Actually, GM Son gave General Choi his Honorary 4th Dan in 1955, and tore up the Honorary 6th Dan in 1957, when he was still Kwan Jang. He didn't leave until 1959. As for rank being unimportant, that is true, but apparently rank was very important to General Choi, even Honorary rank.
Oh, I'm sure rank was important to Gen. Choi. If only you'd been around to explain to him that it is unimportant. You could've made him a 10th dan, too
General Choi was never the head of the Oh Do Kwan. The first Oh Do Kwan Jang was GM NAM Tae Hi and the second was GM HYUN Jong Myung. In fact, if I am not mistaken, it was GM Nam who chose the name Oh Do Kwan. General Choi did help to establish the Oh Do Kwan by I believe making Taekwondo training mandatory in the ROK military, and for that GM Nam asked GM Son to issue General Choi an Honorary 4th Dan.
Well, that's weird.
A Modern History of Taekwondo says Gen. Choi founded the Oh Do Kwan in the 3rd Army base.
Either that or you don't know what the discussion is really about, which is to give MT readers enough information so they can decide for themselves.
Which you haven't done. But I digress... :lol:
You seem to think that this is an opportunity to vent frustration and anger by attacking me personally. Again. That is a typical DD member pattern, remember? They run out of facts, or have their facts pointed out as erroneous, they get mad, and they attack me.
:lol: Hardly. I find you amusing more than anything else. So far, your behavior here has been tame compared to that shown in the DD archives. But then, I guess when you're posting on a board you don't run you don't want to get banned yourself :lol:
I do find it interesting that you apparently think I've "attacked" you since all I've done is point out all you offer are your opinions.
No additional facts to add or support your position, except another personal attack.
This is what I said: "Right, so you don't know what Gen. Choi was like as a martial artist. You simply believe what others have told you. There's no shame in admiting your ignorance in this matter, Glenn."
If pointing out that you don't know something and there's no shame in admitting that is taken as an attack on you, well then I got nothing :lol:
Yes, but using the logic that you used on the pioneers when they were assessing General Choi's lack of skill in the 1950's. Your point of view, twenty years ago when you were a kid (were you even a dan holder back then?) might have been colored by the fact that you were seeing "the founder". Who is to say that your childhood perception of General Choi's skill was in fact a valid one?
:lol:
I was a kid 20 years ago? That's news to me :lol: You already said someone told you I was 29 but as I replied that is incorrect :lol:
Yes, I was a dan holder when I attended the seminar with Gen. Choi. As for my perception being "colored" by seeing "the founder" to be honest when I first saw him I was somewhat disappointed. He looked very small, slight of build, tired from travelling and I remember thinking "I wonder how he's going to do on the floor..." But he got out there and it was all business. Very impressive.
One more point, again going with your logic, YOU may know how terrific General Choi was, back in 1991, but that doesn't translate into the MT readers knowing, because like you say, they weren't there.
Oh, I know. And I haven't asked anyone to take my word as Gospel. Still less have I asked anyone to accept what someone else told me 50 years after the fact. I simply was giving an example of why
I don't really think your comments are worth assenting to.
Great. Have you spoken to anyone who trained with General Choi in the 1950's? If so, what was their opinion of his skill level back then?
No, I haven't. Have you spoken with someone who trained under him then?
But even if I did talk to someone who directly trained under Gen. Choi in 1959 I wouldn't have
knowledge about anything because I'd be taking their word for something I could in no way see. That's belief. There's nothing wrong with believing things you don't know. People do it all the time. But if you then go around and present your belief as knowledge then you can run into trouble.
Same thing can be said about you twenty years ago and the people that you spoke to who saw General Choi in the 70's.
Sure. But the reason why I brought them up is not only because of that but also because their experience coincides with my own. Since that was the case they are witnesses worthy of belief
for me. I see no reason to doubt them.
But we are talking about pioneers here, so if you have a problem with their skill level when assessing General Choi or their evaluation of General Choi's skill, then your issue is with them, not me.
I don't have any problem with the pioneers. But then, strictly speaking, no one has heard anything from them in this thread. All we've heard is what you say they said. That's not hearing from them.
And I'm not trying to change your belief, what I am trying to do is give MT readers information so they can make their own decisions.
If you say so :lol:
I did say it was unimportant. But the point is that General Choi has spent alot of energy attempting to explain that his Taekwon-Do is different from Japanese karate. And yet he promoted a Shotokan practitioner to ITF 6th Dan. It seems that General Choi's words are different from his actions, which is yet another example of a lie that he has told. If you have an explanation about why General Choi would argue on one hand tk-d is different than karate and then on the other hand promote a shotokan practitioner to ITF 6th Dan, then we are all listening.
Oh, the reason is obvious, if what you say is true. He was hoping the man in question could help him spread Taekwon-Do.
Actually, no I am not a Mac Davis fan and have no idea what song you are talking about. But I guess I can thank you for your complement, even though I don't consider myself perfect. I'm still learning like everyone else.
:lol: if you say so, brother
Pax,
Chris