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CZ Firearms is helping the Canadian Liberal Party confiscate firearms from legal owners

I'm Canadian and have owned guns for decades, and I've never heard of them. I know you can either get your RPAL with the reason given as either target shooting or collector, but that's it.
Kristian
True, but there is also the Prohib class too, that is/was Grandfathered in. 12(6) for example. The thing about it all though is, having the status of "Genuine Gun Collector" also brings in certain protections and responsibilities with it.

Maggie’s Credentialed but Illiterate

I’ll just say that this article highlights the very thing we see here on the forum.

And yes, I’m posting the full text of the essay even though I realize many will ignore it or skim and post anyway, because that is exactly what this essay is about.
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Credentialled But Illiterate: The Reading Crisis at the Heart of Education

By Patrick Keeney

In his trenchant essay, “The Average College Student Is Illiterate,” Hilarius Bookbinder sounds the alarm over the precipitous decline in student literacy.

It is a sobering account. Bookbinder (a pseudonym) teaches in the humanities and draws upon years of classroom experience. He observes that many of his students are functionally illiterate. They are unable to engage with serious adult literature and often find the very act of reading tedious. As a result, they avoid it whenever possible. This aversion manifests in predictable ways: skimming texts without comprehension, failing to identify key arguments, and struggling with exam questions simply because they haven’t read them carefully.

His reflections reveal the troubling reality of liberal learning today and the formidable challenge educators face in fostering genuine intellectual engagement. Bookbinder places the blame squarely on society. “I don’t blame K–12 teachers,” he writes. “This is not an educational system problem. This is a societal problem.”

Of course, he has a point, but this is too lenient. It overlooks the significant structural failures within the K–12 system itself—failures that have deprioritized foundational literacy, neglected intellectual rigor, and left students unprepared for the demands of higher education.

Over the past several decades, elementary and secondary schools have increasingly adopted a pedagogical model prioritizing technological fluency and emotional well-being over developing serious intellectual habits. As one parent noted in response to Bookbinder’s piece, children are now “pushed into technology (computers, iPads) as early as kindergarten” and “are not required to read entire books, let alone write about them.”

This new orthodoxy exalts engagement over comprehension, screen fluency over print literacy, and the consequence is a generation of students ill-equipped for the demands of higher education.

More troubling still is the retreat from rigor. In the name of preserving students’ self-esteem, schools are often reluctant to challenge students, hold them accountable, or insist upon high standards of excellence. The result is a dangerous turn to what has been called the therapeutic approach to education. Students are flattered rather than instructed, and their self-esteem is affirmed regardless of whether they have done anything estimable. The essential work of education—discerning truth from error, cultivating judgment, introducing the young to the intellectual heritage of their civilization—is displaced by therapeutic aims.

And so, when these students arrive at university, their failure becomes apparent. Every professor has stories—students who cannot follow a basic line of reasoning, who confuse anecdote with argument, or who, without the slightest embarrassment, announce that they are “not readers,” as though this were a harmless personal quirk rather than a disqualification fromserious intellectual life. Once isolated anecdotes, such stories are now commonplace, as Bookbinder documents.

The university effectively becomes a triage center for the wounded products of a broken educational pipeline. Professors are increasingly urged to accommodate: to simplify readings, moderate expectations, and reward effort rather than genuine achievement. The result has been a steady erosion of standards and academic benchmarks.

But this is not merely an educational failure. It is a moral one. Literacy is not simply a technical skill—it is a form of ethical and intellectual development. It requires cultivating patience, empathy, and sound judgment. It demands that we sit still and listen attentively to the minds and voices of others. If students cannot do this, then we are not educating them. At best, we are merely credentialing them.

To be literate, in the fullest sense, is to participate in the great conversation of civilization. It is to gain access to and be initiated into the shared understandings of a community. A liberal education, properly understood, is neither vocational training nor a self-esteem project. It is a moral and intellectual discipline that presupposes a conception of the good and an account of the human person as more than a bundle of appetites or a mere consumer. It sees the human being as a moral agent, capable of self-transcendence and shaping a life toward truth, beauty, and meaning.

We deceive ourselves if we believe the decline in student literacy is a neutral development. We must resist the fashionable cynicism that shrugs and says this is simply the way of the world. We are told that deep reading is obsolete in the internet age, with its endless screens and omnipresent mobile phones. Our society increasingly treats the reading of serious texts not as an essential ability at the core of educational engagement, but as a quaint indulgence from abygone era.

Such resignation is not only intellectually lazy but morally perilous. The capacity to read deeply, write clearly, follow and test a line of reasoning—these are habits of mind without which neither democracy nor the life of the mind can flourish.

Education has always been about elevation. Liberal learning, as the name implies, is about liberating the individual from the contingencies and limitations of his or her birth. It is the deliberate act of lifting students’ minds above distraction, above appetite, above the noise of the present moment. To “meet students where they are” may be a necessary pedagogical starting point, but it must never be mistaken for the destination. The true aim of education is not to affirm students as they are, but to form them into what they might become. It is to awaken their capacities for reason, imagination, and judgment—and to summon them toward the best versions of themselves.

An earlier version of this essay was previously published in The Epoch Times

Official Mark 7 Apex10/Revolution **All things Mark 7 Thread**

I have the BulletSense running good right now on a 1500rd run.. Yes those 2 tiny allen laser adjustement screws are super sensitive.

In regards to the range panda bullet feeder... Ive been using the DAA pre-set noseguides for a while now and they are great. I have one setup for each bullet I load, just slide it in.. The Range Panda looks very similar, just CNC instead of plastic.

What powder and bullet sensors are you using right now instead of the Mark 7? I see your pics says sub-moa but not finding anything with a search.
I had the DAA nose guides as well but the RP kicks the hell out of those. The DAA moves adjustments too, there is no lock like on the RP. You can also hand adjust it without a wrench.

Join the MK7 Reloaders group on FB and look up John Stuhmiller. He makes the Sub-MOA equipment. Way better than the MK7 offerings. Super simple to set up, no spilled powder and no more fucking with the stupid mirrors, set screws and BS.

I hate having to tinker with shit that was functioning fine yesterday. The addition of the primer collator, RP and the Sub MOA I just turn on the press and keep it fed. Cheers.

CZ Firearms is helping the Canadian Liberal Party confiscate firearms from legal owners

Problem is day and night as we a majority will not concede to demoncraPts bullshit without a fight.
AIPAC, auto pen pardons, Trump assassination attempts, Epstein list, MRNA shot effects accountability. Up here we pine for the freedoms of most of the states, but the foundation there is well laid to support the NWO agenda.

CZ Firearms is helping the Canadian Liberal Party confiscate firearms from legal owners

CZ won't give a straight answer about it. They're being cagey and playing games like saying they aren't involved in the "buyback program", not mentioning the destruction phase.

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If CZ is helping the despotic government up there destroy confiscated guns, they'd help the Dems do it here.
You are getting it now.

FAFO

If that was not a staged content video, it shows how deeply damaged the IQ of liberals has become. Early onset dementia by the millions. Nowhere in the world, outside of the west where stupidity is protected by government, would a female do that to any uniformed male. In fact, no male would do that overseas either. She is lost. Absolutely no self preservation abilities left. Now consider which population the NWO wants to reduce. Useless eaters…

Does anyone stand with Berger?

ive had one lot of 2k or 2200 (cant remember the box size) 108 eld's that legit shot as well as bergers on average...shot knots at 100 and if i saw a splash/impact down range the correction applied was consistent on the follow up as good as my shooting ability

i said it on here before, but ill say it again...i won matches with Hornady (Amax and ELDs) for years, and then i won matches with bergers for years. I switched back to hornady (ELDs) and still won...but then i went back to Bergers for good. The bergers shot better consistently, lot to lot, barrel to barrel in various cartridges.

and no, most people couldnt shoot the difference. shooting Bergers over Hornady isnt going to take you from mid pack to podium, but it can notch you a few extra impacts on smaller than normal targets. that counts at the top. being able to see an impact/splash and trust where you broke the shot and where it hit will repeat on the follow ups is a big deal