I addressed that in a later post.
Is that a serious question? I am saying over and over, the average city dweller who is not part of some Country Club. Say, an accountant or a barrista or elevator technician.
Are you telling me that a professional phone sanitizer can claim he needs a gun for vermin control, population control, humane killing, business use, or self defense? And how the hell could you be a collector if you don't have the ******* license yet??? I mean come on.
A city dwelling professional phone sanitiser will be granted a firearm certificate for
- vermin control at the farm he has got permission to shoot at. Just because he has to travel there does not matter.
- deer population control on the estate or woodland he has permission to shoot at. Again, it does not matter he may have to travel a long way to get there. He may just store his gun there anyway.
- humane killing, possibly, if he has a second job and can be called upon to do that. The police and vets have people who can put animals down for them. Race courses sadly need them, as exampled by the recent Grand National.
- business use, he could have a side line in trading guns or to supply them for films and TV.
- self defence, that one is highly unlikely, as it tends to be reserved for police, military and secret services.
He can also collect guns, shoot clays and target shoot.
I get you prefer to see it as not a denial. But the fact is, it is full flat out denial with the farmer/sporting club exemption, and a few obscure professions. A schoolteacher in London who does not have the financial luxury of club membership is flat denied, full stop. I'm not saying you couldn't create an acceptable exemption for yourself with some work and expense. I'm saying the UK says "no gun for you" unless you can check off some boxes the average non-rural person cannot check off without ample financial means, free time, and transportation.
A school teacher in London, whose family or friend has some land that they will give permission to shoot over, will get a gun.
Agreed on the general lack of interest. Disagreed, of course, on the claim that you generally can have a gun, unless you meet standards that many don't meet. Can the average minimum wage worker in a city afford memberships to these country fowling clubs?
You have not understood permission. An average wage person just needs permission to shoot somewhere there is suitable land. Lots of farmers use city dwellers who like to shoot, as their free pest controllers. The city dweller gets free shooting, the farmer free pest control.
Again with the grouse estate memberships and farms. Seems only the well-off and the rural rustic generally have firearms?
Nope. It is easy to get a second hand shotgun for under £100 and plenty of places will let people shoot for free, such as farms and the nearest clay pigeon shoot to me will charge £25 for a session.
No, I think it's a ban because it is de facto banned in every sense of the word "banned" with some exceptions for club members (which I also gather are not always a given to be admitted into)and the handful of professional animal killers and farmers. And the collectors without collections.
You think it is a ban, because you do not know it works here and you have made numerous assumptions that are wrong.
The reasons why people will get permission are far greater than you thought. The cost is way less than you thought. The restrictions are not as great as you thought.