Registered: 09/19/05
Posts: 1416
Loc: East Tincup General Store,Colo...
Not being critical of any country's laws to protect their citizens. How does removing the hilt improve safety? The operator's (Knife Wielder) hand would tend to slip down the blade without the stopping power of the hilt. Result would be serious cuts, loss of fingers, and lots of screaming. Just askin'
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David Loomis RKS# 724 RKCC# CM-061 Molon Labe
Registered: 09/25/13
Posts: 1153
Loc: the other side of the earth
crutchtip,
Quote:
Are you in a communist country?
Exactly, former communist country
In general, this is not strictly. Laws in England, Israel, Finland and other much stricter. For example, in England, you can not appear in public places with a knife with blade length more 5 cm
It is not to protect the owner of the knife, it's like a knife in the differentiation of utility instruments and as a weapon. The knife as a weapon requires a permit, heaps of certificates. It's money.
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Si vis pacem, para bellum
In the UK you can carry a non locking folding knife with a blade under 3inches in length without any problems,any bigger folder any locking folder or any fixed blade in a public place would cause you a problem unless you had a very good reason to be in possession of it.
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Neale R Jenkinson RKS 4303 RKCC CMI 004
In the UK you can carry a non locking folding knife with a blade under 3inches in length without any problems,any bigger folder any locking folder or any fixed blade in a public place would cause you a problem unless you had a very good reason to be in possession of it.
So who determines what constitutes a "good reason"?
Amazing to me how these laws get passed and no one steps up against it. I guess once they chip, chip away at your rights you forget you miss them.
Originally Posted By: desert.snake
Exactly, former communist country
.......a knife with blade length more 5 cm
It is not to protect the owner of the knife, it's like a knife in the differentiation of utility instruments and as a weapon.
The knife as a weapon requires a permit, heaps of certificates. It's money.
"former commie country" says allot, but I guess your individual rights didn't follow suit? All I gotta ask is who was the nimrod who came up with the graphics that outline the ludicrous restrictions?
Who determines what is the point of length where a knife becomes a weapon versus one for "utility"?
Tell that to the passengers and crew of the 9/11 hijacked planes where the perpetrators used 3" boxcutters - a utility knife.
Sad that you have to live under such austere conditions.
It is a kind of ISO system in country. It is very useful to have clear borders of quality and monitor it. As an example - the quality of gasoline, the parameters of tires, the steel composition and properties, size and arrangement of sandpaper, quality radiocomponents, and other.
But sometimes the standards really are bull s....
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Si vis pacem, para bellum