krazykaiser
Member
- Location
- alberta
Sent, let's go get em
I got a reply. Think before you vote!! One gun at a time until they are all gone!!
I sent the following email to my liberal MP in Moncton:
Dear Ms. Petitpas Taylor,
I am deeply concerned by the newly proposed bill C-71.
During the recent "Guns and Gangs" summit, both the RCMP and Minister Goodale failed to provide any concrete evidence that any amount of gun control in Canada is working. Data strongly suggests that legally owned firearms are rarely involved in crimes.
Our Liberal federal government had assured Canadians that the intention was not to target law-abiding gun owners, but rather those who would use firearms to induce violence and commit crimes. Bill C-71 is entirely contrary to this statement.
Gang violence and the smuggling of firearms into Canada for their use is unarguably the real public safety issue in Canada. Statistics show that the large majority of violent gun crimes/fatalities are gang related. However bill C-71 does not attempt to address in any way illegally trafficked firearms and their use on the street, and instead targets once again law-abiding gun owners.
The prohibition of the CZ 858 and Swiss Arms semi-automatic rifles is vindictive, unfair, and makes no practical sense. These specific firearms have been owned by over 10000 canadians for years and there is no data to suggest any misuse or risk to public safety.
Bill C-71's wording also suggests further unwarranted firearm bans and prohibitions. Moving the Canadian firearm classification to the RCMP instead of elected government is a recipe for abuse, as RCMP management has already demonstrated against Canadian citizen firearm ownership either by action or creative re-interpretation of firearms law. To allow firearm reclassification by the RCMP without repercussions or recourse by legal gun owners is one of my biggest concerns of bill C-71, as it allows the RCMP the ability to reclassify any number of firearms at any point and deprive Canadian citizens from legally purchased firearms obtained with our hard earned money.
Bill C-71 makes the sale or transfer of non-restricted firearms contingent on obtaining a reference number from the CFO. This will complicate the process inordinately. In addition, this is essentially a back door registry over time, which legal gun owners consider a breach of our Liberal federal government's promise not to start another gun registry. The last registry was hugely cost prohibitive and no data demonstrates there was any benefit.
Canadian firearms law is complex enough and does not need to be further convoluted by bill C-71. Canadians would be better served by stronger efforts to get illegally owned firearms off the streets, out of the hands of criminals, which was the original promise by the Liberal government. Legal gun owners rightfully feel aggrieved by what appears to be another backdoor attempt to limit our ability to participate in our chosen passion and sport.
Ultimately, what Minister Goodale seems to be missing or ignoring is the proven fact that criminals ignore laws. C-71 will only serve to further burden legal gun owners, with no effect on public safety.
Ms. Petitpas Taylor, I ask for your views on bill C-71 and your help to defend the rights of legal gun owners.
Sincerely,
This is her response:
Dear ###x,
Following up on your inquiry of last week, on Tuesday, March 20, the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, the Honourable Ralph Goodale, introduced a new bill aimed at curbing a steady increase in gun violence that has been observed in this country over the past five years.
In 2016 there were 223 firearm-related homicides in Canada, 44 more than the year before. That represents a 23% increase, and the highest rate since 2005. In 2016, shootings were the most common method of committing murder in this country, exceeding stabbings for the first time since 2012 (38 per cent versus 30 per cent). The pattern is clear, and worrying. Illegal handguns and assault weapons are a threat to public safety and we need to get them off our streets.
And so, following on our commitment from the 2015 election campaign, these proposed measures are simply the next step that our government is taking to strengthen our existing gun laws in a common-sense, focused and effective way in order to keep our communities safe. Effectively, we’re finding ways to prioritize public safety and effective police work while also respecting law-abiding firearms owners.
To be clear, we are not bringing back, nor will we ever bring back, the federal long-gun registry.
Our proposed measures are merely focused on the safer transport of handguns, and on keeping military-style assault weapons off our streets.
The new legislation proposes to:
Enhance background checks on those seeking to acquire firearms – looking at the full life history of a person, including any history of mental illness associated with violence, not just over the last five years.
Require that whenever a non-restricted firearm is transferred, the buyer must actually produce his/her licence, and the vendor must verify that it is valid.
Ensure the impartial, professional, accurate and consistent classification of firearms by restoring a system in which Parliament defines the classes and then experts in the RCMP make the technical determination about the class into which a particular firearm falls into, without political influence.
Except between a residence and an approved shooting range, require specific transportation authorizations to be obtained whenever restricted and prohibited guns (mostly handguns and assault weapons) are moved through the community.
5. Standardize record-keeping of sales by firearms retailers, already a common “best-practice” in the industry. This information would be accessible to police officers (not governments) on reasonable grounds and with judicial authorization.
This legislation will complement prior steps to create a more balanced and representative Canadian Firearms Advisory Committee; to strengthen infrastructure and technology at the border to better interdict gun smuggling, to withdraw from manufacturers/importers the authority to determine in certain circumstances their own firearms classification, and support provinces, territories, municipalities, communities and law enforcement in local initiatives to combat illegal gangs and gun crime.
I hope that this helps to answer some of your questions and concerns, however should you have any other questions, please feel free to reach out at any time.
Warm regards,
Ginette
The Honourable/l’honorable
Ginette Petitpas Taylor, P.C./c.p.
Member of Parliament/députée
Moncton-Riverview-Dieppe
Constituency Office/Bureau de circonscription
272 rue St. George St., Suite 110
Moncton, NB E1C 1W6
Tel/Tél: (506) 851-3310 Fax/Téléc.: (506) 851-3273
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