this post was submitted on 17 Feb 2026
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"Corruption" that entertains junior enlisted should be viewed with a much less harsh eye than, for example, corruption that enriches senior officers, or contractors, or elected officials.
It's not a good thing, but it's not exactly what I'd call "important." Plus, I'd be willing to bet it's an artefact of the stupid budgeting system we use.
And honestly, a couple hundred dollars for a good knife (I'm assuming it's at least better than Walmart knives, with "government tax" added) is pretty typical if you know your knives. Having a good knife if you use it often is so much better than a box cutter.
Edit: I did the math from the info in article. It's $350 per knife. That's honestly pretty low considering how much "government tax" is usually added.
$350 for a knife is lower mid-range, not what I would consider a luxury
Our ideas of luxury costs are significantly misaligned. I made do with a cheap $25 multi-tool until I got a skeletool for a Christmas present. Why other way is considered out of reach for me.
For pocket knives the scale is sort of divided like Production -> Midtech -> Custom. Even some production knives are pushing $500 (or more) now
I don't doubt that. I also don't want to deny a service member a knife. I carry one and think it's pretty fucking handy.
My first point is that a serviceable utilitarian fixed-blade knife is in the $30-$50 range. With the service-member markup that is not anywhere near $300.
My second point is that buying a tool is about meeting the utilitarian need first. Maybe an entry level knife might not hold up as well as a mid-range of the same design, but as the price goes up, you are getting diminishing returns on utility. It might be off an assembly line, but anything over $50 is still a luxury.
Yeah ... but if all you're using it for is opening boxes, you don't need a $350 mid-tier knife ... you need a $15 box cutter with replaceable $0.50 blades.
If you want a fancy knife, sure -- go get one ... with your own money. But if you're using taxpayer money for it, you can have the $15 box cutter that gets the job done just fine.
I was an enlisted aircraft maintainer for a term of service, and I don't recall ever being in need of aa box cutter.
My opinion stands, however. They want knives, let them have knives.