Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Firearm Legislation - Open Letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

The Honourable Justin Trudeau

Ottawa, Ontario,

Canada

K1A 0A6

justin.trudeau@parl.gc.ca

 CLICK HERE FOR MY PROFESSIONAL WEBSITE

Dear Sir,

RE: Firearm Legislation

I can demonstrate clearly that there is no justification for the most recent government gun control initiatives. When the issue is contextualized to societal risks generally, a person legally owning a firearm of any kind fails to make muster as a justification for a governmental intrusion on the right to own a firearm. There is a fulsome body of law in relation to property rights and the expropriation of same. There is also a long-standing cultural and (British / Canadian) legal tradition dating back 400 years in support of citizen ownership of firearms. Further, and more importantly, Section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms is excited in relation to this matter, both under the rubric of liberty generally and security of person. Further again, Section 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms is excited, as these government actions unjustifiably discriminate against an unenumerated class of people.  Please, let me reason with you, please consider the following.

Excerpt from my recent book – On Canadian Governance

A useful concept to use to consider in relation to gun control is called the “Availability Heuristic Salient” (AHS). In instances where the AHS affects public opinion, the ease of imagining an example or the vividness and emotional impact of that example becomes more credible than the actual statistical probability. Because an example is easily brought to mind or mentally "available", the single example is considered representative of the whole, rather than as just a single example in a range of data. Salient events tend to distort the judgement of risk.

  Click Here: Emergencies Measures Act Charter Right Concerns

There are issues where Availability Heuristic Salient drives policy that is detached from mathematical reality and this distorts public perception and the political process, one such policy area is gun control. People who are unfamiliar with firearms are intimidated by them. They hear about mass shootings on television, they see movies with guns going off. They have repeated exposure to the most extreme outcome of firearm use and the pro-gun control lobby uses the high level of saliency to support, what is truly an irrational position.

The government of Canada spent approximately 2.7 billion dollars on a long gun registry. Then, in 2012 the long gun registry was scrapped with no significant effect on public safety – 2.7 billion dollars wasted. The government of Canada at the time of writing, is embarking on the banning of certain classes of firearms and implementing a freeze on handguns. The ban on certain classes of firearms involves a “buyback” program – the total cost of which ranges from 2.6 to 6.7 billion dollars according to a Fraser Institute article written July 30, 2021.

                                                     Click Here: Military Preparedness

According to Statistics Canada “In 2020, police reported a total of 743 homicide victims in Canada or a rate of 1.95 per 100,000 population. For 277 of these victims, a firearm was used to commit the homicide (for a rate of 0.73 homicides per 100,000 population). “Overall, one in four (25%) female victims of firearm-related violent crime were victimized by a current or former spouse or another intimate partner.”

 

Deaths (Risk) / 100,000

Cause of Death

Rate / 100,000

Female IPD (Intimate Partner Deaths)

0.046

Female Deaths by Firearms

0.180

Firearm Deaths Excluding Suicide

0.180

Total Deaths by Firearms

0.730

Motor Vehicle Fatalities

4.600

50-Years or Older Male – Aspirin

10.400

Suicide

10.600

Opioid- and Stimulant-related Harms

19.500

Medically Preventable Accidents

66.000

Tree Falling (Occupational Risk in the United States)

357.000

 

In Canada, 277 people per year are killed in gun-related incidents (one would be too many) yet we are spending as much as $8 billion on gun control and nothing on a medical records system when in Canada 25,000 people die each year from preventable medical accidents. In the context of rational thought, medical accidents should be our priority.

Here are a few points to illustrate how politicization distorts response to real-world problems. There is no factual support that the Canadian public will be safer because of the billions spent on gun control, yet the government is doing it anyway. The legally restricted guns and their some 2,000,000 owners represent no threat to the safety of the public. The portion of Canadians that are gun owners, regardless of what kind of firearm they own represent no threat to public safety. Yet the government is bent on confiscating private property and intruding on gun owners' most fundamental rights. This issue has been political in the extreme for generations – liberals supporting gun control, conservatives against gun control. Gun control policy is most strongly supported by the urban female voter, and gun control as a wedge issue excites the respective party bases. The fact is, gun ownership is a non-issue, no one needs to spend time on it.

To further illustrate how costly this phenomenon is, let's take a moment to think about what might be done with the funds that are being wasted due to the public’s map of reality being distorted – $8 billion would provide $100,000 to 80,000 Autism kids, a Japanese company in India built the equivalent of a Vancouver to Hope rapid transit line for approximately $8 billion, we could provide 16,000 $500,000 forgivable business start-up loans, we could start a bond return augmentation program to incent innovation in key industries like environmentally friendly products and services, we could put $2 Million toward 4000 first nation water systems … you’re getting the picture. I've used gun control as an example above, but there are many other examples to draw from, a fact that amplifies the damage being done.

A Case for Self Defence

Why, in Section 7 Declaration of Rights of 1688, was self-defence recognized as valid (then directed to protestants, in contemporary Canada it would apply to all). And then again, why, in 1892 was self-defence considered a valid reason to lawfully carry a handgun and in 2023 self-defence has fallen by the wayside. Whether one is threatened by a rabid animal or a homicidal person, the threat is there in the moment, and the 10-minute response time of the police is unhelpful. The fact is, the police are unable to protect against these sorts of threats, and citizens are left to fend for themselves. This is an unacceptable circumstance, the right to life and security of a person must be attended to by the state, if the state is unable to attend to the section seven rights of citizens, it must permit citizens to attend to them on their own accord and by their own good judgement. This is especially true in remote locations such as farms etc.

Self-defence is a valid reason to have a firearm, defending one’s life is a right and defending the life of another is a moral obligation. This value is expressed in the United Nations doctrine of Responsibility to Protect, while directed at state scale instances, the moral obligation to protect remains valid at the individual level.

Rather than making people, women, into victims that must wait for help, we should be empowering them to defend themselves and others, as they do in so many countries around the world. With correct training, a civilian can be as effective and safe in the use of a firearm as a police officer. Had we taken this attitude and taught the women victims of the Polytechnique shooting how to care for themselves it is likely some, if not all, would be with us today. England, with very strict gun control laws, had a higher rate of gun crime through a period of IRA violence than the US – when people decide to do something illegal and a firearm is their chosen means to execute, they find guns - there will always be a man with a gun.

The attitude that accompanies the insistence that state actors are the only people qualified to attend to this most personal challenge, is part of the devolution of the individual’s standing in Canada. There is a greater insistence by the government to force people to depend on officialdom rather than to be self-reliant. This is a dangerous trend because, in matters related to self-defence the state is unable to effectively respond to certain types of threats that befall an individual - no matter how committed a police officer is, they can only drive a car so fast, and most acts of violence occur in an instant.

The Government’s Insistence on “Disarming” People is a Trigger – A case for returning to the status quo.

Many people are concerned by the government’s insistence on “disarming” people, particularly in the face of there being no data to support the government’s actions. The imposition of the gun registry and its subsequent removal in 2012 indicated no marked impact on public safety in having it or not having it.  The recent spat of gun violence in Toronto for example has been the product of illegal guns in the hands of criminals. The legal gun community is almost entirely absent in the illegal use of firearms.

” Indeed, there are more than two million PAL holders in Canada; each one has been vetted by the RCMP and is checked nightly for any violation through the “continuous eligibility screening” program. Firearm owners are also exceptionally law-abiding. PAL holders are less likely to commit murder than other Canadians. Between 2000 and 2020, the number of PAL holders accused of homicide varied from 6 to 21, averaging 12 accused per year out of approximately 2 million PAL holders. The number of PAL holders increased from 1,979,054 to 2,206,755 over this same time period, so the annual rate over 20 years was 0.63 accused per 100,000 PAL holders.”

Fraser Institute November 25, 2022

This reality is triggering a negative reaction, a fearful reaction in some cases, in this otherwise exceptionally law-abiding group  many are perceiving an injustice.

Conclusion

We are at a critical juncture in Canada, a confluence of factors has emerged: post-Covid realities, the fragmentation of our national narrative and societal fissures that have emerged from these events, the “real” two solitudes in Canada - rural and urban are diverging rapidly and, finally, the events in Ukraine are driving the imperative to vigorously prepare for national defence. The gun control initiatives of the present government are serving to amplify division generally.  Furthermore, the gun control initiatives are attacking and alienating the very law-abiding citizens who possess the fortitude and predilection to come to arms should it be required. The funds that will be consumed by this effort should proceed would be better directed at any number of initiatives – this type of expenditure on what one can only deduct to be political pandering is irresponsible.

There are no grounds by which the government can assert that it is fair, sound and reasonably necessary to confiscate private property in the form of firearms from law-abiding citizens. These people are exemplarity citizens, vetted for criminality and with a longstanding track record of responsible firearm ownership. Whether these individuals have a 3 or 30-shot clip, an automatic weapon or a single shot or a handgun, their presence is benign; this fact is clearly demonstrated by the data. The legal gun owners of Canada are being discriminated against due to the politicization of the issue distorting the map of reality of the body general. The data is clear that the risk associated with gun ownership as has been the status quo post-2012 warrants no further government intervention when you contextualize the very limited risk of legal gun ownership with the full breadth of human endeavour.

Please reconsider your actions in this regard.

Kind Regards,

 

 

Neil E. Thomson

 

 

 

 

 

  

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