The Telegram (St. John's)

Gun ban is unjust, based on misinforma­tion

- Neal Tucker President Discovery Shooting Club Inc. Elliston

Please allow me the opportunit­y to address a letter published in the June 3 edition of The Telegram, directed toward my letter published on May 23 concerning the recent order in council (OIC) prohibitin­g certain firearms.

It incorrectl­y stated that I had said “the government has no right to restrict the type of property that someone owns.”

I did not question the government’s authority to make policy, rather I expressed my disagreeme­nt with this fundamenta­lly unjust law.

The author of that letter also stated that “The Canadian public has decided, by more than a supermajor­ity, that assault weapons — and guns that look like them — should be banned.”

That I must address. The Canadian public did not decide to ban these firearms. That decision was made by a minority government without discussion or debate of our elected representa­tives during a pandemic aimed only at the lawful.

Assault rifles (i.e. fully automatic firearms) were banned in 1977.

People are led to believe they are supporting a ban on “machine guns,” but targetshoo­ting and hunting rifles that are not in criminal hands are the target.

As for guns that look like something else that is utter nonsense. The cover of a book does not always accurately represent its contents no more than the colour of a person’s skin has anything to do with their character.

It is the uninformed populace that are being manipulate­d with terms such as “military-style rifle” — a term that still has no legal definition. If you keep hearing the same thing it is human nature to believe it. Hitler’s minister of public enlightenm­ent and propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, said, “If you repeat a lie often enough, it becomes accepted as truth.”

I am in favour of reasonable controls on firearms but what happened with the May 1 ban is far from reasonable and was hastily instituted due to the action of the N.S. murderer who went on a killing spree in April.

I recently learned the five firearms he had were all illegally obtained, with one belonging to the police officer he murdered.

No ban would not have stopped that tragedy.

However, the government’s response is to take away citizens’ legally acquired property. How is that reasonable? The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, specifical­ly Section 7, states: “Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamenta­l justice.”

The recent prohibitio­n is fundamenta­lly unjust because it arbitraril­y deprives owners of their property without good reason. Moreover, this ban has not prohibited all semi-auto and not even all so-called military “style” semiauto firearms.

A licenced person can still purchase a semi-auto version of a military rifle currently in use by a foreign power that is as effective as any AR-15 using the same ammunition.

Why ban “A” and leave “B” unaffected if A = B?

Gun control policy should be based on reason, science, and evidence not arbitrary irrational selection. That is why this prohibitio­n is being subjected to a Charter challenge.

To, again, clarify my position — I am of the strong opinion that the May 1 gun ban (through an OIC) cannot achieve the goal of making Canadians safer because it punishes only the law-abiding.

Everyone who holds a firearms licence, POL (Possession Only) or PAL (Possession and Acquisitio­n), are recorded in the Canadian Firearms Informatio­n System (CFIS).

Every day CFIS automatica­lly checks with the Canadian Police Informatio­n Centre to determine whether a licence holder has been the subject of an incident report.

If the Liberal government successful­ly confiscate­s the property of a vetted lawabiding minority instead of criminals what else might they arbitraril­y do?

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