RoyalDrew said:
what have you done to convince me, aka the average Canadian, that we should have unrestricted access to firearms?
Who has suggested that the "average Canadian" should have unrestricted access to firearms? You'll be hard-pressed to find anybody who does.
Although, that worked quite well for non-restricted firearms until the late 1970s. Dozens of sporterized Lee-Enfields could be found propped up on display in any Woolworths/Woolco department store bolts in and unchained for $30.00. Nobody had a problem with that, and life in general was far more peaceful.
ballz said:
This is why the only real argument that I can support is strong *storage* laws. The only interest the public has in my private ownership of a rifle is how my rifle is stored, because if stored improperly it may cause harm to people other than myself.
I disagree, as storage laws have been used as a blunt instrument with which honest firearms-owning citizens can be freely bludgeoned. That applies to one Toronto resident, Mike Hargreaves (I believe) who had his collection stolen from his personal vault while he was in Florida on holiday. It took two or three days for the criminals to cut into his vault, but he was charged anyway. Others have been charged even though the firearms were not technically in storage, but being transported or in use. Most lawyers, most police, and precious few judges understand the legislation as it's so confusing and convoluted.
Negligence laws are adequate to deal with an owner who has been truly negligent in the storage of his/her firearms and had them stolen. Generally, though, the owner is doubly victimized. He/she has had expensive property stolen and then been charged by the police for being a victim. That's like Sharia rape laws.
Halifax Tar said:
Just to play devils advocate what about the round that goes stray into your neighbour yard ? Can you guarentee all your rounds will stay from fire to fall on your land ?
Nobody can guarantee anything, but there are legal measures that deal with this, too - negligence under the Criminal Code and civil suits. That is adequate for most things, firearms-related or not.
ballz said:
There would only be two types of firearms. Legal ones and illegal ones.
And what would be an "Illegal firearm", and why? You admit that you do not really know. The nature of the firearm is irrelevant. It is the intent and action of the person wielding it that counts, not the tool. Nail criminals. Focussing on inanimate objects is stupid.
ObedientiaZelum said:
Firearms are a class unto themselves. Cars, baseball bats, knives etc.. are all involved in deaths of Canadians and in some cases like cars they cause more deaths but I think when we start comparing firearms to cars and bats we start to loose the Canadians we're trying to reach. .
Except that the Antis make the claim that "we register cars" and "we register dogs", etcetera. They've clearly polluted Drew. These claims need to be held up to the light whenever they are made. Nobody goes to jail for several years for refusing/neglecting to register a car or dog.
RoyalDrew said:
Firearms should be licensed because in the wrong hands they can be dangerous.
Firstly, firearms are/were
registered. Owners are
licensed.
Many other things are dangerous, too, yet no licences or registration are required.
And refusal/failure to get the applicable licence or register any item other than a firearm will not get one a jail term.
There is no justification for treating innocent citizens worse than child molesters or drug dealers for paper "crimes". None.
RoyalDrew said:
If I open a restaurant and don't get properly inspected and licensed should I be allowed to serve you food?
Not the same at all.
If one was to open a commercial range, there is a similarity.
The range should be inspected for safety, adequate insurance should be in place etcetera.
We are talking about private firearms ownership, though, and not commercial.
RoyalDrew said:
I've been cooking my whole life just like you have been handling firearms your whole life? But what if I contaminate your food with salmonella due to mal-practice? I think you get where I am going with this.
And, again, there are existing legal remedies that deal with negligence, including civil suits.
Nobody requires a licence to cook for friends and family, though, nor do they have to have their homes inspected or their kitchen stoves registered in order to avoid a few years in jail.
RoyalDrew said:
You seem very concerned about your "rights" but do you even know what that means? Without regulation and government, we have no rights because we don't have government there to protect those rights that we do have.
If you rely on a government to protect your rights, then you truly have none.
One only has the rights that one can protect oneself.
That is the whole reason behind then US Second Amendment. It protects citizens' ability to defend themselves against a government that has descended into tyranny.
Not that governments ever descend into tyranny, right?
RoyalDrew said:
The government has determined that it's in their interest to regulate firearms,
The government (Liberal) that inflicted the current Firearms Act upon us did so to gain votes in urban centres. That was the only way in which it was "in their interest to regulate firearms".
Other governments have done so in order to oppress and abuse, up to and including the point of mass-murder, their populations.
ballz said:
Why is a permit to purchase firearms and ammunition (aka a Firearms Acquisition Certificate or FAC as we used to call it) somehow less adequate than an expensive, onerous, and above all else intrustive license/registration system?
Indeed.
Although an FAC was not needed to purchase ammunition.
Firearms owners did not object to the FAC system, because it did not criminalize them as the current system does. They did not need to continually obtain government permission to continue to own their lawfully-acquired property or go to jail.
It did not achieve anything of value, either by preventing crime, accident, or suicide, but, then, neither does the licensing regime that replaced it.
ballz said:
I just don't see the *harm* in being allowed to own something like a silencer or anything else. If the public wants to take away my freedom to own a silencer or anything else, they need to demonstrate that there is a significant risk involved in allowing me to own a silencer.
A law-abiding citizen should not have to justify why he wants to own something, whether he owns it in case of the zombie apocalypse, in case of a tyrannical gov't, or whether he owns it because he likes to pretend he's playing Call of Duty on the range.
The onus is on the public to justify why owning a silencer or anything else represents such a great risk to society that it is justifiable to take away a man's freedom to own one.
Unfortunately, in our "free" society we have forgotten how precious freedom is and take away other's freedom on a whim to give ourselves a warm, fuzzy, feeling.
Bingo!
Yellow bits added by me.
Eaglelord17 said:
The reason why gun control should be reversed is simply put it doesn't effect its target.
Well, yes and no.
If the "target" is honest citizens who own firearms, as it really is, it is brilliantly effective.
If the "target" is dangerous criminals, then it is a complete waste of time and effort and money, as you said:
Eaglelord17 said:
If The whole reason to have gun control is to try to prevent criminals from getting firearms and reducing crime. It has been proven that this doesn't work. There have been many studies that show gun control has no effect on crime rates based on different countries with them. Russia has a high amount of crime and it has some very restrictive gun laws. Switzerland and Norway have very lax gun laws and they have very low crime rates.
Simply put crime rates are not affected by gun control and in come cases cause them to increase (crime rates have gone up in the UK since they have changed there laws). The reason why they do not affect crime is simple, only law abiding citizens follow the law. Making a new law has no effect if they don't follow them in the first place (eg. murder is already illegal, robbery is already illegal etc.).
As to the firearm suicide comments in regards to storage (I don't call them 'safe' storage requirements), yes the rates of firearm suicide have decreased, but the rates of suicide have increased in other areas to make up for the loss.
And as to prohibiting different firearms based on things like being fully automatic, barrel length etc. There is no point. The fact is criminals already have access to these items, they know they are not allowed to own them in the first place (how many criminals do you think have gun licences) but they still acquire them for there purposes. For many years civilians were allowed to own and acquire fully automatic firearms in Canada (up until 1978 then you were grandfathered). There is still many fully automatic firearms in civilian hands, guess how much crimes are committed with them. Fully automatic firearms are not even shot much even if you have the option (just costs so much for ammo). Fully automatic is mainly only useful for two things, suppressing fire and room clearing otherwise it is just wasting ammo. I feel you can do just as much damage with a semi-automatic (if not more as your magazine doesn't empty instantly). Bolt actions are the same way, if you are taking accurate shots then you can do much more damage then someone that is just 'spraying and praying'.
There should be no need to justify owning something. We are a society of wants not needs. People do not need cars, or TVs, or computers etc. but we WANT them. You do not actually need much to survive.
And in regards to licencing I am still a bit uncertain on where I stand on this. There are two ways I would like to see this, either have one class of firearms (so you can buy every firearm with this one licence) with one licence that never expires (but can be taken away if you commit a crime) and you have to be crime free to acquire the licence. Or have a database that has the names of all the people that have been convicted and when you go to buy a firearm they look up your name and if nothing comes up you are good to go.
I would not normall quote a whole post of this length. I made a rare exception due to its quality.
Thank-you.
Crantor said:
Decriminalise simple violations
Except the federal government has no jurisdiction to regulate private property. That is the domain of the provinces.
It is in the Criminal Code because that is the only way that the federal government can "control" private firearms ownership. There are no non-criminal ways of dealing with Criminal Code infractions.
Mosquito - meet colour television.