RE: The Gun Registry Must
I know a couple people who have gone through the process of getting handguns. It's not that hard at all.
I know a couple people who have gone through the process of getting handguns. It's not that hard at all.
Reverend Blair said:I know a couple people who have gone through the process of getting handguns. It's not that hard at all.
Reverend Blair said:In 1981 or 1982 if you had to take a safety course to get an FAC. There was a further course if you wanted a pistol. I know that because I took the course for rifles and shotguns. I'm not sure when it came in, and it might have been because we'd never owned guns or weren't 18, but the restrictions are nothing new.
Reverend Blair said:I know a couple people who have gone through the process of getting handguns. It's not that hard at all.
Reverend Blair said:What changed? Lepine killed a bunch of innocent women and the Liberals needed to appear to be doing something. Nobody who knew anything about guns was making any reasonable suggestions, so we got the gun registry.
Cosmo said:Ahhh ... but now I'm old and boring and we sit around talking about our health rather than our hardware.![]()
Cosmo said:Sad, innit?
What changes in policy and procedure occured after the gun registry was implemented? How did it become harder to get a gun? What kind of background checks were done which were not being done before? What kind of restrictions were put on people that were not there before?
What I want to know is what procedures changed to justify the cost of the gun registry? That has always been the point about this legislation, is the cost vs the results.
I don't doubt that. I am interested in how things changed regarding getting a gun before the gun registry compared to now. What process was in place in, say, 1985 that is different from 2005. Frank may be able to tell us that.
Reverend Blair said:What changes in policy and procedure occured after the gun registry was implemented? How did it become harder to get a gun? What kind of background checks were done which were not being done before? What kind of restrictions were put on people that were not there before?
What I want to know is what procedures changed to justify the cost of the gun registry? That has always been the point about this legislation, is the cost vs the results.
I don't doubt that. I am interested in how things changed regarding getting a gun before the gun registry compared to now. What process was in place in, say, 1985 that is different from 2005. Frank may be able to tell us that.
So you think the gun registry came into law in 1986?
There is no significant difference in what it takes to get a firearm. There are fairly strict storage requirements, most of which predate the gun registry by a few years. I believe they reduced the number of allowable shells in a magazine at some point, but let's face it...if you can't kill Bambi when using a high-powered rifle with a scope and two bullets, then you're too inept to be operating a gun anyway. At that point you're likely too inept to pull down your pants before you take a dump, actually.
The FAC regs remain about the same. Be sane, don't be criminal, don't shoot at the man in the moon. If you want a gun, you can have one. Store it properly. Transport it properly.
That makes it sound even sillier when the gun lobby complains about the registry. The regulations were already there. All you are being asked to do is register a deadly weapon in a less intrusive manner than you register your car.
Considering that guns are built to kill things and cars are designed to have other uses, the gun registry really isn't that bad. Personally, I'd prefer to the money put into searching every car, boat and moped entering from the US for illegal weapons, but they tell me that'd be a problem diplomatically.
That's because the registered owner will get charged if a the gun is found by police, or a crime is committed with it if they haven't reported it stolen. This is a positive effect? More paperwork?but the Gun Registry does have a positive effect. Stolen firearms are now reported.
Nonsense. They only know that if they happen to be going to the house of a lawabiding citizen, which is where they're least likely to call. For most houses they have to go to, they don't have a clue if there are guns there or not.Police now know when going to a call whether there are guns in the residence.
No, they can only be checked to see if they have registered guns, and again, those whom the police seek are least likely to bother registering their weapons.People who are being sought by the law for unrelated things can now be checked to see if they own guns.
No, it's a government beaurocracy. Civil servants may be dumb enough to register a few staple guns, but theres no way that would cause a billion dollar overrun on a 2 million dollar project.The costs you keep freaking out about are partly due to idiots plugging up the system by registering soldering guns and toasters too.