Canada Says They Will Send Police Door To Door After Failed Gun Buy Back

Published on March 31, 2026
Duration: 9:59

This video critiques Canada's firearm buyback program, highlighting a low participation rate (2.5%) and the government's plan to use police for door-to-door collection of prohibited firearms. The speaker argues this is a form of confiscation, not a voluntary program, and a progression from registration to bans. The video suggests this serves as a warning for the US gun rights movement.

Quick Summary

Canada's firearm buyback program faces significant non-compliance, with only 2.5% of affected firearms declared. The government plans door-to-door collection by law enforcement, utilizing off-duty and retired officers. This is viewed by critics as confiscation and political maneuvering rather than a safety measure.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Introduction: Canada's Gun Buyback Failure
  2. 00:10Background: The Ban and Buyback Program
  3. 00:34Low Participation Rate: 2.5% Compliance
  4. 00:56Government's Response: Door-to-Door Collection
  5. 01:18Minister's Plan: RCMP Enforcement
  6. 01:51Confiscation vs. Buyback: The Mask Off
  7. 02:22Enforcement Challenges: Officer Shortages
  8. 02:58Translating the Plan: Retired Officers
  9. 03:23Analogy: Bad Movie Heist
  10. 03:57Police Refusal to Participate
  11. 04:16Occupation vs. Law Enforcement
  12. 04:20Canada as a Template for US Gun Control
  13. 04:31Trudeau's Shifting Stance: 2010 vs. 2020
  14. 04:56Progression: Bans to Buybacks to Collection
  15. 06:15Minister's Private Admission: Not Worth the Money
  16. 06:46Political Motivation: Appeasing Quebec Voters
  17. 07:15The Receipts: Evidence of Political Control
  18. 07:17Message to Officers: Don't Participate
  19. 07:5298% Non-Compliance as a Movement
  20. 08:19What This Means for the US
  21. 09:09Educated, Engaged, Armed Citizenry
  22. 09:22Support the Channel: Defend America Merch

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the current status of Canada's firearm buyback program?

Canada's firearm buyback program has seen extremely low participation, with only 2.5% of estimated affected firearms declared by the March 31st, 2026 deadline. This low compliance rate has led the government to plan for door-to-door collection by law enforcement.

How does Canada plan to enforce its firearm buyback program?

The Canadian government intends to use the RCMP and other agencies for door-to-door collection of prohibited firearms. This enforcement will utilize additional resources, including off-duty and retired officers, to overcome shortages in active personnel.

Why are some Canadian police forces refusing to participate in the gun buyback?

Multiple police forces across Canada have reportedly refused to participate in the firearm buyback program. They are not refusing due to a lack of concern for public safety, but because they believe disarming law-abiding citizens door-to-door is not the role of law enforcement.

What is the alleged political motivation behind Canada's gun buyback policy?

According to leaked recordings, the Minister of Public Safety suggested the gun grab is not worth the money and that the policy's continuation is primarily to appease voters in Quebec. This indicates a political strategy rather than a genuine safety initiative.

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