I work as a chef. Maybe 3 or 4 years ago I bought my first $300 kitchen knife, an Hattori FH. It was all gleaming steel and sex appeal. It shipped in a white wooden box lined with blue silk batting. It was beyond beautiful with its ergo-contoured black linen micarta handles. It was so nice in fact that I never took it to work except once to show it off. So it sat and gathered dust for a couple years. When I realized I never used it I sold it. Why own one you don't use?
Six months ago I bought an $800 kitchen knife straight from Japan. It was forged by an artist, a genius. Black-steel at 66 Rc. In your hand it's a living thing; you can feel the energy as you hold it. Even though it's absurdly expensive I take it work every day. I agonized as to whether to buy it, then I just decided to buy it and
let go. Sure, it could get a chip or get dinged, but does a carpenter every keep his best hammer in the toolbox so it doesn't get scratched? Besides, I sharpen professionally, too, and there isn't much short of total destruction that I can't fix.
If I'm afraid to use a tool, I don't really own it. It's useless to me.
So, I guess that's what I think about safe queens. I'm pretty liberal politically but tool-wise I'm a hard-@ss man!
You gotta earn your keep if you want a spot in my tool box, knife roll or belt sheath.