Immediate fail. Assuming criminals are thinking rationally at all times is an epic fail in logic. If they were thinking logically at all, they wouldn't commit the crime in the first place.
The RCMP report itself lists 152 long gun homicides with registered long guns...
No matter what you say, you're never going to be able to convince me that the system is useless when a police officer can recover a murder weapon, and with a few keystrokes discover whom it belongs to....
152 times in fact, in the five years between 2003 and 2008.
Backgrounder: The long-gun registry: Costs and crime statisticsThere are nearly 7 million registered long-guns in Canada. Yet of 2,441 homicides recorded in Canada since mandatory long-gun registration was introduced in 2003, fewer than 2 percent (47) were committed with rifles and shotguns known to have been registered. (Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics).
Is the RCMP report still being withheld?
And so please explain how having their guns registered prevented the murders?
In fact, please explain how many of the registered guns were registered to the person who commited the murder?
Somebody is mistaken.
Released Nov. 16, 2007
One wonders how a report published in 2007 could have information on the number of murders using weapons with known registration status between 2003 and 2008...
Curious.
I don't think it does. As I already told you before though, I don't see that as a problem. The DNA registry doesn't prevent crime either, and it's a great tool to have in the kit.
Maybe the politicians said it would prevent crime, I don't think that's true though. I don't think any tool the police have prevents all crime, obviously.
I don't think the registry should be kept because it prevents crime, I think it should be kept because it's a useful tool for solving crimes.
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I could not find your 154 reference in the report....and to be blunt, I'll trust numbers from neutral Stats Canada much sooner that stats from a self-serving, internally generated RCMP report.
How is it an invasion of privacy? You're only guilty of something if you don't register it. Seems like a lot of bitching and moaning for something so simple as registration.They treat citizens as potential criminals. They are an invasion of privacy, a slap in the face to presumed innocence, and an insult.
And there is the crux of the matter.
Interesting development. It turns out that the NRA has been involved in the fight against the long gun registry for the last few years. I wonder how the US would react if any Canadian organization attempted to interfere in US domestic affairs? CBC News - Canada - NRA involved in gun registry debate
Apparently this is a common practice for the NRa in that it also interfered in Brazil when proposals were made there to register firearms.
http://www.bclocalnews.com/opinion/letters/95278674.html
Why isn't the CBC ranting and raving about the ties between the Coalition for Gun Control and the Liberal Party of Canada? Why is nothing being said about the CFGC's ties to the anti-gun US Brady Campaign, funding by US anti-gun billionaire George Soros, as well as the involvement of the international anti-gun group, IANSA? What about the $386,000 the CFGC got from the Department of Justice for some non-existent "training program" in Quebec, that was never reported on? What about anti-gun "documentary" (and I use the term loosely) maker Michael Moore's interference with *three* of our elections? Why no mention that US Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean was the keynote speaker at the 2006 Liberal Party convention?
The CBC is being blatantly biased about this. I guess this shouldn't surprise me anymore...
The insinuation that this is somehow suspect, that there is some problem with this, is ludicrous........an open and obvious attempt by the CBC to influence public opinion and the up-coming vote , otherwise simply a non-story.
Yeah, Americans should be lobbying to change our laws as they see fit...damn CBC for reporting such a thing. Downright Orwellian of them....
Absolutely!
It has been WIDE OPEN that the NRA has shown an interest....for years.
Absolutely...not.
It's ironic to me to watch the NDP members turning away from support for this bill now that the spotlight is on an American lobby group putting pressure on Canadian politics.
They ought to mind their own business, and focus on the second Amendment. But the chance for using the Canadian gun debate was apparently too lucrative to pass up.
....which has a common constitutional ancestry with our own........
The ironic part is that NRA getting involved is what is prompting the bill to lose support.What, you expected linear thought from the NDP?????That's funny!
I have no problem with that. I do have a problem when foreign influences are inserted in domestic politics. If you think they actually care about what happens in Canada (beyond gun laws) you need to try a little reality yourself.Try a little reality, it is a small world, people with common interests internationally work together.
But, it's not our constitutional right.
The ironic part is that NRA getting involved is what is prompting the bill to lose support.
I have no problem with that. I do have a problem when foreign influences are inserted in domestic politics. If you think they actually care about what happens in Canada (beyond gun laws) you need to try a little reality yourself.
Most firearms registry queries made manually: commissioner's report
It's only a matter of time before the long-gun registry reappears on the parliamentary radar.
Conservative MP Candice Hoeppner's private member's bill died last month, but it is widely expected the government will re-introduce a new bill -- either in the House of Commons or Senate -- that would once again try to scrap the controversial program.
You may well remember that in the most recent heated days of debate, a number of anti-registry advocates disputed the oft-quoted statistics that police search the Canadian Firearms Registry Online (CFHRO) 12,000 times a day.
Those opposed to the registry said most police forces run computer programs that automatically check the CFRO every time they consult the Canadian Police Information Centre (CPIC) for calls completely unrelated to firearms.
Yet the just-published annual report of the Commissioner of Firearms takes indirect aim at that argument. It reiterates that on an average day, Canadian police queried the firearms registry 11,076 times a day in 2009.
"Some of these queries result from police agencies choosing to enable a feature that automatically checks CFRO when a CPIC check is made. However, most police agencies do not automatically check CFRO, and rely on manual queries."
My cousin recently registered some firearms that he purchased. He said it's not a big deal. A few minutes on the computer and he was finished. But then again, he never was much for whining...