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Question:

Can you eat Marijuanna resin?

I am in an incredible ammount of pain from my Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and I was wondering if Pot Resin from Medicinal Marijuanna would work if I ingested it. Since resin is the burned remains isn't all the active ingredient already to work if you ate it?This is strictly for medicinal purpouses and is legal in my location.

Answer:

Most people consider it unsafe because it is unsafe. Condition 1 is the only safe way to carry a loaded 1911. Safety off should only be when you're ready to actually fire the weapon. My question to you is why would anyone carry a 1911 with the safety off? That's a good way to shoot yourself.
The 1911 was designed as a holster gun to be fired with one hand. To be ready to use you have to have a round in the chamber, hammer back and the safety on. Then you can just draw it with one hand, thumb off the safety and fire. The safety was very positive, blocking the hammer itself. When you have a round in the chamber and the hammer down, the safety is off. So if you drop the gun and it hits the hammer it can transfer enough energy to the firing pin that the gun will go off. This problem was fixed in newer models with a firing pin lock that only releases when the trigger is pulled. Some feel that makes the action course and harder to work. The other issue with the hammer down is to fire the gun you have to pull back the hammer. With one hand this requires you to shift your grip and your grasp of the gun is weak for that split second. You could lose the gun. If you are in a close fight having to pull the hammer back could cost you your life. When you carry the gun in a military flap holster the flap obviously goes over the entire back of the gun. When you carry it in a more modern holster with the hammer back, you put the strap over the slide in front of the hammer, just in case the safety somehow gets flipped off, the strap acts as an additional safety to prevent the gun from going off in the holster.
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So, there is a huge misnomer that I haven't really seen addressed here. The risk is not when the pistol is sitting in your retention holster with coverage for your trigger guard. The risk is getting it in there and getting it out of there. When you are gripped up on the gun to get it into your holster or pull it out you've typically disengaged the grip safety. So, if you have typical trigger discipline, some of the time, particularly if you are under stress - or the aftermath of stress, your finger is sitting on the trigger, when it should be indexed and off. Generally, we aren't wearing holsters and are gunned up naked (well I'm not .. usually) so having clothes getting into your trigger guard is not uncommon and in many retention holsters there is some force you need to apply to get it into the holster. When you are coming out or going in the possibility of dropping or even tossing your pistol is non - zero. In fact, it's a LOT different from zero. If you had seen the number of experienced shooters that I've seen in competition trying to shave another half second off their draw toss their gun at the target because they weren't quite gripped up you'd be surprised. Or the number of guns that have hit the deck because after a rough run someone wasn't quite paying attention when they were trying to holster and they missed the holster and dropped it again, you'd be surprised what a little stress does to you. In particular, if you are serious about carry you do it every day. If you practice regularly (which if you carry you should) you are probably running a minimum of a 1,000 draws and holsters a year, maybe more. Every year. However good you are, sooner or later, something happens. THAT is what those safeties are for. Thinkingblade
Why do most people consider a 1911 unsafe to be carried with a round in the chamber, hammer ******, and safety off? There is nothing stopping the hammer from dropping on the firing pin in condition 0 if the sear slips. Condition 1, the thumb safety physically blocks the sear (and by extension, the hammer) from doing so (like if you drop it). Also, the only other safety is the grip safety, and that can mechanism can easily stick, even if you don't notice it. I'm pretty sure nobody here will argue for carrying a 1911 (EDC style) with no safeties engaged at all.So far - none of the answers are correct, real shame people who do not know crap about things have to chine in all the time - makes their ignorance show. From what I read, you posted the same point I did, called my answer incorrect, provided less information that was relevant to the question, and added a pointless back-story. Not surprising from Egowolf.

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