Okay.
I recently went to the Barrie Gun Club, which is a large gun club situated, obviously, in my riding of Barrie—Springwater—Oro-Medonte, not far from you. We'd love to have you up some time. There are too many good people there. I'm sure they'd welcome you with open arms.
It was interesting, and this has been talked about a little bit already today. They laid out a whole bunch of firearms for me on a picnic table, of all things, to educate me a little bit. I was trying to learn and they were showing me different firearms that shoot the exact same way, but some had plastic barrels and some had wooden ones. For someone like me who's not an avid gun owner, who doesn't know a lot about them, I couldn't get my head around why one was banned and one wasn't. You sound like you're at the same level as me—perhaps more knowledgeable, I'll give you that—but you haven't used them much either. Could you try to explain to me why your firearms ban has banned one and not the other?
I'll give you one more example, if I could, Minister. One of the gentlemen there has given some help to farmers in the Oro area for 15 years with their coyotes in the springtime and has used—and I had to look this up because I don't know them—a Ruger Mini-14 for many years. He's an upstanding citizen in our community and has helped farmers with their herds for free by getting rid of some coyotes in the rural area. That gun is now banned. He can't use it anymore, so this spring he is unable to go out and help those farmers, even though he's used that gun for 15 years.
Can you explain some of these differences and how someone like that could now be banned from using that firearm?