The recent (Dec 2015) stabbing in London by some Other
Dickless Asshole (ODA) will surely result in a call to de-fang the British
citizenry even more. There has already
been a call by English doctors to eliminate pointy kitchen knives. Even the presence of a Stanley utility knife
in your work belt can land you in an English jail until you can explain to the
judge’s satisfaction why you needed one.
I hope your employer feels like appearing in court to bolster your
claims you have to cut up cardboard boxes as part of your job.
It’s hard to understand how anyone could think they can
eliminate pointed knives. Fleming’s James
Bond pauses in “Dr. No” to sharpen a purloined dinner knife into a sharp point
before escaping from his cell. It just
took a concrete surface and a little time.
This is a basic prison skill known to, unfortunately, millions.
Here in America we also have our share of ODAs and the incidents they create. While the anti-knife people are present, so
far they haven’t made too much of an impact.
Part of our protection is granted by the 2nd Amendment. This amendment isn’t only about guns, which
aren’t mentioned. It talks about arms,
which can be guns, knives, spears, axes, clubs, canes, bow and arrow and other
material objects.
But given the right circumstances an anti-knife backlash is
possible. One only has to recall The
Woman’s Home Companion’s article about switch blade knives, “The Toy That
Kills.” Following movies and plays like
“Rebel without a Cause” and “West Side Story” the media published stories about
violent youths and changing sexual mores and conservative America demanded to
be protected. The politicians of that era responded by making Switchblades illegal. How a switchblade is more deadlier than any locking knife or fixed blade was never explained.
Politicians, fearful of exhausting their political power and
prestige by addressing the real causes of crime, did/will scapegoat inanimate
objects as a way of placating the voters.
That object could be your knife collection. What’s a collector to do?
Pick up a copy of Knife Laws of the U.S. by attorney Evan
Napper. It’s worth $25 and a couple
hours of your time.
One of his interesting ideas is to join a knife collecting
club. I suspect it would be better to
join a physical one with meetings you can attend rather than an e-club. Another valuable step is creating a listing, either
spreadsheet or index cards with each knife entered, date obtained, value and written
description. This extra effort could
help validate your claim that you are an active trader/purchaser and a “official
knife collector” as well as make collecting more enjoyable.
One word of advice.
Use a ‘scientific’ description of your knife. It is an early Vietnam era, serialized,
survival knife by Gerber and not just Gerber seven-inch stabby thing.
Speaking of stabby things, did you know the classic KA-BAR
fighting knife was made in Cleveland, among other places? At the last knife gun show I ran into
a fellow who told me how he built up stacked leather washer handles on KA-BARS
working his way through college. Since he
was my age that ruled out WWII and Korea. He indicated he had quite a few seconds at
home, as a nick or chipped blade couldn’t be sold.
I don’t know if it’s a true story, but it would be
interesting to see what he considers ‘quite a few.’
I just attended a local knife club meeting and one fellow denied he was a knife collector, but was rather a knife gatherer. That description fits me much better than collector.
I just attended a local knife club meeting and one fellow denied he was a knife collector, but was rather a knife gatherer. That description fits me much better than collector.