A lady with a firearm Part I

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  • 2tonic

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    My :twocents:...

    Women actually effectively using firearms should be celebrated and noted. If they have a training resume, a score card, a positive YouTube channel, all good.

    If we are posting the most scantily clad boob models with their fingers on the trigger of a prop gun they have never shot, then we are demeaning gun owners.
    Plenty of soft porn all over the web. This site doesn't need to be one of them. It represents Indiana Gun Owners. :ingo:




    :scratch: Wonder why this thread wasn't started in the Women and Firearms section of INGO?



    Can we have scantily clad boob models if they're exhibiting proper trigger discipline?
     

    DadSmith

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    Lady
    LA'DY, noun

    1. A woman of distinction. Originally, the title of lady was given to the daughters of earls and others in high rank, but by custom, the title belongs to any woman of genteel education.

    So this thread is about women who are polite, refined, respectable and are holding/using firearms?

    If so here is my 1st submission.
    1683113138265.png
     
    Last edited:

    Karl-just-Karl

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    Not to mention the magazine almost appears to be in backwards
    That and the trigger guard being in front of the mag well...and granny ain't holding nothing in her left hand but a fistful of air.

    Her right hand has 6 fingers including the thumb.

    If someone spent all that time using her sweater as the basis for creating an imaginary gun-coozy, why would they butcher up the picture of the gun that bad?

    The more I look at it, the worse it gets.
     

    Kalashalite

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    Her name was Simone Segouin, also known by her nom de guerre Nicole Minet. When this photo was taken she was 18 years old. The girl had killed two Germans in the Paris fighting two days previously and also had assisted in capturing 25 German prisoners of war during the fall of Chartres.

    The weapon is a captured German Maschinen pistole 1940. The infamous MP-40 of Schmeisser design.

    She just passed away this year in Feb. I think she is an inspiration to show that anyone can fight to preserve liberty in times of need. This girl stole a German bicycle from a patrol, derailed trains and fought in the streets with a submachine gun. Talk about femme fatale...

    From wiki:

    "She received the rank of second lieutenant in 1946, and was awarded the decoration of Croix de Guerre for her service in the Resistance.[6][8] After the war, Segouin became a pediatric nurse in Chartres.[6] A street in Courville-sur-Eure, where she lived, was named for her.[9] In response to the honour, Segouin said, "I'm very glad to know that people are not indifferent to this period of my life."[7] In 2020, the village hall in Thivars was named for Segouin.[10] She was the subject of a French documentary in 2021, broadcast on RMC Découverte.[11] On 14 July 2021, she was appointed a Knight of the Legion of Honour, France's highest order of merit.[8]"
     

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    2tonic

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    I'll venture a guess that is the same lady. She appears to have some off-the-hook yarn working skills.

    But there is something very wrong with that photo. Hint: the ejection port and brass deflector.
    Not to mention the magazine almost appears to be in backwards
    That and the trigger guard being in front of the mag well...and granny ain't holding nothing in her left hand but a fistful of air.

    Her right hand has 6 fingers including the thumb.

    If someone spent all that time using her sweater as the basis for creating an imaginary gun-coozy, why would they butcher up the picture of the gun that bad?

    The more I look at it, the worse it gets.

    Yeah, unless Granny has a 40mm grenade launcher hiding under that cozy, there's no reason for a trigger guard ahead of the magwell, which, by the way, slopes the wrong way.
    Looks like there's a loop behind the mag as well. :facepalm:

    And WTF is that optic? :dunno:
     

    2tonic

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    Her name was Simone Segouin, also known by her nom de guerre Nicole Minet. When this photo was taken she was 18 years old. The girl had killed two Germans in the Paris fighting two days previously and also had assisted in capturing 25 German prisoners of war during the fall of Chartres.

    The weapon is a captured German Maschinen pistole 1940. The infamous MP-40 of Schmeisser design.

    She just passed away this year in Feb. I think she is an inspiration to show that anyone can fight to preserve liberty in times of need. This girl stole a German bicycle from a patrol, derailed trains and fought in the streets with a submachine gun. Talk about femme fatale...

    From wiki:

    "She received the rank of second lieutenant in 1946, and was awarded the decoration of Croix de Guerre for her service in the Resistance.[6][8] After the war, Segouin became a pediatric nurse in Chartres.[6] A street in Courville-sur-Eure, where she lived, was named for her.[9] In response to the honour, Segouin said, "I'm very glad to know that people are not indifferent to this period of my life."[7] In 2020, the village hall in Thivars was named for Segouin.[10] She was the subject of a French documentary in 2021, broadcast on RMC Découverte.[11] On 14 July 2021, she was appointed a Knight of the Legion of Honour, France's highest order of merit.[8]"

    A most admirable and courageous woman, no doubt.


    But I think it's safe to say that the French fashion industry was scraping bottom by the wars' end.
     
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