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Victorinox SwissChamp Swiss Army Knife
Victorinox SwissChamp Swiss Army Knife

Description

Victorinox SwissChamp Swiss Army Knife. This famous SwissChamp, loaded with features at an excellent price, is often our #1 Swiss Army knife in sales dollars year after year. The Champs formidable array of implements (30) includes: 1...

Ka-Bar BK11 Becker Necker Neck Knife
Ka-Bar BK11 Becker Necker Neck Knife
List Price: $56.44
Sale Price: $32.20
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Description

The Ka-Bar Becker Necker is the quintessential neck knife. The knife is made of 1095 Cro-Van steel, an easy-to-sharpen carbon steel that keeps its edge well. The Becker Necker also includes a black plastic, injection-molded, glass-filled nylon sheath that's designed to work with the TDI metal belt clip...

Columbia River Knife And Tool 9065 Zilla Jr. Multitool With  Black And Grey Scale and Assisted Opening Needle Nose Pliers, 2.25-inch Steel Blade, 5.25-inch Handle
Columbia River Knife And Tool 9065 Zilla Jr. Multitool With Black And Grey Scale and Assisted Opening Needle Nose Pliers, 2.25-inch Steel Blade, 5.25-inch Handle
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $19.28
You save: $20.71 (52%)
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Description

The Zilla tool features a 2.25 in. bead blast blade made from 3Cr13 steel with a 5.25 in. black handle. Tool includes pliers knife wire cutter and stripper flat and phillips head screwdrivers bottle opener and carry clip and a blafck nylon sheath...

Ka-Bar BK14 Becker Knife and Tool Eskabar Knife
Ka-Bar BK14 Becker Knife and Tool Eskabar Knife
List Price: $56.44
Sale Price: $33.86
You save: $22.58 (40%)
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Description

Becker Knife and Tool products are knives that work for a living. Made to be used and not stored. They will take all you can dish out.

Spyderco Tenacious G-10 Handle Folding Plain Edge Knife
Spyderco Tenacious G-10 Handle Folding Plain Edge Knife
List Price: $54.95
Sale Price: $29.99
You save: $24.96 (45%)
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Description

The mid-sized Tenacious knife has a black G-10 laminate handle, milled with prolonged, fatigue-free cutting in mind. Tucked inside are skeletonized steel liners which increase the handle's rigidity and strength without adding non-functioning weight or bulky thickness...

Columbia River Knife And Tool 9065K Zilla Jr. Multitool with  Black On Black Scale and Assisted Opening Pliers, 2.25-inch Blade, 5.25-inch Handle
Columbia River Knife And Tool 9065K Zilla Jr. Multitool with Black On Black Scale and Assisted Opening Pliers, 2.25-inch Blade, 5.25-inch Handle
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $29.99
You save: $10.00 (25%)
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Description

ATTRIBUTES Special Features: Pliers Knife Wire Cutter And Stripper Flat And Phillips Screwdrivers Bottle Opener Clip And Sheath

Cold Steel GI Tanto Knife with Secure-Ex Sheath
Cold Steel GI Tanto Knife with Secure-Ex Sheath
List Price: $36.99
Sale Price: $26.29
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Description

The Cold Steel GI Tanto is a no-nonsense tactical knife designed for practical uses--from camping and hunting, to any day-to-day use where a strong and sharp blade is called for. The knife features a broad, seven-inch Tanto blade of 1055 carbon steel with a hard spring temper that has been ground to a razor sharp edge and point...

Zero Tolerance G10 Handle with Speed Safe
Zero Tolerance G10 Handle with Speed Safe
List Price: $175.00
Sale Price: $129.95
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Description

With a tough stainless blade and grippy textured G-10 handle, the Zero Tolerance 350 folding knife is an ideal choice for law enforcement and military applications. The ZT350 is 10 percent smaller than the original ZT300, yet is just as aggressive...

Buck 277 Folding Alpha Hunter, Rosewood Handle, Liner Lock Folding Knife with Leather Sheath
Buck 277 Folding Alpha Hunter, Rosewood Handle, Liner Lock Folding Knife with Leather Sheath
List Price: $114.00
Sale Price: $60.16
You save: $53.84 (47%)
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Description

Buck Knives 277 Folding Alpha Hunter TM is the evolution of Buck's venerable 110 Folding Hunter, one of the most copied knives in the knife industry. The Folding Alpha Hunter is solid, smooth and feels like it was made for your hand...

Delk 41293 Ultimate Fishing Tool, Green and Orange
Delk 41293 Ultimate Fishing Tool, Green and Orange
List Price: $24.99
Sale Price: $19.98
You save: $5.01 (20%)
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Description

Save space in your tackle box with the most compact fishing tool ever! It's a bright LED flashlight with fold-out hands-free stand...a hook remover, fish scraper, scissors, serrated knife, bottle opener...

knife scales
What should be the future of gun control laws in America?

After yesterdays school massacre do Americans think there should be stricter gun control laws. I know that there have been many incidents like this in the US and that working class black areas have long been plagued by gun crime. I know that in the US people see it as their constitutional right to bear arms but this was written in the 1700's and technology has made weapons much more deadly since then. Where I live in Ireland there are problems with gun crime but on nowhere near the same scale as in the US. There is a lot of violent crime involving knives and other weapons here and I know for a fact that if people here had easier access to guns that crime would instantly rocket as criminals would have access to more deadly force. What price are Americans prepared to pay for their right to bear arms as I am aware that at the time of the Vietnam war that more Americans died from guncrime at home than died in Vietnam.

Tight gun controls the most powerful weapon

Shrinking the nation's firearms arsenal has been a lifesaver, write Simon Chapman and Philip Alpers.

TEN years ago tomorrow at Port Arthur, Martin Bryant killed 20 innocents with his first 29 bullets, all in the space of 90 seconds in the Broad Arrow Cafe and an adjacent souvenir shop. This lone "pathetic social misfit" (the judge's words) was empowered to achieve his record final toll of 35 people dead and 18 seriously wounded by a type of gun openly sold by law-abiding firearm dealers as "assault weapons".
No more. Attitudes to firearms and gun laws changed almost overnight. After a decade of very public gun massacres - Queen and Hoddle streets in Melbourne and at Strathfield Plaza - people had overwhelmingly had enough of anyone with a grudge gaining easy, mostly legal access to weapons designed expressly to kill a lot of people in a very short time.

Just 12 days after the Port Arthur shootings, John Howard's first major act of leadership, and by far his most popular in his first year as Prime Minister, was to announce nationwide gun law reform.

The new laws specifically addressed mass shootings, banning rapid-fire rifles and shotguns. In the 1996-97 Australian firearms buyback, 643,726 of the newly prohibited guns were purchased by the Government from owners at market value, funded by a small surcharge on the Medicare levy. Tens of thousands of gun owners also voluntarily surrendered non-prohibited firearms without compensation. In all, more than 700,000 guns were removed from the community and destroyed. No other nation had ever attempted anything on this scale.

So, 10 years later, can we see a difference? Resoundingly, yes. The results are in: Australia's tightened gun controls have been followed by remarkable reductions in gun deaths.

In the decade up to and including the Port Arthur event, Australia experienced 11 mass shootings, which are defined as taking five or more victims. One hundred people were shot dead and another 52 wounded. In the 10 years since Port Arthur and the new gun laws, not one mass shooting has occurred in Australia. For this reason alone Australia is a safer place.

But for each Australian killed in a mass shooting in the past 17 years, 80 have died by gunshot in less high-profile events, many of them in family violence. It is here, in the day-to-day tragedy of firearms-related homicide and suicide, that Australia's new restrictions and, perhaps equally importantly, changing attitudes to guns and gun owners, can most plausibly claim to have had the most effect.

Even before Port Arthur, gun-related deaths - suicides, homicides and unintentional shootings - were declining slowly. But the rate of decline accelerated markedly after the tragedy. From 1979 to 1996, 11,110 Australians died by gunshot, with an annual average of 617. In the seven years after new gun laws were announced (1997-2003), the yearly average almost halved, to 331.

With firearm homicide - the gun deaths that attract the most attention - the downward trend has been even more dramatic. In the same two periods, the average annual number of gun homicides fell from 93 to 56. But it was the acceleration in the rate of this decline which proved most remarkable: it fell 70 times faster after the new gun laws, than before.

Have murderers simply switched methods? While the annual average number of all homicides has increased since June 1996, the rate per 100,000 people has fallen marginally, but can be described as steady. This suggests that partially removing a single type of weapon may not reduce a type of crime committed using many possible means. This could change if Howard moves to tighten controls over handguns, which he has flagged.

Guns have a very high lethality index (or, as it is sometimes indelicately put, a high completion rate) in both homicides and suicides. Had the gun law reforms not occurred, more Australians contemplating suicide - in particular, impulsive young people - might have more easily found a method of instantly ending their lives.

Reliable national data on suicide attempts is not available to examine whether suicide completion rates changed after Port Arthur.

By destroying one-fifth of this country's estimated stock of firearms - the equivalent figure in the US would be 40 million guns - Australians shrank significantly their private arsenal. In 2002-03, Australia's rate of 0.27 gun-related homicides per 100,000 people was one-fifteenth that of the US.

Simon Chapman is professor of public health at the University of Sydney and author of Over Our Dead Bodies: Port Arthur and Australia's Fight for Gun Control. Philip Alpers is adjunct associate professor of public health at the University of Sydney and editor of www.gunpolicy.org.