Canada’s Gun Laws
Canada’s Gun Laws
———- .
Subject: Gun Registry Facts
Canada’s billion-dollar gun registry employs 1,800 bureaucrats, who spend
their days tracking down duck hunters and farmers.
By comparison, Canada hired only 130 additional customs officers to
protect
our borders after Sept.11.
Here are a few more eye-rolling facts about the gun registry, mostly
unearthed by MP Garry Breitkreuz from Saskatchewan.
Internal audits show that government bureaucrats have a 71% error rate in
licensing gun owners and a 91% error rate in registering the guns
themselves.
The government admits it registered 718,414 guns without serial numbers.
That means either the bureaucrats forgot to write them down, or the guns
didn’t have serial numbers in the first place. That’s as useless as
registering a vehicle simply as “a blue Ford Explorer.”
To these gun owners, the government has sent little stickers with made-up
“serial numbers” on them, that gun owners are supposed to stick on their
guns. And everybody at the gun registry is praying that criminals who
steal
those guns won’t peel off the stickers.
Some 222,911 guns were registered with the same make and serial number as
other guns. That’s not just useless — it’s dangerous..If someone else
with
a “Blue Ford Explorer” is involved in a hit and run, you’ll be the one
getting a knock on the door by the RCMP.
Out of 4,114,624 gun registration certificates, 3,235,647 had blank or
missing entries — but the bureaucrats issued them anyways.
In the beginning, the government’s firearms licenses had photographs on
them
- just like driver’s licenses do. But after hundreds of gun owners were
sent
licenses with someone else’s photo on them, the government decided to
scrap
photos on the licenses altogether, rather than fix the problem.
Private details about every gun owner in the country are put on one
computer
database, called CPIC. That’s valuable information to a peeping tom — or
a
criminal. The CPIC computer has been breached 221 times since the
mid-1990s,
according to the RCMP.
In August of 2002, the gun registry sent a letter to Hulbert Orser,
demanding he register his guns, and warning him that it’s a crime not
to. Orser died in 1981.
Garth Rizzuto is not dead, but he’s getting older — he applied for a gun
licence 21/2 years ago.He hasn’t been rejected. They’re still “processing”
his application.
Some 304,375 people were allowed to register guns even though they didn’t
have a licence permitting them to own a gun.
On March 1 of 2002, bureaucrats registered Richard Buckley’s soldering
“gun”
- that’s right, a heat “gun” used for welding tin and lead. No word yet on
Buckley’s staple guns or glue guns.
Some 15,381 gun owners were licensed with no indication of having taken
the
gun safety courses — one of the main arguments for licensing.
Despite the billion-dollar taxpayer subsidy, gun-owners must still pay
$279
for the required licenses, registration, photo ID and other costs to
register a single gun. That’s as much as a gun costs in the first place.
It’s a tax — a tax on rural Canada.
The government spent $29 million on advertising for the gun registry –
including $4.5 million to Group-Action, the Liberal ad firm now under RCMP
investigation.
But all of these follies are trivial compared to the central, unanswerable
flaw in the gun registry: Since only law-abiding gun owners will register
their guns, how can the registry stop criminals?
If you think this is information all Canadians should have, forward it,
ask
your political representatives about these facts. You don’t have to be a
gun
owner to have concerns on the questionable actions taken and situation we
are in.
Maybe there is a better way?