The picture was perfectly fine, you just don't know that much about guns. For example you call the Ruger a benchrest rifle, when it most certainly is not. Benchrest rifles aren't shot from the shoulder, so they never have adjustable stocks since they will be shot from a REST and not by a person holding it. That Ruger also doesn't have the correct forearm for a benchrest either. Perhaps you are confused at the terminology and mistakenly believed all high precision rifles with great accuracy were just termed benchrest. I don't know. At $1,600 new for that Ruger you could just buy a $800 Savage 110 or Remington 700, work up some handloads and be just as accurate as the Ruger.
The AR-15 platform is not rugged. Fairly easy to make them jam up and stop firing. Made of aluminum, not steel. They work great as long as they are maintained regularly and aren't used as prybars or bats like you could do with a M1 Garand or Mauser 98.
Easy there killer. I know you love to argue about stupid shit, but lets relax here for a moment.
No, the picture isn't all that clear, at least not from the browser I'm viewing it in. Many of those look like bolt actions.
No, I never said ALL Ruger's are bench rest rifles. You made that up. So the next few lines are arguing nothing.
Not all bench rest rifles are highly accurate, I agree. Again, never said ALL bench rest rifles were highly accurate. You made that up.
I can get that Ruger Precision Rifle, (that's the name it was given, not my description of it), for less than $1200. I would actually debate that both the Savage 110 and the Rem 700 (depending on who manufactured the barrel) will consistently be more accurate than the Ruger "Precision" Rifle. - Why do I think this? Because my Savage is more consistent than my buddy's Ruger. And I've put over 200 rounds of each down range on both.
I won't argue that AR is less rugged than the Garand, Mauser, Nagant and various others of the like. Those were built with endurance and durability in mind, and not looks as todays ARs are built for. - So that I agree. I will go on to say that several of my ARs took at least 2-300 rounds fired through them before all the "kinks" were worked out. Some fired consistently right off the bat, and have fired flawlessly. But some don't. That's the product of mass producing shit and not quality assuring it. I blame the manufacturer not the platform for that.
Next time try not to be so confrontational in your comments, its no wonder people have a hard time maintaining a good conversation with you.