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Thug Aim

A notion once penned in 1906 by Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin, regarding the accuracy of thugs in urban areas of the United States. The study persisted until 1918 when World War I saw that the study's resources were diminished. The results of the study were released in 1924 and were met with limited applause. The main subjects of the study consisted of experimentation with the accuracy and prevailing notion that the common thug does not have substantially improved aim over that of a common person. Preliminary testing consisted of use of the Hotchkiss M1909 a gun widely used by prominent mafia's and thugs. The results of the study are detailed further in the subsections below.

Recently, the study has come under much fire after many found that getting into a gun fight with a thug proved to be fatal, as the results of the study insisted that the accuracy of a thug would severely limit his effectiveness in a gun fight, assuming one could hit him before he could get off 11 shots, since statistically the thug would hit at or around the 12th shot.