Beowulf wrote:so, what's the point of a registry? No registry has solved a significant number of crimes. Certainly not compared to just using the money to hire more officers would have.
Except for the Australian gun registry.
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Beowulf wrote:so, what's the point of a registry? No registry has solved a significant number of crimes. Certainly not compared to just using the money to hire more officers would have.
Ah, yeah, you're either as stupid as I thought or no less dishonest than I expected.Beowulf wrote:Only if you think its job is to waste an amount of money best described using the term "billions". I'm sure there was a better use for the money than to fail to solve crimes.
Hilarious because you're still tilting at windmills and the results would have been the same unless somebody decided to break the law and refuse to turn in their guns.Alyeska wrote:Hilarious? A gun law was proposed with the promise it would never be used towards confiscation. Why was this promised? Because the people who wanted to pass the law did not have sufficient votes to get through. So they needed support from the gun owners.
And then after the law is passed, the list is used in direct opposition to what was promised and is used to confiscate weapons from the very people they relied on to get the law passed.
What on Earth did they spend 2 billion dollars on? That's thousands of dollars per firearm. It can't possibly cost that much legitimately, so where did it all go?Aaron MkII wrote:Unfortunately it was extremely expensive, 2 billion
Because some people who own guns cling to them like security blankets. I have no idea why.compliance is low (witness the long running amnesty),
info is inaccurate (transfers often don't get recorded properly)
The Conservative propaganda machine is surprisingly effective, don't you think?and it pissed a lot of people off.
Even my mother who hates firearms thinks it was a waste. It certainly turned people off the Liberals who might otherwise have supported them.
We used to have that nationwide in the US. It passed in the 1960s as part of a wave of gun control legislation back then, and it wasn't repealed until 1986.Aaron MkII wrote:Ontario requires stores to record ammunition sales because some guy shot a cop in 94.
I believe California just started doing it again.MKSheppard wrote:We used to have that nationwide in the US. It passed in the 1960s as part of a wave of gun control legislation back then, and it wasn't repealed until 1986.Aaron MkII wrote:Ontario requires stores to record ammunition sales because some guy shot a cop in 94.
That's a question I have no answer for, and I don't think anyone else does either.Ryan Thunder wrote: What on Earth did they spend 2 billion dollars on? That's thousands of dollars per firearm. It can't possibly cost that much legitimately, so where did it all go?
Well we did pay for them after all.Because some people who own guns cling to them like security blankets. I have no idea why.
It's not that man. The transfers are done via computer or over the phone at time of sale, or over the phone when you sell them. Someone has to record the transfer and swap things in the system. People have had guns registered to them they never owned, or have sold them and the transfers were never recorded. I keep my paperwork and call the CFC for a list of whats in my name so I don't end up in a cell because someone arsed up.The question is 'why'.
And if the answer isn't anything more substantial than "because people didn't like the ebul guberment tracking their gunz", we should continue to do it out of spite.
"It's a goddamned pain in the ass" is reason enough.
No, it dates from before that. Lots of long time owners view the firearms act (of which the lgr is just a part) as a betrayal and that it set a group traditionally disposed to supporting the government and law enforcement against each other.The Conservative propaganda machine is surprisingly effective, don't you think?
Yeah? I don't think it's accomplished anything, one local guy said the CFO doesn't even bother to check his and he usually doesn't bother to record my address, just my license number. Wal*Mart doesn't even bother half the time.MKSheppard wrote:We used to have that nationwide in the US. It passed in the 1960s as part of a wave of gun control legislation back then, and it wasn't repealed until 1986.Aaron MkII wrote:Ontario requires stores to record ammunition sales because some guy shot a cop in 94.
It goes well beyond the level of clinginess I'd associate with 'mere' ownership.Aaron MkII wrote:Well we did pay for them after all.
Well, I can agree; that's a totally unacceptable level of unreliability.It's not that man. The transfers are done via computer or over the phone at time of sale, or over the phone when you sell them. Someone has to record the transfer and swap things in the system. People have had guns registered to them they never owned, or have sold them and the transfers were never recorded. I keep my paperwork and call the CFC for a list of whats in my name so I don't end up in a cell because someone arsed up.
I don't understand why they would feel that way.No, it dates from before that. Lots of long time owners view the firearms act (of which the lgr is just a part) as a betrayal and that it set a group traditionally disposed to supporting the government and law enforcement against each other.
Well, can you get beehive cartridges for it? You could shred outhouses for target practice. It'd be awesome.Aaron MkII wrote:As far as I know ammo designed to penetrate body armour is illegal as are incendiaries. Explosive rounds are a no-go as well so while I can legally own a 40/37mm launcher I'm restricted to flares and stuff.
I'm not so sure, I have thousands of dollars invested in my hobby. That's a lot of money to flush.Ryan Thunder wrote: It goes well beyond the level of clinginess I'd associate with 'mere' ownership.
It's pretty much the saga of the lgr.Well, I can agree; that's a totally unacceptable level of unreliability.
Prior to the FAC system, you could own whatever you wanted. After the FAC, you had to have a background check and they started looking more closely at what we could own.I don't understand why they would feel that way.
I'm not sure actually, I haven't looked to closely at them because it's money with basically no utility but guys do reload them so it wouldn't be hard to make your own.Well, can you get beehive cartridges for it? You could shred outhouses for target practice. It'd be awesome.
General Schatten wrote:How do you figure?
Sorry about that, I figured we'd get to it soon enough with Beowulf. My bad.General Schatten wrote:Ryan, would you mind answering my question?General Schatten wrote:How do you figure?
I guess it depends on whether you're fairly compensated or not, then. But some people wouldn't even accept that.Aaron MkII wrote:I'm not so sure, I have thousands of dollars invested in my hobby. That's a lot of money to flush.
Yeah, I don't really get that either. They ban guns by name rather than capability, or by arbitrary characteristics that don't really have anything to do with capability. I can understand why owners would be fed up with that by now. Even I think its silly.Under the current system, guns were arbitrarily classified according to appearance, calibre and length.I don't understand why they would feel that way.
If you don't at least get compensated for a reclassification that affects you, I can understand why you'd feel persecuted. It would imply that you should've known better somehow, when you presumably bought the gun in good faith.They system allows for whole scale confiscation, or reclassification via an Order in Council (sorry, i forgot about that before) and it's all aimed at owners. None of it affects criminal elements but one of the reasons given was to crack down on crime, even though gun crime had been declining since 1973 IIRC.
My friend told me about some reuseable ones he found in a catalogue. I can't recall where that was at the moment, but I could ask him for you if you're curious.I'm not sure actually, I haven't looked to closely at them because it's money with basically no utility but guys do reload them so it wouldn't be hard to make your own.Well, can you get beehive cartridges for it? You could shred outhouses for target practice. It'd be awesome.
Theres always people like that.Ryan Thunder wrote:I guess it depends on whether you're fairly compensated or not, then. But some people wouldn't even accept that.Aaron MkII wrote:I'm not so sure, I have thousands of dollars invested in my hobby. That's a lot of money to flush.
Of course, I'm working under the assumption that if something is confiscated its because its more dangerous than its entertainment value or general utility is worth in some way. I guess that's kind of idealistic of me.
Agreed.Yeah, I don't really get that either. They ban guns by name rather than capability, or by arbitrary characteristics that don't really have anything to do with capability. I can understand why owners would be fed up with that by now. Even I think its silly.
Exactly that, the Firearms Act is almost excursively aimed at regulating licensed individuals. If the penalties weren't all criminal in nature it might have gone over better.If you don't at least get compensated for a reclassification that affects you, I can understand why you'd feel persecuted. It would imply that you should've known better somehow, when you presumably bought the gun in good faith.
What do you mean when you say 'it's all aimed at owners'?
Oh! Please do, I'd appreciate that.My friend told me about some reuseable ones he found in a catalogue. I can't recall where that was at the moment, but I could ask him for you if you're curious.
Personally I wish they had never tied it to the cars computer, it breeds complacency and in fact has lead to the death of at least one officer. They should assume a firearm is present at any call, because even if the registry lists something, they could have borrowed one, they could have ones that aren't subject to it. I have a flintlock that isn't required to be registered, yet it will allow me to kill at least one individual as they come through the door just as well as my Remington 870IIRC, one of the purposes of the registry was to allow law enforcement officers to undertake operations in possession of the facts about suspects. For example, if they were to arrest a person at his home, and they found out that he had a cache of (for example) rifles in his house, then they can take some precautions. There was just such an occurrence a few years ago, before the registry, in which some RCMP officers were killed.
Of course, anyone can have illegal weapons at any time, whether or not the registry is in force, so in this sense having one would not prevent all unexpected complications due to firearms. But it was liked by a large number of police agencies; indeed, in Quebec the police have sued to keep the data from it.
The registry was used to create justification to seize the weapons in the first place. Its a hell of a lot easier to say "we need to ban guns, here's the list that proves it!".Ryan Thunder wrote:Hilarious because you're still tilting at windmills and the results would have been the same unless somebody decided to break the law and refuse to turn in their guns.
Guess what, genius; the registry wasn't the problem, even if it was used incorrectly. Which is why it was a stupid/dishonest requirement that they not be allowed to use it to confiscate weapons.
Your laws don't allow it, but ours do.Alyeska wrote:The registry was used to create justification to seize the weapons in the first place. Its a hell of a lot easier to say "we need to ban guns, here's the list that proves it!".Ryan Thunder wrote:Hilarious because you're still tilting at windmills and the results would have been the same unless somebody decided to break the law and refuse to turn in their guns.
Guess what, genius; the registry wasn't the problem, even if it was used incorrectly. Which is why it was a stupid/dishonest requirement that they not be allowed to use it to confiscate weapons.
And it gets better. Have you heard of Ex post facto? Making something that was legal illegal and making it a crime to even own something that was legal. So you are stripping property from people. Many of these bans have actually been ruled as Unconstitutional by the courts. The problem is the registry allows the police to seize the weapon. And seized weapons are destroyed. So even if the courts vindicate that the ban was illegal, the registry was used in a manner that caused the destruction of private property. And you can't un-destroy something that was melted in a blasting furnace.
Don't? If our laws didn't allow Ex post facto, gun confiscation would be illegal. It isn't. Its just very frowned upon, most of the time.Aaron MkII wrote:Your laws don't allow it, but ours do.
So, you admit that you would prefer that lawmakers work from ignorance if it means you get to keep your guns?Alyeska wrote:The registry was used to create justification to seize the weapons in the first place. Its a hell of a lot easier to say "we need to ban guns, here's the list that proves it!".