When Senator Dianne Feinstein introduced legislation last week
to reinstate the assault weapons ban, the veteran California
Democrat also
proposed a national gun registry. The registry would apply to
all legally owned weapons grandfathered prior to the assault
weapons ban taking effect.
Canadians are all too familiar with gun registries. In 1995, the
Liberal government of Jean Chrétien passed the Firearms Act which
established the Canadian Firearms Registry. It was a white elephant
plagued by cost overruns in the hundreds of millions of dollars
and was the target of frequent criticism by Sheila Fraser, Canada’s
former Auditor General. Noted conservative Canadian journalist
Peter Worthington
wrote, “Gun registry is little but an expensive, unnecessary,
largely useless waste of time. Bureaucratic boondoggle aptly
describes the program.”
The Conservative Party long vowed to scrap the gun registry when
it came to power. Although Stephen Harper’s Tories ousted the
Liberals from power in 2006, they did not have a majority in
parliament until after the 2011 election. Last year, the Tories
finally abolished the Canadian Firearms Registry. Shortly before
the House of Commons held its final vote on the matter, Public
Safety Minister Vic Toews
told reporters, “It does nothing to help put an end to gun
crimes, nor has it saved one Canadian life. This is simply an
attempt to make people feel safe, rather than doing something
substantive in criminal law.”
The Canadian Firearms Registry has become such an albatross that
even Liberal politicians now want no part of it. Last December,
Liberal leadership hopeful Justin Trudeau (the eldest son of the
late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau)
said, “The long gun registry, as it was, was a failure and I’m
not going to resuscitate that.” Trudeau’s main leadership rival,
Marc Garneau (who is best known as Canada’s first man in space),
made similar
comments. “It’s gone now,” he said. “The Conservatives
have killed it. Let’s move on to other things. It is not my
intention to spend more money to bring it back.”
So if Canada doesn’t need a national gun registry, why do
we?
Now it is true that even without the firearms registry, Canada
still has far stricter gun laws than the United States. That said,
there are only two things accomplished by compelling law abiding
gun owners to register their weapons with the federal government.
The first is that it gives the federal government more power and
control over our day-to-day lives. The second is that it gives the
federal government yet another opportunity to create a bloated
bureaucracy and, as a consequence, expand the deficit.
If the Clinton-era ban on assault weapons couldn’t prevent the
Columbine massacre, what makes anyone think that a national gun
registry is going to prevent another Newtown? Come to think of it,
there is a third thing that is accomplished by compelling law
abiding gun owners to register their weapons with the federal
government. By putting pressure to bear on law-abiding gun owners,
it gives the appearance that the federal government is doing
something about a social problem and thus justifies its existence.
That doing something often does more harm than good almost never
enters into the equation.
In an era where big government is practiced by both Democrats
and Republicans, the hardest thing in the world is to do nothing.
This is especially true when you don’t get good press for it or for
that matter any press at all. After all, when is the last time you
heard a contemporary politician say, “The government which governs
least governs best”? You certainly won’t hear it from a politician
who is about to get money for his or her congressional district or
state. You certainly won’t hear it from a politician who is about
to break ground on the construction of the headquarters of the new
national gun registry.
In which case, it is up to private citizens to help our elected
officials cast their eyes north of the border. If Canada can
survive without a national firearms registry, then so can we.