Finius
Retired Moderator
- Jan 24, 2011
- 1,430
- 361
I've decided to open this thread up as a general interest discussion, thus it's not under the UK Law section.
We're still now, five years after the commencement of S.36 of the VCRA finding that people don't know the rules or are constantly striving to try and avoid them. Airsoft hasn't caused any major upset in Britain and as a sport is growing both in player numbers, business numbers and by extension of both of the former, taxable income for the Government to get hold of. We've gotten on fairly well despite the VCRA, which many decried as the death of airsoft.
My question is this then, where are we going? How can we improve the law? How are the government likely to change the law in the future? What do we think?
In terms of my own personal opinion, I think we're fairly strongly on the right course and I think the system we've adopted now is good. I see no need for any further restriction or freedom with regards legislation. Under eighteens must be gifted their guns full stop, thus preventing many eye-poking-outs etc, over eighteens must prove they're a skirmisher; nobody who cannot within reason be trusted with an RIF can get one without somehow circumventing the law and only persons over eighteen can buy one at all, whether RIF or IF (which can in turn be gifted by parents to children who wish to take up the sport quite easily). All in all, a good thing.
Where do I see room for improvement?
The UKARA system needs to be rolled out as an official national scheme, preferably government supported, in my eyes, more like a license. You play your three times and then become licensed, every year when your expiry comes due, you're sent a letter to remind you that you're coming up to having to renew and asked to resubmit evidence to prove you're a skirmisher. Sites need to be advertising and educating on the issue a lot more too, all new players should have to have a ten minute or so induction on their first day to outline how the sport works etc, which should touch on the issue of UKARA and registration, thus opening the floor for them to do their own research and hopefully reducing the number of "how can I get a black gun" type threads the more experience among us have to deal with.
A lot of you will probably vomit a little at the sheer sight of the phrase "government supported". Why the hell do we want anything to do with the government you ask?
Legitimacy. If we managed to create a licensing scheme run or assisted by the government, they would be much more hard pressed to go back on themselves and take our rights away, they could also be held accountable and lobbied directly concerning issues with the system etc; in theory UKARA too can be held accountable or lobbied, but as a private and mostly charitable organisation, they're entirely within their rights to just tell individuals to sod off. The government on the other hand are terrified of niche groups who tend to vote in force if even a few of their members are upset and when we're talking thousands of persons, often in concentrated areas (read that as constituencies), it could be quite a concern for unstable seats.
The other bonus to a government scheme would be police cooperation, every person who could legally buy an airsoft gun could be found easily by the police meaning that if your house gets raided or you get stopped on public transport etc, it's as simple as looking you up on the database and a quick look over the RIF to confirm that it is indeed an airsoft replica and you more than likely have a good reason as to why you're carrying it around because you went to the effort of getting yourself registered in the first place.
What don't we need? A move towards blaze tips. I feel that once you've gone to the effort of getting registered you should be left alone to do whatever you feel with your RIF and IF within the realms of the law at the time of purchase. A chef doesn't blunt his knives during transit, and they're far more lethal and equally likely to cause a stir if produced in public. Moreover, introducing blaze tips would be retroactive law and would contravene European law, so it's off the cards. It would be entirely fair for NEW RIF and IF to require blaze tips, but then you have the issue of distinguishing between those purchase before the law and those after, it would also require the reorganizing of the VCRA to some degree which would only lead to a disadvantage to us as a sport (in my opinion). Another major grip of mine with the concept of blaze tips is that there would be massive issues with guns that do not have removable flashiders, like the VSR series, shotguns or many vintage weapons and pistols.
I do however think we should be educating players, sites and the police on the transport of RIFs, and these may well include promoting the purchase of a spare flashider that was bright orange for use in transit, or even something as simple as orange tape.
Where are we going? Nowhere, for the time being, there's no central body to airsoft, no official representation, no pressure group, only UKARA and UKAPU and apart they are both too weak to do anything major in terms of progress. As for the government, there's not enough attention on guns or election issues at the moment for airsoft to come up in law again anytime soon - it's going to take something like Dunblane or a series of armed robberies or something first, until then, I feel that if we as a sporting community continue to grow and keep out of trouble, we're not going to bring down the wrath of parliament anytime soon, and if we wait politely, when it does happen, we'll be prepared and as a community may have enough oomph to get our way for a change...
So AFUK, care to share your opinions?
We're still now, five years after the commencement of S.36 of the VCRA finding that people don't know the rules or are constantly striving to try and avoid them. Airsoft hasn't caused any major upset in Britain and as a sport is growing both in player numbers, business numbers and by extension of both of the former, taxable income for the Government to get hold of. We've gotten on fairly well despite the VCRA, which many decried as the death of airsoft.
My question is this then, where are we going? How can we improve the law? How are the government likely to change the law in the future? What do we think?
In terms of my own personal opinion, I think we're fairly strongly on the right course and I think the system we've adopted now is good. I see no need for any further restriction or freedom with regards legislation. Under eighteens must be gifted their guns full stop, thus preventing many eye-poking-outs etc, over eighteens must prove they're a skirmisher; nobody who cannot within reason be trusted with an RIF can get one without somehow circumventing the law and only persons over eighteen can buy one at all, whether RIF or IF (which can in turn be gifted by parents to children who wish to take up the sport quite easily). All in all, a good thing.
Where do I see room for improvement?
The UKARA system needs to be rolled out as an official national scheme, preferably government supported, in my eyes, more like a license. You play your three times and then become licensed, every year when your expiry comes due, you're sent a letter to remind you that you're coming up to having to renew and asked to resubmit evidence to prove you're a skirmisher. Sites need to be advertising and educating on the issue a lot more too, all new players should have to have a ten minute or so induction on their first day to outline how the sport works etc, which should touch on the issue of UKARA and registration, thus opening the floor for them to do their own research and hopefully reducing the number of "how can I get a black gun" type threads the more experience among us have to deal with.
A lot of you will probably vomit a little at the sheer sight of the phrase "government supported". Why the hell do we want anything to do with the government you ask?
Legitimacy. If we managed to create a licensing scheme run or assisted by the government, they would be much more hard pressed to go back on themselves and take our rights away, they could also be held accountable and lobbied directly concerning issues with the system etc; in theory UKARA too can be held accountable or lobbied, but as a private and mostly charitable organisation, they're entirely within their rights to just tell individuals to sod off. The government on the other hand are terrified of niche groups who tend to vote in force if even a few of their members are upset and when we're talking thousands of persons, often in concentrated areas (read that as constituencies), it could be quite a concern for unstable seats.
The other bonus to a government scheme would be police cooperation, every person who could legally buy an airsoft gun could be found easily by the police meaning that if your house gets raided or you get stopped on public transport etc, it's as simple as looking you up on the database and a quick look over the RIF to confirm that it is indeed an airsoft replica and you more than likely have a good reason as to why you're carrying it around because you went to the effort of getting yourself registered in the first place.
What don't we need? A move towards blaze tips. I feel that once you've gone to the effort of getting registered you should be left alone to do whatever you feel with your RIF and IF within the realms of the law at the time of purchase. A chef doesn't blunt his knives during transit, and they're far more lethal and equally likely to cause a stir if produced in public. Moreover, introducing blaze tips would be retroactive law and would contravene European law, so it's off the cards. It would be entirely fair for NEW RIF and IF to require blaze tips, but then you have the issue of distinguishing between those purchase before the law and those after, it would also require the reorganizing of the VCRA to some degree which would only lead to a disadvantage to us as a sport (in my opinion). Another major grip of mine with the concept of blaze tips is that there would be massive issues with guns that do not have removable flashiders, like the VSR series, shotguns or many vintage weapons and pistols.
I do however think we should be educating players, sites and the police on the transport of RIFs, and these may well include promoting the purchase of a spare flashider that was bright orange for use in transit, or even something as simple as orange tape.
Where are we going? Nowhere, for the time being, there's no central body to airsoft, no official representation, no pressure group, only UKARA and UKAPU and apart they are both too weak to do anything major in terms of progress. As for the government, there's not enough attention on guns or election issues at the moment for airsoft to come up in law again anytime soon - it's going to take something like Dunblane or a series of armed robberies or something first, until then, I feel that if we as a sporting community continue to grow and keep out of trouble, we're not going to bring down the wrath of parliament anytime soon, and if we wait politely, when it does happen, we'll be prepared and as a community may have enough oomph to get our way for a change...
So AFUK, care to share your opinions?
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