Post Office joins other federal agencies stockpiling over two billion rounds
of ammo
Kit Daniels
Infowars.com
February 5, 2014
The U.S. Postal Service is currently seeking companies that can provide
“assorted small arms ammunition” in the near future.
On Jan. 31, the USPS Supplies and Services Purchasing Office posted a notice
on the Federal Business Opportunities website asking contractors to
register with USPS as potential ammunition suppliers for a variety of
cartridges.
“The United States Postal Service intends to solicit proposals for assorted
small arms ammunition,” the notice reads, which also mentioned a deadline of
Feb. 10.
The Post Office published the notice just two days after Sen. Rand Paul
(R-Ky.) announced his proposal to remove a federal gun ban that prevents lawful
concealed carry holders from carrying handguns inside post offices across the
country.
Ironically the Postal Service isn’t the first non-law enforcement agency
seeking firearms and ammunition.
Since 2001, the U.S. Dept. of Education has been building a massive arsenal
through purchases orchestrated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms.
The Education Dept. has spent over $80,000 so far on Glock pistols and over
$17,000 on Remington shotguns.
Back in July, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration also
purchased 72,000 rounds of .40 Smith & Wesson, following a 2012
purchase for 46,000 rounds of .40 S&W jacketed hollow point by the National
Weather Service.
NOAA spokesperson Scott Smullen responded to concerns over the weather
service purchase by stating that it was meant for the NOAA Fisheries Office of
Law Enforcement for its bi-annual “target qualifications and training.”
That seems excessive considering that JHP ammunition is typically several
times more expensive than practice rounds, which can usually be found in
equivalent power loadings and thus offer similar recoil characteristics as duty
rounds.
Including mass purchases by the Dept. of Homeland Security, non-military
federal agencies combined have purchased an estimated amount of over
two billion rounds of ammunition in the past two years.
Additionally, the U.S. Army bought almost 600,000 Soviet AK-47 magazines last
fall, enough to hold nearly 18,000,000 rounds of 7.62x39mm ammo which is not
standard-issue for either the U.S. military or even NATO.
It would take a Lockheed Martin C-5 Galaxy, one of the largest cargo aircraft
in the world, two trips to haul that many magazines.
A month prior, the army purchased nearly 3,000,000 rounds of 7.62x39mm ammo, a huge
amount but still only 1/6th of what the magazines purchased can hold in
total.
The Feds have also spent millions on riot control measures in addition to the
ammo acquisitions.
Earlier this month, Homeland Security spent over $58 million on hiring security
details for just two Social Security offices in Maryland.
DHS also spent $80 million on armed guards to protect government buildings in
New York and sought even more guards for federal facilities in Wisconsin and Minnesota.
While the government gears up for civil unrest and stockpiles ammo without
limit, private gun owners on the other hand are finding ammunition shelves empty
at gun stores across America, including shortages of once-common cartridges such as .22 Long
Rifle.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
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