> "Now with that said. Discharge it anyway"
Sorry, nope!
If you discharge it and remove the anode cap, the bare tube will accumulate it's own charge just sitting there in the open air and therefore become a danger by itself for the next person who uses their fingers to reattach the anode cap. It's the fact that the anode cap is on AND the rest of the electronics are doing their job, when it's turned off, the anode wire is grounded in any working set, preventing the tube from gathering a charge in open air.
Unless the monitor is known to not be working (and even then, unless you are going to work on it) there is absolutely NO need to discharge it, and doing so (and leaving it uncapped) is where the real danger is.
How many TV's and computer monitors are "swapped out" each year? Do people discharge those? No. If it's working there is no need to, and if it's not working, only do so if you're going to be working on it.
There are enough other parts that are dangerous (eg the fragile tube) that if some child got near and did the wrong thing, many more bad things would happen. You shouldn't ever have an open frame monitor, working or not, assembled or not, anywhere near a child in the first place. Sharp metal, thin glass, risk of implosion from a simple bump on the back.