Nobody in the world can own a firearms as easily as you can in America, even in California.
Actually, fun tidbit, the Czechs are actually 2nd to America with regards to the each in which you can get a gun:
No full-autos unfortunately, and you do need a licence, so they're kind of a much better iteration of the UK's laws, but I digress.
The gun laws are cucked, but one of the reasons I paired the generalised history of their erasure with free speech erasure because I think when one considers how relatively quick the two were degraded, the reverse is very much possible.
Pro-gun activism is relatively new in the UK but I think once speech rights are secured (something Reform has promised) then other rights and securities can be pursued as well. Also the government can't
technically ban them outright, because, believe it or not, their hands are tied thanks to a bill from 1689.

People cannot be completely restricted in their means to possess arms, even if there's a fuck-load of paperwork and red tape in the way. Since they cannot ban guns outright, every restriction on firearms is amended to a
single act, which when overturned, would reset us to a comparable state of firearms allowance as the USA.
I'm awfully tempted to buy Reform membership, see if I can be the candidate for my local area, and YOLO its repeal as a private members bill.
But yeah, my TLDR is basically: a single act is what stands in the way of Brits and America-tier gun ownership. And attitudes can shift quickly on any given subject once it's brought into the public consciousness - look at the online response to OSA, and the IRL response to immigrants. Once the more pressing stuff is out of the way, guns can be brought up; self-defence and homeowner rights are already a topic of contention, since the whole idea of "reasonable force" should fly out the window once somebody breaks into your home. Once that topic is broached, guns can probably also be raised as a subject to allow Brits to sufficiently defend themselves against home invasion.
But this shit takes time, which is annoying. I'm glad I'm still relatively young and at the ass-end of this censorious period. It
appears like it's only starting, but it has no mandate to justify itself and won't survive the decade -
I'd put money on that.
So yeah, the gun laws
are cucked and laughable, not denying that, but doesn't necessarily mean they'll be so
forever. Shit looked dour for the right-wing globally from 2011-2025, now things are on the relative up and up, at least as far as actual support for right-wing policies goes.
TLDR: Americans can eventually overturn the NFA, the British can eventually overturn the 1968 Firearms Act. The bread and circuses aren't enough anymore and people are angry.
In addition to Machine Gun USA, we now have Tank America, the attraction where you can drive a tank

Heh, your tanks need to be demilitarised to own?
Posers.
