Personally I am cheap, I make a good living but not into spending big money on stuff. Yes I prefer to eat at wendy's or McDonald's. I own most red rifles and a ross but not the expensive .280 ross but the cheap sporter M-10. I think we are not poor just cheap and reliable people just like our rifles.
I'm a Middle Aged Rural Professional who just figured out the internet a few years ago.
I like Red Rifles because they are well built, reliable and take a beating like none of my far more expensive rifles do, at a great price. And if the grizzly doesn't drop after emptying the mag, they have bayonets.
22, and not long starting a job where I have more expendable funds to throw around. Shot shotguns all of my life, and a .22 for some plinking, then this caught my eye. I like it for the fact that it's NR, I can take it in the woods (There's 1 shooting range in this province), and there's plenty of ammo available. I wouldn't say I got it on price point alone by any means. Now that I'm on the forums, I'm just reading more and more about the reds, and I'll probably be picking up more in the near future. Fingers crossed on the Type 97. Who knows, I might even pick up an SKS.
^ csa vz-58.
They interest me and they're fun to shoot while for the most part remaining inexpensive. I need to get four more specific SKS's and maybe a Type 81 when/if they come into the country and I'll be set for red rifles for the most part.
Then I'll move onto black rifles, which aren't cheap. I'm pretty cheap, but willing to spend money on things that interest me and have worth. I just don't waste my cash.
You're pretty lucky then as apparently according to the higher ups I need another 16 to complete my collection.
I couldn't be farther away from your idea of the "average red rifle owner".
I care about what goes in my body, I care about not wasting my hard earned money on junk. (I'm not saying red rifles are junk, I'm just arguing against your chosen lifestyle)
Cheap is another word for "ill-informed sucker".
Quit acting like being cheap is a positive quality to have.
What I find most interesting about any person I've ever come across that has admitted to being "cheap"... They will spend 25 dollars on running shoes, feel great that they got such a good deal. 2 weeks later when their feet, legs and back are aching, and the shoes they bought make their feet stink and they are already falling apart from regular use, they go out and buy ANOTHER pair of 25 dollar shoes, when for 90 dollars, they would have a proper pair of shoes that could last over a year.