On 29/05/2006, at 6:48 AM, Bryon Daly wrote:

Anecdotal and mostly irrelevant story:
Back during the original run of Babylon 5 (probably 9+ years ago, so forgive me if my memory is faulty), JMS (the series creator) discussed in the B5
newsgroup how the BBC

Channel 4, but understandable error. :)

censored part of a major scene involving use of a
knife (where when Vir apologizes to G'Kar for the Centauri's crimes against the Narn, G'Kar pulls a knife, cuts his hand and as the blood drips, counts
off "dead, dead, dead...". )  IIRC, he mentioned another minor scene
censored , apparently for being too disturbing, where a few characters were
briefly held at knifepoint (no one cut or injured).

It's to do with the watershed. B5 used to be on at 6pm on a Sunday evening. When it was shown at 11pm on a Wednesday night, it aired uncut.

As far as how can knives be outlawed and still have kitchen knives...maybe
not for long....http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4581871.stm
But aside from the nanny doctors calling for the kitchen knife ban, it seems the operative point to the law as described is "public place", so presumably
a knife in a kitchen an perhaps a machete in a garden are OK.

Yes. It's illegal to carry a knife on your person in a public place. Similar laws apply in many countries. In Cyprus, your diving knife must be in a bag with your diving gear in the boot or flatbed. If it is under the driver's seat, you're liable to be charged and fined if an officer finds it. When I entered Australia for my cycling trip I had a 6" folding knife for camping. I declared it, the customs officer took it away, came back after a few minutes, and asked the important questions "What is it for?" "Camping - i'm going on an outback cycling expedition" "Where are you carrying it?" "In my toolkit in a rear pannier compartment. Never on my person." "OK. no problem."

Charlie
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