Archives du mot-clé Assault weapons

Bill C-21; « An elephant giving birth to a mouse. »

By Serge St-Arneault

On the last day of classes of the fall school semester, my sister Annie was assassinated in a classroom with a legal military-style assault weapon at the Montréal Polytechnique engineering university.

Since that day, my family and many others have been working to remove assault weapons from our communities and our streets. This has never been achieved, not even during the decade-long period when the long-gun registry was in effect (which was later abolished by Stephen Harper’s Conservative government).

Since then, many innocent people have been injured or killed by assault weapons, most of them legally acquired and owned under Canadian law, including the one used in the Dawson College school shooting.

In any sane world, these weapons would be limited to the military.

Of course, we are not close to experiencing the gun carnage that is ravaging communities across the United States. Nearly 40,000 Americans are killed by guns every year. That’s one murder every fifteen minutes. Unfortunately for Canadians, we have our own home-grown “NRA” and are increasingly mimicking the US culture that values guns over lives.

Both shootings of a 15-year-old girl in Montreal on February 7th and of a 14-year-old girl in Toronto on February 12th testify to that.

In 2019 fall election, the Liberal Party of Canada finally committed to banning military-style assault weapons. They also promised to buy-back “all” existing ones. The families cheered and told Canadians the Liberals had the strongest position of all political parties. They got elected on those commitments.

Six months later, on May 1st, Prime Minister Trudeau unveiled a series of Orders in Council that made it illegal “to buy, sell, transport, import or use military-grade assault weapons in this country”. This was to be followed by an “evergreen law” to complete the ban and make it permanent.

We thought we had won. Canada was heading in the right direction, reflecting the polls that invariably show 80% of Canadians support banning these weapons. One mid-May Environics Research poll showed that even despite the pandemic, a clear majority still want the Liberals to move forward with the mandatory buyback — as was done in New Zealand and Australia following their own mass shootings.

« An elephant giving birth to a mouse. » This pretty much sums up what happened on the morning of February 16th.

Bill C-21 was going to pave the way for a bold long-awaited reform that would lead to a complete and permanent removal from the Canadian landscape of the weapons of choice for mass murders.

Sadly, all the pomp and circumstance, assorted with dramatic talking points, were nothing but hollow theatrics and a missed opportunity to finally end the protracted and painful national gun control debate.

While Chrystia Freeland tweeted that with Bill C-21, “the government introduced legislation that will fulfill our commitment to take the most dangerous guns off our streets and out of our communities”, the Liberals decided to back out of their promise and instead rely on the goodwill of gun owners to surrender their assault weapons or to keep them and never, ever shoot them again, as that would no longer be “allowed”.

The same weapons that Trudeau described as being « designed for one purpose and one purpose only: to kill the largest number of people in the shortest amount of time”, adding, “There is no use and no place for such weapons in Canada.”

Of all people, Mr. Trudeau should know that as long as these weapons remain in circulation, they represent an unacceptable safety risk. Indeed, Corey Hurren, the 46-year-old Manitoba Reservist, licensed gun owner and avowed QAnon follower had in possession at least one of these newly prohibited weapons — part of the arsenal he had with him as he rammed his truck through the gates of Rideau Hall last July. His plan was to “arrest” the Prime Minister because of COVID-19 restrictions and … the recent prohibition of assault weapons. This man left behind a letter in which he wrote that “he hopes his children would understand his actions”.

With Bill C-21, tens of thousands of semi-automatic assault-style weapons will remain in private hands. Similar tragedies can and will happen again.

If owners choose to keep their weapons, it won’t be because they will have accepted that from now on these will forever be useless “souvenirs” from the good old days. No. They will keep them because they know full well that, armed with a little patience, the day will come when an O’Toole-led Conservative government will repeal the ban, as he has already pledged he would do.

And when that happens, we will be back at square one.

Except, we have no more energy to fight. We cannot continue to engage in this never-ending battle.

If passed, Bill C-21 will bring about the end of our three-decade-long battle for gun control that began on December 6, 1989.

And from then on, at every anniversary, during every commemorative ceremony, gun victims and their families — past, present and future — will remember the Trudeau government’s ominous capitulation to the gun lobby.

Assault Weapons: Was our 30-year battle for gun control really all for naught?

By Serge St-Arneault

Many of the families of the victims of the December 6, 1989, Polytechnique tragedy in Montreal, have been working for thirty years to eliminate assault weapons from our communities and our streets. This has never been achieved, not even during the brief decade that the long-gun registry was in effect, which was abolished by Stephen Harper’s Conservative government in 2012. Since then, many innocent people have been injured or killed by assault weapons legally acquired under Canadian law, like the victims of the Dawson College school shooting. Logically, these weapons should be strictly limited to military personnel.

For sure, we are so far not even close to what is happening in the United States, where gun violence is out of control. Nearly 40,000 Americans were killed by guns in 2017. That’s one murder every fifteen minutes. Unfortunately for Canadians, we are increasingly mimicking the US culture that values gun ownership. Both shootings of a 15-year-old girl in Montreal on February 7th and of a 14-year-old girl in Toronto on February 12th testify to that.

In the last election, the Liberal Party of Canada promised to ban military-style assault weapons. They promised to implement a buy-back program for “all” assault weapons. In May 2020, Prime Minister Trudeau announced a series of Orders in Council that made it no longer legal “to buy, sell, transport, import or use military-grade assault weapons in this country”.

Yet despite polls invariably showing 80% of Canadians support a ban on assault weapons as well as one conducted by Environics Research (on behalf of PolySeSouvient) showing that despite the pandemic, a clear majority still want the Liberal government to buy back all existing ones, we were dismayed to learn through media reports that the forthcoming bill will go in the opposite direction, with the buyback, while mandatory in New Zealand and in Australia, will not be mandatory in Canada.

As long as they remain in circulation, these killing machines represent a major public safety risk.

For example, Corey Hurren, the 46-year-old Manitoba Reservist, avowed QAnon follower, licensed gun owner and avid gun control opponent, had in possession at least one of these weapons, a newly prohibited Norinco M14 rifle, as well as a Lakefield Mossberg shotgun, a Dominion Arms shotgun and a high-capacity magazine when he rammed his truck through the gates of Rideau Hall on July 2, 2020. He wanted to “arrest” Prime Minister Trudeau because of COVID-19 restrictions and the recent assault weapon ban, leaving behind a letter in which he wrote, “he hopes his children would understand his actions”.

We are not so naïve as to imagine that owners of grandfathered assault weapon will henceforth consider them as “souvenirs” from the good old days when they could shoot them. They know full well that a future O’Toole-led Conservative government will repeal the ban — as he has already pledged to do. And when this happens, we will be back at square one.

These killing machines, as well as handguns, will continue to proliferate and the NRA ideology will continue to seep into the bowels of our country.

And it will be the end of our battle that began over thirty years ago.

My sister Annie was assassinated in a classroom with a military-style assault weapon. With the anticipated federal bill, this kind of tragedy can and will happen again. If it is indeed the intent of the Liberals to break the promise that we loudly and publicly applauded and that contributed to their 2019 victory, then we will have been manipulated in order to win them votes. This is nothing less than a betrayal.

Gun victims and their families, past, present and future, will remember this sinister political calculation.

Link: 30 ANS DE LUTTE POUR RETIRER LES ARMES D’ASSAUT DES RUES DU PAYS: «ON EST À BOUT DE SOUFFLE»