Trudeau promises more gun control and goes on the attack against Scheer

BERNARDO: Target criminals, not the compliant​

CSSA members agree on three things:

Licensed firearms owners are heavily vetted by government and the RCMP;

Licensed firearms owners are statistically safer than serving police officers;

Most crime committed with firearms is the result of illegal guns smuggled across the border and then used by drug dealers, gangs and organized crime.

What you demand from government:

Real, effective border enforcement and interdiction of smuggling routes.

Policing and intelligence efforts focused on criminal networks, not licensed gun owners.

Consistent, tougher sentences for violent offenders.

Evidence-based policy with measurable public safety outcomes, not public safety theatre that pushes a political agenda.

None of these exist under Mark Carney’s Liberal government, nor did it under Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government before it. Members frame the firearms confiscation compensation scheme and the handgun freeze as high-cost, low-yield.

The dominant critique?

The entire program is political theatre that diverts police resources and public money from far more urgent needs, such as healthcare capacity, mental health services, and frontline law enforcement.

Members repeatedly connect Ottawa’s approach to a net loss in public safety capacity:

Confiscation logistics consume RCMP and other police forces’ bandwidth.

Firearms bans and “handgun freezes” limit training opportunities for legitimate firearms users, while criminals remain completely unaffected.

The Nova Scotia tragedy is cited first as a massive failure of the RCMP and second, as a failure to prevent illegal guns from being smuggled into Canada. It should never be the rationale to penalize lawful firearms owners and confiscate their property.

A strong current of procedural justice runs through member emails:

Members want transparent rules, realistic timelines, and guaranteed, fair compensation — or a repeal of the entire firearms confiscation scheme.

Carney’s “voluntary” participation in a confiscation scheme that becomes criminal at the deadline is not a voluntary program.

Vague or contested valuations for surrendered property raise expropriation concerns.

Deactivation capacity constraints (there aren’t many approved gunsmiths who can deactivate firearms) create amnesty-timing risks beyond licensed gun owners’ control.

The mood is hotter than a year ago.

Four distinct camps emerge from our analysis of member emails:

Law-and-Order Pragmatists — Want the firearms confiscation program repealed and replaced with concrete border & crime control measures; they prioritize civility and persuasion.

Fiscal Hawks — Lead with waste narrative, stating the entire firearms confiscation program, like the failed long gun registry before it, is a total waste of taxpayer dollars; they prefer money be spent on healthcare and policing initiatives that have a measurable public safety benefit.

Civil-Liberties Guardians — Alarmed by the precedent being set: ban legally-owned firearms → confiscate legally-owned firearms → criminalize licensed firearms owners. They push for due process, evidence-based policy, and defence of our civil rights.

Defiance Faction – Fed up with surveys and hedging; open talk of refusal to comply; increasing appetite for mass protest.

Note: The pragmatist + fiscal + civil-liberties blocs are numerically larger; the defiance bloc is smaller but loud, and it’s pulling fence-sitters toward firmer resistance.

Trust in the governing Liberals is effectively exhausted. Members view current firearm policy as punitive and agenda-driven, not as policy that will positively affect public safety.

The CSSA community is politically unified in opposition to the current federal approach and consolidating behind an evidence-based, enforcement-first alternative. The centre of gravity is moving from frustration to mobilization.

Anger is understandable, but persuasion wins policy.

Canadians outside our community need to see calm competence, compassion for victims of violence, and a credible plan to reduce crime.

That’s how we build the super-majority necessary to end “public safety theatre” of gun bans and confiscations.

Politically, our community is firmly opposed to the current federal firearms program and is platforms, primarily from the Conservative Party.

Strategically, members want evidence-based public safety policies, fiscal responsibility, and respect for lawful owners.

The energy has shifted from frustration to mobilization.

Now let’s turn that energy into policy change through massive political action in the next federal election.

 
Gun control group warns of Liberal ‘inaction’ ahead of Polytechnique anniversary

OTTAWA — A well-known gun control group is telling Prime Minister Mark Carney it would be “disingenuous and even hypocritical” for Liberal MPs to wear white ribbons to mark the anniversary of the Montreal massacre given the government’s lack of action on key firearm measures.

In a letter sent to Carney this week, the group PolySeSouvient accuses the Liberals of “inaction” to ensure a complete ban on assault-style firearms and failing to implement gun-related measures to prevent intimate partner violence.

The National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women, informally known as White Ribbon Day, falls on Dec. 6. It marks the anniversary of a gunman’s murder of 14 women at Montreal’s École Polytechnique in 1989.

Since May 2020, Ottawa has outlawed approximately 2,500 types of guns on the basis they belong on the battlefield, not in the hands of hunters or sport shooters.

The government says a buyback program will provide owners fair compensation for their outlawed firearms.

PolySeSouvient, formed in response to the 1989 mass shooting, says the buyback will be a waste of money unless it includes a ban on the semi-automatic SKS rifle, which is not among the banned firearms.

“If the ban is not comprehensive, assault weapons will remain legally available and the public’s interest in terms of increased safety from gun violence will be compromised,” says the letter to Carney from PolySeSouvient coordinator Heidi Rathjen and others affiliated with the group.

The SKS is commonly used in Indigenous communities to hunt for food. It has also been used in police killings and other high-profile shootings.

In September, the government said consultations on the firearm’s classification were ongoing.

PolySeSouvient has called on the government to impose an immediate ban on new sales of the SKS, remove from circulation modern, assault-style versions of the rifle, and implement a voluntary buyback of older models. It advocates an exemption for Indigenous hunters who use the SKS primarily for sustenance.

The group also criticizes the Liberal government for failing to bring into force measures to deal with firearm-related intimate partner violence that flow from legislation which became law almost two years ago.

“Over 50 women’s groups have fought for the adoption for these measures,” the letter to Carney says. “A year ago, alongside relatives of victims of recent gun-related domestic femicides and familicides, these groups reiterated their call for swift and effective implementation.”

In their spring election platform, the Carney-led Liberals promised to automatically revoke gun licences held by individuals convicted of violent offences — particularly intimate partner violence offences.

The letter to Carney says “it would be disingenuous and even hypocritical for you and your Liberal caucus MPs to wear white ribbons or to participate in memorial events across Canada commemorating the victims of the femicides at Polytechnique,” given the remaining work to be done.


This part (among others) they got VERY wrong: The government says a buyback program will provide owners fair compensation for their outlawed firearms.

The government itself has imposed a cap on funding that will result in most NOT seeing any "reimbursement" or "compensation" for their "outlawed firearms".
 
Following the rumored failure of the test project to confiscate firearms in Cape Breton (said to have achieved 30 or less from a projected 200) the BIL of the area's Liberal MP announced his retirement today. Wonder just where he will land?

BREAKING: Cape Breton Regional Police Chief Robert Walsh announces retirement plans​

Cape Breton Regional Police Chief Robert Walsh is set to retire at the start of the new year.

In a notice sent out by the Cape Breton Regional Municipality on Monday, Walsh announced that he will retire as police chief as of Jan. 1, 2026.


Robert J. Walsh

The Cape Breton Regional Police Chief, Robert J. Walsh, went ahead with signing on to confiscate legally acquired property from licensed individuals without consulting his own officers that serve under him. Remember, Chief Walsh is the brother-in-law of Liberal MP Mike Kelloway.
 

Cape Breton Gun Owners Surrender 22 Firearms in Confiscation Test; Police Chief to Retire​

TheGunBlog.ca — Gun owners in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, surrendered 22 firearms in a test of the Liberal Party of Canada’s national confiscation effort, CBC News reported today, further signaling the attack on honest citizens will fail.

Police Chief Retiring

Robert Walsh, the chief of the Cape Breton Regional Police Service who had said he was pleased to collaborate with the Liberals against government-licensed firearm owners, said today he is retiring. He didn’t give a reason.

The Liberals, backed by Walsh, tested their billion-dollar confiscation effort last month by offering to compensate owners who chose to surrender their recently “Prohibited” rifles and shotguns.

The 22 seized firearms represent 11% of the 200 confiscations available for the test.

Police Chair Comments

“It tells me that there are some people out there that wanted to pass in guns,” said Glenn Paruch, the chair of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality Police Commission, according to CBC News.

“What it says for the potential project itself, I honestly can’t comment on that until I talk to the chief and get the actual numbers on it,” CBC quoted Paruch as saying.

CBC didn’t say how many individuals surrendered firearms. It’s possible they’re from only a handful of people, or even a single person.

Criminalize and Confiscate

The Liberal administration has criminalized hundreds of thousands of government-licensed firearm owners across Canada since May 2020 as it works to suppress civic-minded Canadians, weaken safety and security, and destroy the firearm industry and gun culture.

The attacks represent one of the biggest crackdowns against honest citizens by any democracy in history, outside of war.

Walsh: “I Am Honoured”

“I am honoured and grateful to have had the opportunity to serve my community as Chief of Police, alongside the many dedicated professionals in what I believe is one of the best police services in the country, that is well-positioned for what lies ahead in policing,” Walsh said in a statement on the website of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality.

 

Politics Before Public Safety - The Truth about the Liberal Firearms Confiscations​

Trudeau – and now Carney – claim the Liberals are only banning “assault-style” firearms: modern weapons of war.

So why are hunters losing ordinary hunting rifles, farmers losing varmint guns, collectors losing priceless collections, and Canadian Olympic shooters forced to spirit their own competition firearms out of the country?

There’s a lot of confusion around Canada’s ongoing firearms bans and the recently launched confiscation programs. Between ever-changing regulations, political talking points, and online misinformation, most Canadians still don’t know what these laws actually do — or who they really hurt.

And the Liberals are more than happy to sit back, and let that misinformation do their work for them.

This video breaks it all down in plain, everyday language.
No political spin. No gun-guy jargon. Just straightforward facts for people who aren’t already deep in the debate.

It’s not made for seasoned firearms owners.

It’s made for the confused fence-sitters who don’t know who or what to believe.

Watch it, check our work, and decide for yourself.

 
The Toronto Star - notoriously known for it's direct support of all things LIEberal - tries to gloss over the failure of the Cape Breton Gun Grab Pilot Project:

Carney government ‘analyzing the results’ of firearms buyback pilot project amid reports of low uptake

OTTAWA—The Liberal government refused Wednesday to say how many banned weapons have been collected in the trial for its contentious gun buyback program, as federal sources and local reports suggest minimal success, raising concerns about how the roughly $750-million scheme will unfold on a national scale.

The Liberals kickstarted the long-delayed program with Cape Breton, N.S. as its testing ground last month, hoping to collect 200 guns and evaluate its system, but the small-scale pilot has been met with pushback and little uptake from frustrated gun owners.

An RCMP official, who was granted anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, confirmed to the Star this week that uptake was below hopes and expectations. Local media reports from CBC and the Cape Breton Post have cited Glenn Paruch, the chair of the Cape Breton police board, as saying he’s heard between 10 and 22 guns were collected, which would be less than 15 per cent of Ottawa’s stated target.

Paruch did not reply to a request for comment from the Star.

On Wednesday, Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree would only say the government was “analyzing the results” and would be sharing the data “at the appropriate time.”

“By all accounts, technical capabilities have been satisfied, and we are looking forward to rolling out the program across Canada over the coming weeks,” Anandasangaree told reporters.

But Nathalie Provost, the secretary of state for nature and a longtime gun-control advocate, acknowledged this week there was a low uptake, telling the Star she was “concerned” about it. She added, however, that the Cape Breton pilot project was a valuable learning experience that showed the importance of communication.

“The program is going well, because one of the first issues of the program was to see if the system worked. And so on that aspect, it worked well,” said Provost, a survivor of the 1989 École Polytechnique massacre. “The numbers are not very high, but they’re very important. We learned so much doing it.”

It’s not yet clear when the national program, which aims to collect more than 2,500 types of firearms banned by the Trudeau government, will start.

The pilot project in Cape Breton was launched six weeks ago, a day after an audio recording of Anandasangaree surfaced in which the minister suggested to his gun-owning tenant that the Carney government was moving forward with the Trudeau-era policy due to electoral pressure from Quebec. He later said those private comments intended to convey his belief that the long-delayed program should have been completed faster.

The Alberta and Saskatchewan governments have added roadblocks to taking away their citizens’ guns while signaling more is to come, and some police services, including the Ontario Provincial Police, have said they won’t participate.

Meanwhile, gun control advocates have grown frustrated about delays in the program and other measures. In a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney last week, PolySeSouvient said it would be “disingenuous and even hypocritical” for Liberal MPs to wear white ribbons to mark the Dec. 6 anniversary of the Montreal mass shooting.

Gun owners in Cape Breton were not required to participate in the pilot project, and can still surrender banned firearms once the national program rolls out.

But Rod Giltaca, CEO of the Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights, called the participation so far “a startlingly low number.”

Giltaca said there could be “more noticeable uptake” under the threat of criminality, but that “it seems like people are ready to resist.”

In Cape Breton, the launch of the pilot project was met with protests from gun owners and condemnation from the local police union.

The Cape Breton Post reported this week that Cape Breton Regional Police Chief Robert Walsh said he had agreed to a request from the federal government not to comment on the results of the pilot project. Anandasangaree’s office did not address that question when reached by the Star.

Two Liberal MPs told the Star they don’t think it’s politically smart to promote the program to constituents, citing fear of backlash. One of the local Cape Breton MPs, however, said Wednesday it has not really been an issue in his riding.

“Haven’t heard anything negative about it. People really aren’t talking about it,” said Liberal MP Jaime Battiste.

https://www.thestar.com/politics/fe...cle_0b0757aa-1190-46bb-bcda-24890d79cf6d.html
 

Ottawa delays planned restart of gun 'buyback' program for retailers with banned stock​

OTTAWA — The federal government’s plans to resume a compensation program for retailers for inventories of formerly legal guns that were subsequently banned by the Liberals have been delayed from this fall until an unspecified date.

The change comes as Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government intends to move ahead with the launch of a national “buyback” program by the end of the year for individual gun owners whose formerly legal firearms ended up being banned.

In September, when Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree announced the “buyback” program was being piloted for individuals in Cape Breton, N.S., his department confirmed that the second phase of the program for businesses with banned stock would resume in the “coming weeks,” after it was closed this past spring.

Public Safety Canada’s webpage dedicated to providing information on both programs also states that the resumption of the program for businesses was slated to begin “later this fall.”

However, it now appears the government is backing off from that timeline.

“We will be reopening the second round of the business phase of the Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program. The exact date will be shared soon,” wrote Simon Lafortune, a spokesman for Anandasangaree.

Wes Winkel, president of the Canadian Sporting Arms and Ammunition Association, which the government has contracted since 2023 and assisted with pricing, confirmed to National Post there has been an “indefinite delay” on the part of the federal government.

Neither Anandasangaree’s office nor the public safety department has clarified the reason behind the delay.

“We will continue to work closely with industry stakeholders and law enforcement partners to ensure that the second phase of the business portion of the buyback program runs efficiently and securely,” Lafortune said. “Further updates will be provided as implementation work progresses, and the government thanks Canadian businesses for their continued cooperation and patience as this important initiative moves forward.”

Rod Giltaca, CEO and Executive Director of the Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights, which promotes itself as “Canada’s gun lobby,” said the reasons the federal government has yet to complete the retail side of the program remain a “mystery.”

“This program has been a disaster for over half a decade,” he said in an interview on Thursday.

The Liberals’ efforts to remove what it has called “assault-style” firearms from businesses and individuals have proven to be a long and troubled journey.

Former prime minister Justin Trudeau campaigned on doing so during the 2019 federal election, with him announcing an initial ban on some 1,500 makes and models of firearms, including the AR-15, through an order-in-council in May 2020, following a shooting spree in Portapique, N.S.

Since then, hundreds more types of firearms have been added to the prohibited list through announcements made in December 2024 and March of this year. More than 2,500 makes and models of firearms have now been banned in Canada.

The amnesty order to allow firearms owners with banned guns to possess them without criminal liability has also been extended several times beyond the two years Trudeau initially promised in 2019. The federal government’s latest extension brings the amnesty program to October 2026.

The federal government reported that during the first phase of the compensation program for retailers affected by the original 2020 bans, more than 12,000 guns had been collected from businesses by the time it reached its original April 30 closing date, with some $22 million worth of compensation doled out.

Giltaca said the prohibitions on gun retailers have “been very damaging” to many businesses, stuck with the cost of having to store prohibited inventory, with some forced to close.

When it comes to the program for individuals, the federal government has yet to release the results of the pilot program it ran in Cape Breton, which, when it was announced back in September, was stated to be for a “maximum of 200” banned firearms, to test the online portal, collection, and destruction process.

This week, the chair of Cape Breton’s police board told reporters that he had heard there were between “10 to 22 collected.”

A request for a response from Cape Breton police, which teamed up with Public Safety Canada to pilot the program, has not yet been returned. Cape Breton Police Chief Robert Walsh declined to tell local reporters this week the results of the program, saying it was the federal government’s pilot.

“If the government isn’t extremely humiliated over this whole affair, they definitely should be,” Giltaca said.

This week, Anandasangaree told reporters the government was “analyzing the results of the pilot,” adding that the “technical capabilities have been satisfied,” with the plan to roll out the program nationally only weeks away.

The minister’s spokesman said the pilot, which is now closed, lasted a total of six weeks, with the first three weeks open for firearms owners to declare the fact that they owned a prohibited weapon, with the following three weeks, “for collection, verification, destruction, and payment.”

He added that the results of the pilot would be released before the national launch, and the government remained committed to finishing the program.

“As you know, the pilot’s objective was to ensure that we are fully prepared to launch the Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program nationally,” Lafortune wrote. “We will have more to share on the pilot’s results in due course and will be launching the national program before the end of 2025.”


Part & Parcel of the delay is the FACT that a great many of the businesses that complied have yet to be reimbursed.
Since the end of April...
Doesn't sit well with those waiting in the wings...
 

Saskatchewan plans amendments to Firearms Act amid federal ‘gun grab’​

The Government of Saskatchewan announced amendments to the Saskatchewan Firearms Act to protect firearm owners amid the federal government’s national gun grab program targeting over 2,500 firearms models reclassified as prohibited since 2020.

The proposed legislation ensures that anyone seizing firearms under new federal laws must pay the owner fair market value, as set by the Saskatchewan Firearms Commissioner.

Firearms will be considered seized if impacted by federal bans and owners do not receive fair compensation within 12 months of the legislation coming into force.

"The amendments we are introducing will promote public safety and help safeguard the heritage of law-abiding firearms owners by holding the federal government accountable for providing fair compensation to all affected Saskatchewan firearms owners," said Corrections, Policing, and Public Safety Minister Tim McLeod.

"Rather than targeting law-abiding firearms owners, we believe our approach of providing law enforcement with the tools and expertise they need to secure and protect Saskatchewan communities from illegal firearms is a more effective firearms safety measure."

The federal buyback funding is capped at $742 million, and compensation is offered on a first-come, first-served basis, with no guarantee once the cap is reached.

To help owners receive fair compensation, Saskatchewan will launch an online portal for appraisals of firearms, ammunition, and accessories covered by federal legislation.

These appraisals can then be used as court evidence against the federal government if compensation is withheld.

"Individuals should not be criminalized for having a firearms licence and owning legally-obtained property," said Saskatchewan Firearms Office Commissioner Robert Freberg.

"Lawful firearms owners are not causing public safety concerns in our communities. The firearms affected by the federal government's reclassification, which are currently legally owned by individuals and businesses, are rarely used in criminal activities across Canada. The real concerns are firearms that have been smuggled in from the United States or those that have been illegally modified for use in gang and illegal drug activities."

Other proposed changes include allowing medical professionals to report patients with conditions affecting firearm safety and empowering the Chief Firearms Officer to inspect ranges and designate safety instructors.

The amendments would also permit the Saskatchewan Firearms Office to store firearms voluntarily turned in by owners without fear of criminal charges while compensation claims proceed.

The provincial government continues to oppose the buyback program, urging federal investment instead in initiatives combating firearms smuggling and illegal gun crime, such as the Saskatchewan Ballistics Laboratory.

 

The Great Canadian Gun Grab: Another Billion-Dollar Bonfire of Stupidity​


In the annals of government incompetence, few spectacles rival the Liberal government’s Firearms Confiscation Compensation Scheme – a bloated, bungled exercise in political theatre that’s limping into its sixth year.

It’s not about public safety. It was never about public safety.

It’s about votes. It was always about votes.

And this bloated, six–year, billion-dollar boondoggle is where common sense, small businesses, and honest citizens are sacrificed on the altar of political theatre.

First under Justin Trudeau, now under Mark Carney, it’s the same script with a new actor, and the same disastrous results.

In 2020, after the Portapique mass killing spree, the Liberals swung a sledgehammer at licensed gun owners, not criminals.

They slapped a “ban” on 1,500 so-called “assault-style” firearms that’s now ballooned to over 2,500 makes and models.

The amnesty deadline is punted down the road year after year, (the latest extension is October 2026), as though no one in Ottawa is willing to take responsibility for this scheme and the harm it does to the innocent.

If this is public safety, then the Titanic was a lifeboat.

The Pilot Program That Proved the Point

Their grand 6-week “proof-of-concept” pilot program in Cape Breton was supposed to showcase how smoothly firearms confiscation would work.

They expected up to 200 banned guns to be voluntarily surrendered.

They held press conferences. They offered up the same, stale talking points with strategically planned smiles for all the cameras.

The result?

Twenty-two guns turned in.

That’s less than the number of excuses Ottawa churned out to defend this epic failure.

The local police chief who loudly supported the pilot program’s launch, Robert Walsh, refused to answer basic questions after its abject failure, calling it a “federal” problem, before conveniently retiring into obscurity.

Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree insists the “technical capabilities” of the firearms confiscation scheme were demonstrated.

If seizing 22 legally owned firearms in six weeks is Minister Anandasangaree’s definition of success, we shudder to think what he would consider “failure.”

Economic Sabotage in a Pretty Red Maple Leaf Box

This isn’t just a political and public embarrassment. It’s economic vandalism dressed up as virtue.

Firearms retailers—already hammered by the 2020 gun ban by Order in Council—surrendered more than 12,000 firearms in the first business phase of the program received $22 million in taxpayer compensation for their trouble.

Phase two is now “postponed indefinitely.”

So now, shop owners sit on dead inventory they can’t sell and can’t surrender for compensation; while still paying storage, insurance, and interest on the money they had to borrow to pay for new stock.

Some of those businesses closed their doors for good.

Those jobs weren’t “redistributed.” They’re gone. And they’re not coming back.

The Canadian Sporting Arms and Ammunition Association, dragged into appraising values in 2023, confirms what everyone on the ground already knows: Ottawa turned this file into a black hole.

Money, time, and trust go in.

Nothing but political grandstanding and carefully crafted talking points come out.

Budget 2025 casually earmarked $38.7 million over three years.

That’s not a solution. That’s an insult.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is in court to pry the true cost of their firearms confiscation compensation scheme out of the government’s clenched fist.

Everyone knows the real tab will be measured in billions once administration, enforcement, storage, and constant deadline extensions are factored in.

Leaked audio caught Minister Anandasangaree questioning whether the firearms confiscation scheme makes any sense at all.

Imagine being “responsible” for a program when the person responsible for selling it to Canadians doesn’t believe in it.

The Same Trainwreck, New Engineer

Carney’s Liberals now brag about a “national launch” that’s always “a few weeks away.”

It’s the same Trudeau-era train wreck, repainted and rebranded. More half-baked ideology over evidence, and more political theatre over honesty and truth.

Optics are always more important than actual, measurable public safety results.

After half a decade and untold millions, what do we have to show for it?

Noncompliance hardened.
Small businesses gutted, not supported.
Public safety stats worsened, not improved.

This isn’t government soberly wielding the sword of justice.

This is government playing dress-up with power, waving prop swords while real criminals slip through the cracks.

Imagine if those billions had gone to border security.
Imagine if they were invested in mental health care.
Imagine if they cut health-care waitlists that actually cost Canadians their lives.

Instead, we fund “public safety theatre” while calling it courageous action.

Time to Lay the Axe to the Root?

This is not governance. It’s grandstanding at gunpoint.

The foolishness isn’t in the firearms. It’s in the hands writing the regulations while emptying your wallet.

Scrap the confiscation scheme. Completely.
Enforce the laws already on the books.
Target smugglers, gangs, and real criminals instead of branding lawful citizens as enemies of the state.

Government is supposed to “minister to you for good,” not become the wrecking ball swung against honest people and their livelihoods.

When rulers abuse that trust, citizens must say so. Clearly. Firmly. Persistently.

Demand stewardship, not showmanship.
Demand justice, not headlines.
Demand policies that actually save lives instead of burning billions of taxpayer dollars in the name of “feeling safe.”

Because if we don’t, this won’t be the last billion-dollar bonfire with your hard-earned money.

It will just be the warm-up.

 
https://x.com/TWilsonOttawa
INCOMING REGULATIONS FOR AMMO AND REACTIVE TARGETS

This is important - bear with me here. There are incoming explosives regulations that are going to increase the cost and decrease the availability of ammunition.

NRCan has open comments until Dec 1st.

They question compliance across the industry when it comes to selling and shipping explosives like reactive targets and powders.So they want to propose new changes that will restrict who can ship/sell explosives, they will also require all businesses to register with NRCan (not required at the moment) in order to store and sell.

This will increase inspections and requirements/protocols businesses have to follow - so many will just choose not to carry those items. They’ll also have record keeping requirements for businesses, and businesses that don’t register will not be able to buy explosives from distributors.

You can voice your concerns by commenting in the general comment section here: https://gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2025/2025-11-01/html/reg3-eng.html?utm_campaign=as-npc116018532

This is another “death by a thousand cuts” issue. Share with your local retailers.

 

Alberta doubles down on defending gun owners while rejecting federal gun grab​

EDMONTON- — Alberta Justice Minister Mickey Amery says the province is moving ahead with measures to strengthen legal protections for Albertans who use firearms in self-defence, while continuing to refuse participation in the federal gun grab program.

Speaking in an interview with the Western Standard following Premier Danielle Smith’s announcement on Saturday at the 2025 AGM, Amery spoke on how the province is reviewing how police and Crown prosecutors interpret cases involving defensive firearm use.

“We’ve said for a long time that Albertans have the right to use reasonable force to defend themselves,” Amery said. “That is enshrined in the Criminal Code and in our culture.”

A motion formalizing the province’s position is expected to reach the legislature floor next week. Amery clarified that Alberta will not be changing federal law, but rather adjusting how it is interpreted in determining whether prosecution is appropriate in cases involving lawful gun owners.

“Is it in the public interest to prosecute innocent, law-abiding Albertans who are defending their homes, themselves and their families? I don’t think it is,” he said.

Amery said he does not anticipate legal challenges from the federal government, nor the use of the notwithstanding clause, as the province intends to remain within federal legal parameters while adjusting enforcement priorities.

Any direction for police agencies will fall under Public Safety Minister Mike Ellis, while Amery will focus on guiding Crown prosecutors.

Alberta Plans Clearer Self-Defence Framework

The review will focus on ensuring consistency in how self-defence cases are handled across the province.

Amery said the goal is to ensure lawful gun owners are not unfairly criminalized when acting to protect themselves or their property, noting that reasonable force remains the legal threshold.

“It’s about clarity,” he said. “Albertans need to know where the line is — and prosecutors need to consider whether charges align with common sense and public expectation.”

He said future guidance will remind prosecutors to weigh whether a conviction is realistically achievable and whether pressing charges is in the public interest.

Province Maintains Firm Stance Against Federal Gun Grab

Amery reiterated Alberta’s long-standing refusal to assist in the federal firearm confiscation program, saying the initiative is wasteful, ineffective and unfairly targets lawful firearm owners.

“We’ve said the type of gun confiscation scheme Ottawa has devised is not going to do anything to protect public safety,” he said.

Amery argued the federal terminology around “assault-style firearms” is misleading and captures firearms commonly used by hunters, farmers and sport shooters.

Nova Scotia Pilot Project Raises Questions

Amery pointed to the federal pilot project in Nova Scotia as evidence the program lacks public support. Reports circulating publicly claim only 22 firearms were surrendered during the testing phase — a result Amery described as insignificant.

“That’s a ridiculously low number,” he said, adding with emphasis, “I have more than 22 guns in my gun safe.”

Amery said the results reinforce Alberta’s view that lawful gun owners do not support the program and are unlikely to participate voluntarily.

“That tells you Canadians are not buying into this program,” he added.

Other Provinces Aligning With Alberta

Amery said multiple provinces are now mirroring Alberta’s stance, making federal implementation increasingly difficult.

At a recent federal-provincial meeting, he said Saskatchewan and Ontario indicated they would not support or administer the gun grab.

“If the federal government doesn’t have provincial police services, prosecution services or provincial buy-in, I cannot see how they will successfully implement the program,” Amery said.

He added the federal government may need to reconsider whether continuing the program is a viable use of public money.

Message to Alberta Gun Owners

Amery said firearm owners who have followed regulations should feel supported by the province.

“These are people who have taken safety courses, gone through all the hoops and who know how to safely handle a firearm,” he said. “We will do everything possible to protect law-abiding Albertans from being turned into criminals through a poorly conceived federal program.”

The provincial motion related to self-defence and prosecution guidelines is expected to be introduced in the legislature next week. The federal government has not yet publicly responded to Alberta’s latest position on the gun grab.

 

Alberta gov't to present motion next week against federal firearm seizure program: Smith​

The Alberta government will introduce a motion this week under provincial sovereignty legislation to defy the federal gun seizure program, Premier Danielle Smith announced Saturday during a speech at the United Conservative Party’s annual general meeting.

The motion, if passed by the legislature, will instruct “provincial entities,” including municipalities and law enforcement agencies, to refuse to enforce or prosecute the assault-style firearms compensation program.

It would also protect Albertans defending themselves from intruders, she said.

“I’ve got a little tip for low-life criminals out there: if you don’t want to get shot, don’t break into someone’s house,” Smith said during her speech. “It’s really that simple, isn’t it?”

The provincial government wants police and the justice system to focus on “criminals — not farmers, not ranchers or sport shooters, nor Albertans defending their families and homes,” she said.

Public Safety Canada did not immediately respond to CBC News’ request for comment. The ministry oversees the gun program, and firearm and policing policy advice falls under its responsibilities.

The Alberta Sovereignty within a United Canada Act, passed in December 2022, offers a framework to challenge federal laws and policies in court.

The federal government has banned more than 2,500 makes and models of assault-style firearms since May 2020. It developed a buy-back program, which is voluntary, to compensate eligible businesses and individuals who own such weapons.

But there is an amnesty period on this weapons ban. If people and businesses don’t dispose or deactivate those weapons before Oct. 30, 2026, they risk being charged with illegal possession of a prohibited firearm.

“Obviously, firearm owners are not happy about this, because it’s just another step in a 50-year history of Ottawa … targeting law-abiding firearms owners with increasingly draconian laws and confiscation and devaluation of property,” Teri Bryant, Alberta’s chief firearms officer, told CBC News Saturday.

Bryant's office works under the provincial justice ministry.

Financial investment, sentimentality and sport are among the reasons people are against the federal policy, Bryant said. She also claimed the ban also hasn’t had an apparent effect on criminal misuse.

The Alberta government has taken steps over the past few years to try to push back against federal gun restrictions.

In September, Smith included firearm-related stipulations in her mandate letters to Justice Minister Mickey Amery and Public Safety and Emergency Services Minister Mike Ellis.

Amery’s mandate letter stated he must “relentlessly defend Albertans’ right to lawful and safe possession of firearms and affirm Albertans’ right of self-defence.”

Ellis was mandated to ensure all policing priorities are aligned with that direction.

Part of the intention behind the upcoming motion is to signal to the federal government that it shouldn't rely on any provincial entities to cooperate with its buy-back program, nor help with confiscating guns from registered owners, Amery told CBC News Saturday.

The Justice Ministry will not direct prosecutors to specific cases, he said, but he can — and plans to — issue guidelines as a general policy to the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service.

This motion, if passed, could put RCMP officers serving in Alberta in a bind, because they fall under federal jurisdiction. Amery said it's up to that agency to choose whether they follow Ottawa's directive.

"Given the fact that we've heard countless report that the RCMP all across Canada is severely understaffed, we think that their priorities should lie in other places," he said.

The Opposition NDP did not immediately respond to CBC News’ request for comment.


Of course the CBC continues with the spin that the buyback is somehow "voluntary".
When faced with criminal prosecution if you don't buy in, that is a FAR cry from "voluntary"!
 

MAUSER: Ottawa’s gun ‘buyback’ program will cost billions and for no good reason​

Five years after then-prime minister Justin Trudeau banned more than 100,000 types of so-called “assault-style firearms,” the federal government recently made the first attempt to force Canadians to surrender these firearms.

It didn’t go well.

The police chief in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, volunteered to run a pilot “buyback” project, which began last month. The government told Cape Bretoners they had two weeks to surrender their firearms to qualify for reimbursement or “buyback.” The pilot project netted a grand total of 22 firearms.

This failure should surprise no one. Back in 2018, a survey of “stakeholders” warned the government that firearms owners wouldn’t support such a gun ban. According to Prime Minister Carney’s own Privy Council Office, the “program faces a risk of non-compliance.” And federal Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree was recently recorded admitting that the “buyback” is a partisan maneuver, and if it were up to him, he’d scrap it. What’s surprising is Ottawa’s persistence, particularly given the change in the government and the opportunity to discard ineffective policies.

So what’s really going on here?

One thing is for certain — this program is not, and never has been, about public safety. According to a report from the federal Department of Justice, almost all guns used in crimes in Canada, including in big cities such as Toronto, are possessed illegally by criminals, with many smuggled in from the United States. And according to Ontario’s solicitor general, more than 90% of guns used in crimes in the province are illegally imported from the US. Obviously, the “buyback” program will have no effect on these guns possessed illegally by criminals.

Moreover, Canadian firearms owners are exceptionally law-abiding and less likely to commit murder than other Canadians. That also should not be surprising. To own a firearm in Canada, you must obtain a Possession and Acquisition Licence (PAL) from the RCMP after initial vetting and daily monitoring for possible criminal activity. Between 2000 and 2020, an average of 12 PAL-holders per year were accused of homicide, out of approximately two million PAL-holders. During that same 10-year period, the PAL-holder firearms homicide rate was 0.63 (per 100,000 PAL-holders) compared to 0.72 (per 100,000 adult Canadians) — that’s 14% higher than the rate for PAL-holders.

In other words, neither the so-called “assault-style firearms” nor their owners pose a threat to the public.

And the government’s own actions belie its claims. If these firearms are such a threat to Canadians, why slow-roll the “buyback” program? If inaction increased the likelihood of criminality by law-abiding firearms owners, why wait five years before launching a pilot program in a small community such as Cape Breton? And why continue to extend the amnesty period for another year, which the government did last month at the same time its pilot project netted a mere 22 firearms?

To ask those questions is to answer them.

Another question — how much will the “buyback” program cost taxpayers?

The government continues to block any attempt to disclose the full financial costs (although the Canadian Taxpayers Federation has launched a lawsuit to try to force the government to honour its Access to Information Act request).

But back in 2020, the Trudeau government said it would cost $200 million to compensate firearms owners (although the Parliamentary Budget Officer said compensation costs could reach $756 million). By 2024, the program had spent $67.2 million — remember, that’s before it collected a single gun. The government recently said the program’s administrative costs (safe storage, destruction of hundreds of thousands of firearms, etc.) would reach an estimated $1.8 billion. And according to Carney’s first budget released in November, his government will spend $364 million on the program this fiscal year — at a time of massive federal deficits and debt.

This is reminiscent of the Chretien government’s gun registry fiasco, which wound up costing more than $2 billion even after then-justice minister Allan Rock promised the registry program would “almost break even” after an $85 million initial cost. The Harper government finally scrapped the registry in 2012.

As the Carney government clings to the policies of its predecessor, Canadians should understand the true nature of Ottawa’s gun “buyback” program and its costs.

 
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