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The Great Gun Control Debate- 2.0

Technically they had another party make them under a marking variance with ATF as they don’t actually make guns. They have an FFL/SOT so are legally a manufacturer, with the understanding they don’t physically manufacture them.

It was a fairly small run done, IIRC 3 or 4 different times over the years. (insurance is a hassle if you do more than 100 over a few years, and aren’t in the scale production to offset it it with volume sales).
 
Its called 'compromise'

If the price to be paid for getting Quebec inline for a pipeline or two, along with a LNG refinery to be built in/across Quebec is continuing to move forward on the Gun confiscation program, is that a compromise worth doing?

I have no dog in the gun confiscation fight, but if I had to pick 1 - continue as is in the previous gun ownership laws or have 2 pipelines be built across Ontario and Quebec, with one of them results in a new export driven LNG facility in Quebec and the other ending up at the Irving facility in NB - guess which one I'm going to chose to allow to happen and which I'm not.

Which of these results in a 'win' for the vast majority of Canadians and which does not? On BOTH sides there are 'losers' but which one drives the most economic gains and has the majority of Canadians behind it?

That's some impressive gymnastics.

So to get Quebec onside the rest of Canada has to give legally owned property ?

If this is where we are Canada is a failed country already.
 
As I said up thread, perhaps its time the Feds admit this needs to be a provincial matter and let the provinces handle it individually.
That would be the worst thing that could happen. Quebec shouldn’t even be allowed to have it’s own registry.

It is better to have one standard across the country, it is one of our strongest points as a country. The key is not having a stupid standard.
 
In Quebec part of the problem, if you want to call it that, is that a small, hard-core group of anti-gun urban intellectuals and politicians use the annual anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre as a refresher to increase the anti-gun rhetoric and to refocus the urban majority onto the subject. If you’re anywhere in Quebec , but especially in the Montreal region the whole issue of guns,gun control and banning guns gets re-hashed in the various news media starting a few weeks before the anniversery date unti a few weeks after…and everybody gets all anti-gun again.
 
That would be the worst thing that could happen. Quebec shouldn’t even be allowed to have it’s own registry.

It is better to have one standard across the country, it is one of our strongest points as a country. The key is not having a stupid standard.

The only people that would suck for would be Quebec. That's a Quebec problem, it's shouldn't involve me in NS. Or Bob in BC.
 
In Quebec part of the problem, if you want to call it that, is that a small, hard-core group of anti-gun urban intellectuals and politicians use the annual anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre as a refresher to increase the anti-gun rhetoric and to refocus the urban majority onto the subject. If you’re anywhere in Quebec , but especially in the Montreal region the whole issue of guns,gun control and banning guns gets re-hashed in the various news media starting a few weeks before the anniversery date unti a few weeks after…and everybody gets all anti-gun again.
It is fascinating to me they keep beating that dead horse.

Literally occurred before I was born and we have had serious legislative changes since then.

If that is all you can reference you don’t actually have a problem.
 
It is fascinating to me they keep beating that dead horse.

Literally occurred before I was born and we have had serious legislative changes since then.

If that is all you can reference you don’t actually have a problem.
Agreed…it’s really tedious
 
It is fascinating to me they keep beating that dead horse.

Literally occurred before I was born and we have had serious legislative changes since then.

If that is all you can reference you don’t actually have a problem.
They have an effective emotional string to pull, and that is far better in politics than facts or reality.
 
In Quebec part of the problem, if you want to call it that, is that a small, hard-core group of anti-gun urban intellectuals and politicians use the annual anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre as a refresher to increase the anti-gun rhetoric and to refocus the urban majority onto the subject. If you’re anywhere in Quebec , but especially in the Montreal region the whole issue of guns,gun control and banning guns gets re-hashed in the various news media starting a few weeks before the anniversery date unti a few weeks after…and everybody gets all anti-gun again.
Montreal island stirs the Liberal Party Drink and the CBC talking heads in this issue. Get outside of that bit of Quebec and the folks are pretty much like the rest of Canada, ie driving trucks, boats on the lake and RV’s in the campground.
 
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