Gun Owners Guide to Election 2019

The next prime minister of Canada will be one of two men. This book shows you how to stop the one who will take away your guns.

The October 2019 election is the most critical vote in a generation for Canada’s hunting and shooting community. If Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party wins, he will execute the biggest round of gun bans against federally licensed firearm owners in the country’s history.

Contrary to what many shooters believe, the solution isn’t to vote Conservative in every riding. That risks handing victory to the Liberals, because the Conservatives have no chance of winning in 30 percent of ridings.


Available in paperback from Amazon.ca and Amazon.com, and digitally from all major online book retailers. Click the blue button for the complete list.

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About the Book

The next prime minister of Canada will be one of two men. This book shows you how to stop the one who will take away your guns.

The October 2019 election is the most critical vote in a generation for Canada’s hunting and shooting community. If Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party wins, he will execute the biggest round of gun bans against federally licensed firearm owners in the country’s history.

Contrary to what many shooters believe, the solution isn’t to vote Conservative in every riding. That risks handing victory to the Liberals, because the Conservatives have no chance of winning in 30 percent of ridings.

Mission Mindset

  • Our mission in Election 2019 is to save our guns.
  • This book strips away all the noise about party leaders, policies, platforms and personalities.
  • Focuses on the only election dynamic that matters.

Tactical Approach

  • The next Prime Minister will be Trudeau or Scheer. If it’s Trudeau, we kiss our guns goodbye.
  • Applies a tactical approach to winning Election 2019 based on current political realities.
  • The most accurate and up-to-date recommendations for PAL and RPAL holders who want to save their guns from Liberal bans

First Political Action Manual of Its Kind

  • Original research and analysis based on the past 5 elections
  • Includes latest polls and projections up to the end of August 2019
  • Produced by the same team behind The Bill C-71 Book (Bestseller)

100 Unwinnable Ridings

  • Conservatives are best the positioned to defeat the Liberals in 238 electoral districts.
  • They don’t stand a chance in the other 100.
  • Those ridings will elect parties who want to ban guns.

That’s the bad news. The good news is this book will show you how to ensure it’s not a Liberal who will help Justin Trudeau take your guns.

You have thousands of dollars invested in your firearms. You can’t afford to get this election wrong.

Scroll down to the Order Now section and purchase today from your favourite online retailer.

NOTE: The first two links are to the Amazon.ca store, the second two are for the Amazon.com store.

Details
Authors: ,
Genre: Politics
Tag: Recommended Books
Publisher: Botanie Valley Productions Inc.
Publication Year: 2019
Format: Paperback, eBook
Length: 252 Pages
ASIN: 1988938252
ISBN: 9781988938257
Rating:

List Price: 19.99
eBook Price: 9.99
Endorsements
"This is an essential read for any Canadian who wants preserve our freedom and culture in Canada going into the 2019 election."
– Joel, via Amazon
“Every gun owner, sports shooter should read this book. Great book. Easy reading, very clear & concise. Thought it might be a little dry but not at all! Makes total sense. I recommend it highly.”
– Callie
“It’s a great strategic-voting guide and informs gun owners why their coloured team [Team Red, Team Blue, Team Orange, Team Green, …] doesn’t matter as much as Team Gun Owner.”
– Joel, Nova Scotia
“Great Analysis. As a sport shooter in Canada who represents Canada around the world (at shooting sports recognized by the International Olympic Committee), it’s very worrisome to see a focus on confiscation rather than on core issues. This book is an easy reference to read through.”
– Canadian Pistol Champion Allan Harding
About the Author
Christopher di Armani

The hardest writing for any author, I suspect, is writing about themselves. It sure is for me.

While I can write the most personal quirks, the most embarrassing situations and tell the truth for any character in my fiction, writing about myself is, well, uncomfortable.

I’m not one for the spotlight. I like the shadows. I’m most comfortable there. Most writers are.

Writing is my passion and I’m my happiest when I’m pounding out a story. If it’s 3am and I’m still at the keyboard you are right to be scared. Anything can show up on the page at that hour.

Like many writers I am an avid reader. My earliest memories are of Zane Grey westerns. I devoured them like candy. His strong male characters would, no matter their personal flaws, do the right thing when it mattered most. That is what drew me to his books.

I imagine I learned a lot of my own moral code from the characters Zane Grey created.

Like many writers I am also an introvert. Do not allow the protestations of past co-workers convince you otherwise. They see what I want them to see - the social face that allows me to function out in the world. Every writer has one.

It’s how we survive until we make our way back to the safety and security of our writing room.

I am a good writer.

That’s not arrogance speaking. That’s a fact substantiated by the money folks pay me to write. Bad writers don’t get paid.

I didn’t start off a good writer though.

My first novel, written when I was 16, is proof of that. It’s about teenage gangs in high school, about bad choices and worse friends. I wrote it as an assignment for English class. My teacher took pity on me and commended me for its length and ambition with a C Plus. Notice he did not say talent.

The book is horrible. Really. I stumbled across it a few years ago and attempted to read it. By the end of the first page I wanted to vomit. It’s trash.

I accept that.

I started writing young and wrote anything that struck my fancy. Some of it was published, most wasn’t. I wrote letters to the editor, newspaper articles, short stories, poetry, novellas, books, screenplays and short films.

Major newspapers, both print and digital, published me as time went on. Then I edited a national magazine for a firearms advocacy group for two years. That’s where I learned first-hand just how hard we writers make things for our editors.

During my tenure as magazine editor I learned how to edit anything into readable form. Why? I had to meet deadline. That’s a lesson that serves me well to this day.

I’m also a huge horror movie fan. I love vampires (not the ones that sparkle), werewolves and scary guys like Hannibal Lecter.

My interests vary widely as do my forms and genres of writing. I love writing current events commentary. That love has turned into numerous book projects, including a book on the RCMP’s ongoing issues as well as a book on Canada’s 23rd Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau. That book, published in early 2017, went on to become a #1 Bestseller on Amazon.

I’ve written a vampire movie, series of two serial killer movies in a series and I’m in the process of turning all three scripts into books. I just finished the first draft of the novel based on the vampire script and so far so good.

When I finish that I’ll turn the two serial killer movies into novels and add the third and final installment to that series. Along the way I’m sure I will write other odd things, too.

Like most writers I have more ideas than I have time to write.

That’s the beauty of the creative mind, isn’t it?