About Us Schedule Course
 Descriptions
Media Info
Contact Us Directions Instructor/RSO
 Certification
Links

 

Canadian Gun Laws Fail (Published by the Toronto Star)

(Note: the article below illustrates the increasing gun crimes in Toronto and proposes as a solution the nonsense that since the currently oppressive Canadian firearms restrictions aren't stopping crime, the answer is MORE restrictions!)

Gun culture
Dec. 20, 2001

The deadly scourge of guns on city streets hit painfully close to home this week for the Toronto police force.

Constable Antonio Macias, 32, was shot Monday night outside an apartment building on Weston Rd. in the west end. The wound was serious but thankfully, Macias, the father of two young children, is expected to recover.

The shooting was a troubling reminder of the dangers our police officers face day in and day out.

Even more troubling is the description of the person suspected of shooting the officer — a teenager.

Mayor Mel Lastman spoke for many when he called the shooting "an affront to everything that's decent about this city."

Truth is, though, youths with guns have been a deadly combination this year in Toronto.

On Saturday night, 20-year-old Mohamoud Ahmed was standing on a downtown street corner when a car pulled up, several young men jumped out and shot him. Five days earlier, David Bryan, 29, was gunned down in Scarborough.

The two men are just the latest in a grim tally of death and injuries that have shattered neighbourhoods and destroyed young lives.

In all, there have been 59 murders in Toronto this year, 32 of them involving guns. Police have made arrests in fewer than 30 of the homicides.

Toronto's black community, which has been especially hit hard by the shootings, issued a call to action earlier this year to solve not just the murders but the social and economic problems at the root of this violence.

To its credit, the police force was working on a strategy to get guns off the streets. But the attacks of Sept. 11 forced a new focus on the force and the strategy went on the back burner.

Chief Julian Fantino, who rushed back to Toronto Tuesday from an anti-terrorism conference in the United States, admits that the emphasis on terrorism after Sept. 11 sidetracked the force from other priorities.

Now guns are the priority. Getting the force's gun strategy off the drawing boards and into action has taken on a new urgency. Fantino has promised to unveil several new initiatives very shortly.

And the city, which ignored the concerns of the black community, cannot turn a blind eye any longer.

For all the talk of recent weeks, it isn't terrorists who are the greatest threat to this city. It is young people and their guns. It will take the combined efforts of politicians, educators, community activists and residents themselves to halt this epidemic of shootings.

Copyright 1996-2001. Toronto Star Newspapers Limited.
 


I couldn't resist concluding with this silly bit of news. Of course the thinking depicted above would only be natural to bureaucrats who think like this:

Canada Seeks to Stop Car Exhaust Suicides
December 31, 2001 08:45 AM ET

http://www.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml?type=humannews&StoryID=484798

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's transport ministry, looking for ways to make it harder for people to commit suicide in cars, is considering ordering auto makers to equip all cars with special suicide-resistant tailpipes.

 (What a bunch of boneheads!)

Go to my News Archive


All material Copyright 2010 by
AllSafe Defense Systems

Home  |  Contact Us  |  Directions  |  Schedule
Course Descriptions  |  NRA Instructor Certification
Links  |  About Us  |  News Archive  |  Media Information