...it was Nazi-America when it came to handguns. I am looking forward to moving back next Summer and getting back home!
bydland,
I'm not going on the attack, but I would like to offer a different perspective.
Bear in mind, I live in a country that has far fewer guns per capita. Furthermore, while there is a debate here about the rights of gun owners and the relative merits of gun control, there is no constitutional language here upon which to make the argument for gun ownership. Simply, it's a different culture, so please accept my comments in that context.
While we have fewer guns, we are seeing spikes in gun crime, especially involving youth and gangs. We're starting to get drive-bys and such here in Toronto with greater frequency. Our stats seem small when compared to many comparably-sized US jurisdictions, but that doesn't really matter. Everyone I know is pretty concerned about the problem. That's probably because I'm a teacher, and I would like to see all my kids grow up.
I consider myself to be pro gun control -- in my country -- which sometimes gets me labeled as anti-gun on US forums.
There are a lot of people like me, in the USA, Canada, and all over the world. We're not anti-gun nuts, or anything of the sort. I just don't believe that many problems get solved by adding more guns to the mix. From my perspective, I think my country has all the gun control it can reasonably expect to have. Those controls don't change the fact that there are people who think it's appropriate or reasonable to brandish weapons and terrorize the innocent.
Several years ago a previous federal government mused about banning all handguns, with mixed reviews. Personally, I wouldn't miss them, but I doubt that would make my kids any safer. Recently, the Mayor of Toronto, David Miller, renewed his call for a city-wide ban on handguns. I'm pro gun control, but I disagree with him because it is already illegal to carry a hand gun here -- civilian carry permits are virtually unheard of. It's also illegal to point weapons and people and shoot them. So all we would accomplish is to criminalize gun owners without actually stopping a bullet.
I also know this to be a fact. An extensive report by the RCMP a couple of years ago, released to the media through the FOI act, tells us that slightly less than half of weapons seized from criminals were formerly the property of law-abiding gun owners. This tells me three things: (1) The pro-gun lobby in my country cannot blame all gun crime on the vast trafficking of illegal weapons from the USA into Canada. (2) The pro-control movement here cannot pretend that further controls will stop all forms of gun crime. (3) Not all gun legal owners are reliable, responsible, or immune to having their weapons stolen and used to hurt others.
So, to that extent, I understand the efforts of citizens who ask their government to impose gun safety on jurisdictions, even where it becomes inconvenient for gun owners.
Respectfully, the word, Nazi, in that context, does not apply.