Buck Knives were being made and sold in the U.S. and everyone had a great feeling about the knife in their sheeth.

A Union moved in and tried to set up shop with the workers at Buck Knives. They eventually got a foothold and ran the wages through the roof in order to grow the Union; NOT because there was genuine interest in the living conditions of the Buck Knife worker, which was fine before they moved in, but because the Union machine is a machine which must continually be fed in order for the managers at the top to continue to be latent, rich executives.

The age-old Buck Knife company drew a line between management and union worker, and a rift was caused.

The Union's contract expired and they wanted to negotiate: Higher wages, Grand Retirement with full bennies, etc., etc.

In order to stay in business as a brand, Buck took their manufacturing overseas...

The price of Buck Knives stabilized and management prospers because actually the price of production went DOWN.

We now have to purchase a foreign-made knife in order to own a knife with the Buck brand name attached to it.

Everyone lives happily ever after except that worker who lost the job and was abandoned by the Union when he no longer could pay his "dues".

That's my theory, and I'm sticking to it...
Taylor
