BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Peter Rostas doesn't want to have any reason to use the gun he was buying, but the young Hungarian father of one was taking no chances with a coronavirus epidemic he fears may bring out the worst in some people.
"It's a precautionary measure," Rostas, 33, said as he queued outside a small Budapest shop selling non-military grade weapons that require no licence. "I'd rather be laughing later than find myself in a conflict with nothing but a broomstick."
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