Long Gun Registry -Yes- No

Long Gun Registry - For - Against - To Lazy to care


  • Total voters
    43
  • Poll closed .

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
have you ever hit the nail incorrectly, missed it completely, hit your finger?
That I have....and before you ask...in my lifetime I have fired at least 25000 round out of handguns and rifles and I have never accidently shot myself or other humans in the process...so your questions are irrelevant:roll:
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
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The following quote is from the LINK posted in the Opening Post:

Const. Randy Kuntz posted a question on an online forum for Blue Line Magazine,
a police publication, asking whether police supported the long-gun registry as a useful
working tool. Over the course of 14 months, Const. Kuntz said, he received online
responses and emails from 2,631 police officers.

Some 92% of respondents, or 2,410 officers, said the registry was a useless crime
-fighting tool, said Const. Kuntz.

“All it’s doing is tracking legal-owned firearms, which is kind of useless,” said Const.
Kuntz, who is also a long-gun owner and acts as a wilderness hunting guide. “I don’t
know how you’d use it as a crime-fighting tool. I’ve been straining for years trying to
figure that one out.”




I don't know the answers to the following questions, but I'm going to
throw them out here anyway.

What % of the total of all the "Law Abiding" (=non-criminal element)
have not registered all or any of their firearms?

What % of the total of all the "Non-Law Abiding" (=criminal element)
have registered all or any of their firearms?

What % of the total of all the firearms that where actually registered
are actually firearms....and not household items like hand-drills and
blow-dryers registered in protest?

What % of all of the inquiries by law enforcement to this gun registry
are legitimate and intentional inquiries...and not due to it being tied
automatically to CPIC?

Of the legitimate and intentional inquiries to this gun registry, how
many of those claimed are double or tripled up numbers due to the
automatic redundancy for every inquiry?

Ron, there's a reason that scientific survey methods are sent out randomly. There's a huge selection bias in an online call for input. Those with an axe to grind are already out there looking for this stuff. The police who use this tool as just a tool and have no problems aren't cruising the internet forums ranting about it.

As to whether or not it's useless, there is some rather famous testimony going around right now in the media. Some family members were concerned about a suicidal family member who owned some guns. They wanted the guns removed. The police checked the registry and found 21 long guns registered in addition to the firearms the family members informed police of.

So, there's one actual example.

In the same vein, I wouldn't go to a pharmaceutical forum to get a representative view of the health professions views on treating suicidal patients.
 

Goober

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 23, 2009
24,691
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Moving
That I have....and before you ask...in my lifetime I have fired at least 25000 round out of handguns and rifles and I have never accidently shot myself or other humans in the process...so your questions are irrelevant:roll:
Non?...If you have a tool that you don't feel is safe to use....one word for it is "Useless"!
The registry is a tool - How you use it and the information is up to the officer making the call.

And i have not shot anyoe and I have fired off a lot more rounds than that - Handguns to 50 Cals, and 1 time a M109 round - 155 cal - But Ii have hit my thumb with a hammer a few times -
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
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Tony: Comparing apples and oranges

It's called an analogy. An officer that relies on one tool is taking a grave risk. A mariner that relies on one tool is taking a grave risk.

A is to B as C is to D.

You misrepresented what the Officer told you.
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
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Northern Ontario,
It's called an analogy. An officer that relies on one tool is taking a grave risk. A mariner that relies on one tool is taking a grave risk.

A is to B as C is to D.

You misrepresented what the Officer told you.
Nope I didn't missinterpret ...he very specifically said that he would not rely on it for safety, and that the only consideration given to the registry was if he had orders to remove all guns from a residence.. if the registry said that there were five guns and he only found four he would ask more questuins and search till he found the missing one.
But apon going in he would go in with the same precautions either way.
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
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It is simply not a valid police tool.

It does not tell where firearms are for the following reasons:

So, DNA databases aren't valid tools?

1. At MOST 75% of the long arms in Canada are registered.
Most Canadians don't have DNA in a databse.

2. You can loan a firearm to any person holding a license.......then the gun is not at the address it was registered to....but somewhere else, perfectly legally.
Sure, or the gun could be there, as the registry says.

You could loan your car to someone who runs over a pedestrian and flees. If the cops get a license plate ID from an eye witness, they can follow the registry to your door. Then you can tell them where to find your asshole friend.

3. The registry is so screwed up with inaccurate information that it is NOT ADMISSIBLE in court....that kinda says it all, doesn't it?
Not really. The gun registry isn't evidence that a crime was committed with a firearm, so why would it be admissible. It can lead to evidence, which is admissible.

Even if EVERY long gun was legally registered, the police would have to be idiots to assume the presence of firearms based on the registry.
Agreed. So stop setting up straw men where you make cops idiots. I have cops in my family, and they aren't idiots.

And everybody seems to forget; the same police would dance a jig if the Charter were burned on Parliament Hill.........
Ahh, so you don't think they're idiots, it's much worse your contempt.

Any state where the police dictate policy is known as a Police state.....
The police didn't make the laws....they just enforce them, using the tools we give them.

think about that.
A state that ignores the testimony of the experts in a field is not using evidence based decision making. They are using ideology based evidence ignoring.

Think about that.

Can't argue this tonite: simply an opening salvo....later folks!
Miss. My battleship is that way------------>

My turn. F9.
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
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So, DNA databases aren't valid tools?

Most Canadians don't have DNA in a databse.

Sure, or the gun could be there, as the registry says.

You could loan your car to someone who runs over a pedestrian and flees. If the cops get a license plate ID from an eye witness, they can follow the registry to your door. Then you can tell them where to find your asshole friend.

Not really. The gun registry isn't evidence that a crime was committed with a firearm, so why would it be admissible. It can lead to evidence, which is admissible.

Agreed. So stop setting up straw men where you make cops idiots. I have cops in my family, and they aren't idiots.

Ahh, so you don't think they're idiots, it's much worse your contempt.

The police didn't make the laws....they just enforce them, using the tools we give them.

A state that ignores the testimony of the experts in a field is not using evidence based decision making. They are using ideology based evidence ignoring.

Think about that.

Miss. My battleship is that way------------>

My turn. F9.

Your comparison of registry and DNA data has one fatal flaw.....

the DNA database are all criminals.

that you want to treat all gun owners the same as criminal deviants is quite revealing of the mindset of the anti-gunners.....


BTW....you CAN NOT call the registry with a serial number (as you would with a car) and identify the address and person to whom the gun is registered.

I'm not kidding. That is how big a mess it is. It is USELESS.

And I don't have contempt for police, I've worked with them a lot, and they have a tough job. But protecting the constitutional rights of the people is NOT high on their agenda.......it should be on the agenda of our Parliamentarians....and (for ONCE at least) I like to see the gov't come down on the side of Liberty.....

I think your battleship is turning turtle, my friend. :)

I'm to bed...up for a 12 hour shift in 5 1/2 hours......
 

wulfie68

Council Member
Mar 29, 2009
2,014
24
38
Calgary, AB
I'm against the registry for a couple reasons:

- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs or whatever they call them now (I stopped hunting about 15 years ago and stopped borrowing Dad's rifle and shotgun then). To buy or even transport a firearm, you were (are?) legally required to get an FAC (which involved a background check of the applicant... a good thing IMO). Last I heard it was expanding to the point that you needed one to purchase ammunition (which in some ways makes more sense). Now we come down to an inpretation question: do cops responding need to know how many firearms and of what calibre may (or may not, as Colpy pointed out) be present or just that the address they are responding to has residents who own firearms? To my mind it goes back to the point that cops shouldn't let their guard down because of what a database says, regardless...

- as others have pointed out, the registry creates criminals of otherwise law abiding citizens who think it was a politicized pile of BS, particularly rural Canadians who live in locales where a hunting rifle is a necessary tool. And yes my relatives are included in this... I probably would be too if I owned any guns but I alway used Dad's for hunting.

- I'll concede the cost isn't as great now that its been established but there is still a cost to update and maintain it, as well (as Colpy and others have pointed out) the accuracy of the data contained within it is highly suspect

I'm not opposed to some gun control measures: I think we were close to getting it right with the whole FAC system, with its background checks, etc. Conversely, the long gun registry was a redundant piece of crap from Day One, brought to us by an idiot whose idea of solving a problem is lip service and a simplistic approach to a different issue. The Registry was created after Marc Lepine killed those girls at L'Ecole Polytechnique, but it hasn't stopped other disturbed young people from packing guns and using them in educational institutions... like Alan Rockhead promised all his braindead supporters in Toronto that it would...
 

Omicron

Privy Council
Jul 28, 2010
1,694
3
38
Vancouver
Years ago when all this foolish registration started I asked a few RCMP officers I was target shooting wit, what they thought of this registration process....
He said that any officer worth his salt walks into every situation as if the residence
"- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs"
Huh? I wasn't already. Geezus muther ****ing momma of Crist you've got to be kidding.

- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs

Years ago when all this foolish registration started I asked a few RCMP officers I was target shooting wit, what they thought of this registration process....
He said that any officer worth his salt walks into every situation as if the residence
"- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs"
Huh? I wasn't already. Geezus muther ****ing momma of Crist you've got to be kidding.

- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs

Years ago when all this foolish registration started I asked a few RCMP officers I was target shooting wit, what they thought of this registration process....
He said that any officer worth his salt walks into every situation as if the residence
"- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs"
Huh? I wasn't already. Geezus muther ****ing momma of Crist you've got to be kidding.

- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs
Huh? I wasn't already. Geezus muther ****ing momma of Crist you've got to be kidding.

- the information it provides/provided about the possibility of legally owned firearms being present is redundant with the use of the database for people obtaining FACs

This is such a sad thing about how you people want a good government before you started thinking of a way to use them for business and not for civilization.

Alright, let's see it. An RCMP corruptible.
 
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Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
:protest: Ditch it. It was a useless, knee jerk, politically motivated, piece of garbage when instigated. Allan Numbnuts thought it was his catapult into 24 Sussex. Thank Christ that didn't happen.

Now some Con has put forward a private members bill aimed at cancelling it. Good idea, but we all know what happens to private members bills most of the time. The minority con govt. could fall on this, so Harpo is smart enough to pad things so Iggy and Jacko can be mollified and allow his highness to continue spending our tax dollars. More fake lakes, etc.

Tempest in a pisspot, folks. It stays; it only costs 2 mill. a year now to run it............:roll: er so they say. It goes..........so wot.!!!

Any cop who answers a domestic and is off guard because the "registry" says there ain't no guns at this address.................:-(..........well, RIP. Cops just ain't that dumb. They always assume the worst, and most of the time, their assumptions are correct.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,467
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Location, Location
I don't see anything wrong with a long gun registry.
'It makes criminals out of otherwise law-abiding citizens'. That's a foolish argument. If people choose to disobey a law, that's a decision to not be a law-abiding citizen.

People register and license cars, boats, snowmobiles, pets, etc etc.

What's the big deal, just because it's something called a gun? It's because people are paranoid. That's the only reason. People are scared that the government will decide to seize their guns. The cure for that is to elect more people who think the way you do, then the government won't do things you don't like.

Sure, the registry cost too much to set up, that's beside the point. There's nothing wrong with a long gun registry, and there's also nothing wrong with people owning long guns.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
Police Chiefs are political animals. Have you done some reading to see
what the rank&file officers think about this issue?
I'll do you one better, I've actually talked to Constables...

The common opinion?

They like it. It gives them a heads up, when going to a call.

But that isn't what's being touted as the big win, nor what the sales pitch of the registry was, now is it?
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
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Vernon, B.C.
I don't see anything wrong with a long gun registry.
'It makes criminals out of otherwise law-abiding citizens'. That's a foolish argument. If people choose to disobey a law, that's a decision to not be a law-abiding citizen.

People register and license cars, boats, snowmobiles, pets, etc etc.

What's the big deal, just because it's something called a gun? It's because people are paranoid. That's the only reason. People are scared that the government will decide to seize their guns. The cure for that is to elect more people who think the way you do, then the government won't do things you don't like.

Sure, the registry cost too much to set up, that's beside the point. There's nothing wrong with a long gun registry, and there's also nothing wrong with people owning long guns.

Your argument is a little flawed. I doubt like Hell if the Government is going to seize our guns- that just doesn't make any sense. But back to your argument, the guns that are in the "wrong" hands just aren't likely to get registered. Vehicles are a little different, they change hands a lot more often than guns do. They also have to be identified for benign purposes. With the gun registry you are hasseling 98% of the population for no valid reason. So once you start with guns what's the next step? Knives? machetes? baseball bats? Where is it going to end? :smile:
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
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Location, Location
Vehicles are a little different, they change hands a lot more often than guns do. They also have to be identified for benign purposes. With the gun registry you are hasseling 98% of the population for no valid reason.

I don't follow your reasoning. Why do cars have to be identified for 'benign purposes'? Why do you think that registering guns is 'hassling' the population, but registering cars isn't?
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
I don't see anything wrong with a long gun registry.
'It makes criminals out of otherwise law-abiding citizens'. That's a foolish argument. If people choose to disobey a law, that's a decision to not be a law-abiding citizen.

People register and license cars, boats, snowmobiles, pets, etc etc.
You are absolutely correct sir.

What's the big deal, just because it's something called a gun? It's because people are paranoid. That's the only reason. People are scared that the government will decide to seize their guns. The cure for that is to elect more people who think the way you do, then the government won't do things you don't like.
Ya, but I hate the Conservative parties other policies. I'd have to swallow a lot of shyte to vote for them, just to rid us of this waste of money.

Sure, the registry cost too much to set up, that's beside the point. There's nothing wrong with a long gun registry, and there's also nothing wrong with people owning long guns.
You see paranoia, I see people cognizant of the fact that it's a slippery slope.

I don't follow your reasoning. Why do cars have to be identified for 'benign purposes'? Why do you think that registering guns is 'hassling' the population, but registering cars isn't?
You make a valid point here TenPenny.

But there aren't 20+ million people riding their guns on major highways and thoroughfares.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
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Vernon, B.C.
I think the bottom line here is, it is criminals we really want to identify and register. As for guns vs. vehicles, every vehicle has the potential for involvement, directly or indirectly with crime/legal infractions, whereas the vast majority of long guns (in the hands of law abiding people) and properly secured don't. Guns are only one weapon used by the criminal element.
 

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,677
161
63
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC
Long Gun Registry - Yes - No

No, it should be scrapped.

Just because a couple of police chiefs said they support it, doesn't make the decision absolute, as just last night on the news (I believe it was Global) they interviewed other police officers who weren't afraid to speak their minds, who claimed that the long gun registry is useless and doesn't save police officer's lives, since regardless if they know a person owns firearms or not, in any unknown situation, they're supposed to expect anything, including firearms being involved that may or may not be registered, so the long gun registry is moot.

My father who collects a number of WWII items, and was in the militia who primarily trained other soldiers on how to properly operate firearms, had to toss a number of firearms he had in his collection and tossed away a few of his hunting rifles because of this registry. He hated it from the start, knew it wouldn't serve any useful purpose, and was just a typical tax grab..... and when it all started, based on his explanations, I agreed with his point of view.

I'm a supporter for regulated gun control in this country, in that I believe nobody should be allowed to own or operate a firearm without proper training, background checks and certifications proving that know how to properly operate firearms...... but this long gun registry is a pile of crap, a total waste of time and whether or not someone's firearm is register, it won't make a difference if they wish to commit a crime using their firearm..... people will still be at risk and people will still die if shot by that firearm.

For once, this is something the Conservatives have right and is something I support.