I obey the law so there's nothing to throw me in jail about. There's no law against being original.
Since none of you wanted get my point, that covers it.
Well if you're best response is my acceptance of quid quo pro provisions in other matters is merely the result of personal defect, perhaps you'd be more interested in explaining why in 15 years none of the provinces have raised a reference question to their courts over the inspection sections of the Firearms Act.
I have too much to lose so I don't indulge.
Until then, the only solution is civil disobedience.
The right to be free from unreasonable search is an individual right, in this case one violated by the Federal Criminal Code.....in other words, the provinces have nothing to do with it...
You REALLY have to love this!
From the Toronto Star, no less, Canada's most anti-gun newspaper.
If a stolen gun fell in the forest, would the gun registry hear? - thestar.com
The problem is this is not an isolated case, but completely typical..........
The story of Anobile’s gun begins on a frigid Sunday in November 1999. He returns from a hunting trip, leaving all his hunting gear, including his shotgun, a Beretta A-M-301 12-gauge, in his car. It’s a decision he’ll come to regret.
The next day, he visits his ailing 98-year-old father in Montreal’s Santa Cabrini hospital. When he returns to the parking lot, however, his Chevy Lumina is gone.
He reports the theft to the police. Three or four days later, he remembers, the police call to say the Lumina had been recovered. It had been used, they say, in a robbery at an east-end brasserie, and abandoned.
There’s no sign of the gun.
Eventually, Anobile’s insurance company replaces the gun with a new Beretta. And he hears nothing more on the subject.
This seems telling.
No problem leaving a firearm in the car, rather than secured in a gun safe as it should be. Next day, rather than move the gun from the car to the gun safe, still leaves it in the car while going to the hospital. Why would he need to have a shot gun at the hospital?
Some law abiding gun owner. Typical if you ask me.
Yeah, well.....a little careless......I imagine he simply forgot it was still in the car. Having guns laying around is not unusual for a lot of us........
But you know, most of us are not perfect.
If perfection were the prerequisite for anything, all of us would be allowed to do absolutely nothing.
Which is all beside the point....the registry is useless.......obviously.....and this is FAR from the only case. In fact it IS typical.
YouTube - CFC Registers Stolen Gun Repeatedly
How typical????
How about 4,438 times........by 2003.....and obviously it is still going on.
http://www.garrybreitkreuz.com/publications/RCMP-ATIStolenGunsRegistered-2003-09-11.pdf
And so you have a gun registry, that some want removed. There not in that catagory.Not really. This isn't just a no big deal opsy I forgot, it's a fukit I'll leave my guns in the car so I don't have to lug them back out again next time. It's not a matter of being a perfect person, it's a matter of taking the reasonable and appropriate steps to ensure that guns don't fall into the wrong hands. That you with all your training and understanding the law to say, it's not unusual for a lot of you to do the same.
This is exactly why you, like most others shouldn't be allowed to have a gun. If you want to shoot, go to a range where you can store and shoot your gun without it ever having to leave the range.
I dare say the biggest problem with the registry is that gun nuts go out of their way to sabotage it and it's not unlikely that a good number of those who worked on developing it, were and are gun nuts who continue to do what they can to make it fail.
Stupid people shouldn't be allowed near guns.
Not really. This isn't just a no big deal opsy I forgot, it's a fukit I'll leave my guns in the car so I don't have to lug them back out again next time. It's not a matter of being a perfect person, it's a matter of taking the reasonable and appropriate steps to ensure that guns don't fall into the wrong hands. That you with all your training and understanding the law to say, it's not unusual for a lot of you to do the same.
This is exactly why you, like most others shouldn't be allowed to have a gun. If you want to shoot, go to a range where you can store and shoot your gun without it ever having to leave the range.
I dare say the biggest problem with the registry is that gun nuts go out of their way to sabotage it and it's not unlikely that a good number of those who worked on developing it, were and are gun nuts who continue to do what they can to make it fail.
Stupid people shouldn't be allowed near guns.
Lock them the **** up and they won't get stolen. Pretty damn simple.Yeah, well.....a little careless......I imagine he simply forgot it was still in the car. Having guns laying around is not unusual for a lot of us........
But you know, most of us are not perfect.
If perfection were the prerequisite for anything, all of us would be allowed to do absolutely nothing.
As I said, it was careless, but I'm sorry, most of us fail to approach your status of perfection. (gee, what happened to that rolled eye icon???)
The police could have charged him with unsafe storage, but did not. I wonder why, as that seems to be standard procedure in gun theft cases??? Another bit of stupidity, which prevents many gun thefts from being reported.......
Yeah....store the guns at at shooting range....RIGHT, so they can all be stolen at once. Definitely among the dumbest ideas of the many stupid ideas promoted by gun controlers.....BTW, I've been on about 9 ranges. Seven of them were simply gravel pits. Store them where? As if I pay $1,000 bucks for a hangun to let somebody else hold on to it!
Just ludicrous.
Ahhh....the Auditor General, in her report on the gun regisry, said much of the problem with its cost was the rabid anti-gun attitude of the people in charge.....alienating the gun owners they were supposed to be helping.
We didn't screw it up.....it fact, we kept costs to an absolute minimum, by not registering most of our guns....LOL!!!!
The question is, do you want to work on solving the problems of criminal firearms use? Or do you just want to harass the hell out of shooters?
Because the second option appears to be the prefered one, and it is extremely counter-productive.