Tgace said:
Tony Blauer says...
"Survival training is not complicated. The 'truth' is rather simple, but will require a paradigm shift, which may be difficult for a community that notoriously waits for a tragedy to change SOP's and tactics. Real fighting - STREET SURVIVAL - has little to do with a technique, martial arts or finesse. Street survival training is about ATTITUDE, PREPARATION and INTEGRITY. Learn to discern fact from fantasy. Commit to the truth and pursue excellence."
Under that blanket of thought, it puts the onus on the individual to seek out complete training instead of seeking a single art that is complete.
Within a self defense context, completeness of training would have to mean that you are at least familiarized with the possible threats that would be faced, and train in applications/drills/tactics/responses that would neutralize the threat and allow for escape. This doesn't have to mean that it is a 'tab A into slot B' art. It could be a bag of fundamental movements that push basic conceptual and tactical goals that the student learns to apply in a variety of situations. Either concept or technical approach had better cover all the ranges and skills necessary at every range to be complete:
Situational awareness/assessment (OODA loops, color codes),
firearms defenses, both with and against said weapon(cover/concealment/disarm/disfunction),
non ballistic long weapons (sticks,clubs, tire irons, bats...),
kicks,
non ballistic short weapons (saps, knives, screwdrivers...), punches/palmstrikes, close range (elbows, knees, standing grappling),
ground fighting (mount, guard, disengage, bites, gouges chokes...).
To be 'complete', students would have to have some firearms recognition and operation training, so they know what and where to grab, rates and ranges of fire.... where the safety is so they can either use (personal choice) or more effectively defend against firearms. Also some non ballistic weapon (long/short) training to effectively defend against as well as employing said weapon in these situations. And, of course the empty hand techniques and applications that most people associate with martial training.
I think there are 'complete' tactical systems or schools of strategy, but I don't think there are any complete arts. IMO, arts are a subset of systems that focus on specific applications of tools within the tactical/strategic theory of the system. Example: TKD would be based on the same operational doctrine/tactical theory that would outline individual firearms employment, team operations, unit doctrines...all the way up to whole armies for the Korean military. The operational/tactical theory would be the overall framework. The faster that a person in this kind of 'system' understand which tactical theories and concepts are being emphasised and repeated at every level/scale, the better he will be able to flow and respond appropriately.