User Panel
Born in ‘98 here…everyone I knew carried a knife every day outside school. I still do. My area is more rural, but most the girls had knives too.
|
|
|
|
Used to carry a Swiss Army knife to middle and high school in the 80's.
Now I carry something a little less utilitarian and a lot more pointy. |
|
Quoted: I made sure my boys have always had a knife to carry when we’re together. If they don’t bring theirs or lose it, they don’t get to use mine. They take them everywhere and haven’t lost them. I started them out with $25 sog academy type knives and because they took good care of them, I bought them some midrange auto knives for Christmas. A couple of years ago, I bought my gf’s son a kabar for Christmas. View Quote |
|
Quoted: My dad gave me his dad's (never met him, died before I was born) Barlow as my first knife. I still have it. I'm 56. Dad has passed too. Some reason, I have about 6 Barlow knives now. They seem to multiply. Semi-unrelated story from one of my students at the end of class one day. Student: You know you have a knife clipped on the inside of your pocket? Me: Yes, and? Student: Oh nothing, it doesn't bother ME, but I'm just sayin' I teach on a community college campus. View Quote |
|
Quoted: As gen x ages, our value will be tested. Will we continue being awesome or will we start doing old man boomer shit like: "BaCk in MaH dAy BoiS caRried bElt kNivEs liKe tHeir dAddY not phonEs!" View Quote |
|
|
Quoted: My man. Brothers, our generation is at a cross roads. Pop culture is appealing to our generation's nostalgia with our music in Marvel movies, The Batman, and the Super Bowl. Netflix is putting out documentaries from our generation like "Trainwreck: Woodstock '99", like its some kind of Vietnam documentary. And the first time I heard Pearl Jam played on the local classic rock station, I died a little. Let us not go down the path of calling all modern music trash because we can't appreciate it, or saying that kids today are worse than us because of some petty crap in a vain attempt to ignore our own inadequacies, or spend our days telling people about our joint pains. Instead, let us continue doing what makes us us. Lets go home to an empty house, eat cold cereal while watching TV and not opening the door for anyone, and doing what we like while not caring about what anyone else thinks. View Quote |
|
|
Quoted: That's not how I remember it. I recall practicing with butterfly knives while we waited in the school lobby before (6-8th grade) before classes started. I don't recall anyone every saying anything about it, or the switchblades that we passed around class. Then again, they only got anxious about guns if you brought them in the building. Cars were fine. View Quote I remember one kid brought his grandfather's Luger in a shoe box of parts and coach put it back together for him during class so his dad didn't bear his ass. |
|
|
Quoted: we had one in 8th grade, more of a fuck up with an otf. it supposively didnt close and this fat kid got stuck in the belly. (like the only fat kid in the entire school) View Quote |
|
|
Born and raised in upstate Ny, in the 70's and 80's. It is rural, apple orchards, lots of woods and farms. Most of the guys and some girls , during hunting season, would go hunting in the am before school started, leave the field and go directly to school, and then go back out in the evening after school. Many of us would show off new rifles we may have gotten for Christmas or from a family member that handed it down, right there in the school parking lot, no big deal for anyone. Some would still have their fixed blade knife still strapped on their belt in class. Even when there were fights, it was handled with fists and then it was over. No one ever thought to use a knife or a gun to settle any problems. We even had a student smoking section outside the building. We do not have a gun problem, but we do have a problem with people who are willing tgo carry out the acts we see played out. Something has changed, and it's not guns, it's the people.
|
|
Born and raised in upstate Ny, in the 70's and 80's. It is rural, apple orchards, lots of woods and farms. Most of the guys and some girls , during hunting season, would go hunting in the am before school started, leave the field and go directly to school, and then go back out in the evening after school. Many of us would show off new rifles we may have gotten for Christmas or from a family member that handed it down, right there in the school parking lot, no big deal for anyone. Some would still have their fixed blade knife still strapped on their belt in class. Even when there were fights, it was handled with fists and then it was over. No one ever thought to use a knife or a gun to settle any problems. We even had a student smoking section outside the building. We do not have a gun problem, but we do have a problem with people who are willing tgo carry out the acts we see played out. Something has changed, and it's not guns, it's the people.
|
|
Quoted: I would agree...more people carry a knife today than we did in the 70s. We grew up, and now Gen X are adults...and most of us carry a folder in out pocket every day View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I would say more people carry knives now than then, just not at school. I agree with this. Some of us carried pocket knives, though. Started with a Boy Scout folder, then Swiss Army. Nobody carried a knife on their belt...except my dad. I feel naked without a knife. Benchmade or Kershaw. Early GenX here, 1965. |
|
I've carried a knife every day I can remember since ~5th grade, aside from a few in DC and other foreign countries.
Also, I was born in '91. |
|
Yeah, I remember being able to take knives on planes too.
People fuck around and shit changes however. |
|
Rex Applegate Folder.
Buck 110 Still have them. But these days I carry a leatherman in my pocket and a pocket clip utility blade knife. |
|
I used to carry a pocket knife to school all the time. One of my friends, his fell out of his pocket on the bus and some first grader snitched on him. He was suspended for a day.
|
|
|
Quoted: I’ve done my part to ensure every young man in my circle carries a knife. The young women too. The church folk were a little weirded out when I gave my niece a purple Skallywag Aluminum Dagger for a confirmation gift. View Quote I have handed out quite a few Ontario Rat 1 knives to people who needed a knife and might actually carry one. They're only $25-ish on Amazon. |
|
I remember a time when EVERY young boy carried a knife View Quote Well, if you didn't grow up in a a large inner city...... A pocket knife in my area would of meant an arrest or worse. |
|
Quoted: Well, if you didn't grow up in a a large inner city...... A pocket knife in my area would of meant an arrest or worse. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: I remember a time when EVERY young boy carried a knife Well, if you didn't grow up in a a large inner city...... A pocket knife in my area would of meant an arrest or worse. Dang. |
|
How the fuck can you play Mumbly-peg without your cubscout penknife?!?
Kids today... |
|
Clearly remember, 1988, junior year in high school, my chemistry teacher asked for my knife so he could open a package.
Nobody batted an eye. And he asked me just because I was the closest to him. But along those lines... 1986, the high school I went to as a freshman had a student smoking room. |
|
Every boy has carried a knife at a certain age since ancient times.
|
|
|
Late Gen-X here. Have always carried a mini Swiss Army knife on my keys. Have recently started carrying a USAF survival knife strapped to my boot. Guess OP is right.
|
|
|
My friends and I would play mumbly peg in middle school ala 1969..
|
|
|
Quoted: Nitpick: That's Jed (Swayze's character) with his back to the camera. He wasn't a schoolkid (it's unstated, but implied he had graduated some time ago). View Quote Yeah he was about 30 when they filmed that. His character was probably supposed to be a bit younger, but he'd still have been a Boomer. |
|
Quoted: Yeah he was about 30 when they filmed that. His character was probably supposed to be a bit younger, but he'd still have been a Boomer. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Nitpick: That's Jed (Swayze's character) with his back to the camera. He wasn't a schoolkid (it's unstated, but implied he had graduated some time ago). Yeah he was about 30 when they filmed that. His character was probably supposed to be a bit younger, but he'd still have been a Boomer. |
|
Quoted: I would say more people carry knives now than then, just not at school. View Quote 1971 Gen X here. Lots of us carried at school but I think in the 90s with the advent of Spyderco style pocket clip knives it was just more obvious somebody had a knife versus before that it was in your pocket and no one see it. Maybe we were the peak of the concealed means concealed movement lol. Still got my very first pocket knife from Cub Scouts that my mom got me way back in the day. |
|
Quoted: We carried in Elementary school. When "butterfly knives" became popular from all the 80's Ninja movies, then they started telling us to keep them at home. View Quote carried my buck 110 damn near everyday of HS,early 80's and it was pretty normal never got into the butterfly knife hotness but I had several friends that did,some blood was spilled the 80's were AWESOME!!!! |
|
|
Quoted: Quoted: Yup carried my buck 110 damn near everyday of HS,early 80's and it was pretty normal never got into the butterfly knife hotness but I had several friends that did,some blood was spilled the 80's were AWESOME!!!! I seriously miss the 80’s. Yep, growing up in Canada I always had a knife on me. I remember in high school a teacher was trying to open a box and almost all the boys in the classroom pulled out their knives to help. I never saw a knife come out in a schoolyard fight though. There was a code we all followed. |
|
|
|
Most kids now days, outsie the rural red state kids, think knivies and guns are icky.
|
|
We had moved to NY at the time and I was in 2nd grade when they made a big deal about suspending the 1st kid for bring a pocket knife to school.
|
|
I still have my Cub Scout pocket knife, before that it was an el cheapo Barlow folder…
|
|
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.