I've always been a Wendy's/ Krystal/Bojangles'/del taco kind of person when it came to fast food anyways. I do have a small weakness for chicken fires from burger king.
When I was 4 I set a few cheap plastic lawn chairs on fire that had a car sponge and some random stuff on it in the garage. My mom noticed and put it out. I got the biggest ass whooping possible. I remember later on I had a cheap airsoft pistol and would shoot bees in the flower bed with it.
The thing is the older guy could have just not gone to the police and they wouldn't have gotten into the mess. That was their dumb mistake. People don't know what you got unless you start babbling off .
Most perceived "collectible" guns do not gain much value. If you want ones that hold or gain real value for sure, you need to get into old Colt SAAs(1st gen), early Smith and Wessons, and really really old Winchesters.
The only other 45's I had were not really worse than Hi-Point, just not as easy for me to shoot as accurately. I've owned a few 1911s, M&Ps, and used to own a Glock 30.
There needs to be a challenge to see who hits the paper plate at 50 yards first. Will it be the one with the Hi-Point or the one with the Kimber or Taurus?
I used to own a Hi-Point .45 pistol and admit that it was one of the best shooting .45 auto pistols I have owned. Hitting a paper plate at 50 yards with it did not seem to be a challenge either. Ugly, but I'm not gonna lie, it was probably one of the best .45s I've owned other than my Glock 21.
Night sights are a waste of money. Why buy fancy sights with glow in the dark vials that are only good for only several years? The money would be better spent on a quality mounted light, ammo, or a holster.