A hunter who knows how to hunt | The duty

I am a hunter. I too am an honest man.

I own firearms. I even own firearms which, in all likelihood, will be prohibited by Bill C-21: and I will be happy with that.

Guns should not be a lifestyle or a culture. They are dangerous objects, objects of death. Controlling them should always be a priority to ensure the safety of the public, others and ourselves. Some weapons I own are dangerous and, above all, very inexpensive. They were born out of the painful legacy of war and it wouldn’t even occur to me to use them for hunting, and we all know that. Yes, these are those famous semi-automatic rifles, military caliber.

We should never listen to those people who, under the guise of being honest people, make the firearm their identity, the temple of their existence, when the object in question is purely intended to end. This should not be a debate and it is certainly not the time for “nuances”: you should, Mr. Trudeau, not spare the goat and the cabbage in this debate, as you so often do , while here there is no goat or cabbage, but rather a few gun fanatics who better not listen to and who, let’s face it, do not represent the most thoughtful specimens and more common in our society. Trust these women, these activists and survivors of Polytechnique, who on December 6 ask you for pure decency year after year.

Remember that being armed is not a right, and even less being armed like a soldier. Remember also that the military are not hunters and that this law does not affect the ability to hunt.

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