
Good2Golf said:The AR-15 and the whole move from 7.62mm to 5.56mm was actually to cause more wounding vice killing, thus committing the enemy to use more soldiers to care for wounded comrades, reducing enemy effectiveness.
True, but the US and Australians still made extensive use of 7.62 mm in Vietnam due to the shortcomings of the 5.56 mm in the jungle. There are tons of 7 62 mm/.308 hunting rifles in Canada which are far more powerful than the AR-15.Retired AF Guy said:My understanding was that with an 5.56mm rifle you could carry more ammo. Also, the AR-15 was a lot shorter than the M-14 making it easier to handle in the jungles of Vietnam.
Haggis said:True, but the US and Australians still made extensive use of 7.62 mm in Vietnam due to the shortcomings of the 5.56 mm in the jungle. There are tons of 7 62 mm/.308 hunting rifles in Canada which are far more powerful than the AR-15.
Canadian gun owners have been under attack by the Liberal government since the 2015 election. Bill Blair’s reaction to a horrific tragedy in Nova Scotia committed by a madman with a known criminal past and illicit firearms was to punish legal, RCMP vetted gun owners with a mass gun ban and confiscation plan, all during a global pandemic and a suspended parliament.
We are “marching on Ottawa” on Saturday, September 12, 2020 @ 1:00pmEST – The Integrity March. We are going to the capital of Canada, where the laws are made and the lawmakers are, to demand integrity from our politicians and in the decisions they make. Canadian gun owners want a safer Canada too – and we demand credible work on crime and violence.
Haggis said:In the context of small arms, which includes the infamous banned rifles, firepower can be defined as a combination of the calibre, accuracy and volume of rounds being fired at a target. That can be from a single firearm, such as a rifle (C7A2/M-16), or combination of firearms sch as a rifle, squad automatic weapon (C9A2/M249) and platoon medium machine gun (C6A2/M240B).
The term "firepower" is often used to describe the capability of a specific weapon to inflict harm/damage to a target. That's wrong. A rifleman with an AK-47 does not have more firepower than one with a C7A2. He has a larger calibre bullet. He has a heavier barrel, but if he cannot employ the principles of marksmanship and hit what he's aiming at, all that is useless.
The "firepower" of long guns in Canada is severely limited by their legal magazine capacity, that being 5 rounds. Again, Liberals overlook this legal limitation when fear mongering to support their ban of lawfully owned and used firearms.
Donald H said:But I have to ask you why you think 'Liberals' overlook magazine capacity? Is it not one of the main talking points of the anti-gun lobby in Canada, as it is in the US?
Haggis said:True, but the US and Australians still made extensive use of 7.62 mm in Vietnam due to the shortcomings of the 5.56 mm in the jungle. There are tons of 7 62 mm/.308 hunting rifles in Canada which are far more powerful than the AR-15.
Haggis said:When the PM and Minister Blair talk about the rationale for banning lawfully owned"military/assault style" firearms, they frequently use the phrase "designed to kill the largest amount of people in the shortest amount of time". This ignores the fact that a lawful gun owner needs to change magazines every five rounds. So, they would have to carry an awful lot of magazines. Using New Zealand's mass shooting as an example, the shooter would've needed a minimum of eleven legal Canadian capacity magazines to murder 51 people if every shot was a kill.
Again, a criminal firearm user doesn't care about legal magazine capacity limits or any other gun laws. But criminal firearms are not the target of this OIC, amnesty period or possible compensated confiscation (buyback), just legally owned ones. Thus, the Liberals omit any discussion of legal magazine capacity to let the public think that 30 rounders are in every gun owners closet and glovebox.
Donald H said:Thank you for your explanation, but to the point, larger magazines certainly do aid in increasing firepower. Which goes to explain my comment on the picture 'that supposedly spoke a thousand words'. Not the second picture which was different.
Donald H said:Thank you for your explanation, but to the point, larger magazines certainly do aid in increasing firepower. Which goes to explain my comment on the picture 'that supposedly spoke a thousand words'. Not the second picture which was different.
:cheers:
7.62NATO was the available cartridge, not necessarily the preferred cartridge. South Africa starting adopting the R4 in 5.56mm in 1982 as a replacement to the R1/FN FAL while still heavily engaged in Angola. If they wanted to, they could have adopted the R4 in 7.62NATO, the R4 was a variant of the Galil which was available in either calibre. That South Africa chose to switch to 5.56mm while actively involved in a war strongly suggests that was actually their preference.Humphrey Bogart said:7.62mm was also the preferred calibre in African Brushfire Wars. The Portuguese, South African and Rhodesian Armies all preferred the FN FAL due to much of the terrain being flat brush land or savannah. The FN outranged the AK47 significantly and was a very effective rifle for Fireforce Operations. The South African Army now uses the R4 and R5 series which is 5.56mm but still uses the R1 (SA FN copy) as a designated marksman rifle.
Haggis said:When the PM and Minister Blair talk about the rationale for banning lawfully owned"military/assault style" firearms, they frequently use the phrase "designed to kill the largest amount of people in the shortest amount of time". This ignores the fact that a lawful gun owner needs to change magazines every five rounds. So, they would have to carry an awful lot of magazines. Using New Zealand's mass shooting as an example, the shooter would've needed a minimum of eleven legal Canadian capacity magazines to murder 51 people if every shot was a kill.
Again, a criminal firearm user doesn't care about legal magazine capacity limits or any other gun laws. But criminal firearms are not the target of this OIC, amnesty period or possible compensated confiscation (buyback), just legally owned ones. Thus, the Liberals omit any discussion of legal magazine capacity to let the public think that 30 rounders are in every gun owners closet and glovebox.
Colin P said:Not to mention that the OIC is far broader than that and goes after all sorts of collector grade military arms. Like a French 25mm AT gun, M72 LAW empty tubes, Several different mortars from WWII. Likely because we all live in fear of a 711 being held up by crew served weapons. It is social engineering, they hate all things military unless controlled by them.
Donald H said:That's a very dangerous argument to make in a democratic country Eagleford, but I have to be honest and say that I respect it and understand that there are certain circumstances in which it's quite legitimate. The debate over capitol punishment is another example of where the same argument could be legitimate.
It's a copy of a design that was meant for doing just that if we can say that it was designed for killing people instead of it being a murder weapon. With my limited knowledge I don't know of any other long gun that is better suited to killing people. (that needs to be qualified of course)
I didn't know that. But I may be misquoting you because you added another sentence: "more than any other rifle.'
I'm not familiar with the particular shooting offhand but I'll assume he didn't use an AR-15. If that's true then it would be the exception for school shootings in the US.
I respectfully disagree. GM makes pickup trucks and that's not questioned as legitimate. If they started making pickup trucks with a 50 cal. machine mounted in the bed of the truck, that wouldn't be legitimate in my opinion. AR-15's are a copy of a weapon that was designed to kill people. (I am assuming that's correct) Therefore I consider the AR-15 to not be a legitimate weapon on Canada's streets.
There could be many different long guns that are incorrectly designated as not being legal for civilians to own. That will hopefully be sorted out over time. But at the same time there are in my opinion quite sensible laws being proposed and adopted. For instance, I owned a couple of Remington 1100's and from experience I would say that they are legitimate shotguns to own. They're a lot different from a weapons that was designed to kill people and is super efficient at doing so.
- Staff edit to fix quote box.
Eaglelord17 said:It is not a dangerous argument to suggest many people don't know what they are talking about.
It is dangerous to suggest that all opinions are equal and that majority=right.
Most people believed the world was flat for centuries, we know now that is incorrect but the majority believed it. Democracy is a terrible form of government, it just happens to be the best one tried so far.
Most people which want to ban firearms in this country tend to have no exposure to them and don't even know what our laws currently are.
They are not informed at all, and what little knowledge they possess is basically American influenced trash. Movies, video game, are how they view firearms and people really don't understand they do not function as they are shown in movies. You don't have infinate capacity magazines which hit 1000% of the time on full auto, etc. As such their opinions aren't worth much. They are still entitled to them, I am not taking that away from anyone, but to say that their opinions are equal really isn't true.
All firearms are designed to kill. Be it a AR-15, A Winchester 94 (lever action), a double barrel shotgun, a handgun, a brown bess musket, etc. It is the height of ignorance to pretend that they all aren't capable of doing the same thing. Some can be more efficient, but there is a lot of factors in there. The skill of the shooter, the location, etc. I am more afraid of someone with a shotgun in close quarters than a AR-15. Ultimately what matters is who has the gun more than what the gun is. The Swiss basically all possess full autos or converted autos in their homes, going back several generations. They don't have any real crime rate however. There are little girls who ride their bikes to the range with Sig 550s (a illegal to possess firearm here) strapped to their back and there is no issue. This pretending to minimize damage by banning certain firearms is stupid. What actually minimizes damage is controlling who has firearms, and specifically getting them out of the hands of criminals.
Eaglelord17 said:Most people which want to ban firearms in this country tend to have no exposure to them and don't even know what our laws currently are.
This could all lead us to making sure everybody is aware of the meaning of 'democracy'. I'm going to assume everybody already gets it.
Fabius said:I don't think everyone understands the meaning of democracy. Respectfully, I don't think it means what you think it does to be honest.
Democracy is typically found in one of two forms. Either Direct Democracy or Representative Democracy.
Direct Democracy is exceedingly rare and exists in no nation state at this time although it exists in several regional forms such as Swiss Cantons. This is what you seem to be referring to when talking about majority rule ala everyone has a direct vote on policy.
The second more common form is Representative Democracy. This can take a multitude of sub forms, usually either some form of parliamentary or presidential democracy.
Canada, like the rest of the Commonwealth, is a Constitutional Monarchy with a parliamentary democracy.
Canadian's do not vote directly on any policy at the Federal or Provincial levels with the exception of when either level calls a referendum. We elect representatives who then vote on policy.
This is a key feature of representative democracies and is a key part in limiting and controlling the excesses of the majority.
Referendums are useful in certain situations and can be used to create a more hybrid form of democracy and for fundamental questions of importance to all citizens belong the authority of our representatives to decide, an example is the Quebec referendums on sovereignty.
All this to say that in Canada, what 50% + 1 of the Canadian population want does not equal anything. We are not a direct democracy.
Now the argument can be made that our politicians don't act like statesmen and don't do anything but go where the wind blows them, when they should be shaping and steering a consensus but that's a separate discussion.