Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Alternatively, if not invested in mental health, if not invested in purchasing scanners at our ports of entry.... It would be surprising for Canadians to know that in Miramichi, New Brunswick, only 10% of the required background checks are conducted in the renewal of or the application for a current firearms licence because it's not properly or adequately funded, Mr. Chair.
These are all tangible, concrete things that would actually improve safety for Canadians and public safety for our country with five billion dollars' worth of funding, which is what the Fraser Institute estimates it would cost if the Government of Canada were to provide compensation to firearms owners should Bill C-21 and its amendments come to pass.
With regard to the perception of legal gun ownership contributing to crime, we know that simply isn't true. Under this government, the prevalence of violent crime is up 32%, and there is a fear that it will only get worse. In fact, the banning of certain firearms seems to be a political exercise, and there is a legitimate fear that the crime issue will be used by the government to ban even more lawful firearms.
As we see from some of the amendments brought forth by the government, the list is not simply semi-automatics but a wide swath of firearms. Despite the fact that handguns are used to commit the vast majority of violent crimes in Canada, long guns and shotguns are bearing the full brunt of this government's policies.
Furthermore, firearm-related violent crimes typically represent less than 3% of of police-reported violent crime in Canada, a country where individuals own more than 20 million guns. Canadians have little to fear from law-abiding gun owners.
Ironically, in the U.K. during 2019 and 2020, nearly 16,000 knife crimes were committed in a nation with strict gun control. I will add that in comparison to Canada, the U.K. reported 33% more robberies, 22% more assaults, 30% more homicides and 28% more hate crimes. Ironically, many of the European nations that are held up against Canada due to their tight gun controls, including France, Belgium, Greece and Sweden, fare much worse in their crime rate, and Germany is also comparable.
Canada is not the United States, and it is not healthy to import their cultural issues for political gains. Every loss of life is a tragedy, but it does have to be put into perspective. A 2011 study from McMaster University found no significant association between gun laws passed and firearm homicide rates in Canada from 1974 to 2008, proving that the introduction of such laws within the Canadian context has been nothing more than a political exercise.
While homicide-related deaths get much more attention within the context of firearms' being used, many of the excess deaths are tied to suicide, yet this is still a very minimal number.
On the accident front, firearms have also attracted unwanted attention, yet accidents account for 0.3% of total accident incidents, ranking well below 37% for car accidents, 18% for people falling off roofs or falling from distances and 11% for poisoning. However, nobody here is arguing that we should not drive cars.
We are focusing so much time, so much effort and so much money on something that is so insignificant that it's not even funny.
To recapitulate, this is a bad law, as it breaks the social contract that Canadians have struck with their government; comes at a great expense, potentially, for taxpayers of Canada; and fails to improve public safety.
Now that I'm done with my rant, Mr. Van Bynen, you'll be very happy to know that I have some questions.
My question for our panel of experts is this: Is there any province or territory in Canada that prohibits, through its provincial wildlife rules, laws or regulations, a hunter from hunting with a firearm that has a force of over 10,000 joules?