Marty said:
I just dont see the need for someone to own one of these things
Well Marty, I just don't see the need for anyone to own a 22-250 A Bolt, but as a fellow firearms owner I am not about to question your particular preference. No offence intended, but it is precisely your type of "my gun is good, yours is bad" thinking that creates divisions within the Recreational Firearms Community and allows the Federal Government to pursue its incremental "death of a thousand cuts" iin the ceaseless attack against legitimate firearms owners. If you understand the history of firearms legislation in Canada and the underlying motivations of our elected representatives, then you are fully aware that the stated intent of the Liberal government and their overly-urbanized supporters is to slowly but surely eradicate private firearms ownership within this country. They started with incremental prohibitions placed on certain types of military-style firearms back in 1978, and have successively tightened the screws ever since.
Having now prohibited the vast majority of military-style firearms and legislated their confiscation (without compensation) within the current generation of owners, the hoplophobes are simply following their established plan by moving on to firearms such as the Ruger Mini series of "Ranch Rifles". Please tell me how the Ruger rifles are any more "dangerous" to the public interest than your Browning A Bolt? The Ruger "Minis" have a legitmate and well-established role in Canada for sporting, sustenance, and predator-control purposes. However, because the Government can play on the residual emotion of one deranged criminal's horrific acts at L'Ecole Polytechnic, they see the Ruger rifles as an ideal "flagship" to lead the charge for their next entirely predictable round of prohibitions.
And once the precedent is set with prohibition of the Ruger sporting rifles, guess who is next. You'd best enjoy your A-bolt while you can, because once the "antis" have banned everything else, firearms like yours will be next. I'm willing to bet that you have a scope on your Browning. That, combined with the high-velocity long-range 22-250 cartridge makes it a perfect "sniper rifle", wouldn't you say? My point being that those with an emotional agenda can "demonize" anything. Unlike you, they don't attempt to distinguish between "good guns and bad guns". They want them ALL banned. And mark my words, they won't stop with the next round of prohibitions. Just like they didn't stop with the previous prohibition orders in 1978, 1992, 1994 and 1998.....
Why do we see Restricted Firearms on display when the Police raid drug dens? The answer is simple - criminals smuggle or steal what they cannot obtain by legitimate means. Your belief that the criminal element would suddenly lack access to restricted and prohibited firearms if they were banned outright is utterly facile. The fact that criminals ALREADY have no legal access to such firearms certainly doesn't seem to have much of an impact on their ability to readily acquire them, does it? And please don't try to tell me that this is because such firearms are stolen from licensed owners. The simple fact of the matter is that the vast majority of firearms used in crime are "black-market" guns. They are either smuggled in bulk across the border, or are the very same formerly-legitimate firearms that the Federal Government unwittingly pushed onto the black market with its continued implementation of draconian firearms laws.
Once again, your logic is fundamentally flawed and your distinction between certain types of firearm is completely irrational. My .223 AR-15 with its legally blocked 5-round magazines is no more of a threat to Canadian society than your .22-250 Browning A Bolt. Just because YOU don't personally have a use for such a firearm doesn't mean that it has no legitimate sporting purpose (see my post above).
It is time to get your head out of the sand Marty. Playing the "my firearms are good, but yours are bad" game simply provides the anti-gun forces with increased opportunity to attack a fractured recreational firearms community. To paraphrase, "either we all stand together or we shall surely all hang as individuals". Maintain your current attitude and one thing is certain - the time will come when your "evil, high-powered sniper rifle" is next on the chopping block. Perhaps then you will finally see the light. Sadly, by that point you will be standing all alone.....
Some food for thought.