The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader

What started as a discussion of Bill C-21 and the banning of Airsoft guns and municipal handgun bans evolved into a podcast that can only be described as absolutely essential listening for every firearms owner.

Please listen and if you agree, share widely so others can hear as well.

This highly informative episode of the Silvercore Podcast details exactly how firearms owners can shift the narrative and effect positive change which will prosper everyone regardless of what side of the firearms debate they find themselves. Dan Fritter, owner of Calibre Magazine, Ryan Steacy, director of IBI Barrels and Travis Bader of Silvercore Training share insight acquired from years of working in the firearms industry.

 

https://calibremag.ca

https://internationalbarrels.com

https://silvercore.ca

 

 

Topics discussed in this episode:

 

  • Intro [00:00:00 - 00:02:29]
  • Travis and Dan’s first time meeting [00:02:29 - 00:02:29]
  • Bill C-21, house of commons schedule, when the bill was introduced & how readings and committee works [00:03:10 - 00:08:30]
  • Buyback, no buyback, rollback & mandatory seizure [00:08:30 - 00:09:39]
  • Rumoured election, minority governments [00:09:39 - 00:10:23]
  • Dan’s prediction on what’s next with bill C-21 & next promises to anti-gun people [00:10:23 - 00:11:39]
  • Perspective on gun laws, effects on ballot boxes, laws passed & original purpose of OIC [00:11:39 - 00:16:16]
  • Bill C-21 concerns & what it means for non firearms owners, firearms owners, gun clubs & gun stores if it’s passed [00:16:16 - 00:24:10]
  • Culture around firearms, what happened with Molson Indy and how it compares to the gun ban [00:24:10 - 00:28:24]
  • Fight between pro-gun, anti-gun, and people in between & their emotional, sometimes illogical arguments about firearms [00:28:24 - 00:31:35]
  • Dan’s testimony on bill C-71, opposition & engagement on social media [00:31:35 - 00:39:33]
  • Gun rights progress, US style rhetoric [00:39:33 - 00:42:53]
  • Separate people from the problem & asking questions [00:42:53 - 00:51:00]
  • Finding a solution to the real problem & majority of gun owners [00:51:00 - 00:58:20]
  • Gun Control in Canada & perspective of safety first [00:58:20 - 01:02:27]
  • Political standpoint & shifting what’s being said & where focus for public safety should be [01:02:27 - 01:14:10]
  • Red flag & yellow flag laws, push back from Alberta & Trudeau’s response to get more votes [01:14:10 - 01:24:34]
  • Replica firearms, consequences of prohibiting them & film industry [01:24:34 - 01:38:26]
  • 12.7 and 12.6 firearms licences, impact of laws and legislation & amnesty period [01:38:26 - 01:46:21]
  • Anti-gun & pro-gun on the same team of pubic safety [01:46:21 - 01:49:23]
  • Outro [01:49:23 - 01:50:22]

 

Explore these Resources

In this episode, we mentioned the following resources which may be beneficial to you:

 

 

Follow us:

Follow our Host

Learn More about Silvercore

What is The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader?

The Silvercore Podcast explores the mindset and skills that build capable people. Host Travis Bader speaks with hunters, adventurers, soldiers, athletes, craftsmen, and founders about competence, integrity, and the pursuit of mastery, in the wild and in daily life. Hit follow and step into conversations that sharpen your edge.

Kind: captions
Language: en-GB

I'm Travis Bader
and this is The

Silvercore Podcast.

Join me as I discuss
matters related to

hunting, fishing,
and outdoor pursuits

with the people in
businesses that comprise

of the community.

If you're a new to
Silvercore, be sure to

check out our website,
www.Silvercore.ca where

you can learn more
about courses, services,

and products we offer.

As well as how you can
join The Silvercore Club,

which includes 10 million
in North America wide

liability insurance, to
ensure you are properly

covered during your
outdoor adventures.

Before we get rolling
with this episode, I'd

like to do a little bit
of housecleaning and to

that end, I would like
to remind everybody

that if they're enjoying
The Silvercore Podcast,

if they like what they
hear, let us know, leave

a comment, click like,
subscribe, tell your

friends, you can find
The Silvercore Podcasts

on all major podcast
providers out there.

We're also on YouTube
and you can find us

social media and speaking
about different social

media platforms, we're
also on clubhouse now,

so if Silvercore Club
members are interested

partaking in a live
podcast on clubhouse.

We'd asked for two
things; number one,

let us know, number
two, let us know

how to use clubhouse
so we can do this.

Now without further ado,
today I'm joined by the

director of directions
for International

Barrels, the makers
of high quality

premium grade rifle
barrels, Ryan Steacy.

How's it going?

Ryan, welcome back to
The Silvercore Podcast.

Thanks.

As well, we've got the
publisher and owner of

Calibre Magazine, Calibre
Magazine's going into

its 10th year producing
Canadian firearms

content, top drawer,
premium quality magazine.

If you're a member of
some organizations,

I believe the CSSA is
one of them, you will

already be getting
the Calibre Magazine.

Thank you for joining us
today, Daniel Fritter.

Hey Travis, long
time no talk.

Yeah, it has been
a while, hasn't it?

Yeah, I mean, it's been
like years, man, when I

was going down there and
dropping off magazines

back in the day.

I remember that.

In fact, right, we're
talking off air here,

but our first meeting
happened right here

in the podcast studio,
that was my office.

Before we turned into
the podcast studio.

Yeah.

And for those that
are listening to maybe

not know, Silvercore,
obviously based at

a Delta and Calibre
started up based out

of Delta as well.

And our office was,
I think about 10

minutes away from
your guys's office.

And about 12 minutes
away from the brewery,

that's down the street
from your guys's office.

Yes, good times.

I need one of
those near IBI.

Yes, you do.

Hey, you talk to
those Four Winds guys

around the corner from
Travis' place, they

make some good beer.

Well, I'm really
glad to be able to

be chatting with you
again here, Daniel.

It's bill C-21
particularly that

kind of got us talking
offline here, and

then we thought.

You know, you've got
some pretty good insight.

You're a sharp cookie,
you're a smart guy,

you got some good
insight that I figured

that The Silvercore
Podcast listeners

would like to hear.

And Ryan and I are
both affiants on

the order in council
firearms prohibition

and have a little bit
of insight from that

perspective; providing
the court's information

so that they can make
the best available

decision with all the
information available.

And I guess.

You know, Dan, you
were, you spoke at the

Senate about bill C-71.

So I'm going to have
to throw in a big

old disclaimer at
the front of this.

None of us are lawyers,
but we're going to spend

some time just sort
of openly discussing

different ideas,
different viewpoints

in regards to some of
the recent legislation,

policy regulations that
have been coming down

the pipe, and then we'll
just see it from a few

different perspectives
and see if we can kind of

get ourselves caught up
on, up to where C-21 is.

Sounds good.

Well, I mean to take
it back to C-71, I

think, you know,
the problems there.

Uh, I mean, as you
said, we're none of

us are lawyers, but
Ian Runkle is one.

I think we've all seen a
lot of his content and,

uh, I think we can all
probably say with some

degree of confidence that
the people responsible

for drafting this bill,
maybe weren't the best

of lawyers, if they
were lawyers at all.

Um, or conversely, you
know, cause I'm, I'm

aware that there will
be some lawyer out there

that works for the crown
that may watch this and

goes, wow, that Dan guys'
a dick, I worked really

hard, but that other guy.

He sucked!

He wouldn't give
me any lee way.

Um, cause I think that's
probably closer to

the truth is, uh, with
C-21, I mean I've done

a video already, but for
those that don't know,

my personal attitude is
that, um, it comes down

to a scheduling conflict.

Cause this bill was
introduced, I haven't

checked the calendar as
of right now, but we're

still in the latter
half of the month.

So it should be
sitting months.

So for those that don't
know the parliamentary

calendar for the house
of commons, generally

they seat, or they
sit half the month.

Uh, it's typically
been the last

half of the month.

Um, and before
everyone says, Oh,

lazy parliamentarian,
they're actually very

hardworking people,
even some of the liberal

MPS are incredibly
hardworking individuals

that serve their
constituents very well.

And to do so that
requires spending time

in their constituency.

So they spend half their
time back home and half

the time in Ottawa.

So it makes total sense.

Um, but that means
that they only get

half the time to
actually do government

business in Ottawa.

They can't vote or debate
or have parliamentary

procedure progress
without the parliament

actually sitting.

And obviously even
with these weird hybrid

sessions that they're
having the calendars,

the calendar, they
can't take days out

of that calendar.

It's actually part
of the way the

parliament is managed.

When Justin Trudeau
announced C-21, there was

only 55 days left in the
parliamentary calendar.

Um, There's less
than we're into the

forties now, I think.

Um, so it's dwindling.

They said that second
reading is going to

happen sometime later
this week, which I

will confess, you know,
obviously as a gun

owner, I don't think
there's any gun owner

up there that wouldn't
be able to get out of

a psychologist chair
without at least some

degree of generalized
anxiety diagnosis.

Um, but I mean, I hear
these headlines and you

get the little heart
flutter of, Oh shit

maybe it's real, but um.

Oh, can we swear
on this pathway?

Is that allowed?

Swear away.

Okay.

It might happen
accidentally, but we'll

keep it to a minimum.

Um, yeah, it may
not happen, uh,

or might happen.

But then I think the
reality is 55 days for

those that don't know.

So you got your first
reading in the house of

commons, second reading
in the house of commons.

Typically not much
happens between those

two, especially with
government bills

because private members
bills and government

bills, government bills
are backed, but the

government probably
member's bills or smaller

bills that a private
member puts out that

the government may or
may not have consulted

on dramatically.

Typically private
member's bills

don't make it.

Government bills are the
big ones that are policy.

So this is a government
bill, they've got lots

of background on it.

So private member's bills
being first and second

reading, they do see
some degree of editing.

Because someone may
read it and go, someone

across the isle will go,
you're an idiot, this

is unconstitutional,
illegal, whatever, and

they'll make a change
and they'll give it a

second reading in the
house just to say, I'm

serious about this.

I've made the
edits right.

Now it'll be read
the second time.

Obtaining a second
reading is very easy

on the calendar.

It gets really tricky
to get the third reading

because between second
and third, and you have

the committee stage.

Where the parliamentary
committee on, um, I

believe the parliamentary
committee is the

national national
security public safety.

Um, I think parallels
the Senate committee.

Uh, and that committee
is comprised of MPS,

the makeup of it
reflects that of the

house of commons.

So it is a minority
committee with

liberals chairing it.

Um, but this is where
it'll get messy is

because, you know,
even if they can get

the second reading,
which they obviously

will this week, it's
just a scheduling

thing, they don't have
to discuss anything.

But once they put it
into the committee, uh,

the committee schedule
actually, for example,

WE, the, WE scandal's a
great example of this.

Remember how, like we
were seeing all those

headlines progress and
progress and progress,

and then it hit
committee and it stopped.

Like it just, you heard
nothing else about, WE.

Same as SNC, it was
committee committee

committee, and then it
just stopped because

although the liberals
do control the committee

and they can bring
things to a stop,

they don't have the
majority to, to progress

things beyond that.

So things just get
parked in committee.

So like the WE scandal
is still being heard in

the committee because
the liberals can't move

on, but they have enough
people to stop progress.

And we're going to see
the same thing here,

because I mean, this is
the bill that determines,

this is a multi-billion
dollar buyback, the

government has to know
this at some level.

None of the scheduling
makes sense.

So, you know, to go back
to the main point, you've

got 40 days to get this
through a committee where

the Bloc Québécois will
try and be painting the

Liberals into a corner
to say, if the gun

buyback isn't mandatory,
it's not a buyback.

So the Liberals will
have to be doing some

kind of politicking
with the Bloc.

The NDP doesn't know how
they're going to stand

because they're probably
pulling on it still to

figure out, you know,
where do we, is it bad.

Because in the political
scheme, basically, you

got the three levels
of rollback, which is

what the CPC wants to
do is roll it back,

stop the buyback.

Then you've got the
liberals that are,

it's a buyback, but you
can keep your stuff.

Um, and obviously for
gun owners, we look at

that and go, well, maybe
we get to keep it down

the road, who knows?

Um, and then the
other one is the

mandatory buyback.

And then the last
one beyond that is

mandatory seizure.

Right.

Of no compensation
seizure.

Now that is an,
that's a thing.

Gun owners need to
realize there are people

out there that want that,
so like, don't forget

that's on the table.

Cause people do start to,
they shift the goalpost

and they forget like,
no, the goal was always

this wide guy's, like.

Right.

We've got to worry
about those things.

Um, and because there's
the rumored election

coming up in June or
the fall and minority

governments only last
450 days on average,

this one's already
passed the average

minority government
expiry date in Canada.

No minority government,
I think actually one

minority government
has gone the full four

term, but it was once
and it was like in the

forties or something,
extremely extenuating

circumstances.

So long story short,
I just don't see this

bill beating Justin
Trudeau's next election

writ because he has his,
when you think of Justin

Trudeau's priorities,
winning the last

election is like here.

And you've got
your hand up high.

Actually banning
guns, way higher.

Yes.

Um, and then his actual
gun stuff is way lower.

So this is just
to get votes.

So what I think he's
going to do, uh,

this is just my,
this is conjecture.

From someone who's
watched politics on guns

for 10 years, what I
think is going to happen

is they're going to run
this thing through as

close as they can get.

They're going to put as
much effort into getting

it as close to the finish
line, and then they're

going to drop the writ
and they're going to

try and drop the writ
on some sort of leverage

legislation or policy
to try and make it look

like the Liberals are
not the ones asking

for this election.

Then they're going to
campaign on the notion

that the Conservatives
demanded the selection.

The Conservatives killed
off the gun ban bill, the

Conservatives canceled
the buyback and you got

to vote Liberal to keep
the buyback on rails is

what I think they'll do.

Because I think this
because also too, when

you look past this
and you go, where do

they go beyond this?

What's the next
selection promise?

If they pass this law,
what do they promise the

anti-gun people next?

Because they're not
going to just let

those people swim away
from the voting block.

Like they're there in
the sales funnel for

the Liberal party.

They're not just going
to be like, okay, well

we're done with you,
you can go vote for

whoever you want now.

They have to keep those
people on the line.

So, and there's
nothing past this, they

can't ban handguns,
the bill's too big.

There's 2 million of
them, it was too much,

it's just not worth it.

Like, I don't think any
government wants to go

down that road of buying
2 million handguns.

Like the bill would
be huge, but just

fundamentally it's,
it's something on the

balance sheet no one
wants politically.

Well, the, on the balance
of probabilities here

and on that spectrum
that you've already

pointed out, buy back
might not be necessary.

I mean, it depends on
when you say it, cause

you always have to look
at these, whenever I look

at stuff now with the gun
laws, it's the question

of, do you look at it
from the perspective of

what will this do from
a legislative / punitive

/ enforcement perspective
versus what will this

do at the ballot box?

Because so much of
the legislation and

policy that's come out
of this government.

And I'm not just saying
this, this isn't, I'll be

totally blunt, I'm not an
overly partisan person.

I'm not a big fan of
the liberals because I

work in the gun industry
obviously and I don't

like the way they govern
our country in general.

But, um, so don't, I
don't want people to

think this is a partisan
snipe, but generally

speaking, this government
has not been terribly

effective at governing
for the last five years.

We have not passed
many actual laws.

They have not actual,
like I mean, they

haven't changed much.

Gun owners are a prime
example of like, I know

our lives will change
dramatically and it's

a huge, huge concern
and we are at, we are

at the brink of losing
all of our guns, but

I'll be blunt, it took
six years to get here.

Like six years.

This government has
been promising to do

this for six years.

It took them six years
to do this, you know?

There, they don't
too much, very

quickly do they.

No.

Um, So it's one of
those kind of, this idea

that the government is
suddenly going to go from

a government that has
passed, you know, some of

the smallest volumes of
legislation in history to

passing the largest and
most sweeping and most

expensive piece of gun
control legislation in

Canada's history in less
than 40 days, during a

global pandemic strikes
me as far as far fetched.

Is there any way that
they can push it through

with a different method
other than, uh, I

mean, obviously you
can't do the OIC again,

but is there another
way they can do it?

He can't OIC this, cause
technically speaking

on the, uh, legally,
uh, they can OIC things

that are regulation.

So they can OIC the
AR-15 because it's, it's

a reg like the document
is called regulations.

Uh, it's not legislation,
it's not an act.

They can OIC acts as
well, but the thing

with OIC's is you
can't OIC anything that

involves procurement.

If there is a dollar
bill attached value,

it has to go through
the house of commons

because, OIC's are
intended to change typos.

That's OIC's legal
intention for the

Parliamentary procedure
was literally, cause

all of Canada's laws are
passed in English and

French, and sometimes
when they do the French

translations, the words
don't quite match up.

And you can end up with
laws that say like,

you can't ride your
horse down the street,

meaning you can't ride
your turtle down the

street or something
stupid like that.

Obviously I don't speak
French cause someone

to Quebec, those words
mean nothing alike.

Um, BC guy.

Um, but like that's what
OIC's are supposed to be

for, cause they didn't
want to have the host

of common sitting and
having 338 paid MP's go

like, yeah, we want to
correct the typo on page

284 of the criminal code.

So they said the privy
council was supposed

to have the right to
just change small,

inconsequential things
in general, and then that

expanded out into this
regulatory framework,

but it hasn't expanded
into procurement.

And thankfully the
one thing people also

should think about, um,
the only reason that

Justin Trudeau can't
do this is because the

Conservative party and
even the NDP even, but

mostly the Conservative
party made a massive

issue out of the Liberal
party, trying to pass

that bill early on in
the pandemic that would

have given the Liberal
party, both taxation

and spending powers.

Because what it would
take for Justin Trudeau

to pass this unilaterally
would be essentially

the modern version of
the war measures act,

which is what they were
looking at, passing

early in the pandemic.

And the government
basically said, we're

going to pass this, but
we're not going to give

you the spending ability
and the taxing ability

to just tax and spend
however the government

wants because that's
that's pretty crazy.

Um, but if he had gotten
that, then yes, this

bill could have just
been a essentially, an

executive order of I'm
going to spend 5 billion.

And the only reason,
so people, if you're

watching this going
well, how can you spend

so much money so quickly
on pandemic response?

We fast track
stuff in the house.

Um, pandemic
response bills were

given fast track.

So it's a whole, those
bills, do go through

that kind of more war
measures type framework.

It still does replicate
the parliamentary

framework, but it's
been streamlined.

Um, for emergency
purposes, but anything

that isn't pertaining
to COVID response has

to go through the normal
framework and it isn't

given the benefits of
all those pandemic stuff.

So if anyone's listening
and wondering why there's

a disconnect there and
why I'm saying they can't

pass this, but they can
pass, CERB response in

two days, it's one is an
emergent thing and one

is a long-term policy.

You know, shockingly
Westminster parliaments

don't give government the
ability to pass anything

they want just because
there was an emergency.

Shockingly.

Good.

So.

Close though.

A little bit too close
I think we can all say.

You know, I'd
agree with that.

Now The Silvercore
Podcast is shooting,

hunting outdoor
adventures.

There's going to be
people who listened to

this, who don't have
a firearms background,

aren't interested in
firearms, but should

probably still be
concerned about some

of the things that
have been proposed and

can you speak to that?

Oh, can I, um, there's
where to start?

Well, I mean, first
off, for anyone that's

listening to this and
who is thinking, and I

mean, it's doubtful um,
because I mean, they're,

they're seeking out gun
podcasts probably with

other kinds of folk.

But if they're talking
to someone, if they

find someone in their
life that goes, you

know what, Dan, it
doesn't matter to me.

Like, I don't know how
many AR-15 and I've

had people, like I have
people, I own a gun bags

and I have people in my
family that think that.

Don't know the point,
all that kind of thing.

Those people, you
should just tell them

that if C-21 passes,
it will mean the end of

guns in Canada period.

Because functionally,
what it will do, um,

is, is the framework
that it provides for is,

um, almost completely
replicating much of the

framework that was put
in place by a former

Liberal government
to remove alcohol and

tobacco from the main
stream consciousness.

Now I'm not saying guns
are the same as those

two things, because
as someone that drinks

very sporadically and
minimally, because of

health reasons that
are personal to me,

um, I don't think
either of those things

are terribly healthy.

I do think guns are
actually perfectly

healthy product.

So before anyone
misunderstand that I.

I would disagree on rum.

I would honestly
disagree.

I could totally make
the argument that a nice

scotch lead tonight is
a very healthy thing

for me on certain times
when I have a gutter

shoe, that means I pay
for it the next day.

So unfortunately
it's a like, uhh,

pick and choose.

Um, but I worked in the
car industry, back when

they were kicking tobacco
of everything, uh, and

alcohol and people will
remember that we used to

have a thing in Canada
called the Molson Indy.

And the clue to why
it went away might

be in the name.

Um, and they're
doing the same thing.

Obviously C-21 has
an advertising ban,

it won't actually
impact our business.

So if people think
this is me being,

self-interested it, won't
no one advertises guns

from a self-defensive
perspective in our

magazine really.

And those that do
will have no problem

with switching it.

It's usually us
advertisers that are just

trying to save money on
graphic design that, have

a budget, to be blunt.

It doesn't say
self-defense.

It says violence.

Violence in general.

Violence in general.

Most of them are
just listing.

Does that count as
violence against animals?

Right.

I don't think so, cause
when you actually read.

Like what are we're
talking about here.

The law, I think it says
violence perpetrated

against persons, is
actually in the, cause

I know the parliamentary
summary says that, but

in the actual legislation
says against persons,

because I remember
thinking like what

about bear defense.

Cause Marlin's
always run some big

bear defense ads.

Just hunting in
general really.

Kind of violent animal.

Um, my bigger concern,
however, is that in a

really fundamental way,
like let's, let's say

a C-21 Liberals win.

This is what's
going to happen.

If the liberals win C-21
would likely be expanded

to include additional
things because they

won't just roll the same
thing out post-campaign.

They'll need to give
some fresh meat to

the base to try and
get them on next time.

So there'll be something
else, something

stupid and bad.

Um, probably some kind
of handgun limitation,

something around there.

They won't buy 'em back,
but they'll try and get,

handguns are still the
thing that are not on the

table for the Liberals.

So they'll find some
way of putting them

on the table and, but
moot point anyways,

at the end of the day,
the municipal handgun

gotten ban, right?

What's the one thing
that every gun club

has a problem with
in Canada right now?

It is real estate
development encroachment,

and the encroachment
taking the form of

noise complaints.

You see it nationally.

Port Coquitl- like,
there's not a major

urban center where,
and major urban centers

are the fastest growing
areas in Canada.

So the cities are
expanding faster

than the rural areas.

They're encroaching
onto where the gun

clubs used to be out
in the boondocks.

And now the developers
who just by virtue of

having a lot of money
and being in a world

where they have to
interface with municipal

politicians on a daily
basis to get zoning

permits, those have
been disposed developer.

Those real estate
developers are closer

to municipal staff and
council, then gun club

executive is, and when
you read these things and

you go, okay, well, if
the municipalities can

shut stuff down, right?

What, how long has it, I
mean, before every city

council in Canada decides
that it's just easier

to allow the gun club to
go bankrupt by shutting

down handguns, because
most clubs make their

money off of restricted
ownership, right?

Like if you have a
restricted gun license,

you don't technically
have to have a gun

club membership, but
most people it's the

easiest way, so most
people just maintain

a gun club membership
because they have a

restricted license.

If they get rid of
municipal handgun

ownership, the local
clubs that retain

membership because
that's what the local

restricted owners belong
to to maintain their

hand gun possession.

They may only shoot
three times a year, I

was that guy, when I
first got into shooting,

I got a hand gun.

I belong to the
Abbotsford Fish

and Game Club.

I shot like three
times a year, but I

still was a member.

I paid my 200 bucks
because I owned a handgun

and I had to have it.

I had to have a
license at our club

on my license right.

If they pass the
municipal band, the

officer fish and game
club can't operate

because Abbotsford fish
and game, abbotsford

city council says
no more handguns.

The Abbotsford Fish and
Game Club will lose its

membership within years.

Like the restricted guys
that currently make up

the cohort of Abbotsford
Tactical Shooters and

all the handgun stuff,
all the IPSC stuff, all

those core cohort of
guys that you always

see at the gun club
when you go shooting.

The guys that used to
shoot the AR-15's there,

they shoot the handguns
there now, they won't be

there, and that means the
gun club won't be there.

And when you look at
the larger, I mean real

estate is still the
fastest growing and the

only economic sector
that is growing at a time

when Canada's economy is
basically looking like

it's going to crater.

So in what world do you
see city councils putting

gun clubs over real
estate developers with

millions of dollars of
development potential?

Like you've got a
club of maybe three to

400, maybe five, 6,000
people, 12,000 people,

if you're Burlington and
Ontario, and you're in

the densest area, what
do 12,000 people paying

a few hundred bucks in
a sport that, if you're

a politician looks like
it's on the dying edge

of things, versus a real
estate developer saying

I can put in on an 80
acre plot, how many

towers can they install?

How many, how many
apartment buildings

at $600,000 per
unit can they build.

Gun clubs do not
have a chance against

that kind of might.

And I'm one of those
people that if you put a

bad thing out there and
you make it possible for

it to happen, eventually
it will happen.

Every day, the universe
hits reset, Groundhog day

runs over again, and that
might happen again today,

and eventually it will.

So if they pass this
law that saying of every

hammer, when you're
a hammer, everything

looks like a nail.

Every gun club
will eventually

look like a nail.

And it, I don't care if
you're the Burlington

Gun Club peel.

If you're right in the
middle of a downtown,

urban, Southern
Ontario area, or if

you're in Fort St.

John, at some point that
city that you live in,

that you drive out of
to get to your gun club.

If they pass this ban to
get rid of your gun club,

you'll never get it back.

And once the gun clubs
are gone, I mean that

doesn't even get into the
issue around gun shops.

I mean gun shops in
Canada, we don't get

the benefit of the
big box stores that

have the support of
selling fishing gear.

Like Cabela's can
sell less guns because

they sell fishing
gear and boats and

all this other stuff.

So if they ban one
gun, Cabela's just

sells more Gore-Tex
jackets offset it.

But our local gun
shops, the guys that we

all love and rely on.

You know, those
independent shops.

If they been handguns in
the city of Vancouver,

we all know of various
gun shops that would

probably really have
a hard time making

that work, you know.

Um, they would
probably be able to

keep the lights on.

We see that in Australia,
a lot of shops did manage

to stay open, but there
was a massive reduction

in overall volume.

Um, and I think that's
where, like this isn't,

we're not looking
at the guy that has

the 30-30 Winchester
that goes, this

doesn't matter to me.

Like you're not going
to have anywhere to

sight your rifle in.

You're not going
to have anywhere to

shoot sporting clays.

You're not going to
have a retailer to

bring in the latest
version of that ammo

that you wanted.

Like, we will become
a third rate nation of

gun owners that just
get stuff because you

know, for a little while
there, it was nice.

We were climbing, the
market was climbing, we

were getting more stuff
out of the US and we all

saw we'd go to SHOT Show.

Readers may not know
this , listeners rather,

but like, we all go to
SHOT Show every year

and we talked to US
distributors and it was

finally reaching a point
under primarily Trump

because the US sales
were kind of leveling

off that earlier.

That Canada was
getting some respect

from the US market.

And we were starting to
see some product come

out more timely fashions
and were seeing little

things like product
managers would start to

send emails to Canadians
and say, Oh, look at

this new thing that's
coming out of America.

Um, now with this new
law, we're just going

to become another
ulcer because that's

what they thought of
us as though we're the

weird country that you
can't own an AR-15.

And then once we started
to adopt these modern

firearms and adopt
modern shooting and go

like, Oh yeah, 3Gun is a
perfectly viable sport.

People start loving it
and doing it a bunch.

Ryan Stacey I mean,
I remember Ryan.

I mean, I've known
Ryan for years, like

predating even Calibre.

And when he was shooting
for the BCRs, like,

I remember thinking
like, who does this

weird obscure sport?

This is going
back probably

14, 15 years now.

Yep.

And I was like,
who does this?

Now, it's super main,
it's not mainstream per

se, but it's way more
mainstream than it was.

Yeah.

Like I'm sure when
Ryan tells I'd be

curious, right?

Like when you talk to
people, your backgrounds

and you're shooting
Bisley and stuff.

Now, when you first
got into it and you

first started being
successful, like 10,

12, 14 years ago with
the PCRs, like has, have

you, have you noticed
like a shifting attitude

amongst the general
population when you

talk about what you do?

I think so.

Yeah.

I mean, it's a lot
more acceptable um.

By the time I was.

Cause if you like the
John Wick, the Jerry

Mitchellick videos, the.

Oh yeah, totally.

I mean.

All the Terran
videos that are out

there, everyone has.

Yep, media has a huge.

What's it called?

Keanu Reeves.

Yeah.

The Keanu Reeves
shredding video like.

I mean, that's not
even really what

I do, but, uh.

No, but I think that's
what, like you say, they

have a comprehension.

Yeah, they understand
it now more than

they did before.

Because I think before,
if you told people I do

competitive shooting,
I don't think they

even had a frame of
reference of what

that would look like.

Like obviously what you
do, doesn't look like

what taran does know, but
I don't think people had

any idea of what it was.

I think if you said
that you were, you're a

competitive shooter and
you used an AR 15 people

would look at it like
'what?' That, isn't that

just for military people?

And I think that relates
to like, I mean, with

the OIC, which you guys
are both applicants on

and, and the, the, um,
the recent decision there

for the injunction and
I, that was relating

to culture right.

And I remember when that
came down and I heard

about it, I thought
about the culture

argument, and I thought,
you know, like, It's

really interesting.

Like, it's really
interesting to me

that the courts are
saying that they're

not seeing a culture
here that's being.

They're just not
looking hard enough.

Reduce.

I mean.

It's there.

I mean, it's, it's, I
all say for me, like

it's a bit tragic because
it feels like a bit

of a two-time thing,
because like I said, like

I'm a, I'm a car guy.

I like guns, but
I'm a car guy first

and foremost, I
don't hide that.

Um, always have
been, always will be.

And for me, it's
really sad too.

I came out of the
automotive sector

after the end of
the Molson Indy.

I used to, I used to
work Molson Indy, I was

press, I went down there.

It was like the greatest
weekend of my life.

Like we spend all
weekend in a race

paddock is great.

Um, and I remember the
same arguments because

the city council of
Vancouver, ironically

municipal politics game,
and the advertising ban

around alcohol and all
those things are all,

we don't want these
sponsorships of tobacco

and alcohol in the public
eye, was leading to the

exact same discussions
of, well motor sports

isn't really a sport.

We really shouldn't
be promoting, this

is bad for the
environment, so noisy.

Literally the exact same
arguments that I'm now

hearing around guns.

And it's so tragic
to me that the people

in the gun community
aren't seeing it

because the thing
that's happened to cars.

Car guys will understand
this, in the lower

mainland, for example,
there was a Westwood

Racing Circuit.

It was big enough
that Al Unser Sr

race there, it was a
global racing circuit.

It's currently a real
estate development on the

top of Port Coquitlam,
a little bit down from

the Port Coquitlam
Fish and Game Club.

If you actually look
on Google maps at

Westwood Plateau Real
Estate Development,

if you look at the
perimeter, it looks like

a racetrack because it
is the old racetrack.

Hmm, interesting.

The exact same
things are happening.

And Port Coquitlam Fish
and Game Club is on the

same freaking road as
Westwood was and they're

looking at closing
because of real estate

development encroachment.

Because again they're,
it's a cultural thing

because I hate to say
it, gun owners are not

doing themselves any
favors with this rapid

leap angry rhetoric.

We have to reach out,
we have to recognize

we are the minority.

We don't have the power
to change the massive

amounts of people's
opinions by simply

saying, you know, we own
guns and like, it's okay,

we're not a problem.

It's not enough
to say that.

Because I've seen it
a lot, it's something

I've brought up, like
I've thought about a lot

recently because of the
C-21 debate and I see

people bring up a lot
that they're targeting.

They're targeting legal
gun owners has been a

very common refrain in
the media that I've seen.

Um, or gun owners
saying, you know,

they're victimizing
legal gun owners when

they take our guns away.

And I think, I get
it, I do, it's possi-,

as a gun owner, yeah,
they absolutely are.

That is an
absolute truth.

But there's a point
too, where you have to

recognize it within,
uh, within the context

of the discussion
around, around guns.

When you think that
the discussion around

gun policy is actually
a discussion of

public safety policy.

When you've got a
cohort of people that

are involved in the
discussion, whether we

like it or not saying
we're the victims were

being targeted and.

And the people are,
and then you've got a

third, the third party,
you've got the anti gun

and the pro-gun people
saying, you know, we're

being targeted, we're
law, abiding gun owners,

it's not our fault.

And then you've got
the pro the anti-gun

people saying, Nope,
guns are the problem,

get rid of all guns.

The massive amount
of people involved

in this debate are
on the sidelines,

just watching, right.

And what they're
watching is a bunch of

anti-gun people make
frankly very emotional

rabbit-end pleas.

Logically inconsistent
arguments that don't

stand up on their own and
gun owners making, to be

totally frank, equally
emotional, sometimes

equally illogical
arguments in response.

Instead of being the
rational voice and going

Hmm, when it comes to a
discussion of young kids

killing themselves and
each other in the streets

with illegal firearms
over drugs, because they

have no better possible
outcomes in their life

than a potential being
killed in an alleyway,

making tiny sums of
cash selling dime bags.

Cause I hate to say it,
but street-level dealers

do not make a killing.

These are, these are
truly marginalized

people living unfortunate
existences that none

of us would wish upon
our best, our worst

enemies, nevermind
anyone in our family.

Um, those are the people
that are also involved

in this discussion
and gun owners are so

constantly trying to
say, it's not our fault,

it's not our fault,
not our fault, because

we, we are kind of been
targeted in the past

that it's almost like
we've lost sight of our

role in this discussion.

Is to be the arbiters to
say, look as the legal

gun owners as the experts
on the laws around gun

ownership, I'm not here
to tell you that I'm

a victim or a target.

We don't have a
right, it is a risk.

It is.

It's just not a right.

It's not a government,
right bestowed upon

us to own firearms.

We have to make our case
with diplomacy and I

don't see that anymore.

And it's, it's,
it doesn't work.

We're we're, it's,
it's, it's problematic

to me I guess, because
I just don't, it's,

it's really hard.

Cause I have to confront
the journalists right.

Because what I'm saying
is when I see the, this

is getting awkward now,
but I'll just leave all

this in if you want but.

Fundamentally I think
it has to be said, I

don't mind that people
might not like hearing

this, but let's just put
it in the context of,

I do a media interview,
did one last week.

And a guy goes, okay,
well, this guy online,

you know, the guillotine
comment, right?

Yeah, it was
pretty extreme.

I don't, I don't think
that we should be talking

about breaking the
guillotine out quite yet.

Um, the Liberal's
havent' actually.

Is that a thing?

I must have missed that.

Yeah, there was a
thing where some people

made public comments,
because of course on

the media, they do have
access to social media,

so of course they're
trolling the same.

I don't mean trolling as
in like they're typing

out and trolling, I
mean they're trolling

as in you're fishing.

They're looking for
comments, right?

And I, same thing,
you want to talk about

how high this goes?

Not to sound like that
sounds super conspiracy.

Here it comes!

By Alex Jones,
tinfoil hat.

Yeah.

When I was giving my
testimony on C-71 at

the Senate, Senator Mary
Lou, um, I won't say your

last name, cause I can't
even remember it, but I

remember first name cause
it's the only Mary Lou

I've ever met in my life.

Um, she literally
made a point of every

single pro-gun witness.

She had gone extensively
through their social

media backgrounds,
including as far as

when the president of
a local gun club was

called to testify.

She had gone through
the gun clubs Facebook

page, and she tried
to make him answer for

comments left by gun
club members and by

the gun club, executive
posting comments that

he didn't leave on the
Facebook page himself.

So that's the level
to which those of

us that I think the
government referred

to as stakeholders,ie.

people that have skin in
the game, when it comes

to all these things, or
have at least a large

background of research.

Um, those individuals,
like we're being

forced to answer
for what everyone is

putting out there.

And I'm frankly getting
really tired of people,

putting it out there
that justin Trudeau is

going to kick my door
down and put me in

the back of an MLVW.

And what drive me
to the Vernon cadet

summer training camp
for imprisonment?

There's, it's
getting a bit, you

know, this is a law.

We are a nation of laws.

When I see people on
my own Facebook page on

Calibre saying when I
say he can't, he's not,

it's unlikely that he
can pass this in 55 days.

And I go, well he's and
then people go, oh well

he'll, you'll see it.

And I go, well he
can't, that's legally

impossible, it's
unconstitutional.He'll

do it anyways.

No he won't, like,
this is very much

not something he
can possibly do.

And I think that we, as
gun owners need to strive

to elevate our discourse.

And when I say that,
I mean, everyone's

fucking discourse needs
to go up a notch or

two, and they need to
start thinking like,

instead of punching down
when you see comments

from anti-gun people
that make you angry.

If you feel angry, do
what you would tell

your five-year-old
to do, walk away.

Come back with a clear
head, come back with

good arguments, come
back with arguments that

make the people watching
on the sidelines think

you're the professional.

I mean, it's basic
stuff, like even little

things on interviews
where you watch.

And I won't name
names because they're

out there, but watch
interviews with some

people that work at
this industry, the

anti-gun person shows
up to do the interview.

They're wearing a
doctor's lab coat

because it brings with
it an air of authority.

You see someone in a
lab coat, you listen to

them generally, right?

The gun industry person
shows up in real tree

t-shirt and a John Deere
hat and you kind of

go, I would take that
guy's advice on what

brake discs to buy.

You know, like it's, it's
just a fundamental wear

a suit, wear a tie, be
the kind of person that

people aspire to be.

Don't be the kind of
person that always has to

argue for your existence.

Like how much different.

We always use the
Swiss example, right?

Everyone goes, Oh, the
Swiss, everyone's got

a gun in Switzerland.

Everyone would probably
like to be Swiss.

Why?

Because they have a
shit load of money.

They've never
been in a law.

Their country is pretty
much as good as it

gets in terms of like,
good outcomes for the

people that live there.

It got there because
people strived to

make it better.

They didn't strive to
continuously oppose

the other people.

I mean, that's
the, I mean, that's

fundamentally my
big problem is it's

just, we've entered
this new era of

oppositional stuff and
it's no one's building

anything anymore.

Everyone's just
tearing stuff down.

So, what do you see the
best direction is to

go when you're engaging
people on social media?

Just factual stuff?

I mean, in, in my own
personal case that

doesn't seem to work in
a lot of, a lot of ways.

Like you can, you can
lay out the facts and you

can lay it all straight
out and you can be

polite and professional
and away you go.

And they still, dump
in all the ridiculous

stuff that, you know.

Well, that's trying to
fight emotion with fact.

It's really
what it is yeah.

I guess we need to find a
way to fight the emotion

with our own motion.

I think it's also too
like, there's multiple

forms of capital
out there, right?

Like you got, you got
your time, you got your

money, you got all these
things at your disposal

that you can do, right?

Um, and maybe it's
just having a kid

recently, but I mean,
laying on your death

bed, while responding
to the doctors for

protection, from guns on
Twitter, be the time you

appreciate having spent.

Like, um, and I
think that's where

it comes down to.

Um, It's just some
people can't be

convinced first off.

So there's, there's
certain like, there's,

there's definitely a
point in at this point.

I think it's, it's
certainly safe to say

the pro gun side of
social media commands

a far larger audience
and the anti-gun side.

And the pro gun side
needs to recognize,

you'll recognize that
Calibre pretty much

never, ever, ever
interacts with anyone

anti gun on Twitter or
Facebook or any other

place because when the
doctors for protection

from guns had 300
followers on Twitter

and Calibre has tens of
thousands of people on

Facebook, why the hell
would I promote them?

Like, why would we, even,
if they say the stupidest

thing, like I could,
this is what happens.

Cause again, people
don't see this, if you

look on the insight
side and we'll probably,

I might do my own
maybe video cast or

stream or something
on this to show people

the backend of what
social media websites

look like to see what
works on social media.

What gets traction on
social media is outrage.

Absolutely.

The way the
algorithms work.

Sure, conflict.

Yeah.

Yeah, as again.

So for way of explanation
to those listening

and the algorithms on
social media are the

things that decide what
you are shown, right?

Like your friends post,
you know how sometimes

on Facebook you'll see
some things from one guy

and not other things.

It's the algorithm
deciding you're

supposed to see.

It decides based on what
gets lots of feedback.

Now, what usually
gets lots of feedback

is things that
have high emotional

attachments, ie.

things people hate or
things people love.

As a result, when I put
up a post on Facebook

saying, Hey, look at
this really great new

gun, it's awesome.

Like great example
would be, um, the first

modern sporter, which
was the first kind of

non-restricted thing that
was similar enough to

an AR-15, that got like
120,000 impressions on

Facebook within the first
day maybe, thereabouts.

That was a big,
that was a big deal.

Um, that video I did
on C-21 got 130,000

impressions in the
first three hours.

Everything political,
everything to do with

the debate always
gets the most likes.

So yeah, I could have
absolutely shared a

bunch of doctor's stuff.

I could have shared
a bunch of anti gun

stuff and I could have
gotten a whole shit

load of Facebook likes
and impressions, and

it would have expanded
Calibre, social media

presence, but it also
would have expanded the

social media presence of
those anti-gun groups,

which I do actually
think we are seeing a

bit of the aspect of now.

Those doctors for
protection from guns

was literally one
person with a Twitter

account initially.

Now they have 300,000 or
$200,000 from Airbnb and

like they've expanded.

They've they've eclipsed,
both of the other groups.

And when you look at
the only thing that's

different between
doctors, any other

anti-gun groups, it's
a doctors has been

engaged more with the,
with the program groups.

Interesting.

They choose to,
they both do.

The pro-gun groups,
engage the doctors and

the doctors engaged
with the anti gun groups

or per vice-versa.

This is getting very
complicated, but you

know what I'm saying.

Um, The doctors are
engaging and it's, and

there everyone is feeding
off it cause it does,

I think on both ends, I
think people are seeing

social media growth and
they're interpreting

that as success when
Twitter still hasn't

made a profit, you know.

Social media is only
social media is not, it's

not actual legislation.

I don't think a gun
owner out there would

say we've made progress
on gun rights in

the last five years.

You know, it's
not, we haven't.

Um, we have, I think
inadvertently, propped

up the creation of
anti-gun groups or

made them stronger.

I think we have done
a disservice and

lowered the discourse
that we have.

And I think that as
a result, we, we do

stand to potentially
be ostracized from

the political parties
that stand to hold

power in the future.

Because unless we start
to look like, we always

like to say, we're the
best Canadians, but

we've got to act like it.

And I think that involves
recognizing that, like,

when you hear these
stories about these gun

laws and stuff, I hate to
say it, but you do have

to think if they want to
take my AR-15 how would I

explain why I should keep
my AR-15 to the mother

of a kid who was shot.

Is I think what gun
owners need to think

about, because there's
a mom out there

who's thinking that.

And if that was my kid
or if that was anyone's

kid, I think, I think
we can probably see

that emotionally, my
kid was shot and I want

guns off the street
would be two very

easy dots to connect.

Um, and I think that
because those dots

are easy to connect,
it's why people do.

I don't think it's
logically consistent

and I don't, I
don't think it's.

I don't think it's
good for our country.

I think it's, I think
it's hurting our young

people at this point
and it's increasing

violence to not focus
on the real problems.

But again, I think gun
owners need to think

that before they type
something out on Facebook

or they say some smart
ass comment about how

libtard, snowflake
this or that, think,

you know, there are
parents out there who

are losing their kids.

There are families
that are losing loved

ones to suicide, and
simply saying, well,

stop targeting me.

That doesn't make
you feel better when

your kid was shot.

That doesn't make you
feel like, like your

kid's friends are
going to be safer.

You know, we gotta
give these people hope.

We need to show them that
we care and it's, we've

gotta get there somehow
and it's not going to be

by continuously, I hate
to say it because I have

been a member of the NRA,
my membership lapsed only

because I let it in the
magazines stopped coming.

But, um, we can't,
we're not the NRA,

we're not Americans.

We don't have a
second amendment.

Um, we do have
a Westminster

parliamentary system.

We do not live
in a Republic.

All those same reasons
that Canadian gun

owners like to say we're
different than the US

we don't have the U S
gun violence problem,

et cetera, et cetera.

All those differences,
um, are also the same

differences that prevent
us from effectively

deploying US style
arguments because US

style arguments hint
around that rights, the

second amendment, that's
their, that's their real

foundation, which we
just fundamentally lack.

So if we're coming at
it with the argument and

we're bringing in that
US style rhetoric, we

don't have the foundation
for that to stand up on.

It's essentially, it's
building a house on

quicksand, you know.

Um, it looks really good
and people think it's

great right up until
the one legislator goes,

you don't have a right.

This whole right
was never a right.

You know, you have a
legal responsibility of

all these other things.

And we have, because
the other thing too is

it's we have, we don't
have a right to own

guns, but the government
does have a legal right

to uphold the law.

The law states that they
can't just take shit

away if it's going to
reduce the amount of

hunting, if guns can
use for hunting, if it

can reduce culture, you
know, all those things,

we want them to abide by
their responsibilities.

I think we also have
to have a certain

degree of respect for
our responsibilities

and what those are.

And it's it's to show
people we, we are safer.

We do care, you know.

Man, you've brought
up a lot of stuff.

You went really
macro on this one.

Uh, I really like what
you have to say on this.

Cause I agree, I agree
with what you're saying.

Um, I, it was an
eye-opener for me a

number of years ago,
corporation of Delta

before it was the
city of Delta, says

we're going to ban
firearms businesses

and I went into the
city hall, municipal

hall there and had
all my notes prepared,

had all the arguments
and the statistics

and everything, all,
all ready to present.

And as I'm going
through it, I forget

the fellow's name.

Barry I believe it was,
he say's, Travis I'm

going to stop you right
there, hold on a second.

You've got a lot
more of this stuff?

I said, Oh yeah,
I sure do, right.

He says, you got to
understand, I agree with

you a hundred percent.

Everything you're
saying is true and

I agree with you.

That said we're in a
position where if we

think our constituents
want something that

will take steps to
implement that, whether

we agree with the facts
behind that or not.

And that level of
honesty, and we're going

back about 10, 15 years
now, and it's a little

bit younger, it was quite
an eye opener for me.

And when you, when you
talk about, uh, how to

properly comport yourself
in an argument on social

media, you know, there's
some simple steps that

I typically take, when
I look at an issue.

I try to separate the
people from the problem.

I take a look at what
the problem is, take a

look of the person and
as angry as I can be at

that individual or group
of people who are making

certain statements,
because they're

completely off base, at
least in my opinion, I

do my best to separate
them and take a look at

addressing the problem.

If I can't separate
the people from the

problem, I extricate
myself because there's,

there's no way to be
able to properly work

within that framework.

The second thing
I do is, I agree.

Essentially, any offense
is taken and not given,

if they say something
as crappy as it can

be, and as much as they
try to offend and get

my goat, it's me, who
ultimately will take.

Have that power.

Right.

It's that old adage.

And you see it on Tik
Tok and these different

things, people are
bringing it up again.

A guy gives you a
present, but you

don't accept it.

Who's that
present belong to?

Oh, not to you, right.

Belongs to the person
who brought it in.

And finally, I'll do
my best to approach

a problem from a
position of curiosity,

rather than conflict.

So when you're talking
about how, how do

you convince a mother
whose child was

killed by an AR-15?

I can put my mindset
in all the statistics

and say, it wasn't
the firearm, we should

be combating, uh,
violence or what,

however it took place.

Whether it was a
straight bullet from

gangs, and so we should
be looking at gangs.

Or whether it be
suicide because suicide

is it, uh, largest
killer of people with

firearms in Canada.

And you can say I'll
just look at the suicide.

They can get a knife,
they can get pills, they

can take, get a rope.

Put myself in a position
of curiosity, what

would it be like to be
that individual and to

have gone through that?

Because maybe there's
nothing you can

say to that person.

I think that a lot
of the time there's

nothing you can say.

Right.

Not even worth
an arguement.

Your job's not
to say anything.

That's it.

And I think that's
the fundamental

thing is like.

Exactly.

Like Ryan you've
got kids, right?

Yep.

Like if your, if your
son was killed, is there

anything anyone, anyone,
I don't care if it's the

president of the United
States, anyone, is there

anything anyone could say
to you to soothe that?

And the answer's
no, right?

Like there's nothing
anyone can say to make

a mother feel better.

It's not our job to
make her feel better.

What our job is to do
as gun owners, is to

show her that we are
being responsible.

So it's not saying,
you know, it's not

saying I should keep
my AR-, cause I do

see it like literally
there is a very,

there's a high profile,
she's very emotional.

She's tied into the
anti-gun movement.

She will likely,
never change her mind.

But she's the, she's the
mother of a, of a son

that was killed in a gang
murder and it's tragic.

Um, And, and I, I
think it's, I think

what's happened to
this one is of her,

or sorry, a daughter.

Um, Lindsey's mom has
her name on Twitter.

I'll just say it.

I mean, she's on Twitter,
so everyone knows it.

She's a staunch anti-gun
person, she, she posts

quite prolifically.

Um, I've purposely
tried to avoid engaging

her because I can't,
I don't know how to

frame that discussion.

I don't know how to
talk to someone that,

that has lost their
child like that.

I don't want to say.

Who does?

But I would say, you
ask the question.

If you, if they say,
you know, I want you

to get rid of your
AR-15 because it'll

help prevent murders.

You say like, well, why?

Like what, you know,
what, what do you think

is causing these murders?

And you ask questions.

Cause the big thing
is, is there's there's

there's, you can be on
broadcast or you can

be on receive, right?

Like people are
generally, we're the

old CV radio system.

We don't do two
way so well, right.

And when you get into a
conversation with someone

it's, it's natural,
it's very natural.

People want to talk
about themselves.

Look at me.

I've spent most of
this podcast talking

cause I am the most
verbose person in this

industry bar none.

Proud to say so.

I would agree.

Happy to say it.

Um, I'm fairly certain
people don't take my

calls cause I talk too
long, but nonetheless.

Um, at the end of the
day, like you just don't

have that, like, you
have to ask questions

and people are so much
on broadcast because in

the modern social media
world, that's all it is.

That's what bro, like
when people talk about

Twitter, people rarely
talk about the things

they've read on Twitter,
unless it's the things

they've interacted
with because social

media is a broadcast
thing for most people.

It's how they
express themselves.

They express themselves
on Facebook, they express

themselves on Twitter
and then occasionally

they see how other people
express themselves.

And because of the
algorithm, they only see

the people they hate and
the people they love,

they express themselves
in matters and they

hate and they love.

Um, and the problem
there is that, between

the torquing of the
messaging by the

algorithms that people
don't see cause that's

behind the curtain, but
at that, you know, wizard

of Oz sort of effect,
but also too, just the

overwhelming sense of,
uh, the bubbles that

are created because that
algorithm creates, um.

Echo chambers.

Bubbles, echo
chambers, yeah exactly.

Very good echo chambers.

So you basically just
get surrounded by

people who like what
you have to say and

that say similar things.

So you naturally start
to like what you have

to say more and more.

So when you enter these
conversations with a

mom, instead of, instead
of thinking, because

I think in most cases,
if you were to ask the

average person that
doesn't own guns, to

sit down in a room and
have a conversation

with a parent who'd
lost a child, most of

them would say I would
have a lot of questions.

I don't think they'd
have much to say, because

most people wouldn't
feel like they would

have much appropriate
input on that scenario

because admittedly it's
such a tragic occurrence

and unless you've gone
through it, I don't

think you can really
provide much input.

So most people would
go, I'd be very curious

to, you'd probably find
it on a videotape, they

asked more questions.

What was it like, how
did you get through it?

What were the first days?

Like, you know, do
you think you'll ever

have another, all
these questions that

you would want to ask.

I don't know why gun
owners immediately,

it's because of
the victimization

we do have that, I
think it's innate.

We have, we've kind of
wrapped ourselves in

this cloak victimhood
of, we're being targeted

by the government,
we're being targeted

by the government.

And it's, and because the
laws that they pass are

always created because
someone was shot, like

people were killed in
Portapique that did

not deserve to die.

Gun owners have allowed
the perpetrator of

that shooting and the
nature by which he

obtained his guns to
completely dictate the

manner in which they
respond to that event.

And I think
fundamentally, if

people take anything
away from the podcast,

that's what I want
them to stop doing.

Because when you can
watch that many people

get killed in a short
window of time for

no goddamn reason
and your response is,

but my guns, you need
to take a hard look.

Seriously.

As someone that works in
the gun industry, who,

who flat out, I've been
doing this for 10 years.

I'm looking at
potentially if the

liberals win the next
election, I'm not sure if

my business will survive.

And yes, this is
my voice breaking

that you're hearing,
because it's incredibly

hard to talk about.

But even as someone
that's considering losing

this much of what I've
put my life into, if

someone were to say,
Hey, would you give up

your AR-15 if it saves
everyone's life on

that day in Portapique?

Absolutely.

How could you not.

Those are, those are
sisters and brothers

and friends, you know,
like I think we as

gun owners have lost a
bit of the perspective

and we need to get
back around all that.

Well said, Daniel.

Nice.

That said, I don't think
giving up my AR-15 would

save anyone's life,
just for the record.

Um, I think what
would save lives

is good government.

And I think that's
where it gets

problematic because
I say that and I get

very emotional because
it is very saddening.

And I think that's the
perspective we need

to come at it from
because it tempers the

anger, it tempers the
frustration that I feel

because I sat there.

I'll confess, I was a
gun owner the sat there

on the, on my couch on
May 1st and thought, why

is he doing this to me?

I never thought
about those people.

I think we all did.

It gets, it's
a knee jerk.

Hard not to.

Right?

In the days that happened
afterwards, but in

the days that happened
afterwards is when

the rhetoric picks up.

And that's when we need
to be cautious of that

rhetoric and say, no.

Like when they say,
I think when you hear

about these shootings and
when people say we need

to let the dust settle
before we make comments

and stuff, this is why.

Because in those
first few minutes,

everyone's reacting
to emotional inputs.

You know, people are
watching it and going

those people are, I
don't know those people.

It's the same as
when there's a

tornado in Idaho.

There's no tornadoes
in Idaho, Iowa?

Iowa.

Kansas?

That's where
tornadoes occur.

Yeah.

Uh, floods in
New Orleans.

Like a lot of people
look at the headlines and

they think it's similar.

Its people elsewhere,
it's not my problem,

but when Justin
Trudeau bans my guns,

that is my problem.

Um, but the problem
then becomes when

that rhetoric takes
over the pro gun side

of the debate, we
then enter it from.

To be honest, kind
of a morally bankrupt

perspective because
it's really as someone

that sat across the
table from media

interviewers and had to
defend why I don't think

these gun laws work.

The only reason I can
say is, cause it's,

it's wasting resources.

Like these resources,
this could be spent

on actual progress.

And I think that
argument is the only

argument that matters.

And I think that argument
would be a hell of a lot

stronger if more of our
movement would take into

account that like, shit's
bad out there, folks.

Yeah.

Like young people are
shooting each other

and shooting at each
other more than they

did when I was a kid.

That's for freaking sure.

And I'm 35 years old,
I'm not that old.

Like I grew up on
Tupac Shakur died,

you know, like this is
more violent than then.

Well I'm not going to
discount the fact that

there probably are
some people out there

who will look at it
and say, not my guns

and completely right
off the tragedy that's

happening out there.

But I think it might be
a little disingenuous

to say that gun owners
in general, their head

immediately goes to
the firearm issue from

a perspective of, what
are they taking from me?

And I think the outrage
that is felt from

the community though,
those, the victims

those directly involved
called and the firearms

industry in general is
outrage over the event.

Empathy and compassion
for what's going on and

further outrage over the
fact that, as firearms

owners, most of them will
have done their homework

and have an idea of what
the statistics look like

and have a better idea
of what could possibly

be done to prevent
tragedies like this.

And they see that the
knee jerk reaction of

let's just ban guns will
do nothing to stop the

tragedy that happened.

And that can create a
higher sense of anger.

But I don't think
firearms owners are

properly conveying that.

It comes across as, yeah
don't take my guns as

opposed to what the hell?

You think that we're
going to, if we let's

say we've got a problem
with suicide, suicide,

men will predominantly
use firearms, women will

predominantly use pills.

People have their
preferred methods, but

if we don't have that
implement, we don't

have that instrument
of implementation.

Would that person just
find another instrument?

And maybe we should
be the tried and

beaten that old drum.

Why don't we address what
the actual problem is?

So I, I think, I think
that the, I think the

anger is there, but I
agree with you that the

way that we're, and I
say we're as I put myself

in with the firearms
community, obviously,

the way that we're
conveying that anger and

conveying our message
needs a lot of work

because it's so easily
misconstrued and becomes

positional down to the
firearm issue, as opposed

to solution issue.

How can we find
a solution?

Yeah, for sure.

I agree.

And I think, um, the
only thing I would

say there is, I think,
I don't think the

majority of gun owners.

I'll just say it to them,
majority of gun owners is

on our side on this one.

Um, specifically the
assault weapon ban.

I would've thought that,
and this is where it's

been interesting moving.

Cause I moved out of
Delta four years ago

now, coming up on five.

Um, and when I lived
in lower mainland,

it Abbotsford like
Ryan knows he lives

lower mainland.

Like lower mainland
shooting community is

predominantly a sporting
community, you've got the

trap guys at Vancouver
Gun Club, Abbotsford

is like the center
for all the tactical

shooting type stuff.

You've got IPSC
all over the place,

Poco is big on it.

Like there's lots of
AR-15's, there's lots of

handguns, there's lots of
trap shotguns, it's all

sporting stuff, right?

And hunting is kind
of a bit more of the

minority, cause you've
got to drive like three

hours to shoot an animal
in lower mainland.

Unless you.

Unless you're into ducks.

Live in Delta
like Travis does.

You got it.

And then it's like five
minutes from your house.

So then when I moved up
to Kelowna, it was this

weird inversion, which
I noticed right away.

Because I was, I used
to go to like Reliable

Gun and Wanstalls and
those sorts of shops.

And it was just a sea
of, you know, tactical

stuff and ammunition
and .223 and bulk

stuff and handguns.

And then I came to
Kelowna and the gun

clubs here, like Kelowna
has, Kelowna Fish and

Game has an IPSC range.

It's never been used
to my knowledge,

not since I moved.

The Joe Rich Club, I was
one of two people with

an AR-15 in the club
when I first joined it

in the second largest
metropolitan center in

British Columbia, in the
second largest gun club.

When I took my AR-15
to the Kelowna Fish

and Game Club, some
guy didn't even know

what it was like.

There's no gun, if you
tried to buy an SKS off

the shelf in Kelowna, you
can't do it right now.

There is no SKS.

There's no AR fif- well,
obviously no AR-15's,

but there's like maybe
double digits of handguns

for sale in this entire
city of six figures, like

quarter million people
in this Metro area.

It's insane.

And I think that's
where, also to gun

owners need to recognize
there's a disconnect.

And I think that that
the, the rural gun owner

does not care, by and
large, and this is a

gross generalization.

So please do not email me
with your, I'm a real gun

owner who cares, cause
the exceptions always

prove the rule folks.

By and large, if you
were to drive through

rural Canada and knock
on the doors of people

with PAL's and say, do
you care about the AR-15?

They go the what?

Because it's just not,
if, because fundamentally

when you think about it,
the AR-15 is a restricted

firearm, it can only
be shot on ranges.

If you live in rural
Canada, where's

the nearest gun
range, probably

hours away, right?

What's the nearest
competition to

shoot your AR-15 in?

Hours away, if not
days, depending on

where you live and where
you're driving, right?

I think we're starting
to talk a bit of a change

with the non-restricted
versions of things.

Oh a little bit.

And we're starting
to bleed in.

For sure.

We were seeing that in
Kelowna big time, the

non-restricted stuff was
finally opening people's

eyes up because where you
lack the infrastructure

for AR-15's to be
beneficial, the stags,

the NEA's were showing
people, these are

perfectly viable, modern
firearms that weigh seven

pounds, that are more
accurate than your bolt

gun, that allow you a
better up shot that you

can make fit your wife.

Yeah, so it's, it was
growing, but they've cut

that off at the knees.

And I think that's
where, again, I go for

the macro views because
people do need to look

at these policies.

People need to look
at gun control in

Canada from like
a 10 year scale.

Not a, like C-21,
C-71, all these

bills last few years.

What's the only thing
that's mattered?

Travis and I, before the
podcast, we mentioned

it, the end of long gun
registry the single most

important thing that's
happened in our lifetime.

Well, my lifetime
anyways, I

mean, was that.

The long gun registry
was created in my

lifetime, but I was so
young I don't count it.

I couldn't change
anything then, I was 10.

Um, but that's the only
thing that's mattered.

And ever since then,
they've just been kind

of fiddling with things.

C-21, I'll be honest,
bad bill, terrible bill.

Hope it doesn't pass.

If it passes, how
many guns are they

going to get back?

We'll they'll get
the AR-15's back

because they know
where those ones are.

And the people that
want to give them

back will give them
back and get a cheque.

There's what, 150,000
of those 120,000

AR-15's out there?

I got to figure, they
don't get more than maybe

10% back in the buyback,
I can't see more.

AR-15 owners are pretty
staunch guys, and most of

them have handguns too,
so they'll have a reason

to keep the restricted
license, already.

So the endorsements not
really going anywhere

and we'll all just
wait for the next

government change.

And that's that, you
know, that's where I say

gun owners kinda need
to stop making it about

ourselves and about the
guns we're losing and

about the gun policies
from our perspective

and start thinking as
like, we are the experts

on firearms in Canada.

You know, these are
the laws that they

currently work, these
ones clearly aren't.

Like, I think gun owners
could seriously, like,

we always say like, Oh,
gang bangers, look at,

they don't, they don't
have gun licenses because

they don't have an ATT.

Instead of saying the
ATT is clearly not

working because we
have the system by

which we're supposed
to be authorizing the

transport of firearms
and there seems to be a

whole shitload of people
moving firearms around

the country without ATTs.

We know this because
they keep shooting

each other with them.

So, instead of saying
like there's a public

safety concern that
the ATT system is not

fulfilling the role
that was supposed to.,

we use the laws that
we hate to prop up why

we're better than the
people that are shooting

each other as evidence
of, that's a different

population of people.

They don't have this
fancy plastic card in

our wallets, they're not
us, they didn't get ATTs.

When in reality, the ATT
isn't doing anything.

So why are we, like it's
convenient for us, it

doesn't mean it's good.

It costs a fortune
for the government

to maintain the ATT
stuff when they could

spend more on cops and
that's where like, we

need to be consistent.

It's always gotta
be able to safety.

Anytime we see
there to be room for

improvement on safety,
we should be doing it.

And that includes,
you know, things like

we've seen the CSAAA
do with industry.

Cracking down on
fraudulent purchases and

like doing, working with,
uh, so the cane industry

group worked with the
RCMP to develop, uh,

basically like a sort of
quasi training program

to help train, uh,
retailers on recognizing

straw purchases.

And like, that's a great,
that's, that's worked.

I know there are cases
where people have been

arrested because they
were straw pursing

firearms and that purse
was identified because

of the training that
the employee received.

And that was a hand
in glove industry, law

enforcement working
together and like, that

happened in like, I think
it was like a six month,

it was a fast program
and it made results.

And like, man, if
we had more of that,

there'd be a lot less
people getting shot.

Well.

Again, it all has to be
from that perspective of

safety first, it's all,
it's all about safety.

Because as you know,
when you talk to the city

councils, politicians
only care about what the

voters told them to do.

Um, and safety,
like what's safe.

When I talked to Steven
Blaney when he was the

public minister, it
was always, he never

really talked about
gun policy, he was

always safety policy.

It was always,
everything was from

a safety perspective.

It was never like
politicians never

think from a gun
owners perspective

or about gun clubs.

It's always as a
larger guns in a

safety environment.

Which is what
the liberals are

pushing right now.

They're, they're
talking about guns,

but it's always
backed by a safety.

Some sort of a
safety thing.

And when we're arguing
and when they're arguing,

they should get rid of
guns to make us safer.

And our argument is,
don't take our guns away,

that's a pretty shitty
argument for the guy on

the sideline, is it not?

Like we need to be
saying this isn't

going to make us safer.

This is the reason why.

You need to do this
to make us safer.

It's not going
to be safer.

Um, but because it's
literally like, I

think Travis you're
entirely, right.

It's not that we need
to change the argument.

We just need to change
the order of operations

in the argument.

Because when we start the
conversation with, don't

take our guns, they think
that's the priority.

And the conversation
has to start with, we

want people to be safe.

So when you're talking
to those people, that's

the other thing is if
you're talking to people,

if you're getting a tip
and people are trying to

figure out how to talk
to people, tell the fuds

that it's going to be
the end of all the gun

clubs, because restricted
owners make up what keeps

gun clubs in the black.

And the anti-gun people
that fundamentally like

this isn't going to work
obviously and all that

kind of thing, but tell
them it's a distraction.

Tell them there's
only 55 days left.

Tell them it's the
middle of a pandemic.

Tell them that the IBM.

So the other thing on
timing, if anyone needs

further evidence to
convince people, the IBM

contract that was awarded
for the um, planning

out of the buyback.

Uh, the preliminary
report was delivered

the week before the
law was announced.

So like literally five
business days at most

between IBM delivering
the preliminary report,

which was a $200,000
document I think

that took five weeks.

So it's not
comprehensive in any way.

And this preliminary
report that Bill Blair

took from IBM that I'm
guessing informed bill

C-21, uh, has an option
where to, once they've

completed the initial
report and the government

has given them direction
on which specific model

to go for that the
overall, um, enrollment

of the program will take
an additional two years.

So like they were
saying, this was

supposed to be a two
year, five week project.

And now he's saying
we're going to

have a law ready?

Like legislation
passed in 40 days?

It's not going to happen.

Or, or conversely,
we're not going to an

election in the fall.

And the Liberals think
that after this pandemic,

that they're going to
be somehow be able to

maintain and retain
their mandate, after

the vaccine stuff, after
everything else, it just

doesn't seem likely.

And then again, thinking
from the political

perspective, it would be
great if the Conserv-,

if I was a Liberal
political strategist,

I would look at this
and go, this is great.

We'll get this thing
real close to the finish

line and just when
the anti-gun people

think it's in the bag,
we'll pull the old lucy

football trick and we'll
say, drop that ballot

in the ballot box baby.

And we'll see how
she rolls again.

So, and I think also,
to gun owners on that

front, need to kind of
understand the political

pastoring that occurs
here and understand

that it may change the
way the Conservative

party or other parties
confront these issues.

Um, if the media jumps
all over it and starts

making it look like these
assault weapons have

to get off the streets,
there's some massive

shooting that puts guns
at a bad light again,

you can fully expect Erin
O'Toole to absolutely

not make any statements,
both guns between

now and the election,
because, why would he?

Like.

I'm a little surprised
he did, came out with

that video the other day.

Yeah.

We won't, I'm not.

I thought he would stay
a little more quiet

on the whole thing.

Because the reality is,
is you have to pull the

middle voters over right.

And I know people want to
want them to come out and

say all kinds of stuff.

But the reality of
it is, is if you want

to pull those middle
voters over, um, you

have to be a little
more centrist than.

And it's been
extremely frustrating.

I gotta say, and I, and
I hope if someone from

the Conservative party is
listening to this please,

dear Jesus, God, please,
like get someone that

knows about guns into
the OLO to help out with

policy messaging on this,
because I mean, from,

from Harper to, to Scheer
to now, the Conservative

party's messaging on
guns has basically

been everything I've
complained about today,

wrapped up in a nutshell
and paid for, because

that's what it is.

Conservative party
members are paying for

communication staff
and policy experts

to draft the policy
and communications

that we've seen from
this party on guns.

And that's where I will
say like, again, we'll

probably piss people off,
but it's 2021, some shit

went down last year where
were things are different

and I've got a kid
now, so that's changed

my perspective too.

But, um, I'm getting
really frustrated cause

I mean, those, those
Conservative party,

they work for us.

Let's not forget
everyone forgets these

politicians, they kind
of get the impression

that they kind of
represent the party

in Ottawa, in our
ridings, it's supposed

to be that way around.

And uh, I'm just getting
kind of tired this

constant like, we'll
tell you what our policy

is going to be and
then me getting it and

being like, what the F,
this isn't even good.

Like, I get the
whole, like, trying

to achieve the voting,
like, get the, get

the gun, vote out.

That's what the goal
always is in politics.

But like, I don't know.

Some of that, it's
just, it's just been.

It's like the Common
Sense Firearms

Licensing Act.

It's like, come on
guys, like if you're

going to open the books,
open the books, you

know, do something,
do something right.

Make a substantive
change so that we can

look at a violent
crime rates statistic

that is declining and
say, yeah, we were

part of the solution.

And address the root
causes that actually

are going to have an
effect instead of.

And that's the thing is
I, Erin's statement I

thought was, it's a very
strong, strong statement.

Um, Surprised me.

Yeah.

Uh, I think it's
a good statement.

I think it's
all good law.

I mean, obviously yeah,
rewrite all that stuff,

but I mean, we don't know
how to be re-written.

Um, that's always a
concern is Peter McKay

said he was gonna
rewrite firearms act

and you always go a
little bit of like oh

hmm, if Justin Trudeau
said he'd re-wrote the

firearms act, I might
respond to that a bit

differently than if Erin
O'Toole does, but you

should probably question
that at the same time

as a rational person.

Um, cause they can
rewrite good or bad.

But the other thing
is, um, it's just it's.

Yeah, it's that lack of,
I don't know, lack of

productivity, I guess
it's frustrating to be

sitting on the sidelines
and say like, Hey, you

know, there's a lot
of things you could do

that would frame the
gun discussion in a much

more positive light.

And I don't mean that for
the anti gun groups that

are listening to that
and thinking I'm going to

spin that into a thing.

What I mean by that is
like, like Ryan said,

address the cause.

Instead of saying,
I'm going to roll back

all this stuff to gun
owners, like instead

of putting a video out
for the gun community,

the video should have
been to the general

Canadian population.

Justin Trudeau is going
to spend probably between

2 and 5 billion of your
tax dollars, buying guns

back from people that
don't commit crimes.

I would like to spend
that money standing up

a mental health system.

Yup.

Mhmm.

There, you know.

Yep.

Or stronger borders
or more policing

and gang units.

Like there's a
giant list of stuff

that could be done.

But that's, again, where
a lot of the messaging

on them recently, I
got to say, I don't

understand it in general.

For politics at large
things, like when the

vaccine, like Erin
O'Toole is saying

we're at the end of
the line for vaccines.

And then everyone was
like, no, you're wrong.

And then it came
out he was right.

And he never said,
I told you so.

Yeah.

And that was one of those
like fundamental, like

you're a politician,
you have to say, I

told you, like it's you
know, it's your job.

It's literally what
opposition does, hold the

government to account.

If you were correct,
you know, weeks

before the government.

Own it, say, yeah,
we were right.

You know, we said this
was gonna be a problem.

And guess what.

Start to show people.

And I, I, I think
that's the big thing

is show people.

This is where I guess
fundamentally at that

oppositional side of
gun owners continue

to saying it's all
about the targeting

and the victimization.

We lose our guns, all
that kind of thing.

Is it, the oppositional,
don't, don't stop

thinking that just
because someone

wants to take your
AR-15 away from you,

they're not your ally.

We're all Canadians,
we all want to live

in a safer country.

So I'll start off from
that common ground.

And if they want to
maintain distance and

they don't want to
find common ground with

you, then so be it.

But be it an anti-gun
group or a politician,

like I think the
conservatives need to

stop opposing and start
saying what they do,

how they lead, like
same as gun owners stop

saying, don't take AR-15.

Start saying, spend
the money on a mental

health program.

Spend the money on
opioid addiction

counseling, spend the
money on border patrol,

spend the money on drug
interdiction, spend the

money on money laundering
investigations.

Like spend the money on
any one of those other

things, then we can talk
about the guns, would be

a way better discussion
to have, and I just.

Everyone's just
butting heads it's gets

super partisan, man.

I think it's almost
better to almost ignore

the gun thing and just,
uh, just aim towards

the root causes of
what's going on and

how they would fix it.

And in turn, that's
going to, that's

going to fix the gun
issues in the end.

Uh, everybody's
gonna be happy.

And the gun owners are
gonna know that if you,

if you achieve those
things that you're

promising to do, that
in the end, everybody's

going to be safer.

And the gun folks
will more than likely

still have what
they, what they have.

I think lik if, if I
think that's a good

perspective for people
to have is if you were

to think like what you
said, Ryan, about, if

gun owners were striving
for a safer Canada.

If Canada's gun
homicide rate was

single digits, there
is no government that

could justify spending
any amount of taxpayer

dollars pulling guns
out of civilian hands.

So gun owners should
be striving for that

number to drop too.

Um, obviously
there's the law of

diminishing return.

So it does get really
hard once we're at, I

mean, we're at 200 people
on average, it's for a

country of 32 million is
pretty small number for.

That's very small.

Murders.

But I think too, you
know, one of these bad

things happen, what
you said, Ryan kind

of spawned a bit of
a thought in my head

of like this, what
I've talked about with

regards to gun owners
thinking a little bit

beyond the scope of
their gun safe when they

see these headlines.

Is, um, I'm a young
guy that who sadly is

like, you know, like I
said, growing up in this

nineties, 2000 generation
of school shootings,

Columbine was during my
childhood and I grew up

in a era of just constant
school shootings,

pretty much, um, they're
not the gun's fault.

I always get media
interviews where, okay,

well, what does this have
to do with guns is always

the response, because it
doesn't have anything to

do with guns because if
a kid wants to shoot up

a school, they'll find
some other thing to do,

you know, Timothy McVeigh
or you name it, is a

common, I honestly do.

Like if a kid's going
to grab a 12 gauge and

shoot another kid, I
don't know like, I'm not

the guy to, to say, you
know, what do you do?

Like kid needs mental
help, not like, not to

take a shotgun away,
like taking a kids

shotgun away, he's
still gonna try and

kill another kids.

So it's a little weird.

Um.

Yeah.

But what I've always
thought is like all of

the, so I don't associate
with that as a gun owner,

but I do associate with
that as a young man,

because I've never seen a
mass shooting perpetrated

by a young woman.

And that's where I've
that, that thought.

I don't know when I
had, I think it was a

few years ago that it
suddenly occurred to

me and I thought, you
know, um, it was when

Courtney, we're talking
about having our first

kid and you inevitably
think, well, what if I

have a son, you know, and
mini me kind of thoughts.

And you think about
what's going on with

the kids these days.

And I have concerns about
Tik Tok like everyone

else, but then you see
these shootings and

you think young men um,
might be in a certain,

some, some young men
clearly find themselves

in a, in a state of
very clear distress.

Um, and obviously while
the school shootings

themselves are, are
super, super sad.

I think that, and it's,
it's obviously very

hard to think about the
perpetrators as victims

themselves, but I think
fundamentally, as someone

that has a background
in mental health, you

do have to look at
that and realize that.

Like, if anyone is
wondering, just go watch

a prison documentary
and tell me you don't

feel bad for the guy
who was abused sexually

from the age of three
to 16 and then entered

a life of crime because
he's never known a life

of normalcy, right?

Like you have to feel
sorry for these people.

They, they were not
given the opportunities

that some of us were.

Um, I think it's the same
thing goes on with the

gangbangers in Toronto
and Vancouver is it's,

they're not doing it
because they've got a

great job and they're
like, man, I really don't

like my boss at this
cushy nine to five, I'm

going to go sell drugs.

Like it's not really how
it goes most of the time.

So keeping in mind, you
know, when a gun enters

a violent situation,
there is no one winning

and chances are, there
was no one winning

when that happened
in the first place.

Um, it was just a bunch
of people who are trying

to find a way to win and
don't know how, and I

think guts it's on all
of us to help them out.

Well, Daniel, Ryan,
I've got a bunch of

notes that I had taken
just on C-21 alone.

Some on C-71 some
on the OIC and I much

prefer where this
conversation went.

I think it was much.

Bomb through them quick.

I got a 20 second, hammer
through yellow flags.

I can just, you tell
the, say the word

I'll give her man.

You know what?

Givin' 'er the
whole time.

I was, I was going
to throw it up on the

website and I still
might do that as well.

Just a quick synopsis so
people can look at it.

Of course, on The
Silvercore blog, we have

complete transcripts
knowing full well

that some people
would prefer to read

or watch or listen.

But, hey, you know
what Daniel, if you

want, uh, we've got a
real quick list here.

Red flag, yellow flag,
turning your guns during

a legal challenge,
replica firearms.

Uh, deletion replacement
of grandfathering,

municipal firearms bans,
uh, ammo, individuals

without a firearms
license cannot obtain

ammo abroad, uh, mag
capacity, uh, new,

uh, terms for, uh,
unpinned magazines.

Um, mail order
transfers and centralize

authorization to carry.

So no longer the
CFO now a central

commissionaire, cause
we know the CFOs are run

off their feet, giving
out, uh, authorization.

ATC's.

To carry right, for.

Mhmm.

Uh, so that those
are the main bullet

points I have.

Uh, I did have one
interesting thought

on, on replica's
cause that touches on

a lot of people who
are into airsoft and

some paintball and

.
And that's, that's closer
to your, there's a

bit of a venn diagram
overlap with your,

some of your background
training and stuff too.

There isn't ever-.

Perhaps a little bit,
you're talking about

disabled deactivated,
active, destroyed.

Uh, I think I've got a
little bit of authority

to be able to speak on.

A little bit of
knowledge on it.

On these ones.

Um, in fact, I've sitting
in this podcast studio,

which was once my office,
we've had the, um, uh,

some very high ranking
people from the firearms

program uh, having some
discussions on this who

flew in specifically from
back east to talk on it.

I remember one individual
who, uh, suddenly

couldn't speak anymore
when, uh, she noticed

that there were cameras
in the office because we

are a security related,
related business.

And, uh, tried to
conduct the entire

meeting through hand
gestures, but, uh, it

was, it was interesting.

But did you want to.

Fricken heck man, like.

And I still have that
video I'm sure kicking

around somewhere.

The puppet show.

So yeah.

Did you have any on,
on those things, did

you have any, I mean,
obviously abrogating

control of the handgun
issue from the feds

to the municipalities.

It has some huge.

It's insane.

I dont.

Constitutional issues.

I don't, like.

And it can bleed over
into other areas that

are not even firearms.

Oh yeah, people don't
even understand what's

going to happen.

I mean, like for those
listening, fundamentally

the constitutional
problem with this,

and I'm not a lawyer,
but I do know a

constitutional lawyer.

And my first call after
this was to him, uh,

fundamentally your
firearms license is a

federal document, right?

Like the federal
government issued

that to you.

Right.

And what C-21 is saying.

They call a it geographic
extent, I think is the

actual words that they
use in the firearms act.

Yeah.

Right.

And you can't see
it, but I'm, I'm

laughing and smiling.

Cause this is
legitimately just a

farcically comical
portion of this law and

that they want to have
a federal license, where

your city council passes
a bylaw that says you

can't own a handgun.

Or if you do, you have to
have these special laws.

Cause like, they haven't
said that municipalities

can opt into an
existing set of laws.

They just said,
municipalities can make

some laws and whatever
they say for handgun

storage, possession,
transport, you name it.

They will put on
your license as

conditions, making
your bylaw of federal

statute essentially.

Right.

Because if they're going
to enforce it on the

back of your license to
federal condition on your

federal license and like.

I don't think, I mean,
hey, like I said, I

don't think any of
this will happen.

And I will say so for
the big synopsis of

people want a better
run down on a lot of

these things in detail.

I can highly recommend,
I like Ian Runkle's

channel lot, the YouTube
lawyer out there talking

about this stuff.

Um, the red flag laws
terrible, it's just

an extension of what's
already out there as

an existing system.

I know within private
RCMP Facebook groups,

they don't like this
because specifically, uh,

they don't actually like
RCMP frontline officers

don't like the idea of
going into your house

and seizing stuff, a
little warrant because

RCMP officers, they do
have to go to court.

They do have to testify
on all these things

and they look at it and
go like, this is just

going to get abused.

They've all seen it.

They know that this
is just going to be

abused by a bunch of
people to ruin their

ex-husband's deer season
because newsflash, if

they take your guns.

Now, the new system
is the red flag law.

They take your guns away
for 30 days while they

do an investigation to
find out if the supposed

complaint levied against
you from a public

safety perspective
was verified or not.

The yellow flag laws
that you can't move your

guns, use your guns, buy
your guns, or sell your

guns, they're parked
in your house for 30

days while they conduct
the investigation.

The law in both cases
allows for the 30 day

period to be extended,
I believe once.

And then an additional
complaint will allow

the courts to levy these
penalties against you for

a maximum of five years.

If the complaint
has found justified,

obviously that's
different because then

the courts decide within
the framework of the law.

But yeah, 30 days
it's not judicial,

there's no judicial
oversight, and what

that means that if it
happens to you, there's

nothing you can do.

You, there's
nowhere to call.

Um, judicial oversight
is when you can call a

lawyer who can get you
in front of a judge who

can tell the government,
this is illegal,

you can't do this.

There's nothing
in this for that,

because you don't
have a right to gun.

So if the CFO says
you can't have him

for 30 days, you
have no compensation.

Um, that's
obviously insane.

Um, no one likes it and
this is where again, I

think people will find,
you know, the advertising

ban it's poorly worded.

It makes no sense.

Um, the municipal handgun
ban, unconstitutional

and completely illegal.

And talk about like, you
want to talk about, if

anything, the buyback
is going to cost two

to 5 billion, maybe up
to 8 billion, depending

on how they count it.

I think the municipal
bylaw bank could even

eclipse that amount
because the amount of

lawyers that will have
to be hired to figure

out each individual
case like, it's nuts.

Um, and I mean, when you
think like, and I know

that there are people,
oh no one's going to sue.

I guarantee you, if The
Shooting Edge is going to

be put out of business by
a municipal handgun ban,

the first phone call J.R.

Cox makes, is to
a freaking lawyer.

Like everyone thinks
about these laws from

the perspective that
individuals, but they

forget that even with the
buyback, I, you know, I

have a decent amount of
guns, but I'm probably

not suing to keep them.

A lawyer will cost me
more than the guns are

worth in some cases.

I'm not North Sylva so
if North Sylva's sitting

on millions of dollars,
worth of Bushnell AR

specific optics, okay.

Am I going to go
after the government

try and compensation?

Yes, because it's
probably easier to sue

the government to get
my full retail purchase

price and taxes and
duties and storage

out of the government
on those optics than

it is to sell them.

Because what do
you put it on now?

Right.

Um, so that, shit's just
going to go nuts, um.

Had a buddy that had an
interesting point on a

municipal handgun ban
and driving out, uh,

conservative voters.

So, his thought was that,
uh, if you have a, uh,

like a purple riding
or whatever, that could

go either way, and it
would be easy enough for

the government to say
that we're to, uh, not

implement, but, uh, sort
of point them in the

direction to, hey, maybe
you guys should implement

a municipal handgun ban.

So then the vote, the
Conservative voters at

that point have choices.

They can either get
rid of their stuff

or they can move.

Uh, and if they end up
moving, what happens

to that riding?

Well, the
riding goes red.

It almost gerrymanders
in reverse.

Yeah.

And so after, at that
point, you're picking

up seats in the house,
uh, because each one

of those ridings is a
seat and away we go.

It certainly would
increase the, the

partisanship, I mean
that rural, urban

divide and the East,
West divide, for sure.

Yeah, for sure.

And I think that relates
to the, uh, Travis

mentioned about the
centralized CFO thing.

For those that don't
know, um, CFOs do

have massive amounts
of, of leeway when

it comes to ATCs.

Um, as in like a CFO
could just issue you one.

You could, you could,
may issue or shall issue

is potentially within
reach within Canada.

If a CFO decided it was,
they would just have to

make a personal decision
and have a provincial

government that didn't
fire them for it.

Um, I mean the head of
the Saskatchewan Wildlife

Federation, I think it
was Saskatchewan Wildlife

Federation, there's
two, the Saskatchewan

Wildlife Federation,
and then another one.

I believe it was
him, Bob is his name,

he's the current
CFO of Saskatchewan.

Um, He's obviously
a gun guy, right?

So, uh, with, with
Jason Kenney potentially

higher, I think that's
what this is, there's

a Jason Kenney.

Cause there's been
lots of talk about

Jason Kenney hiring
a provincial CFO.

Yeah.

And.

So that'll be two
provinces that have.

Well, and the big thing,
and I think the Trudeau's

worry about is it Kenny
is, Kenny and Alberta

are the only province
in a position right

now to politically,
Saskatchewan could,

but they'd get crushed
by, Saskatchewan's big

enough to go up against
the national media.

So when the entire
weight of Canada comes

down on them going like,
no, you shouldn't carry

guns and Saskatchewan
might acquiesce.

Yep.

Um, but Alberta's
not like that.

And Alberta's got nothing
to lose anymore, with

all the pipeline stuff.

Yep.

Trudeau has to be looking
at it and going Jason,

like in the same way
that Trudeau looks at

this and goes, this is a
great way to get votes,

which is again why I
think it's reprehensible

because to be clear,
a 14 year old was shot

in the face and Justin
Trudeau's response was

bill C-21, which is never
going to become a law.

So instead of actually
helping kids, he's

decided to just
use them as votes.

So not done nothing,
that's the clar-,

what pisses me off.

He's done something.

He's done the
things to help.

He's chosen to get votes.

He's chosen.

Like he has the
entire weight of the

Canadian government
and armed forces behind

him, including our
strongest ally being

the United States.

And he thinks the best
way to stop kids from

shooting each other
in Toronto is taking

away my gun, which
is fucking bullshit.

So in other words,
he's choosing to use

dead kids to get votes.

That's literally
what it is.

And I would challenge,
I don't care if Rosemary

Barton wants to do
interview with me, I

would stick to my goddamn
statement on that cause

they ain't changed it.

You can't tell me
otherwise, there's no

justification for this.

Bill Blair himself said
as chief of Toronto

police, municipal handgun
bans don't make sense.

You know, and now
he's changing his

tune, because it
makes political sense.

Sure.

Of course.

I think like it's just,
you know, ugh, I got

all angry and lost my
train of thought, but.

It was good.

It was good.

We liked it.

Fucking Trudeau, man.

Um.

So replica firearms,
replica firearms are

prohibited already.

It sounds like they're
looking at some expansion

to what is deemed a
replica firearm, and that

is to include airsoft.

And so there's a whole
slew of people out

there that have never
owned firearms and not

interested in firearms
in general, right.

And I guess people, some
people listen to this

will have a distinction
and they'll think, well,

a firearm is something
that goes bang over 500

feet per second, 5.7
joules of energy, that's

a regulated firearm.

Airsoft, pellet guns
still fall under the

firearm label and if
you use, let's say a

pellet gun to go and
hold up your local

liquor store, you will be
charged with a firearms

related offence right.

And then provincially
firearms and municipally

on the firearm side.

So the, the concept
here, I guess, is

these guns that, these,
these items that kind

of look like guns.

We're going to just
make the replica law a

little bit more robust.

And of course, these
guys are going to be

affected by it, guys
and girls, of course,

they shouldn't talk
in the one way there.

But I was thinking
based on some of my

experience I've had in
the past, dealing with

different regulatory
bodies, I actually

can see a solution.

Not that I would
advocate for this.

But the solution for
the airsoft is out

there, if they still
wanted to do airsoft.

Would be to use
real firearms.

And let me explain
what I mean by that.

Mass murder.

If something
is developed.

If something is developed
as a firearm, it was

never developed to
imitate a firearm,

it was a firearm.

If you deactivate that.

And now there are
some guidelines for

deactivation and
you can exceed those

guidelines and not be
deemed deactivated or

fall below it and be
deemed deactivated.

Whatever you do once
it's deactivated in the

eyes of the law, it is
no longer a firearm.

You then pull the
guts out through some

CO2 or green gas and
the, whatever you

want inside the thing.

And you can run around
and play airsoft again

with what was originally
designed to be a firearm.

Does that make
logistical sense?

No, but if you look at
it from a, just a common

sense perspective.

Legal practicallity.

The work around for
these people to go

out here and to do it.

Yep.

It's ridiculous.

Yeah.

It.

Uh, and I think this
is where the, it can

be beneficial to take
the tenure perspective.

Um, cause I'll admit, uh,
I, I have shot airsoft.

I played airsoft when
I was a young guy

and it's tons of fun.

Um, I think taking the
guts out of real guns

and de-wating them, uh,
I think it's a great

argument because it
really addresses the

core cause of this,
of if the problem

is criminals running
around with replica

firearms and using them
to intimidate people

and police not knowing
the difference because,

legitimately, they don't.

Right.

I mean, these guns
are very realistic so.

Sure.

If the problem is
coming from the law

enforcement caucus
in the Liberal party,

um, and as people like
Harjit Sajjan, getting,

getting things from his
ex VPD guys, which I

seriously doubt he is,
but nonetheless, um.

Yeah.

That could be what
steering this, if, if

the practical solution
for airsoft is, well

we'll just use real guns,
the gangbangers will be

right behind them, right?

Like, if a gangbanger
goes, okay so my airsoft

gun that I used to steal
from the airsoft store

is no longer available.

I guess we'll just go
to the surplus store

and steal that de-wated
handgun that they've

got hanging from
the ceiling, right?

Like, or they'll just
get a real gun or they'll

just produce / continue
to trade an airsoft guns.

Cause I mean the big
thing there's, how

many of these are soft,
guns are out there.

And I got to say
like, I brought this

up with the OIC.

If they ban M14's
say right, they're

not registered.

So there is literally,
and this is just reality,

if a gang banger goes
into a gun store in

rural Alberta and says,
I will give you $8,000

for that M14, and I
know it's illegal, just

grind off the serial
number and that gun shop

owner is going well.

Trudeau's just past
C-21, my city might

put me out of business.

I could really use the
eight grand right now.

I'm gonna eat all the
money from all these.

Yeah, right.

Like you're putting
people in between a

rock and a hard place.

And then basically you're
putting them in a rock

and a hard place that is
also like front of the

line for organized crime
to take advantage of.

So, I mean, if you
don't think that that

gang bangers and, and
people that criminals

that would want to
obtain these things for

nefarious reasons, don't
go into airsoft for sale

groups and buy airsoft
guns for this reason.

You're insane.

Absolutely.

They do same as they
do on any gun for them.

They're on CG and
they're everywhere

trying to get guns.

It's just the fact that
gun owners are generally

pretty, um, fastidious
with their, with their

documentation and
checking PAL's that it's

not really a problem.

Yeah.

So I think that's
evidence, the system

works, but it's so
weird to me that the

government and the
people that elected

them that were like, I
love these guys because

they're going to make
pot legal and then we

can just stop that whole
crime from happening.

And we can dedicate law
enforcement resources

to better crimes.

And you know, when you
make something illegal

and you prohibit it, it
just makes it into the

black market and we can't
control that anyways.

Look at prohibition
or the same people

that turn around and
go, well, we'll make

airsoft guns illegal.

These made in, made in
China, Chinese things

that are dirt cheap,
that are imported by the

million, that are sold
by companies like Walmart

by the, literally like
Walmart orders, hundreds

and hundreds and hundreds
of thousands of airsoft

guns every calendar year.

And they think,
yeah, we'll make

those things illegal.

A bunch of 13 year olds
turning in their Tokyo

Marui Beretta 92's that
they paid 300 bucks

after they did newspaper
route for six weeks.

You know, not that I'm
bitter or anything,

thing broke after
two days, but.

Yep.

Got into real guns
afterwards, it was

a way better way.

Um, but it's just, yeah,
it's such a, like when

you put it into the
realistic perspective,

that's the, like the
comical part, because

when people read it as
a legislation or as an

order paper item, or as
a legislative summary,

it has all the way to
the federal government

behind it and Justin
Trudeau and all this

pomp and circumstance.

And then you go like,
wait, so you're telling

me a cop is going to go
up to a 12 year old and

he's, and be like, that's
a prohibited device,

get on the ground.

Like, is that
what we want.

I thought we were
in for less of that.

Are they, they're banned
for import now as well

by that, are they not?

I think so.

Yeah.

I think I read.

Yeah, CBSA does all
the funky stuff because

even before they.

Yeah, they just do
whatever they want.

Declared it illegal,
they ban it.

So that's going to be
an issue for the film

industry in a lot of
ways, because, uh, uh,

airsoft guns, gas guns,
are a huge portion of

what takes place and even
more so now, uh, with the

way the film industry is.

With all the safety
stuff that's going on.

I know in Vancouver,
uh, there's productions

that I used to work on
that no longer allow

any, uh, real guns on
set and that's written

into their contracts.

Uh, so when they're
dealing with, uh,

firearms and shooting and
all that kind of stuff,

uh, In their production
uh, it's basically CGI'd

with, uh, airsoft guns.

So as you well know, like
you already mentioned,

airsoft guns break and
they fall apart and they

don't last very long.

Constantly.

Constantly.

Uh, and so there
is not an unlimited

supply of airsoft
guns uh, in Canada.

So at some point, those
are going to run out.

So I would ask what
they're going to

do at that point.

They've already, uh,
made it so that, uh,

productions can't
use real firearms

written into their
production contracts.

Then, now the
airsoft guns are

all basically gone.

Um, and anything really
that looks like a real

gun is, uh, going to be a
prohibited as a replica.

So where do they
go from there?

And the part that kind
of, kind of makes me

interested is that a lot
of the people in film

obviously voted for, uh,
you know, it's for film

is fairly hardcore left.

They voted this stuff
in, uh, basically without

really understanding the
full impact of what kind

of problems is going
to cause, even possibly

in their own job.

And I think.

I'm reminded of
some of the facebook

arguments there.

Well, I know for a fact.

I know for a fact
that some people are

suddenly realizing what
is going to happen, uh,

possibly to their job.

Or to the amount of
jobs that they get, or

even the TV shows and
productions and movies

that arrive in Vancouver
and, and undoubtedly the

rest of Canada, because
we'll be all under

the same, uh, rules.

So, um, you know, action
films were a huge thing.

That's basically
what I worked on

back in the day.

Action films, TV shows,
all that kind of stuff

and a lot of that, in
my opinion, is probably

going to have some
issues with coming up.

You know what they do,
they make an exception.

They can make
an exception.

Yes.

And then if they're going
to make an exception on

that, you have to turn
around and say, well,

what was the point of
this to begin with?

Yeah.

And why in the
beginning then, if

this is not a problem.

But that's where, so
like when I was, when,

for the, for the Senate
testimony, when they

email you for it, they
basically give you some

instructions right.

And they don't tell you
what to say or anything

like not, it's obviously
like it's very, very,

very professional.

So anyone listening,
it's very cool.

It's a really
neat thing to do.

But if you ever
get a chance to

highly recommend it.

But they tell you
like you can't

change big things.

Like when the Senate
gets it to start

making amendments.

And even when the
parliamentary committee

start getting it to make
amendments, like the

bill should be a little
bit closer to, to ready.

And actually like what
Ryan brings up with

regards to the film
industry, cause I thought

that right away as well.

I mean, anyone that
lives in Vancouver

can't help, but think
of that, especially in

the gun world, because
film armourer's in

Vancouver are like
a big, big deal, um.

And with Netflix and
in with the, with the

streaming services
now buying so much

more content, like
the hours of content

being produced now.

Uh, I mean, Ryan, you
don't better than I, but

I'm pretty sure it's,
it's just gotta be a

lot more actual hours.

Even when I was getting
out of the industry.

Was already climbing

The Netflix shows and
stuff were growing

exponentially.

They were building,
uh, studios in BC

specifically to do
Netflix productions.

And Netflix, those
shows can't afford

the real guns, right?

Like, I didn't know.

It was like, I knew
that film was going

more towards gas guns.

I thought it was
a cost thing.

Not so much a
safety thing.

I knew the safety
was there, obviously.

Yeah.

It's more of a
safety thing.

It doesn't really
make any difference

to the production.

They, they end up
renting, um, either a

gas gun or a real gun and
they can operate those

on set without one of
us there, without one of

the armourer's generally.

Providing the, the prop
master has a you know,

a firearms license and
there's somebody there.

Gotchya.

That can deal with it.

I think it's just
evidence though that

this exception isn't
already baked into the

law is, is another case
of, I just don't think

they really intended
this to go the distance.

Like I think they
basically just

drafted this thinking.

Yeah, it's about, it
looks to me to be a law

that is about 60% of
the way to something

that's actually
capable of being.

It's not thought
through it all really.

No, no.

So.

They didn't consult
anybody on where

it's gonna go.

And I mean, in some ways
we can probably take a

little bit of like, oh,
that's good, because

I'm glad to hear they
didn't waste a bunch of

time drafting a law they
didn't intend to pass.

I'm glad they just wasted
minimal amounts of our

time drafting a law they
didn't intend to pass,

at a time when there's
some other stuff that

they probably have on
their priority table.

But yeah, that, that
film thing, how many,

so percentage wise,
when you were working,

or if you have any idea
now from like talking

to people that, mutual
contacts and all like

what's the percentage
between real guns

and gas guns on film?

Uh.

In your experience
in Vancouver, just

in your experience.

When I was working, and
I think I left at the

end of 2015, I would
say it was probably,

I bet you, it was
probably 60% airsoft.

Really?

Gas guns.

And you think it's
gone up from there?

It's a hundred percent
gone up because

there were still all
the WB shows like

Supernatural and, uh.

God I love that show.

Aero and all those, uh.

God I hate that show.

All the superhero
um, uh, stuff, the

DC comic shows.

I worked on all of those
and, uh, it was pretty

regular, like Arrow, we'd
you know, I have M 60

machine guns out on it
and handguns all kinds

of different things.

Now uh, none of those
shows uh, allow live

fire, like real blank
fire going on on them.

Do you feel like that
decision was made,

was that decision
made entirely from a

safety perspective or
do you feel there was

a degree of politics
in that decision?

Um, I think it, I
think it was a cover

your ass decision,
uh, there, especially.

Lawyers, liability.

Yeah.

Liability for sure.

I mean, we were always
going through issues, uh,

uh, with the production
lawyers wanting to

rewrite the contracts and
all that kind of stuff.

Uh, like our liability
contracts that we

added at the time, and
it was always a big

huge back and forth.

And I think eventually it
came to the point where

they're like, well, you
don't need a liability

contract when, uh, when
you're running airsoft.

So it's a, it's a
safety issue, so let's

just get rid of the
real live fire guns.

And that, in turn got
basically rid of the

armourer's unless there
was something specific

that there wasn't an
airsoft gun for there's

no airsoft 50 cal's.

So if you had those
out on set yet

to have the guys.

But now, it's,
it's different.

Well, sucks to be
film industry guy

all of a sudden.

I don't know how
the film industry.

Yeah.

You know, I got
buddies that.

Especially with our
dollar being at that

money spot for film
normally too, right?

Yup.

Yup.

Yup.

I mean, it should be a
very lively with the,

with the dollar and
everything right now

and the tax credits
and all that stuff, you

should be pretty lively
here, but, um, all the

people I stay in contact
with, if they're like,

eh, there's, you know,
it's, it's moderately

busy at this point.

You were talking about
putting something on

the back of the license
and putting conditions

on the back of the
license earlier and it

just brought to mind
the back of my license.

And by virtue of my age
alone, I was not able to

get a 25 or 32 calibre
handgun or short barreled

firearm, a section
12.6 type firearm, but

I was able to get a
12.7 inherited firearm.

And you know what
happened when my

license renewed?

I bet you do.

You know what happened.

I don't.

To my 12.7?

Okay.

Well, this might be an
interesting one that

you can write about
in Calibre magazine.

Uh, my 12.7 inherited
it turned into a

12.6 and guess what I
could purchase and buy

and sell other 12.6
firearms from other

individuals out there.

And I was concerned,
I thought like,

what's going on here?

And I had actually,
you know, in a CYA way,

contacted the firearms
programming, um, like

what's going on here?

And they said we
don't make mistakes,

you're 12.6, we
don't make mistakes.

Okay, fair enough,
I got it in

writing, good to go.

I can buy, sell all the
rest, but the interesting

thing was, it didn't
just happen to me.

It happened to every
other 12.7 inherited.

Really?

Firearms owner in Canada.

I've got pictures of
the license and I've

talked to other 12.7
owners who became 12.6.

And now they've got a
situation where they

got, some people, myself,
by virtue of age, I was

never able to even take
advantage of the 12.6,

who were able to purchase
other firearms and sell

the firearms and they
had to turn around and

try and quietly clean
up this little mess.

So when we look at these
laws, when we look at

C-21 and even if we were
to say this was the most

well thought out in their
intention in the way

they're going, we can't
discount human error in

these things and what
those implications will

have to the individual
and to the businesses.

Like for example, in
the film industry, um,

just, just an interesting
aside on all of that.

And if you wanted
to write on that

in Caibre Mag.

I'm interested.

I'm kind of curious,
I'm interested into why.

Cause I thought that
was, I actually looked

into that a few years
ago when I, I got the

impression that it
was pretty expressly

included for most of
the assets I looked at

that like, that was not
supposed to be the case.

Like I, a 12.7 was
supposed to be 12.7,

you get inherited only.

They made a mistake.

You're supposed to
be expanded, but

if it's happening
to everyone, um.

Every single
12.7 became 12.6.

That sounds more like an
internal policy change

because legitimately
once that stuff's like,

I could see if yours did
once and I could see the

CFO saying we don't make
mistakes to cover yours.

But if it's everyone's,
that's, that's an

internal, that's a.

That's an error.

An ATIP that I need
to file to say, like,

why is this happening?

Cause there's
something happened.

There would have been
an internal, like from

my knowledge of how
the firearms program

works, there would
have been something

internal circulated to
dictate that transition

occurring because
it's changed, right?

Like it's, they,
they didn't renew

your license.

They changed
your license.

They had to do
something to do so.

Have you renewed
since that went down?

I have.

And it stayed?

Until the point
where they had to

correct it all.

And they had to course
correct with all other

12.7's who we're, became
12.6 and they have

changed them all back.

Hmm.

Hmm.

That's weird.

So that that could
be human error.

That could be
computer glitch.

That could be
whatever it might be.

But when we started
going down this road of

trying to make policy
and trying to make laws

and regulations, we have
to look at it like you

were saying from, Daniel,
from the perspective

of the victim or the
person and how, how they

will be impacted on it.

We have to look at it
from the perspective

of the film industry,
from the individual

owner and how, how
they may be impacted.

But what rights are we
giving away when we bring

these things in, should
a mistake like this

happened to happen and
they happen more often

than you would think.

Well, that's why I
would say like my big

take home message for
people when I've done

radio interviews, is
always TV and stuff is

just don't you have an
amnesty period, use it.

Like the government
has given you that

amnesty period, just
like they give you back

some money at tax time,
you know, use it like

when the government
gives you something,

take it and use it.

Um, so don't do anything
until then, because

the more time elapses,
the more this stuff

will get fleshed out.

And for all we know,
I mean the long gun

registry amnesty
continued until the long

gun registry ended so.

In your opinion Dan,
is this gonna, is this

gonna stretch on and the
amnesty will have to be

extended at some point?

It'll have to.

I mean, that's, that's
kinda my thought.

I think the amnesety
extension will be

predicated by the
compliance rate.

Yeah.

And the compliance rate
is going to be dismal.

So the amnesty will be
extended indefinitely

because at the end of
the day, they don't want

to reach a point where,
because that's what

the, that's what the
liberals got into with

long and registry, right?

Was it was people that
may have supported

it initially.

Um, even in a
passing way.

Like I know people, I
was at the Vancouver

Gun Club arguing why the
long gun registry should

die when it was first
killed because people

that shoot shotguns at
clay pigeon sometimes

think gun control is good
and in that discussion,

like you just kind of
go like it's, I don't

know, man like, I don't.

No one will comply and
the government will

be stuck with this.

Like, do we put
everyone in jail?

Yeah, how do we
deal with it?

Or, or is, or is leaving
the thread of that over

their head, ostracizing
voters, like, like.

Let's say you're the,
it's 150,000 AR fifteens

in the country, 130,
whatever it is, right.

There's a lot more
Norinco M14's in the

country, a lot more.

SKS's.

A lot of SKS, but the
big one is I use the M14

specifically, because
I think it's the most,

maybe the Mini 14, is
maybe the most popular,

newly prohibited
firearm, right.

Um, If I have an M14,
but I don't own AR15.

I feel a bit
insulated from Justin

Trudeau's gun ban.

I probably feel somewhat
slighted by it by going

like, I can't use my
M14, but you got to

remember too, like we
are all hardcore gun

guys for whom guns are
part of our daily lives.

For a lot of people,
their M14 might be

something they haven't
seen in two years, right?

They, they got it
before they had kids,

they were shooting
with their buddies.

Everyone had kids
shooting less and less.

He keeps it for the
eventual hunting trip

he plans to go on
at some point in the

next 10 years, right?

He probably doesn't
like AR-15's because

he probably looks
at the headlines and

he's never been in
the gun world, and he

thinks it's a quote,
unquote, weapon of war.

Like these are the
sorts of people

that Justin shows.

He's not worried
about us because he

knows where we stand.

Yeah.

But it's those sorts
of people for whom the

amnesty will be extended
because he'll be looking

at those guys going,
if I keep looking like

I'm going to throw this
guy in jail, he might

vote for someone else.

If I keep looking, like
I, I don't really mean

to hurt him, this is
intended to like, if the

law says I'm going after
legal gun owners, but the

government does not go
after legal gun owners,

by default, a whole bunch
of those legal gun owners

will still vote for the
party that is not going

after them because they
are not doing the thing

they said they would do.

Not following
through yeah.

And the Conservatives
need to realize

is talk is cheap.

The Liberals talk all
the time and then they

don't do anything, like
they won't take the guns,

even out of the houses.

Like when you actually
think about those

arguments, the anti-gun
people said of like,

you've promised to take
assault weapons off the

street, et cetera, et
cetera and now you're

just going to let
everyone keep them.

If you were an anti-gun
person and you'd

spent years lobbying,
you would be super

super angry, right?

Like.

Mhmm.

I think there are a few
that are pretty angry.

You finally get, you
listened to Bill Blair

across the table, tell
you, yeah, we're making,

we have the single
strongest anti-gun bill

in Canada's history and
you go, but everyone

gets to keep their AR-15?

Like, I'm sure they're
just as pissed as we

are, because we're
coming at it from

the opposite sides of
this is not going to

do what either of us.

Were allies.

And that's the ironic
part is we argue with

the people that are on
like, and some of them

aren't on the same team
because I'll admit like

some of the groups.

Just want all guns gone.

They don't want you
to hunt, they don't

want you to have any
guns, no guns at all,

they don't like guns.

They're hoplophobic.

And they've managed
to find a way to turn

that into a hobby.

But for by and large,
a lot of things,

these people, and
we've seen it.

Cause there have been
some people that started

out on a staunchly
anti-gun argument that

if you say, look, I'm
on your side dude,

like I'm not, I don't.

I'd like to keep my
guns that's, but that's

besides the point.

What I want to do is save
lives and stop these kids

from shooting each other
and stop the suicides and

stop this and stop that.

Then oh, okay, all right
then, this, they start to

nod their head and they
go, this makes sense.

You're on the same side.

Okay, yeah.

You know, and if
humanizes us a bit too,

but it also gives us
some credibility that

we're, we're kind of
lacking these days.

Empathy.

Yeah, it's empathy, a bit
of, yeah, so it's hard

though, because I mean,
the other thing too is,

I think for Canadian's
at large, it's really

hard because the people
that are victimized

by these crimes are
always, and I'll say

this, this is showing
to sound super woke

myself, this is showing
my own privilege, so I'll

freely admit that I am.

The people that are
victimized by a lot

of these crimes are
people that are not, the

people like myself have
trouble associating with.

I am not a gang banger,
I've never been involved

in the drug trade, I'm
not a violent person,

in the freaking least,
um, So for me, it's,

it's another world.

It's like reading about.

I mean, when I read about
the stories that come

out of Jane and Finch in
some of those downtown

areas of Toronto, I've
been down there, I've

driven down there um,
it's pretty eyeopening.

Yeah.

It's pretty crazy.

But it doesn't
feel like Canada.

Like, it doesn't feel
like the Canada I

know, cause I come from
the mountains of BC.

Like I drove through
downtown Toronto,

looking at the, the areas
where these shootings

happen and I go like,
well, like I don't even

recognize this place.

It's another world.

And when I see the
headlines coming out of

those areas, it feels
like something else and

I think that's what,
especially because gun

owners are typically, we
have higher than average

household incomes.

We have more
stable lives.

We have more complete
family units amongst

our population than
the national averages.

And that gives us a
different perspective

that is, it makes it
hard for gun owners to,

it makes it very hard,
I think for gun owners

to have sympathy and
empathy for the people

on both ends of these
violent crimes, because.

And you see it writ large
amongst the population

that more people have
been killed by opioid

overdoses than by COVID.

But more people
are willing to make

massive concessions
to their daily lives

because of the COVID.

But no one would make a
single concession about

opioids because quote
unquote, the people that

overdose are not like me.

And that's, if you want
to know where I think

Canada is going wrong,
that's where it is.

And it's across the board
and it's it's, we just

don't read out the gang
bangers and gun owners.

It's almost like
they're proud to

say that's not me.

Instead of going, that
could have been me.

He's one of us.

There by the grace
of God go I, right?

Like, your childhood
unfolds a little bit

differently, you know?

Yeah, exactly.

That could be you.

That's good.

Well, Daniel, Ryan,
thank you very much.

This was an
excellent podcast

listeners out there.

If you have thoughts,
please let us know.

You can email them,
leave them on YouTube.

Leave them in the, in
the comments on the, uh,

the podcast there., make
sure checkout Calibre

Magazine, there's plenty
of good content in the

magazine, just like
you've been hearing

from Daniel here.

And if you want to
take your rifle to

11 checkout IBI, get
yourself an IBI barrel.

Thanks guys.

Oh, thanks for having us.

Yeah, likewise.

And I'll continue
to be the strongest

reason why these
podcasts need a mute

button for the guests.

No.

Need to talk more
and not less Dan.

Absolutely.

I'm trying, we're hoping.