and value after President Barack Obama on Wednesday instructed his administration to create concrete proposals to reduce gun violence.

Robert Akers, a Rapid City, S.D., gun seller who specializes in military-style weapons, said the rush of customers had transformed his Rapid Fire Firearms store into a "madhouse" and that he's not actively selling the guns and has turned off his phone.

"The price is only going to go up higher," he said.

There was also an unusual increase in sales for armored backpacks designed to shield children caught in shootings, according to three companies that make them.

The armor inserts fit into the back panel of a child's backpack, and sell for up to $400, depending on the retailer. The armor is designed to stop bullets from handguns, not assault weapons like the one used in the shooting at the Newtown, Conn., school.

Still, the manufacturers and some parents say that while they don't guarantee children won't be killed, they could be useful as shields.

Some experts, however, say sending children to school in armored backpacks is not a healthy response to fear about mass shootings. Anne Marie Albano, psychiatry director at Columbia University's Clinic for Anxiety and Related Disorders, said parents should convey calmness, not anxiety.

"This is not serving to keep children safe," she said. "This is serving to increase their fear and their suspicion of their peers."

At Amendment II in Salt Lake City, sales of its children's backpacks and armored inserts have increased, with 200 purchase requests Wednesday alone.

"The incident last week highlights the need to protect our children," said co-owner Derek Williams. "We didn't get in this business to do this. But the fact is that our armor can help children just as it can help soldiers."

Kerry Clark, president of Texas-based Backpackshield.com, began making the backpacks after the deadly mass shooting at Virginia Tech in 2007. Clark said he sold 15 backpacks Wednesday. Prior to Friday's shooting, he said, the company would sometimes go an entire month and just sell one.

"It's the busiest I've seen it in my life," he said.

Bullet Blocker, a Massachusetts-based company that sells the backpack armor, declined to provide sales numbers but noted that recent sales were substantially greater than normal.

Sales of assault weapons also were on the rise.

Austin Cook, general manager of Hoover Tactical Firearms in suburban Birmingham, Ala., said the spike in sales since Friday's shootings has been so intense that federal background checks that typically take five minutes or less are now taking up to an hour.

Cook said about 50 people were waiting in line for his store to open the morning after the shootings, and that he's since sold nearly all of his assault weapons. Now, he's trying to find more distributors.

"I can't keep them in the store," Cook said.

In Pittsburgh, Dick's Sporting Goods said it was suspending sales of modern rifles nationwide because of the shooting. The company also said it's removing all guns from display at its store closest to Newtown.

Aaron Byrd, co-owner of Patriot Shooting Sports in Youngsville, N.C., is sold out of AR-15 rifles, ammo for those types of guns and high-capacity magazines.

"Things have been crazy the past couple of days. A lot of people have been coming in looking to purchase semiautomatic rifles. They're worried that the government's going to ban semiautomatic rifles and high-capacity magazines, so they've been coming in looking for those," he said.

He added, "I think it is a knee-jerk reaction by both parties — both the government and the citizens."

___

Skoloff reported from Phoenix. Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Allen G. Breed and Mitch Weiss in North Carolina; Scott Sonner in Nevada; Steven K. Paulson in Colorado; Dirk Lammers in South Dakota; Pam Ramsey in West Virginia; Matt Gouras in Montana; and Jay Reeves in Alabama.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/20/2012 9:58:15 AM

Thriving Gun Industry Hammered After Sandy Hook Massacre

By | Daily Ticker16 hours ago

The horrific slaughter of 7 adults and 20 children with an assault weapon last week has once again focused attention on America's liberal gun laws.

The Sandy Hook massacre has also done something that other recent mass shootings have failed to do, which is to cause some investors and retailers to rethink their support of gun manufacturers.

The prevailing investment ethos in this country is that investors should be concerned with nothing but financial performance: As long as a company delivers compelling returns to its shareholders, those shareholders should not have to care about how the company does business or what sorts of products or services it sells.

Earlier this week, however, a private equity firm called Cerberus announced that it will sell its stake in "Freedom Group," a large gun manufacturer that makes the Bushmaster assault rifle used in the Connecticut killings.

Cerberus is run by an investor named Stephen Feinberg, whose father lives in Newtown, Connecticut, where the massacre took place. The firm's announcement made clear that Cerberus would leave the arguments about tighter gun control to politicians, but the firm's actions speak louder than its words. Cerberus no longer wants to support (or benefit from) a company that manufacturers these weapons.

Meanwhile, Dick's Sporting Goods announced that it has suspended the sales of semi-automatic rifles at its 480 stores, and Walmart removed one such gun from its web store. And the stocks of gun manufacturers like Smith & Wesson have dropped sharply.

In other words, the Sandy Hook killings have not just galvanized public-opposition to America's lax gun laws. They have prompted those who normally steer clear of any moral or legal questions about the businesses they invest in to vote with their feet.

For those who see an obvious connection between the ease of acquiring military-grade assault weapons and the prevalence of mass shootings and gun-related deaths in this country, this is good news.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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