Czech President Blames “Green Madness” For Energy Crisis
(summit.news)
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Not really, you can't throw a beer bottle in Brno without someone going "čo si kokot?!" (as in, hitting a Slovak).
Jokes aside, on top of 10 or so million Czechs, we have about 1 mil Slovaks, half a mil Ukrainians (pre-invasion, it's more now), 300k or so gypsies (who technically have Czech citizenship, but come on), and assorted other national minorities. Plus a bunch of people call themselves Moravian instead of Czech (Bohemian), but noone really pays attention to them.
Thanks for the correction.
How are your gun laws? You make some damn excellent pistols.
Better than pretty much all of Europe, licenses are shall-issue and with a type E license you're allowed to conceal carry (can't open carry unless you're working in a specific profession - cop, army, security guard etc.). The class E license is specifically meant for "the defense of one's life, health, or property".
You do need a license for anything remotely useful today, as well as for buying ammunition, and every firearm that requires a license is registered, which kinda sucks. Full autos and explosive rounds are banned. I'm not sure about armor piercing ammo. Hollow points got legalized a few years back, together with stuff like laser pointers, barrel-mounted lights, and suppressors. Rifle magazines are theoretically limited to 10 rounds, but you can get an "exception" which is granted automatically immediately, you just need to fill out one form and pay a fee of like 200 crowns (about 10 US dollars). The reason for the "limit" is a recent attempt by the EU to regulate firearms in all member states, the "exception" is a workaround, it's dumb but I'm glad it was implemented (and the same bill also legalized hollow points, etc., so EU's attempt at regulation ended up deregulating a bunch of stuff. Take that you pinko faggots.)
There are some weapons you can buy without a license: air rifles (and they even recently removed the energy limit, they used to be limited to 16 J, now the only limit is a caliber =< 6,35mm; black powder flintlock guns, floberts, and anything made before 1890. Other stuff, like knives, bows/crossbows, etc. is completely unregulated, you can walk into the metro in Prague with a broadsword on your back and noone will raise an eyebrow. If you chase a road-raging taxi driver with it you might become a meme.
The bigger problem are laws around self-defense, or more precisely, the courts interpreting them. If you use a gun in self-defense you're potentially in some deep shit; it'll almost definitely go in front of a judge, and the judge might have some redditor-tier ideas like "you could have shot him in the arm" etc. There are continuous attempts at improving the legislation to prevent it (e.g. establishing castle doctrine), but so far no luck.
There was a case about 2 years ago, I think, where a guy shot a home invader. A recently released felon broke into his house with an axe in the middle of the night, and guy ventilated him. The case was eventually dismissed after a police investigation, but it still took about 6 months or so, which must have absolutely sucked for the poor bastard.
That's surprisingly not far off from many states in the US, and the self defense laws are similarly murky. Some states you've got a duty to retreat from a fight, others you can stand your ground. Pretty much anywhere you have a right to defend your home with lethal force, but that can depend on the level of threat that you are faced with (violent, armed criminal vs a lost girlscout breaking into your home).
Yeah, our gun laws are more permissive than some US states as far as I know. And we're in the top 10 safest countries in the world. Funny how that works, I'm sure it's because central Europe has magic soil and not because we have like zero nogs and arabs around here.