I'm going to try to move it to the Roadblaster cabinet...so I will have to discharge that monitor. 
Why, exactly? Are you planning on doing any boardwork before you test it in the RB?
Well, no....but I'll be moving it around. To be honest I'd feel a lot more comfortable knowing what parts of a monitor (potentially charged) are SAFE to touch, and wich parts are NOT SAFE. ya know?
you seem to be implying that I don't need to discharge the monitor just to move it around.
Really at this point I want to get the other monitor close enough to just plug it into the RoadBlasters to see if it works. No point in mouting another non working monitor. 
Allroy
I don't know how to put this lightly, but you are wrong.
It is more dangerous to both you and your monitor to randomly discharge your picture tube for no reason.
The monitor can ONLY get you if it both has a defective discharge circuit (causing the tube to retain a charge), AND you rip the anode cap off and stick your finger in the hole.
You DO NOT discharge monitors to move them, test them, install them, ship them, or anything else. You ONLY discharge a monitor if you have to take the anode cap off. NO OTHER REASON.
The actual act of discharging a monitor is about 1000 times more likely to get you shocked then moving it from 1 cabinet to another. It is also possible (albeit unlikely) to damage your monitor in a discharge.
If the monitor isn't plugged in (and has been off for a minute), then EVERYTHING is safe to touch (except for underneath the anode cap). Even the anode cap itself is safe to touch.
The whole monitor electricity thing can be thought of like a car. It has nasty flammable gasoline in the tank, but for that to get you then you would have to open a door, unscrew a cap and then jam your finger inside the hole.