Are there any other gun friendly countries out there? I've heard that Sweden is gun friendly...
Sweden is not gun friendly at all. You have to join a club and pay for licenses and pass tests to be able to buy a gun, and they can take it away over minor offenses.
Maybe you're thinking of Switzerland.
Sweden is not gun friendly at all. You have to join a club and pay for licenses and pass tests to be able to buy a gun, and they can take it away over minor offenses.
Maybe you're thinking of Switzerland.
I was thinking of Switzerland. I was reading up on it elsewhere on the internet and decided to post this thread. Apparently all able bodied males are REQUIRED to keep fully automatic battle rifles in their homes. The downside to this is that all of those males are "on call" for the military at any time. However, the Swiss dont seem to fight many wars.
They have a militia-based military defense. Opinion is growing that the system is obsolete. EU membership is going to tighten up gun laws over there considerably.
Switzerland is NOT a member of the EU.
They are likely to sign the Schengen treaty.
Somalia. You can buy anything you want and there are no laws to stop you because there is no government.
Yes Sir, Switzerland is awesome. Check this INGO Thread great video.
They've already signed the Schengen agreement and have many treaties with other nations regarding interpretations of EU laws, but they're NOT likely to join the EU anytime soon. They've had a pending application since 1992. The citizenry of Switzerland voted AGAINST abiding by the laws of the EU wholesale, hence the need for many complicated treaties with the member nations of the EU without actually joining. Where Switzerland HAS already adopted a lot of the platforms of the EU, it's still not likely to abide all or even most of them. For instance, despite being used unofficially, the euro is NOT legal tender in Switzerland. Swiss currency is, and remains, the Swiss franc. They're not likely to cede as much sovereignty to the EU as other member nations have, in the least. Switzerland, of all nations, understands sovereignty best, I should think, and thus it is very reluctant to cede too much of it to other nations...
I'm pretty sure the Swiss are sighing in relief that they still have their own national - and not supra-national - currency, given how poorly the euro's been doing lately with Greece's recent semi-collapse and impending self-implosion. I don't think the Swiss - who are perhaps our closest cousins with regard to firearms law - are anywhere close to giving up their long-enjoyed right to bear arms.
In their former voting process of Landsgemeinde, in order to enter the public square to vote, one must show proof of citizenship - one's Swiss rifle being that proof, in many cases.
We'll see how things progress, but as it stands, Switzerland is NOT a full-fledged member of the EU, despite its ad-hoc treaties with those nations.
I do not know of another country where non-permanent residents can buy pistols and rifles, carry them, and not do more paperwork than buying a house.
Pretty much nailed it there.
If one of us, as an American Citizen, were to move to another country, even Switzerland, it would be nigh on impossible for us to even THINK about it.
Even if we were to renounce our American citizenship and then work towards it in our new Country, which, again, is very difficult,...it'd still be a long and arduous row to hoe.
Case in point: Immigration law in Switzerland is very very strict. VERY strict. It's generally cost and time prohibitive...and that's the point. THEY don't want "outsiders".
-J-