Zombie Knives Don't Kill People, but Banning Them Kills Liberty
Britain’s crackdown on “zombie-style” knives shows how politicians blame objects instead of criminals—and how bans only hurt the law-abiding.

In July, 25-year-old Brit Sam Jacques had his home searched and was charged with possession of a knife—in his own home—and was fined the equivalent of about $900. The knife fit the criteria of a category called a "zombie-style knife" and was therefore illegal in the United Kingdom, even though there was no evidence of wrongdoing or evidence that Jacques had any intention to harm anyone.
Named for blades commonly seen in zombie films, zombie knives are legally defined in the U.K. as a weapon with "(i) a cutting edge; (ii) a serrated edge; and (iii) images or words (whether on the blade or handle) that suggest that it is to be used for the purpose of violence." They were originally designed for collectors and survivalists. Jaques told the court he used the knife for bushcraft, building shelters, and other outdoor activities, and that the serrated part was used for cutting wires.
In 2016, under Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May, a new amendment to the Criminal Justice Act 1988 banned zombie knives after the fatal stabbing of an 18-year-old. Headlines named the assaulter the "Zombie Killer." Such knives are now categorized as "offensive weapons," along with more than 20 other weapons, including knuckledusters, butterfly knives, and telescopic truncheons. "Any person who manufactures, sells or hires or offers for sale or hire, exposes or has in his possession for the purpose of sale or hire, or lends or gives to any other person," can face six months to two years in prison.
In 2021, the government expanded the law further still, adding a ban on cyclone knives, defined as a "blade with a handle, a sharp point at the end and one or more cutting edges that each form a helix." Conservatives bragged about having some of the toughest knife crime laws in the world.
When a violent incident makes the news, politicians are quick to react with new regulations. Following the horrendous murder of three young Southport girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a host of further knife restrictions. In an article for The Sun, Starmer wrote, "It remains shockingly easy for our children to get their hands on deadly knives." The root cause of the issue, Starmer said, was that the Southport murderer "was still able to order the murder weapon off of the internet without any checks or barriers."
In response, the government has announced new laws requiring online retailers, such as Amazon, to ask for two types of identification from anyone seeking to buy a knife. Customers would also face requirements to record a live video or selfie to prove their age.
In the U.K., politicians have chosen to focus on the tools criminals use rather than the criminals themselves. The flaw with this approach is that it assumes people intending to break the law to assault someone will, for some reason, obey the law banning a certain weapon. By definition, criminals do not follow the law. Indeed, despite the various new bans, zombie-style knives remain readily available for purchase online, and violent attacks with zombie knives have still occurred since the ban. Incidents involving knives or other sharp instruments have not decreased. Between 2023 and 2024, there were more than 50,000 offenses involving a sharp instrument in England and Wales (excluding Greater Manchester), representing a 4.4 percent increase from the previous year.

Indeed, despite the U.K.'s extremely stringent gun laws, police recorded 5,103 offences in England and Wales in the year ending March 2025. Handguns have been banned since the 1990s, yet police recorded 1,665 offences involving handguns in the same year.
Non-violent citizens like Jacques, who have no intention of harming another person, are the ones who are penalized by these restrictions. While criminals can access knives and other weapons on the black market, those who want to stay on the right side of the law are left defenseless.
After a tragedy, it is politically easier for the government to send out a list of things they are going to ban, rather than answer difficult questions about policing effectively or dealing with the violent radicalization of young people. The Southport murderer, for example, received referrals to the government's anti-radicalization program three times before he committed the atrocious attack. Teachers warned officials that he was obsessed with violence. They failed to act. Instead of taking responsibility for running an abundantly inadequate anti-radicalization scheme—ironically called Prevent—the government chose to further restrict everyone's access to knives.
Another inconvenient phenomenon lies behind much of Britain's knife crime: gang violence, often a direct consequence of the war on drugs. The government's 2018 Serious Violence Strategy document explicitly links the rise in violent crime to the growth of county lines drug dealing:
"Violence can be used as a way of maintaining and increasing profits within drugs markets. There is good evidence that these dynamics are a factor in the recent rise in serious violence."
A sensible approach to tackling knife crime would include removing the incentive for criminal gangs to battle over drug markets. Instead, the government is doing the opposite: passing legislation that will eventually make tobacco illegal, introducing an entirely new front in the war on drugs, and creating a fresh income stream for violent gangs.
The frenzy and sensationalization of zombie knives in the U.K. serve as a warning to the rest of the world. The government blaming the weapon, rather than the perpetrator, is a recipe for never-ending restrictions on your liberty.
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OMG you don't understand! The more scary-looking something is, the more deadly it is!
Aren't you supposed to use a bat or something blunt on a zombie ?
Not a fan of the zombie theme, but from what I've seen you have to destroy at least 60% of their gray matter to stop them. It's easiest to do from a respectable distance with a sufficiently powerful firearm. One shot from a 12 gauge [slug] or several from a 5.56 or pistol caliber.
Problem is that headshots are difficult to make, ammo is scarce, and guns make a lot of noise.
Interesting timing.
He'll cover axes tomorrow.
Only if that article doesn’t get axed in favor of another EB/JS “the sky is falling in - tariffs edition” offering.
We need common-sense Islam controls.
Shush. Beltway libertarians don’t want to talk about that.
You’re saying they are buying into the mosquerade?
There's no prophet in that.
Dealing with muzzies would just be more pork spending
"The root cause of the issue, Starmer said, was that the Southport murderer "was still able to order the murder weapon off of the internet without any checks or barriers."
So the "root cause" is a weapon, be is a gun, a knife, an axe, a hammer, a crowbar, a screwdriver....very easy for pols to make a bunch of noise about criminalizing a thing vs accounting for whatever a real root cause may be, and likely admitting that they can do nothing about it.
Those words, "Root cause". I don't they mean what he thinks they means.
When any lefty says that gun control isn't a slippery slope, just show them the UK.
Koreans on rooftops oppose the slippery slope.
LA roofs are flat.
Doesn't Britain require a chef's license to buy knives with a point? Some bagpiping friends had to show their passport to buy those little sock knives, and showed pictures of cooking knives where the point's upper side was a vertical bar high enough to make stabbing difficult at best. I've seen some since that end in a lump of sorts.
Everything you'd want to know about knives in the land of 1984; there has been a bit of noise about banning "pointy" knives that could easily be used to stab someone [as well as your roast pork] but they are not illegal, you just have to have a "good reason" to buy or possess one.
https://www.gov.uk/buying-carrying-knives
And if you want to know what is a "good reason" you are directed to contact your local constabulary and they will decide for you [and if they decide to arrest you, a judge will determine your guilt or innocence].
That's interesting. Googling for it shows no pictures like I remember, and write as if anti-stabbing knives are not yet mandatory. But I remember those weird pictures very clearly, and my friends laughing about it, 20-30 years ago.
Useless page, crying out for pictures of the banned knives instead of words. Maybe pictures are too scary.
For example, knives and weapons which are over 100 years old are exempt
HOLD THE PHONE
Wait, you mean if I take a thousand mall-ninja katanas and stuff them in a storage locker for 100 years then they will suddenly become street legal?
I'm showing up with my 1895 naggant
Never heard of a "cyclone knife" before this article. Now that I've looked them up, they are only slightly less stupid than the law against them. Short version - it's just like a regular knife but less useful.
It looks like some shit you could buy at a mall kiosk, right next to the katanas and the wizard figurines.
It does look like it'd leave a nasty wound channel when pulled back out.
Then again, so would a keyhole drywall saw, and those probably aren't heavily regulated anywhere (yet).
First they came for our guns...
Then they came for our knives...
Something something slippery slope, camel's nose. It's never enough. They always want more.
They haven't yet restricted the purchase of tools like hammers and saws, but in the UK it is possible to be arrested and charged for carrying those tools without having a "good reason" to be doing so.
Then they let in the rag heads, then they came for our daughters
New York City is one of the safest large cities in the US but even so its homicide rate is 3x that of London, which has a slightly larger population. The UK weapons restrictions are pro freedom because there is no freedom when you are dead.
...because there is no freedom when you are defenseless. FTFY
Americans are not subjects to the crown for obvious reasons. We refused to surrender our weapons.
Now fuck off.
That "analysis" is so flawed that it's laughable. First, it ignores the violence that is directly attributable to our ill-considered and self-destructive "war on drugs" and Prohibition before that. As the article notes, the UK is making their own drug-rlated violence problem worse but they have a long, long way to go to catch up with the US's self-inflicted wounds. Second, it ignores the cultural differences between the US and UK, some of which are reflected in the baseline violence rate. Third, you're conflating homicide statistics that use quite different definitions and data collection techniques. Fourth, ...
Actually, that's plenty to reject your claims. Finding the rest of the flaws can be left as an exercise for the student.
Fundamentally, though, you don't actually understand what "freedom" is. You are rationalizing to avoid Franklin's adage about giving up liberty to purchase temporary safety.
directly attributable
Uh... when Janet Reno was rolling over houses with APCs, and Dave Chappelle's backhanded satire about black men being found dead covered in crack was pointed, I might've agreed.
Otherwise, "the confiscation of contraband drives down supply and drives up prices and the combination of low supply, high prices, and physiological addiction... has nothing to do with violence, it's all just the cops beating up drug dealers" is neither plausible nor direct.
You're reading a lot more into what I wrote than anything I actually said.
"[C]ops beating up drug dealers" is a miniscule fraction of drug-related violence (and statistically none of gun homicides since cop shootings are almost invariably ruled "justified"). The vast majority of drug-related violence is precisely due to the factors you describe - prohibition drives up prices, might under certain circumstances drive down supply though that's not evident from the data, excludes the entire industry from non-violent dispute resolution, degrades respect for the rule of law and a host of other obvious negative consequences. It's drug-dealer on drug-dealer violence, drug-dealer on drug-user violence, drug-user on everyone-else-to-buy-the-drugs violence, and yes, a tiny bit of police-on-guilty-and-innocent-alike violence.
Notice he only talks about homicide, no other crimes.
The UK weapons restrictions are pro freedom because there is no freedom when you are dead.
Like how a rapist loses his freedom to rape again when the woman he intends to rape pulls a gun and punches a hole in his noggin? Like that? Or are you talking about the unarmed woman who is raped and strangled to death with her pantyhose because the UK doesn't believe she has the right to self-defense?
Better to die free than live cowed. It's a personal choice, but one that many American's forebears made in leaving behind Europe to strike out for the "sweet land of Liberty". There were no guarantees in coming to America, other than freedom to try. But freedom to try is also freedom to fail, or starve.
What's the multiple of the rate of nonviolent citizens imprisoned for misgendering a stranger online in London vs NYC? How about charges for incorrect pronouns?
England doesn't concider it a crime if a ragheads commits it. Also common in Europe is to not count a homicide until there is a conviction
The UK went all-in on institutionalizing woke, cuckoldry for the non-rapefugee classes that arguments over knife blade lengths and how many CCTVs zooming in on individuals is akin to rearranging the deckchairs at a concentration camp.
1. Ibrahim, if you're fighting over being able to have *knives* - you've already lost.
2. What are you worried for? You're allowed to do whatever you want. These laws are to disarm the natives to allow you an easier time.
In an article for The Sun, Starmer wrote, "It remains shockingly easy for our children to get their hands on deadly knives."
Yeah "they" can get a butter knife from the drawer and stab you?
"They" can kill you with a pencil just the same.
"They", not the weapon, can kill you.
Anything can be turned into a weapon. Next the wooden spoon and darts.
Perhaps warm beer will be down the slippery slope of weapons to be banned due to it's warmth, bubbles and the fact when poured over someone's face when laying on the ground after being hit by a bar stool can be used to drown them.
I’ve always felt that the UK can jolly well go fuck themselves, and it appears that they have.