That day is today
Care to elaborate?
That day is today
Care to elaborate?
That day is today
Care to elaborate?
What's so much better about steel over aluminum mags?
Please refer to my thread on Precision about they mark it because we pay it. Great mag. High price. Unnecessary

...It will keep prices more competitive and will help if the RCMP ever thinks to change their minds and reclassify these mags or amend the laws regarding mag restrictions....
http://www.parl.gc.ca/About/Parliament/GuideToHoc/making-e.htm
An idea to make a new law or to change an existing law starts out as a "bill." Each bill goes through several stages to become law. At first reading, the bill is considered read for the first time and is printed. There is no debate. At second reading, Members debate the principle of a bill — is the idea behind it sound? Does it meet people's needs? If a bill passes at second reading, it goes to a committee of the House.
Committee members study the bill carefully. They hold hearings to gather information. They can ask for government officials and experts to come and answer questions. The committee can propose amendments, or changes, to the bill.
When a committee has finished its study, it reports the bill back to the House. The entire House can then debate it. During report stage debate, Members can suggest other amendments to the bill.
Once report stage is over, the bill is called for third reading debate. Members who voted for the bill at second reading may sometimes change their minds at third reading after seeing what amendments have or have not been made to the bill. After a bill has passed third reading in the House of Commons, it goes through a similar process in the Senate. Once both Chambers pass the bill in the same form, it is given Royal Assent and becomes law.
Only elected members of parliment can introduce bills and change Canadian law... geez you might think by all the mis-information propagated on this forum we were living under some kind of police state! It's a real shame there is so much fear mongering within our own (gun) lobby.
Only elected members of parliment can introduce bills and change Canadian law... geez you might think by all the mis-information propagated on this forum we were living under some kind of police state! It's a real shame there is so much fear mongering within our own (gun) lobby.
Shoot and be happy... you're not worth my time.
I was never suggesting that they would do anything about these mags. Just that if they ever decided to even think about it, one of the first things they would have to think about is how many mags are in the country. The more mags = the harder it would be for them to do such a thing. If people take that as fear mongering then so be it. Personally I don't trust them as far as I can throw them and look at every possible angle
how would people shoot their 50 beowulf rifles if they only prohibit the magazines?Wouldn't surprise me at all if they suddenly declared the .50 Beowulf mags prohibited for some ridiculous reason, or just no reason at all



























