I would take a day off for a protest.
I will add that some people don’t like being out there front and center protesting these days with social media warriors and people losing their jobs over it. I know there’s a difference between the ‘f*** her in the p****’ guy and protesting for gun ownership, but if your boss is really anti gun.. be careful. People lost their ####ing jobs for attending Trump rallies. The free world is ####ed.
Trump is awesome and I’d attend his rallies - I would find another job yolo
The problem with Canada is we accepted peaceful protest....this is the least effective way to achieve any goal.... in Europe people March with torches and pitchforks....we complain and move on. No wonder they ignore us.
Had a good chat with my mp today Pierre Polievre as he was campaigning in the neighbourhood.
In his words “5 months till victory” I told him, it can’t come fast enough.
Thanked him for all his hard work and told him and to keep it up.
If a party can pass laws effecting Bans by comittee why propose any laws by reading them in parliament and forwarding to the Senate at all? Under what specific circumstances are Caucus committee votes even acceptable to enact law in this country?
Maybe we want to avoid scenarios like this on: https ://www.cnn.com/2018/12/22/europe/france-yellow-vest-protest-intl/index.html
And maybe there's something different about violent protests involving thousands of people with ready access to firearms versus your average angry protestor that might blunt society's concern for our "rights".
Let's follow the USA example: https://project2025.afsp.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Toolkit_Safe_Firearm_Storage_CLEARED_508_2-24-20.pdf
"and I feel very strongly that there’s no place for those weapons in Canadian society"
"and those weapons which have been used to kill so many people have no place in our society.”
So he has again stated what he wants, not right for someone who is suppose to be examining the issue from both sides. Hardly impartial.