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Yeah, sounds good. Well, like in a firing squad situation, when they kill a person, usually that person... I mean, it's not as peaceful as they try to make it sound. Usually that person is shot many, many times, multiple times, to where they go through agonizing pain, and they're literally begging for death before there's that death blow. So, that's one thing to consider in that kind of way. But where as far as shooting something even after they're dead, John Notorio from the Roaring Twenties believed that he was afraid that the ghosts of his enemies would come back and haunt them. And he talked about like if he was shooting somebody down, he said he had to shoot their ghost. So, he would use that to kill somebody. So, he would usually come back to the site to where he did the killing, and just lay a bunch of slugs into the air, because he believed that he wanted to let the ghosts from beyond understand that we mean business, and don't come back after this. So, there was certainly that. Now, I don't know if everybody else in this crew thought that way, but he certainly did. He had all kind of beliefs. At one point, he even, what was it? He even like used, he used like a, he garnished the bullets with garlic in the belief like that did something more when you use them. So, yeah, that's just crazy stuff. But that's what it made me think of when you said shooting things even after they're dead. And he always said, don't, don't even think about coming back and haunting me. So, so he apparently, he was afraid of or believed in ghosts.

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