Posted on 12/01/2005 12:32:36 PM PST by NorthOf45
The price being paid for this charade
By Rex Murphy
CBC's The National
November 21, 2005
"Useless" is not a difficult word, but it's worthwhile sometimes to check a dictionary even for the most common ones. For example, the Encarta Dictionary -- that's the online newbie of lexicography -- defines "useless" as "having no beneficial use, incapable of functioning usefully."
Merriam Webster is terse. It just says, "ineffectual."
The American Heritage says of useless, "incapable of functioning or assisting." That's a good one.
The Shorter Oxford is economical and brutal. It says useless means "having no purpose."
I was peering into all of these semantic windows just for the purpose of making sure that when I said the federal gun registry -- cost close to $2 billion -- was useless, that I was on the right track. I think we are. There have been 69 murders in Toronto over this year. Many worthy, innocent people have tasted the deepest grief. The killings have profoundly disturbed, agitated, and alarmed the communities where they have occurred. The most recent murder was of an 18-year-old boy outside a church attending the funeral of a 17-year-old boy who was himself murdered the week before. This brazen blasphemous horror has appalled everyone. It has shaken Toronto to the core.
In none of these killings has the gun registry been of the slightest assistance. It has been ineffectual, of no beneficial use, incapable of assistance. This useless pretence of a policy has answered no valuable purpose. I bring this up in this particularly bleak context not primarily to take a smack at the gun registry, though it deserves every smack it gets, but to point out this further consideration: That cosmetic legislation, legislation designed to make people feel good, has a price beyond the $2 billion sign. Such legislation always amounts to a pretence and an evasion.
It was always known that if there was a problem with inner-city crime, gangs, and guns, the response had to be one that dealt with inner cities and with the gangs and their guns. And that meant confronting some of the most delicate issues, mixing race, poverty, police relations with black communities, drugs, and sheer wilful thuggery on the part of some -- issues that are volatile, not susceptible to a quick fix, and barricaded by a whole set of topics most politicians would prefer not to have to deal with. Throwing up a national gun registry as an answer, even a partial one, to these problems, was a fake response, allowed some civic leaders and interest groups to pose for the cameras, and give a vague impression that the real problems in all their complexity were being addressed. They weren't.
Gun murders in Toronto, and particularly within some areas of Toronto's black community, are not, and never were, primarily a licensing and registration dilemma. Nor are they, by the by, a cross-border smuggling problem or a gun manufacturers' problem. Gun murder in this city is a Toronto problem, it is a gang problem, and it is a problem of relations between the police and portions of the black community. The wretched gun registry has been absolutely useless in assisting police in finding the villains who have been killing people.
Well, the homicide rate in Toronto this year is partially the price being paid for this charade, and a most grievous illustration of the cost that evasion, purchased by feel-good legislation, eventually extracts a price inestimably higher than the $2 billion that useless registry has cost so far.
For The National, I'm Rex Murphy.
Rex Murphy Ping
Check this out Joe!
An Armed Citizen ~ Is A Safe Citizen!
Today the Liberal Government is toast, tomorrow maybe the gun ban they support will be nothing more than melting butter on that same toast.
Canada has my best wishes on seeing the gun banners lose as reality sees the light of day.
Peoples actions are what need addressed and punished. If they are black, so what, if they are white, so what, their color isn't what made them chose as they did. That is just an excuse to avoid assigning personal responsibility for those very choices. It is a politicians way of deflecting the bogus race card rather than just standing up and saying what needs said.
Guns take no actions. People take actions. Guns should not be held responsible PEOPLE should. It matters not what their color is.
Good read, thanks.
Sheep, cows, chickens and pigs go around unarmed all the time and look at what happens to them!!!
Anyone know; if you go to Canada hunting; do you have to "register" your firearm?
However he doesn't say what would be a good solution. I have always thought that if you were going to critisize something that you should have a legitimate alternative in mind.
Used to be the Canadian cops, local, provincial, or the RCMP's took a pretty tough line with wrongdoers. You got a good old fashioned a&&-whoopin' before you got to the jail and several more after. Sometimes (for minor things like assault, petty theft, etc) they would give an a$$-whoopin' and a warning and then take you home to sleep it off.
my how things have changed
*****Gun murders in Toronto, and particularly within some areas of Toronto's black community, *****
Oh My: You mean Canada has a problem with guns and murder in their black community? I thought Canada was a Paradies for blacks.
Like France was a paradise for blacks till they started burning all the cars.
I guess the whole world is racist against blacks except Africa where they get along with each other so well.
The real reason for gun registry is so the government can confiscate them easier.
Found this on about.com: Bringing guns into Canada
Handguns are a definate no no, however. Prominent signage at every border crossing.
Hope that helps.
You MUST declare it at the border. I don't think you are permitted to take handguns into Canada amymore.
That one sentence would have been edited out in our newspapers.
No but your guide does and the natives are none to happy about that.
Imagine having do catch a plane to Whitehorse to register a gun that you use to hunt your food.
Thanks for the ping NO45.
Canada Ping!
Please FReepmail me to get on or off this Canada ping list.
Gee, all those criminal types didn't register their illegal/stolen firearms? I am deeply saddened.
Often wonder how many back ups were buried and not registered.
Thanks for the ping.
My pleasure.
A firearm is a blank slate upon which is written the behavior of its holder. (Mark Davis)
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