Regarding licensing, either you're kidding, or you need a lesson in the history of gun control in Canada - tell me you're kidding; regarding registration, either you weren't around to see the last bunch of confiscations, or you're kidding - tell me you're kidding. There are already confiscations coming - ask a Type 97 owner.
We all know about the Type 97 issue. And I have been around long enough to know about the previous rounds of confiscations and the various outcomes of the court cases involved.
With regard to licensing, I don't want to be at ranges or in the field with other firearms owners who have just walked out and purchased a firearm with no training. Been down that road before and it is scary. Even today with the courses required for a PAL or RPAL you still get people out there who are careless but it is a lot less than it used to be. So no, I am not kidding.
Frankly, I think the training should be more robust with actual qualification on range and approval by a competent and qualified range officer. But that is my opinion.
As for registration, I don't think non-res firearms should be registered. But I do think you should have a license to buy them. And since that is likely the way it will be it is quasi-registration anyway.
Be careful what you wish for. We do not have 2nd amendment rights in this country. The majority allows us to own firearms and if you end up pissing off enough of the majority with opinions that far right you will end up with a slingshot instead of the firearms we enjoy in this country.
If as a community we are smart about it we could actually get everything we want and more by making the other side think it was their idea if we had a collaborative and focused strategy. But we do not. Instead we have a bunch of guys running around saying "you can't take away our firearms and we should be able to do what we want". Well that does not work and the history of gun control conflict in Canada has borne that out.
That is my opinion and you have yours and I respect that.
Krunch