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We weren't planning on doing a show for a while, and Alex and I went camping with the family.
Might as well bring the .50 cals.
We brought the .50 cal along, and at the end of our trip, we decided we were just going to go out there and shoot a couple times.
Just a couple.
Just a couple.
And after about five shots, we were on the phone going, hey, we need to do a show tomorrow.
I'm Tommy Shane Steiner and this is my brother Sid.
We're Texans and Americans who support and celebrate the Second Amendment, which makes
all of us brothers in arms.
We're Texans and Americans who support and celebrate the Second Amendment, which makes
all of us brothers in arms.
Oh, yeah!
you you
Well, the very first few episodes were sort of winging it.
We had so much fun doing it that we were just going to keep going.
Alex said, let's buy a drone and we'll shoot it down.
What did you guys shoot it with?
We shot it with everything.
Don't hit it.
Yeah, just shoot around it.
Go ahead and open up.
At first we were all shooting around it just so we could see bullets whizzing by.
My brother got off a lucky shot and took it right out.
The look on his face was pretty funny.
He was like, sorry, I didn't mean to hit it.
Just before the prices skyrocketed for all the guns because of the politics, Alex went
into GT Distributors and got the .50 cal.
Man, it was hilarious.
He walked in and Alex started buying everything in the store.
I noticed a lot of ammo boxes in my office.
We had an entire shopping cart, this massive oversized shopping cart, full of ammo boxes that said B-52 use only.
It was the old ammo surplus stuff that they used to use when the B-52 used to have the .50 cal.
The ball ammo to me was just a normal lead bullet.
The armor piercing rounds actually had tracers on them and they were incendiary.
It was all in one.
The red tip is the tracer.
We were going to test out the thickness, how much metal the .50 cal could shoot through.
This is about the thickest thing we could find so far.
It's about a quarter of an inch, but I don't know if it'll go through that or not.
All we had was paper targets, and we decided that was kind of a waste.
If you're going to be shooting a .50 cal, we've got to have something to think about.
We're not going to be punching holes in paper.
So let's start shooting.
If you think about the amount of force it takes to bend that metal like that.
That's designed to go into a jet tank.
That's the same one.
Now look at the jacket of the bullets there.
It's fused to it.
It's on there.
Some of the round fused to the... Sid, as it turns out, is probably the best shot.
And he's not even a gun gunner, so he's more into archery and stuff.
I think that actually helps him out, because he has nothing to lose.
He can always say he's the archery guy.
You can't manufacture them for a civilian sale anymore, but they can sell them in surplus.
All right, safety on!
Some of the best shooting done, I think, was Rob Dew.
He was running the camera.
He got behind there and did not miss with the .50 cal.
Rob, get off the camera.
Come shoot the .50 cal real quick.
I would be happy to have that guy cover me any time with a .50 cal.
the 50 cal.
I honestly didn't think it was going to punch through the I-beams.
I thought it would have probably made like a little dent, but man, it just turned into Swiss cheese.
Look at that.
Wow, what did that with the big black splat?
That was one that went through and then that was probably one of the incendiary tips.
After it went through, then it ignites and it caused that scoring.
Look how the bullet looks.
That was the thickest steel that we could find and we got two of them and put them together.
We're putting that up there to see if it'll go through.
It's made easy work of that.
What we've learned is you cannot hide behind an I-beam when there's a .50 cal present.
Coming up, we give a new meaning to beam me up scotty.
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Alex brought out this R2D2 toy.
So we set it out there and it was about 600 yards.
And we noticed that the guns were more accurate further out than it was close up.
Matt here was in the Army and he was saying sometimes if they missed something it would still knock it over.
And they were telling him that if you shot a .50 past a man's head at about 6 inches it would still take it off.
We just skimmed by the R2-D2 with the tracer and look what it did to it.
Tell folks about that.
Burned it up pretty good.
I mean you can see where it's all ripped up probably around hit the ground exploded shrapneled out I mean that's from probably just from the tip on the tracer I'd imagine.
Well we're gonna we're gonna get R2 one way or another.
Sid took the first shot at the propane tank.
He knocked the spigot off, igniting the gas.
We also brought out my nephew, my brother's son, Rocker, and uh...
He's been dying to do some shooting.
We thought it would be a little much for him to climb behind a .50 cal, but we had a .223 and we let him loose on that.
He had a pretty good shot.
Vice President Biden told women not to get a 223 rifle.
That it was too much for them to handle.
He said instead to get a 12-gauge shotgun.
If you want to protect yourself, get a double-barrel shotgun.
As you can see here, it's not the best gun for beginners.
Put that double-barrel shotgun and fire two blasts.
Here you see how .223 is perfect for children and women.
You don't need an AR-15.
It's harder to aim.
It's harder to use.
Nine-year-old Rocker was hitting bullseyes from the start with the .223 AR-15.
What I was shocked about was when we shot the tracer ammo, how the tracer will hit the ground and sometimes shoot straight up in the air.
I didn't realize that a bullet would do that.
You don't really see that until you're shooting a tracer.
I think that's what it took was the tracer round.
All the times I've gone out and shot, and I'm sure you have too, you just kind of maybe shoot and think, okay, well it hit the hill over there.
Maybe it bounced over a little bit.
Yeah, but man, that tracer round, I mean, to see how far that thing would go up in the air.
The .50 cal, we shot it into the ground, and it went straight up in the air.
Had to have gone up a thousand feet.
Probably pretty unpredictable.
Yes, so it really gave me a new respect for gun safety and thinking about what's behind a target.
There was a few fires we had to put out.
We bought some fire extinguishers and after every time we would shoot we'd go out there and make sure there wasn't a fire that started.
I think they were all used up by the time that shoot was over.
For added safety we would go normally after it rained and soak the ground pretty good because it was kind of dry out there.
The one time we went out there it was actually raining.
The first time to shoot the propane tank.
I'd never seen one shot, so I didn't know if it was going to make a huge explosion or not.
That was our first shoot.
So we set the fire extinguisher down there.
After the fireball went off, it immediately started to catch the grass on it, around it on fire.
You shot the fire extinguisher and actually put it out?
It just occurred to me at the last moment, and it worked!
Which I thought that was pretty awesome.
I've actually been trying to maybe do that on my own.
Well, I've just been informed of why the tank didn't blow up on our last shoot.
We shot it probably 50,000 times with 50 cal 308 223.
We hit it with everything and it did not explode.
We found out later that it was because of the temperature of how cold it was outside.
It cooled off the tank and didn't allow it to explode.
Well, the great thing about where we were shooting was it was It was about 10,000 acres and there was nobody for miles
around, so we had a pretty good safety distance.
Also on the the shoot day we decided that one of our targets was going to be tannerite
attached to a, I don't know, a display.
I know Alex was pretty excited, I guess, especially after you guys' first time out there.
So we have to get creative now.
And last minute before we leave, Alex is like, I need you guys to go find some cardboard cutouts of some cartoon characters or something like that.
Well, we found Spock, we found Batman, and we found the Statue of Liberty.
I just thought, look, we can't be blown up the Statue of Liberty.
We didn't really know how we were going to set that up.
We were just going to each take shots at it.
But as we all kind of lined up and we all got in our positions, Alex yelled fire and everybody opened up and it was pretty much a melee.
I think the Batman was the one that blew his head up with the Tannerite.
Alright, I think I hit that one.
Sorry Batman.
Sorry Spock.
The thing about Tannerite that we've noticed is that sometimes even if you hit it, it doesn't go off.
We had some that we would find the Tannerite and there would be a hole through it.
Even though it didn't detonate, it didn't mean that you weren't hitting it.
We don't always just go out there to film.
Most of the time, we just go out there to have fun with friends.
You know, the system tries to demonize gun owners and exercising your Second Amendment rights.
That's what I like about this show.
We're patriotic men and women and kids.
I think the point of the show is to show that we're just regular people out there having fun and that, you know, we're not experts.
We're not like trained snipers.
I don't think any of us had any... Well, you had military training, didn't you?
A little bit, yeah.
I was in the military, but, you know, I'm by no means a professional sniper.
No.
We've got a lot of ideas that we're working on, but we want to know what you want to see.
If people have ideas, they can send it to GunsAtInfoWars.com.
We'd love to have some new ideas.
Go out and have fun, and also exercise our Second Amendment right, and exercise our liberty to protect ourselves.
I think it just kind of comes down to your exercising your Second Amendment right, showing your support for the Second Amendment, using your First Amendment right to have your Second Amendment.
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