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In Canada, a ban on more than 1,500 firearm makes, models and variants, together with a mandatory government confiscation (“buyback”) requirement, was imposed by Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over four years ago. Contrary to the representations as to the inherent deadliness of these guns and the urgency of ensuring these dangerous weapons were no longer available to ordinary citizens, the government had no plan on how to implement the law (and all indications are that it still doesn’t). The ban and buyback were coupled with an amnesty period, extended to October 2025, to protect owners of formerly lawful firearms from criminal liability for possessing them until the confiscation requirement was operational.

In announcing the ban, the Liberal government was emphatic that it was not intended to prohibit guns used for legitimate activities like hunting or sport shooting, but only those “designed for soldiers to kill other soldiers…guns that belong on a battlefield and not on our streets.” SOR/2020-96, the Order-in-Council (regulation) listing the newly-banned firearms, devices and parts, repeatedly stressed that the prohibited guns are those “primarily designed for military or paramilitary purposes with the capability of injuring, immobilizing or killing humans in large numbers within a short period of time given the basic characteristics they possess, such as tactical or military design and capability of holding a quickly reloadable large-capacity magazine. While some of these newly prohibited firearms were previously used by individuals for hunting or sporting purposes, it is the view of the Government that those firearms are unreasonable and disproportionate for such purposes.” The banned guns are “tactical and/or military-style firearms and are not reasonable for hunting or sport shooting.”

The government assurances, like its misleading terminology, were meaningless. The ban included ordinary semiautomatic rifles and shotguns used by responsible hunters, trappers, farmers, sport shooters and Indigenous Canadians. A report prepared by the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters (OFAH), for instance, examined previously non-restricted firearms prohibited under SOR/ 2020-96. It began by emphasizing a critical difference between “military vs. military-style” firearms. Prior to May 1, 2020, the firearms prohibited under SOR/2020-96 were, in fact, “available to civilians in Canada with the appropriate level of licensing required to own and possess them.” What most Canadians consider to be “military firearms” are fully automatic weapons using large capacity magazines; however, guns with a fully automatic action and “high capacity magazines” were already prohibited prior to Trudeau’s ban and unavailable for civilian activities like hunting and recreational shooting.

An OFAH survey cited in the report analyzed how a few of the previously non-restricted but now banned firearms had been used. Sixty-four guns (54 rifles and 10 shotguns) were identified by respondents as having “a wide variety of legitimate, lawful, highly regulated, and socioeconomically important uses, including but not limited to collection, hunting, protection of property (e.g., livestock), sport shooting, teaching firearms safety and skills, and trapping. Fifty-five (85.9%) of the 64 firearms were identified as being used for hunting prior to prohibition, with 44 (68.8%) identifying hunting as the primary use.” “The percentage of firearms identifying shooting sports (competition, target shooting/plinking, trap and skeet) as a use was even higher at 92.2% (81.3% as a primary use).” Guns like these, it seems, were the fundamentally “military or paramilitary” firearms that the Liberals claim their ban is restricted to.

Undermining the official “safety” rationale, another commentator pointed out that “of the 1,500 types of guns [Trudeau] banned that day through regulation, there was no history of gun crime with them. They were rifles and shotguns used for hunting and for target shooting, but the guns belonging to licensed owners were not the crime guns most people were concerned about.”

The most recent argument that the Trudeau government’s gun ban and confiscation plan was not aimed at true military or paramilitary firearms but was, instead, a wholesale attack on responsible gun owners and their property is a news report on the effect the ban has apparently had on shooting ranges.

Since May 2020, affected gun owners have been forbidden to use, transport, or transfer the banned firearms except in the very limited circumstances allowed for under federal law. A Canadian gun-rights site, TheGunBlog.ca, states that in the four years following the ban and confiscation law, the number of government-approved shooting ranges in Canada has dropped by 36 percent. Despite the number of ranges remaining relatively stable between 2013 and 2019, the “country had 891 government-approved ranges in March 2024 compared with ‘approximately 1,400’ at the end of 2019, according to the Ottawa-based Royal Canadian Mounted Police.” “Shooting clubs and ranges are at the heart of gun culture and community as hubs to discover the joys of shooting, develop knowledge and skill, and socialize with other gun users,” and the steep decline “is the newest data showing the Liberals, assisted by the RCMP, are partially succeeding in their campaign to suppress gun culture.” The gun-rights site notes that other factors (COVID-19, rising costs, aging members) could be responsible, but adds that nonetheless, the Liberal government “targeted their newest confiscations at the most-active gun users: Recreational and sport shooters firing semi-automatic rifles (May 2020) and handguns (October 2022).”

While lawful gun owners remain permanently prohibited from using their banned guns, criminals, true to form, are uninhibited by legal niceties. A May opinion piece in Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper observes that public safety hasn’t fared at all well since the ban was imposed. “[F]irearm-related homicide actually increased 23 per cent in Canada from 2020 to 2022,” and that “rates of firearm-related violent crimes… reached record levels in 2022. But that makes sense when most of the crimes committed with firearms are committed by those who obtain them illegally. Indeed, according to Statistics Canada, ‘the firearms used in homicides [in 2022] were rarely legal firearms used by their legal owners who were in good standing.’” Summing up the Trudeau policies on “military-style assault rifles” “(a made-up designation; he might as well called them ‘scary looking monster guns’),” the writer concludes that this “is another job well done for this government, if the job was making an announcement and then flailing aimlessly for the next several years.”

Indeed, little about the ban and “buyback” law suggests anything remotely based on evidence, care for appropriate terminology, or concern with addressing actual causes of crime. A prescient May 2020 letter from OFAH to the government identified the potential for “unintended consequences” resulting from the law due to inadequate preparation and a possible lack of transparency as to intent. The “mismatch between the government’s stated intent and the outcomes of the amended regulations have fueled an already burning mistrust of government policy related to firearms. Either the intent doesn’t match the outcome, because of unintended consequences resulting from a lack of robust regulatory consultation and adequate preparation, or the government’s intent has not been truly articulated.”

 

—Courtesey NRA-ILA

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29 COMMENTS

  1. Before gun powder you still had weapons control. Gun control is just more of the same. It has never been about crime control. It has always been about tyrant protection.

    Always.

    • I remember that the popo knew he was a nutjob beforehand, didn’t use the notification system that was set up for emergencies like this one, and investigated themselves afterwards and found no fault with any of their actions
      ….kinda like US agencies.
      But, it’s the gunz!!

  2. And to think that I used to go to Canada to buy guns that were deemed too dangerous to be imported into the USA.

  3. Canaduh has gone commie. Castro’s kid has followed in the rotten footsteps of Fidel. With a giant country having a tiny population how do the Commies find all those gats???

    • Through the Google AI BigBrother
      program that moniters everything said on public boards just like this one

        • Yesterdays impossible is todays conspiracy and eventually becomes tomorrows mundane “of course they do that.”

          We couldn’t spy like that even if we wanted to -> We’re only spying on really bad people -> Arrest this traitor for leaking spying secrets!! -> we have to spy on everyone all the time for muh safety

          The people’s response in kind:

          That’s impossible, nobody’s doing that -> We’ll, if it’s only bad people -> Yeah, arrest him! -> You don’t have anything to hide, do you?

          The creep only ever goes in the direction of totalitarianism. Despite all the complaining and lip-service nobody really wants autonomy, freedom, privacy, liberty or any of that fairy tale stuff. They’ll drag it out of the cage to score political points occasionally but that’s about it. The boot just presses harder and harder year after year, decade after decade until something cataclysmic happens to smash it all down and people born into despotism fight for their freedom only for it to be squandered and thrown away a century or two later.

  4. More human than human.
    What are we going to do if the Mooses attack?
    Honk if your horny.
    Oh no can’t do that either.
    What a hoser.

  5. I went to Canada once. Beautiful real estate. Had a good time. I was on a deployment at Ft. Drum. We had been in the field for 30 days. The army bussed us into Watertown for a day of R&R. Me and a couple of buddies hooked up with a local who loaned us some fishing gear and helped us rent a couple of boats. (Who says New Yorkers aren’t friendly?) We fished our way across the St. Lawrence seaway, had lunch, a few beers at a titty bar and went back to the U.S. In the meantime a battalion of infantry had nearly destroyed every bar in Watertown. Good times.

  6. Things are so different in Canada. I believe that, just like England, they do not recognize a right of self-defense, but instead impose a “must flee” rule whenever it is possible to do so. I remember a case where two or three thugs were trying to burn this guy’s house down, and did succeed in destroying a few cars. He came outside armed and fired at the arsonists. Since it was all on his video security system, the CRMP had plenty of evidence with which to charge the homeowner with unlawful use of a firearm, etc.

  7. Really amusing, or tragic, that one of the banned guns is a Ruger No1. A single shot rifle! Why? Because it was available in a caliber the Canadian government thought was “too powerful”. The thing is, this caliber is NOT available from Ruger but from a custom gunsmith who probably made no more than a handful.

    It looks like any excuse will do.

    • I really like a Ruger #1. I had one once in 7X57. Gave it to a friend to give to his granddaughter. Low recoil and she’s a lefty. Looking for another one. In almost any popular caliber.

    • . So custom single shots in a certain caliber our out? That sux.
      I wonder if that Rider/Shooter guy is in jail?
      He was talking about tooling up and stuff. Come help the cause, then all of a sudden he disappeared.
      Ehhhh, he was probably
      just a Fed phishing.

      • Could have been a statie trying for anyone they know posts (through whatever means). Always is fun to read how such operations tend to go where they are either told to fuck off, ignored till they go away, or everyone not glowing or retarded leaves the group long before a bust where they come up empty.

  8. Once the citizenry is disarmed the government can do anything it wants to do. It can eliminate elections and its subjects can’t do a thing to stop them. Those who say things like, “That will never happen” are the ones who have plans to do just that.

    • Just wait until some radical environmentalist decides to eliminate carbon emissions by eliminating people.

      • Seeing what Canada, Australia, and New Zealand were willing to do during COVID was bad enough and reminds me to check out the appeal status on the Covid concentration camp lawsuit that was dismissed a while ago.

    • Its already here, gunms or not.
      We’ve had the 3rd civil war and it was won or lost, depending on which side of the fence a person sat on, with credit and credit cards.
      And the American patriots believe the next president will make a change, and when that doesn’t happen they believe they can sue their way to Freedom.

      • That last part would be the preferred means of achieving that goal yes. Failing that…….well things go to suck pretty quickly. As to the credit cards…..yeah all your data are belong to is

  9. Put that nutjob PM in front of an angry moose (bullwinkle?) with one of his approved shuuters and see how long he lasts. Take off eh?

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