Canada’s gun ban, which has been planned since 2020, starts now.

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by TheGunBlog.ca—believes they may be in the clear, and that the gun ban may not even happen.
“After more than five years of work, all they have is a website,” the site published.
Compensation
The Canadian government needs 52 pages to list the firearms they have banned and the individual amounts they will supposedly pay if the guns are turned in.
Quite frankly, the list is a mess. Evidently, its authors have never heard of alphabetical order. The firearms are listed in order of what the government will supposedly pay for the guns when they’re turned in. If anyone actually wants to see what the government will pay for their own firearms, good luck. You likely won’t find it on their confusing list.
The compensation, which even the Canadian government says is not guaranteed, starts low at $150 Canadian dollars offered for a full-auto submachinegun known as a GM-16. It ends at $9,945 with a list of CheyTac and other precision rifles, which cost much more.
Hundreds of firearms have no government price listed. Instead, users are told to call the program’s contact center for information about what the government will pay. This unpriced list includes bolt-action rifles such as the Weatherby Mark V and even Smith & Wesson’s M&P 15-22.
Takeaways
One thing about the Canadian gun ban is crystal clear: No one who knows anything about firearms participated in creating the program.
While we in the States may giggle about what the Canadian gun owners are going though, it’s certainly not recommended.
Our Second Amendment needs continuous safeguarding and constant oversight, or we too could someday be told to turn in our firearms. Four years of the Biden regime made this crystal clear.
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