When Guns Are Outlawed, Cambodia Will Be Tits-Deep in Guns

Four hundred homemade guns, 24 crossbows, and 360 "electro-fishing" kits were put to the torch on Tuesday by police in Cambodia's Banteay Meanchey province, reports The Phnom Penh Post. The weapons were mostly voluntarily turned over for destruction as part of "efforts to reduce crimes such as robbery, illegal hunting and illegal fishing," according to the local top cop. That's pretty interesting, considering that civilian ownership of firearms has been illegal in Cambodia since 1999. Apparently, the memo is taking a while to make the rounds.
Then again, maybe the memo did make the rounds, and is being used as wadding in hand-loaded shotgun shells. When Rachel Louis Snyder checked out Cambodia's illicit gun markets for Slate in 2004, she found that the 1999 law had successfully driven the price of an AK-47 from $40 to $100—with ready supplies available via back-door deals from the army.
But Steve Lee's experience is probably more closely relatable to that story from The Phnom Penh Post. In 2013, the Australian fancier of things that go "BANG" paid an enterprising Cambodian hunter for an opportunity to pop off a couple of shots from a hand-crafted muzzleloader. "Came across this guy near the Cambodian/Thailand boarder where guns are completely illegal. I decided to do a review on his home made rifle," he wrote. "It shows that even with total gun control, people will still get firearms even if they have to make them themselves." (He's since been back for more illicit firearms fun.)
I've actually shot scarier looking experimental weapons, though I don't recommend the experience.
With a thriving black market and a creative local gun industry, I'm going to make a wild guess that the bonfire in Banteay Meanchey wasn't the end of the story, and that nobody who wants to be armed was feeling terribly deprived afterwards. Which is, of course, completely predictable, and pretty much what you'd expect looking at the history of firearms regulations everywhere.
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Speaking of back-door deals, you can pay the Cambodian military to fire pretty much anything you want.
That was pretty sweet. That chick was pretty cool about that situation.
That's pretty interesting, considering that civilian ownership of firearms has been illegal in Cambodia since 1999.
Cambodia is now a democracy, right? So that would mean hundreds of thousands of people learned absolutely nothing from Khmer Rouge and the killing fields.
The mind boggles.
Cambodia is a "democracy" the same way Singapore is a "democracy". The same guy mysteriously gets "elected" again and again.
So just like Chicago then.
You know what else is illegal in Cambodia (and Thailand)?
Prostitution.
Well there goes my vacation plans.
Illegal means widespread.
You know what they should have done leading up to 1999? National gun registry.
You know what they should have done leading up to 1999?
Shot all the gun grabbers?
When Guns Are Outlawed, Cambodia Will Be...
...a paradise free from murder, pain, unhappiness, or want.
What do I win?
Also, fried chicken.
Southeast Asian fried chicken is fucking delicious.
Fucker, now I want fried chicken
What do I win?
Your choice of: a severe beating, a night with Warty, or...A NEW CAR*!
* choice between a Citroen or a Chrysler LeBaron (not previously owned by Jon Voight)
Obviously the weapon shown in the video is too crude to be considered safe to fire, but it does serve to illustrate the complete lack of awareness of the gun controllers. It is clear it doesn't take much to make a firearm. Once the invention was perfected - oh, 500 years ago! - the difficulty in making one is simply not there. Of course your makeshift weapon is no match for an AK-47 armed soldier but that is not the point. The point is that gun control can't stop people with will from arming themselves.
You can make an AK-47 out of a shovel. It was designed to be built and used by illiterate peasants.
People all around the world have much in common, most of them are dumb sheep waiting to be led to slaughter.
What do you want!
"Tits-Deep in Guns"
2chili is the man!
There was a special on TV, forget what, about "ghost guns" that have fake serial numbers and no ballistics record. They were being made by hand in the Cambodian jungle by poor people with no better alternative.