Eric Weime
2.8K posts

Eric Weime
@EricWeime
🅴🆁🅽🆂🆃🅷🅰🅵🆃: 🅽🅸🅲🅷🆃 🅵🅾🅻🅶🅴🅽 🅱🅸🆃🆃🅴! lost cause, proved toxisch


Abschließende Bemerkung zum Urteil von #Saarbrücken. Es bestehen offenbar keine Zweifel an der psychotischen Erkrankung des Beschuldigten/Angeklagten. Ob diese in der konkreten Tatsituation zu den Voraussetzungen von § 21 oder § 20 StGB geführt hat, kann durchaus differierend und kritisch gesehen werden. Das Ganze mit "Milde" oder einer ausländerfreundlichen Haltung des Gerichts in Verbindung zu bringen, ist abwegig. Scheinbar kannte bisher niemand der lauten Urteilskritiker die Vorschrift über die Möglichkeit des Verzichts auf Jugendstrafe bei der gleichzeitigen Anordnung einer Maßregel nach § 63 JGG (§ 5 (3) JGG). Persönliche Verunglimpfungen der Vorsitzenden Richterin oder der ganzen Kammer sind nicht zu tolerieren. Es gibt eine Instanz, die befugt und in der Lage ist, das Urteil auf RECHTSFEHLER zu überprüfen. Diese Instanz ist der Bundesgerichtshof.









Everyone knows what a six-shooter is.... The name is part of the mythology of the American West, woven into dime novels and wanted posters and a thousand Saturday morning westerns. The cowboy draws his six-shooter. The outlaw empties his six-shooter. Six shots, six chambers, the whole cylinder loaded and ready. Except that almost nobody actually carried it that way. The Colt Single Action Army, the revolver that defined the era, had a design problem that every experienced user understood within about five minutes of owning one. The hammer, when the gun was at rest, sat directly on top of whichever cartridge was positioned beneath it. There was no safety mechanism of any kind. No firing pin block, no transfer bar, nothing between the hammer and the primer of the cartridge but gravity and good fortune. If the gun was dropped, or knocked against a saddle horn, or bumped hard enough against anything at all, there was a real possibility it would fire. Not a theoretical possibility. A practical, documented, this-has-happened-to-people-you-know possibility. The solution was simple and universally adopted. You loaded five rounds, positioned the empty chamber under the hammer, and went about your day. The gun held six. You carried five. Everyone knew this. It was taught, passed on, drilled into anyone who spent serious time with the weapon. Load one, skip one, load four more. Hammer on the empty. The phrase for it was "five beans in the wheel." This arrangement persisted not for months but for decades. The Colt Single Action Army was introduced in 1873 and the practice of carrying five rounds continued as standard until the gun was redesigned with a proper drop safety in the 1970s, nearly a hundred years later. The revolvers that replaced it across that entire period had the same problem and the same solution. Five rounds in a six-shot gun was not a quirk of the frontier era. It was the correct and accepted method of carrying a single action revolver for the better part of a century. Hollywood, naturally, never got this memo. The six-shooter of the movies is always fully loaded, always fires exactly as many times as the plot requires, and is reloaded from impossible angles at implausible speeds. The real weapon required more care, more patience, and a slightly different relationship with arithmetic. The men who carried it daily understood that the sixth chamber was not for bullets. It was for the hammer to rest on without killing you. The name stuck anyway. Six-shooter. It had a better ring to it than five-shooter, and the West was always better at legend than at accuracy. #archaeohistories






















