CANADA BANS MILITARY TYPES OF GUNS
If you click your mouse on the underlined words, you will get
more information.
This ban doesn't apply to members of the armed forces or police forces. Prime minister Trudeau says the banning of military-style gus takes effect immediately.
This ban doesn't apply to members of the armed forces or police forces. Prime minister Trudeau says the banning of military-style gus takes effect immediately.
At last, innocent people in Canada
won’t be killed by criminals carrying such deadly weapons. Mind you these criminal scum will still kill
innocent people with ordinary guns.
The prime minister says that the order has a two-year amnesty period for current owners,
and there will be a compensation program.
I don’t
object that the owners of these types of guns will be compensated but giving
them two years to turn over those guns is ludicrous. Imagine saying to a gangbanger, “You can keep
your deadly weapon that fires bullets out of the nuzzle at many times a second
but you must turn it over to the police after two years have passed. Of course, the gangbanger has to have
obtained a permit to own such a gun which is probably unlikely.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
unveiled his government’s ban on “military-style” assault rifles by fulfilling
an election promise in the wake of a mass shooting in Nova Scotia that killed
22 people.The guns
he used by the killer were military assault types of rifles.
Suppose
this killer was told that he that before the shootings that the prime
minister said that gun owners with those kinds of guns could keep them for
two years before turning those guns over to the police, then he would still be
in possession of those two horrific deadly military-type guns.
People
who legitimately have such guns are not breaking the law since they have a gun
permit. The mass killer in Nova Scotia
didn’t have a gun permit because he had a criminal record after being
jailed for assault.
Sixty-four-year-old Stephen Craig Paddock was an American mass murderer responsible for the 2017
Las Vegas shooting, in which ts 64-year-old mass killer opened fire into a
crowd of approximately 22,000 concertgoers attending a country music festival
on the Las Vegas Strip. He fired his military-type gun at the concert goers and killed 59 of them and injured
413.
At 10:08 p.m the shooter began to fire shots into the concert venue across
the street. He was positioned in a large suite that contained two rooms,
according to Las Vegas Sheriff Joseph Lombardo. He is believed to have fired
from both rooms to get different angles.
When the police burst into Room
135 on the twenty-second floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, they
found Stephen Paddock’s body and his 23 guns.
He had killed himself. He owned a
military-type gun but he didn’t bring it with him when he began shooting
at the concert-goers. If he used that gun, far more victims would have been
killed and injured.
.
Gun violence in the United
States results in tens of thousands of deaths and injuries with guns annually.
Nearly 40,000 people died from guns in the US. since 2018. Americans have killed
more than 20 million victims in th US since World War II. Ionically, the largest WWI
casualties were China and the Soviet
Union with 20 million victims killed.
The ability
to illegally obtain weapons in the USA is made easier by lax gun laws, and the
guns that make it to the illegal market, by and large, start out as firearms
that are legally sourced from the manufacturer. The patchwork of gun laws means
that American States with the least restrictive laws for purchasing guns become
the source of weapons for crimes in states with more restrictive laws.
Ironically,
the less rational gun rights advocates (NRA) obliquely reference this in an
often-heard argument that high gun crime rates in restrictive areas is proof
that gun regulation simply doesn't work, as opposed to the argument that more
uniform restrictions are needed. More uniform laws that set the bar at the more
restrictive level are universally opposed by politically active gun laws.
However,
gun control only hurts law-abiding citizens. A person intent on doing harm will
simply just acquire any kind of gun illegally.
Purchasing
military-type firearms is as easy and purchasing a pound of butter in a grocery
store. Just go to a the gun sales venue in the United States where anyone who isn’t a child can buy any kind of gun you want even if it
is a military-type firearm.
New Zealand’s ban on semi-automatic weapons has put guns, violence
and regulation back in the spotlight, underscoring the different approaches
taken by governments around the world and their relative success.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern outlined the plan
after a gunman killed 50 people at two mosques in a city on the country’s South
Island. The strengthened laws will prohibit military-style semi-automatics and
assault rifles, as well as putting in place an amnesty for such weapons to be
handed in and a buyback scheme.
Australia’s 1996
gun-law reforms offered that nations ’s a template. After a massacre in
Tasmania resulted in 35 people being killed. wSsemi-automatic weapons, pump-action shotguns and
rifles were removed from civilian possession, and firearm deaths fell. Even so,
while evidence and academic studies suggest that the fewer
people who have access to firearms, the safer a community is. Gun controls
remain controversial in some countries, most notably the United States.
There are more than one billion firearms in the
world and the majority are owned by ordinary people, according to the Small Arms Survey. It estimates that 85% are in civilian hands,
13% are in military arsenals and 2% are owned by law enforcement agencies.
National
ownership rates vary hugely, from about 120 firearms for every 100 residents in
the US to less than one firearm for every 100 residents in Indonesia, Japan and
Malawi.
Japan is
also often
cited as a gun-control success, with strong and repetitive tests that
act as a barrier to ownership. There are only shotguns and air rifles that are
allowed, and if you want to buy one, you need to attend lessons, pass a written
test and a shooting-range test. After that, you would undergo mental-health and
background checks.
Gun rights are defended by the National Rifle Association, which spends heavily to
lobby against all forms of control, arguing that weapons make the country safer. It often holds up
the nation’s Second Amendment as a reason to protect ownership, saying “the
right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed”
Even so, it’s worth remembering that Amendment
was penned in 1791, when gun technology was still pretty basic and semi-automatic
and automatic weapons were around
100 years away from conception and development Further it was at a
time when many citizens weren’t protected by police forces.
Assault rifles, like the AR-15 and AK-47, that fire dozens of rounds
of ammunition per minute, came many decades later. Today, they are
the gun of choice for many ordinary citizens and
criminals and have played a role in most
of the country’s high-casualty shootings, highlighting a dramatic shift in the
style and potential impact of gun ownership.
The Small Arms Survey underlines how embedded
guns have become, showing that 6% of US adults participated in target shooting
with a modern sporting rifle or semi-automatic assault weapon in 2016. That’s about 14
million people.
I can appreciate why people like going to
shooting rages with ordinary rifles. I know because I was an instructor in such
ranges. But firing a semi-automatic
rifle at a targe tin a range is
ridiculous, Obviously it doesn’t require any degree of training or expertise.
It is not unlike a man showing his penis to other men and saying , “See how big
my penis is.” As far as I am concered.
Any man who chooses to own and fire an assault gun is acting with the immature
mind of a small child.
What is that twit going to use the gun for other
than show off. He can’t use it for hunting purposes.
More people were wounded and killed in incidents
in which semiautomatic rifles were used compared with incidents involving other
firearms, Semiautomatic rifles are designed for easy use, can accept large
magazines, and fire high-velocity bullets, enabling active shooters to wound
and accidentally kill more people per incident.
Of course there are also some high-profile
advocates of stronger controls, including former President Barack Obama and Senator Bernie Sanders, whose post on
Twitter was backing New Zealand’s new
approach which was swiftly counteracted by gun advocates.
Bernie Sanders said, “This is what real action to stop gun violence looks like. We must follow
New Zealand's lead, take on the NRA and ban the sale and distribution of
assault weapons in the United States.”
It was
obviously that that senator was not one of those dishonest senators who
accepted the huge bribes given to them
by the NRA to vote the way the NRA wanted then
to vote.
The
ability to illegally obtain weapons is made easier by lax gun laws, and the
guns that make it to the illegal market, by and large, start out as firearms
that are legally sourced from the manufacturer. The patchwork of gun laws means
that American States with the least restrictive laws for purchasing guns become
the source of weapons for crimes in states with more restrictive laws.
Ironically, the less rational gun rights advocates obliquely reference this in
an often-heard argument that high gun crime rates in restrictive areas is proof
that gun regulation simply doesn't work, as opposed to the argument that more
uniform restrictions are needed. More uniform laws that set the bar at the more
restrictive level are universally opposed by politically active gun advocate.
In Canada, these illegal guns are often brought
over the border between Canada and the United States.
In my opinion. anyone bringing illegal guns
into Canada should be imprisoned for two years and if the gun is a military
type of gun, then five years in prison is appropriate.
At last, innocent people in Canada
won’t be killed by criminals carrying such deadly weapons. Mind you these criminal scum will still kill
innocent people with ordinary guns.
The prime minister says that the order has a two-year amnesty period for current owners,
and there will be a compensation program.
I don’t
object that the owners of these types of guns will be compensated but giving
them two years to turn over those guns is ludicrous. Imagine saying to a gangbanger, “You can keep
your deadly weapon that fires bullets out of the nuzzle at many times a second
but you must turn it over to the police after two years have passed. Of course, the gangbanger has to have
obtained a permit to own such a gun which is probably unlikely.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
unveiled his government’s ban on “military-style” assault rifles by fulfilling
an election promise in the wake of a mass shooting in Nova Scotia that killed
22 people.
The guns
he used by the killer were military assault types of rifles.
Suppose
this killer was told that he that before the shootings that the prime
minister said that gun owners with those kinds of guns could keep them for
two years before turning those guns over to the police, then he would still be
in possession of those two horrific deadly military-type guns.
People
who legitimately have such guns are not breaking the law since they have a gun
permit. The mass killer in Nova Scotia
didn’t have a gun permit because he had a criminal record after being
jailed for assault.
Sixty-four-year-old Stephen Craig Paddock was an American mass murderer responsible for the 2017
Las Vegas shooting, in which ts 64-year-old mass killer opened fire into a
crowd of approximately 22,000 concertgoers attending a country music festival
on the Las Vegas Strip. He fired his military-type gun at the concert goers and killed 59 of them and injured 413.
At 10:08 p.m the shooter began to fire shots into the concert venue across
the street. He was positioned in a large suite that contained two rooms,
according to Las Vegas Sheriff Joseph Lombardo. He is believed to have fired
from both rooms to get different angles.
When the police burst into Room
135 on the twenty-second floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, they
found Stephen Paddock’s body and his 23 guns. He had killed himself. He owned a military-type gun but he didn’t bring it with
him when he began shooting at the concert-goers. If he used that gun, far more
victims would have been killed and injured.
.
Gun violence in the United States
results in tens of thousands of deaths and injuries with guns annually.
Nearly 40,000 people
died from guns in the U. since 2018. Americans have killed more than 20 million victims in th US since World War II. Ionically, the largest WWI casualties were
China and the Soviet Union with 20
million victims killed.
The ability
to illegally obtain weapons in the USA is made easier by lax gun laws, and the
guns that make it to the illegal market, by and large, start out as firearms
that are legally sourced from the manufacturer. The patchwork of gun laws means
that American States with the least restrictive laws for purchasing guns become
the source of weapons for crimes in states with more restrictive laws.
Ironically,
the less rational gun rights advocates (NRA) obliquely reference this in an
often-heard argument that high gun crime rates in restrictive areas is proof
that gun regulation simply doesn't work, as opposed to the argument that more
uniform restrictions are needed. More uniform laws that set the bar at the more
restrictive level are universally opposed by politically active gun laws.
However,
gun control only hurts law-abiding citizens. A person intent on doing harm will
simply just acquire any kind of gun illegally.
Purchasing
military-type firearms is as easy and purchasing a pound of butter in a grocery
store. Just go to a the gun sales venue in the United States where anyone who isn’t a child can buy any kind of gun you want even if it
is a military-type firearm.
New Zealand’s ban on
semi-automatic weapons has put guns, violence and regulation back in the
spotlight, underscoring the different approaches taken by governments around
the world and their relative success.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern outlined the plan
after a gunman killed 50 people at two mosques in a city on the country’s South
Island. The strengthened laws will prohibit military-style semi-automatics and
assault rifles, as well as putting in place an amnesty for such weapons to be
handed in and a buyback scheme.
Australia’s 1996 gun-law reforms offered that
naton’s a template. After a massacre in Tasmania killed 35 people,
semi-automatic weapons, pump-action shotguns and rifles were removed from
civilian possession, and firearm deaths fell. Even so, while evidence and academic studies suggest
that the fewer people who have access to firearms, the safer a community is.
Gun controls remain controversial in some countries, most notably the United
States.
There are more than one billion firearms in the
world and the majority are owned by ordinary people,
according to the Small Arms Survey.
It estimates that 85% are in civilian hands, 13% are in military arsenals and
2% are owned by law enforcement agencies.
National
ownership rates vary hugely, from about 120 firearms for every 100 residents in
the US to less than one firearm for every 100 residents in Indonesia, Japan and
Malawi.
Japan
is also often cited as a gun-control success,
with strong and repetitive tests that act as a barrier to ownership. There are
only shotguns and air rifles that are allowed, and if you want to buy one, you
need to attend lessons, pass a written test and a shooting-range test. After
that, you would undergo mental-health and background checks.
Gun rights are defended by the National Rifle Association,
which spends heavily to lobby against all forms of control, arguing that
weapons make the country safer. It often holds up the nation’s
Second Amendment as a reason to protect ownership, saying “the right of the
people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed”
Even so, it’s worth remembering that amendment
was penned in 1791, when gun technology was still pretty basic and
semi-automatic and automatic weapons were around 100 years away from conception
and development Further it was at a time when citizens weren’t protected by
police forces.
Assault rifles, like the AR-15 and AK-47,
that fire dozens of rounds of ammunition per
minute, came many decades later. Today, they are the gun of choice for
many ordinary citizens and crimnals and
have played a role in most of the country’s high-casualty shootings,
highlighting a dramatic shift in the style and potential impact of gun ownership.
The Small Arms Survey underlines how embedded
guns have become, showing that 6% of US adults participated in target shooting
with a modern sporting rifle or semi-automatic assault
weapon in 2016. That’s about 14 million people.
I can appreciate why people like going to
shooting rages with ordinary rifles. I know because I was an instructor in such
ranges. But firing a semi-automatic
rifle at a targetin a range is
ridiculous, Obviously it doesn’t require any degree of training or expertise.
It is not unlike a man showing his penis to other men and saying , “See how big
my penis is.” As far as I am concered. Any
man who chooses to own and fire an assault gun is acting with the immature mind
of a small child.
What is that twit going to use the gun for other
than show off. He can’t use it for hunting purposes.
More people were wounded and killed in incidents
in which semiautomatic rifles were used compared with incidents involving other
firearms, Semiautomatic rifles are designed for easy use, can accept large
magazines, and fire high-velocity bullets, enabling active shooters to wound
and accidentally kill more people per incident.
Of course there are also some high-profile
advocates of stronger controls, including former President Barack Obama and
Senator Bernie Sanders, whose post on Twitter
was backing New Zealand’s new approach which was swiftly counteracted by gun
advocates.
Bernie Sanders said, “This is what real action to stop gun violence looks like. We must follow
New Zealand's lead, take on the NRA and ban the sale and distribution of
assault weapons in the United States.”
It was
obviously that that senator was not one of those dishonest senators who
accepted the huge bribes given to them
by the NRA to vote the way the NRA wanted then
to vote.
The
ability to illegally obtain weapons is made easier by lax gun laws, and the
guns that make it to the illegal market, by and large, start out as firearms
that are legally sourced from the manufacturer. The patchwork of gun laws means
that American States with the least restrictive laws for purchasing guns become
the source of weapons for crimes in states with more restrictive laws.
Ironically, the less rational gun rights advocates obliquely reference this in
an often-heard argument that high gun crime rates in restrictive areas is proof
that gun regulation simply doesn't work, as opposed to the argument that more
uniform restrictions are needed. More uniform laws that set the bar at the more
restrictive level are universally opposed by politically active gun advocate.
In Canada, these illegal guns are often brought
over the border between Canada and the United States.
In my opinio. , anyone bringing illegal guns
into Canada should be imprisoned for two years and if the gun is a military
type of gun, then five years in prison is appropriate.
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