Canada Prime Minister Bans AR15s w/ No Vote, No Democracy, No Debate

Published on May 1, 2020
Duration: 5:06

Colion Noir critically analyzes Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's immediate ban on 'military-grade assault weapons,' highlighting the absence of constitutional firearm protections in Canada. He argues the ban is a political power grab, ineffective against criminals who use arson and smuggled weapons, and warns Americans about the dangers of gun registration facilitating confiscation. The analysis emphasizes the financial burden of government buyback programs on taxpayers.

Quick Summary

Colion Noir criticizes Canada's AR-15 ban, enacted without a vote or constitutional protection for firearm rights. He argues the ban is a political power grab, ineffective against criminals, and warns that gun registration facilitates confiscation, while government buybacks burden taxpayers.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Trudeau Announces Assault Weapon Ban
  2. 00:27Lack of Constitutional Protections in Canada
  3. 01:17Ineffectiveness of Firearm Bans
  4. 01:53Handgun Ban Considerations
  5. 02:57Critique of Government Buyback Program
  6. 03:29Warning on Gun Registration
  7. 04:18Call to Action for 2A Support

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did Canada ban AR-15s?

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced an immediate ban on buying, selling, transporting, importing, or using 'military-grade assault weapons,' including the AR-15, citing public safety concerns. The ban was enacted without a parliamentary vote or debate, and without constitutional firearm protections.

What is Colion Noir's main criticism of Canada's AR-15 ban?

Colion Noir argues the ban is a political power grab, ineffective against criminals who use illegal or smuggled weapons, and possible due to Canada's lack of constitutionally protected firearm rights. He also criticizes the government's buyback program as a taxpayer-funded confiscation.

How does gun registration relate to confiscation in Canada?

Colion Noir warns that gun registration, as implemented in Canada for banned firearm models, facilitates future confiscation by providing the government with a list of firearm owners and their registered weapons, making them easier to track and seize.

What is the financial impact of Canada's 'buyback' program?

The government's 'buyback' program uses taxpayer money to compensate citizens for their confiscated firearms. Noir points out this is essentially making citizens pay for their own property to be taken away, often at a fraction of the firearm's actual value.

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