OPPRESSIVE KNIFE LAWS by Bernard Levine (c)1998 published in BLADE Magazine In BLADE Magazine, back in the first half of 1997, I offered a six-part compilation of the many and varied knife laws of our fifty states. But what are these laws really about? Why do we have them? Do they actually do any good? To me these questions are far more interesting than the details of the laws themselves. Here is how I see the answers. * * * > THE LAWS ON THE BOOKS Nearly every state has knife laws. So does the federal government. So also do countless cities and towns -- except where the state legislature has pre-empted this sort of ordinance, retaining a monopoly for itself. These knife laws are artifacts of fear -- of prejudice and uncertainty. If you know a little American history, you can look at a knife law's wording, and tell when it was first enacted. * If it speaks of bowie knives and Arkansas toothpicks, it dates back to the second quarter of the 19th century, to the rapid and sometimes lawless expansion of settlement in the Mississippi River basin. * If it speaks of concealed dirks and daggers, it dates to the wave of anarchist and pro-German terror bombings around 1915-1918, which frightened an entire generation of Americans into surrendering their liberty. * If it speaks of switchblades and gravity knives, it dates to the "West Side Story" era of the late 1950s, when the mass media drummed up fear of teen-age gangs, and of violence by immigrant refugees with too many vowels in their names. * And if it speaks of school grounds, and "dangerous" weapons, it most likely dates to the convulsive expansion of puritanical prior restraint of our own politically correct era. * > THE GREAT DIVIDE Ever since its first European settlements, in the early 1600s, America developed as two completely different republics. We have been politically divided ever since, and will always remain so. This is because our two founding republican traditions are both opposite and irreconcilable. On one side of the divide were the agrarian republicans like Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. They gave us the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, with their foundation stones of equal creation, personal freedom, and the inalienable rights of every citizen. Theirs was a republic of innate virtue, where crime and vice were nothing more than aberrations. An individual's misbehavior was only of concern to the State when other citizens had been harmed by it. On the other side of the divide were the puritanical republicans like the autocratic clergyman, Cotton Mather. These men believed all citizens to be innate sinners, irresistibly driven to dastardly deeds unless rigidly restrained by the State. Their puritan republic, their City of God, was like a brittle chain, which a single weak link would sunder. In their world, even the slightest mis-step from pious purity had to be prevented at all cost. Countless detailed laws and regulations were devised, and then constantly revised, in order to eliminate every possibility of straying. To the true puritan -- whether pious Christian, secular humanist, or leveling socialist -- notions of rights and responsibilities are meaningless. All that matters is the prevention of sin. No form of prior restraint can be too severe, if it advances this fundamental goal. Guess which side gave us our knife laws. > WHY THEY DO IT The puritanical impulse is a deep one. We all have it. It is founded in the fear that other people's freedom of action is a threat to our own safety, our own sanctity. It is the impulse to make the other fellow toe the mark. The puritan knows that his own motives are good, but he does not trust yours. By regulating every detail of everyone else's life, he believes he can prevent crime before it happens. This is so much neater and safer than waiting to punish actual crimes after the fact. The puritan impulse is the wish to make all risk disappear. This seems much more direct than learning how to manage or avoid risk, and much less demanding than arming oneself to defend against risk. The puritan, like the primitive shaman, seeks to make everything right in the world by magical words of command. Has it ever worked? Can it ever work? Look at the record -- it has never been successful. Puritanism is, at bottom, simple tyranny, and tyranny is doomed to failure. But puritanism's unbroken record of failure will not stop people from trying again and again. Every new generation is born with faith in the power of magic words -- written laws -- to prevent sin. And every American generation for the past century and a half has produced its own new wave of oppressive and futile knife laws. > THE RATIONALE OF REPRESSION No one but a puritan would imagine that a particular TYPE of knife, lying in a drawer in someone's private home, should be construed as a crime. "Some knives are just inherently dangerous," said a New York state senator in 1958 -- a sentiment often echoed since then. To a puritan this is self-evident truth. To an agrarian it is poppycock. Here is why the two outlooks are so different. An agrarian republican recognizes that other people are his equals, no better and no worse. Curtailing another man's freedom does not enhance one's own, but merely encourages the other man to return the "favor," in a descending spiral of mutual repression. But to a puritan, on the other hand, repression is the whole point of law and government. Without repression there would be chaos. Then sin would prevail, and we would all go to hell in a handcart. The agrarian republicans, when they were in power back in the 1780s, generously extended their 'live and let live' philosophy to every citizen -- including even their puritan opponents. Since that time, the puritans have made full use of this grant of liberty, to enact all the tyrannical regulations and prior restraint that they desired. And they generously extended their increasingly oppressive rule to every citizen -- including of course the agrarians. For the puritans it was a 'heads I win, tails you lose' proposition. To this day, the few remaining agrarians have never figured out what hit them. But puritans can be selectively tolerant -- in their own distinctive way. They insist upon extending their repressive laws to people who disagree with them. But they generally exempt one small group from all of their laws and rules -- namely their own leaders. I guess the theory must be that their leaders are so exalted and pure, that their foibles are not really sins at all. Their transgressions will not endanger the community, the way yours or mine would. This was just as true in William Bradford's Plymouth and Cotton Mather's Boston, as it was three centuries later in Joseph P. Kennedy's Boston and Adolf Hitler's Berlin, and as it is today in Bill Clinton's Washington. > EXAMPLES From an agrarian perspective, examples of bad knife laws abound. Indeed an agrarian recognizes that there can be no good knife laws. Good law is about human behavior, drawing a bright line between harmless and harmful actions. It is not about things. From a puritan perspective, however, knife laws are inherently good, although some are better than others. The best would be the French system -- simply ban all knives, and then let the police decide whom to prosecute. England has just applied this system to all guns, and knives are scheduled to follow soon. But here in America that pesky old agrarian Constitution won't let our puritans do this, so they devote a lot of creative energy to finding ways to get around it. They are always pushing the envelope. A decade ago the city of Portland, Oregon, banned all pocketknives, and then defended its ordinance through four levels of appeal -- until the new law was finally expunged by the state's Supreme Court. But with two new puritans recently appointed to that court, the city may well try the same maneuver again. And how about state laws that ban certain "inherently dangerous" types of knives by name? Some ban bowies, others balisongs, still others daggers. What most of them neglect to do, is to define these names with any precision, or even to define them at all. Since 1917 California has made it a felony to be a person "who carries concealed upon his or her person any dirk or dagger." Until a couple of years ago, neither "dirk" nor "dagger" was defined in the state's penal code. This gave the state's appellate courts free rein to declare all sorts of knives and other tools to be types of "dirk or dagger" (if "God is in the details," as a philosophical architect once said, then the devil must be in the appellate decisions). Then the California legislature decided to "fix" this. They had already revised the law several times, adding more types of "inherently" dangerous knives ("ballistic knife, belt buckle knife, shuriken, lipstick case knife, cane sword, shobe-zui, air gauge knife, writing pen knife..."). Early in 1996 they labored hard, and brought forth this new definition of "dirk or dagger:" > PC 12020(c)(24) "a knife or other instrument with or without a handguard that is primarily designed, constructed, or altered to be a stabbing instrument designed to inflict great bodily injury or death." In plain English this means, "any pointed implement at all." California is hardly unique in its broad interpretations of knife terms. Here is an appellate ruling from Alabama: A "butcher's knife" 11 inches long overall is a knife "of like kind or description" as a bowie knife. How about these two rulings, from Connecticut? "[A 3-1/2 inch knife] could be found to be a dangerous weapon... as being approximately four inches long..." "Ordinary bone handled jack knife containing blade which measured 3-3/8 inches in length did not fall within prohibition..." Or this one from Hawaii: "A 'diver's knife' is neither a 'dangerous weapon' nor a 'dagger.'" [I wonder if the Navy SEALs would agree with this?] Or how about that supposed bastion of liberty, Idaho: "The right to bear arms may not be denied by the legislature; it only has the power to 'regulate the exercise of this right'; that is, among other things, it may... prescribe the kind or character of arms that may or may not be kept, carried, or used..." [Try substituting the word "speech" for the word "arms" in this ruling, and see where it takes you.] This 1957 ruling from Tennessee shows that New England did not have a monopoly on puritan dread of sin -- indeed Tennessee courts attempted to nullify the Second Amendment in 1840, and again in 1878. "The purpose of the... provisions was to discourage the using of certain weapons which tend to lead to crime." If you would like to read more of this sort of thing, point your browser to: http://pweb.netcom.com/~brlevine/sta-law.htm > EXEMPTIONS? What about states that offer exemptions and other loopholes to their knife laws? What about the collector exemptions to the switchblade bans of Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Virginia. Aren't these an improvement over across-the-board bans? Hmm, let me see... We start out with a law that is unjust, unconstitutional, and ineffective against crime. Then we add to it a layer of corruption and discrimination -- of special treatment for a narrow class of citizens. Could you please explain to me exactly how this is an improvement? > IN CONCLUSION Perhaps we should let an expert have the last word, on what sort of knife (and gun) law might be appropriate to the United States: "Every able-bodied freeman, between the ages of 16 and 50, is enrolled in the militia... The law requires every militia-man to provide himself with the arms usual in the regular service." Thomas Jefferson (1781) "...all power is inherent in the people... it is their right and duty to at all times be armed." Thomas Jefferson (1824) This system worked just fine in old Virginia. It works just fine right now, in Switzerland. ******* END <<<<< http://www.knife-expert.com/ http://pweb.netcom.com/~brlevine/sta-law.htm