President signs swithblade amendment into law.
- golddot370
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President signs swithblade amendment into law.
http://www.blademag.com Read all about it.
"This no doubt will go down as the most important victory ever for Americans' right to own and carry knives," said Steve Shackleford, BLADE editor. "Everyone who participated--individual knife enthusiasts, knife manufacturers, knifemakers, lawmakers, AKTI, Knife Rights and others--all contributed. It is their victory and rightly so. Congratulations to them all."
Woot woot!
I'm not an AO type of guy but like the fact that I have the right. Good work to everyone else who mailed in letters and made a fuss.
Woot woot!
I'm not an AO type of guy but like the fact that I have the right. Good work to everyone else who mailed in letters and made a fuss.
Will this amendment have any impact on non-assisted openers ( :spyder: s), that can be flicked open, being considered "gravity knives"?
Tom
__________________________________
[url]http://spydercovt.com[/URL]
__________________________________
[url]http://spydercovt.com[/URL]
Junior avatar courtesy of dialexSequimite wrote:I use knives. I collect experiences.
I'm an admirer of Spyderco's designs. Using them is like immersing yourself in music or studying a painting in a museum. I buy some "fine" art but my preference is for usable art.
- The Deacon
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Zero impact on the situation with regard to Spyderco balisongs. Zero impact on state and local laws. Whatever was legal yesterday will still be legal tomorrow, whatever was illegal yesterday will still be illegal tomorrow. If a state or municipality wants to ban AO's in the future, it will probably have zero impact on that. All it does is is prevent Customs from considering AO's as switchblades.
Paul
My Personal Website ---- Beginners Guide to Spyderco Collecting ---- Spydiewiki
Deplorable :p
WTC # 1458 - 1504 - 1508 - Never Forget, Never Forgive!
My Personal Website ---- Beginners Guide to Spyderco Collecting ---- Spydiewiki
Deplorable :p
WTC # 1458 - 1504 - 1508 - Never Forget, Never Forgive!
Yes, it's all classification of "assisted opening" knives. These are knives which must be pushed past a detent before the spring assists the opening. It still required some thumb stud/hole pressure.
Knives which can open/close by the press of a button are still considered switchblades, which are illegal.
Sorry guys. I'd like a Citadel too but it won't happen with my line of work.
Knives which can open/close by the press of a button are still considered switchblades, which are illegal.
Sorry guys. I'd like a Citadel too but it won't happen with my line of work.

- golddot370
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In a nut shell any knife that can be opened with one hand for example the spider hole, thumb stud, assisted opener would have been cosidered illegal. This is a big victory for us knife nuts. Read more about it at http://www.kniferights.org.
- golddot370
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U.S. Customs has proposed revoking earlier rulings that assisted opening knives are not switchblades. The proposal would not only outlaw assisted opening knives, its overly broad new definition of a switchblade would also include all one-handed opening knives and most other pocket knives! ACT NOW TO PROTECT YOUR RIGHTS!
http://www.kniferights.com
http://www.kniferights.com
It may not have much immediate effect, but it is real strategic victory. Rights were being eroded because of ambiguous language, and this law clarifies where the federal government draws the line. While this will have no immediate effect on state and local laws, the federal definition will be the default position when new laws are written. Over time it's effect is likely to grow.
Our reason is quite satisfied, in 999 cases out of every 1000 of us, if we can find a few arguments that will do to recite in case our credulity is criticized by someone else. Our faith is faith in someone else's faith, and in the greatest matters this is most the case.
- William James, from The Will to Believe, a guest lecture at Yale University in 1897
- William James, from The Will to Believe, a guest lecture at Yale University in 1897
Probably one of the reasons why they want to include all one-handed opening knives.feeny wrote:Ill wager my manix that most people can get aforementioned manix out of their pocket and open as fast if not faster than any AO / switchblade ...
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] <--- My Spydies <click the dancing banana!>
- defenestrate
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The Deacon is spot on about this not having an effect on the current legality of any of Spyderco's knives, but I know there were some concerns about Customs talking about all one-hand-openers, quite possibly Spydies included, and if nothing else, this amendment does help protect us regular Spydie owners from any overzealous feds in theory, and that is definitely A Good Thing. Anything that doesn't take away more of our rights as knife carriers is a plus in my book, considering how often someone tries to take them away.
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Happy, Happy, Happy! Peel, Peel, Peel!
Happy, Happy, Happy! Peel, Peel, Peel!
That was the slippery slope argument.golddot370 wrote:In a nut shell any knife that can be opened with one hand for example the spider hole, thumb stud, assisted opener would have been cosidered illegal. This is a big victory for us knife nuts. Read more about it at http://www.kniferights.org.
The assisted openers were looking down the barrel from this law. The definition of "gravity knife" or thumbstuds/holes on blades were where it could have gone eventually.
If they were talking generically about any "one handed opener" you would have seen a bigger team of lawyers from Spyderco, Kershaw, Benchmade and the other companies than what came out of the O.J. Simpson case.
It's still a big win for the knife community. Id rather not leave generic laws in place for congress to revisit later.