R.I.P. Scout26
Colion Noir posted a list of banned firearms.
Scroll down the list and you'll find things like Javelin missiles, M-79 grenade launchers, and various mortars. I didn't know they were readily available in Canuckistan.
IIRC 40mm launchers used to be unrestricted in Canada.
I wonder if their laws require them to be named, which would be why the list is so comprehensive; and which all it would take would be for the manufacturer to change the name and it's now not illegal.
Apparently Star Wars blasters are also on the list:https://twitchy.com/brettt-3136/2020/05/05/watch-canadian-police-with-weapons-drawn-cuff-girl-dressed-as-stormtrooper-for-star-wars-day-promotion/
In a situation like this, I probably wouldn't do it, but I wouldn't be said if someone doxxed the individual officers involved. They shouldn't get to hide behind their shields. THEY responded to the call, and THEY decided to respond to a storm trooper in that fashion. THEY need to own it.
Well, their ban now includes assault coffee...https://twitchy.com/gregp-3534/2020/05/07/it-appears-justin-trudeau-may-have-accidentally-banned-the-black-rifle-coffee-company-from-canada/
The federal government is proposing $1,337 in compensation for turning in an AR-15 rifle under a mandatory buyback program. Public Safety Canada has released a price list detailing how much money owners of banned firearms can expect to get under the program. At the higher end of the scale, forfeiting a Swiss Arms SG550 could net an owner $6,209. Ottawa will seek input from gun owners, businesses and industry on the proposed compensation amounts from now until Aug. 28. The mandatory buyback program would cover the more than 1,500 models and variants of what the government considers assault-style firearms, banned two years ago.