Ok.... I'm not a practitioner of Ninjutsu/Budo Taijutsu, but I'm sort of .....an enthusiast. (for now) But: I do try to exercise some logic from time to time.
Lets take each of your statements and consider them in turn:
It's not my teacher's fault there are lackings in Taijutsu; it's the cirruculum's fault.
I don't know you. I don't know your instructor...so I can't possibly judge this. BUT: Isn't it very likely that if you are experiencing 'holes' in the Budo Taijutsu curriculum that they could be due to having had little exposure to EVERYTHING that your instructor teaches? If you aren't very high ranking, it's most probable that you've not seen it all yet. It gets taught in a logical progression....not one huge panoramic view. IF you know the Bujinkan system well enough and deep enough to be able to make the judgement that there are things lacking....then obviously you know the whole system. ((VERY VERY impressive)) If you don't know the WHOLE system, then you can't possibly know IF it has 'holes' or not or is lacking a thing. Also: Couldn't it be just as likely that it's not Budo Taijutsu that has something lacking in it's curriculum but that maybe something is lacking from Your instructor's Budo Taijutsu knowledge/training? Not a put down, just an observation. Look at the 9 ryu-ha. Look at the scope of their study. Seems to me it'd be a strange claim that you know
enough of it to make this assesment of the whole curriculum and it's faults.
No martial art can be complete, because there will always be something that some other martial art has.
Strange statement. Just because another art has "something" in it's curriculum that Budo Taijutsu does not....that makes Budo Taijutsu incomplete???? I don't understand how you reach THAT conclusion.
Tae Kwan Do has dramatic, dynamic arial kicks in which the person twists and turns in the air...delivering multiple kicks. ((I won't go into the logic of even doing such a feat in combat....that's another thread))...Budo Taijutsu doesn't do such things. Is THAT a hole in B-Tj ?? I wouldn't think so. Just because another art has "something" that B-Tj does not....doesn't mean that there's a "hole" in the curriculum.
Now I'm going to make a point by simply putting two of your own lines back to back....draw your own conclusions:
...there are lackings in Taijutsu
No martial art can be complete
Compared to this:
I'm not going to sit back and pretend it's perfect in every way (while it is a very completem artial art).
Is it complete? Or can NO art be complete??????
I guess I just don't see what your point is.
How about you help us see. Since you know enough of the curriculum to claim that it is "lacking" (even though it is "Very complete")...please, tell us... WHAT specifically is it lacking????
Thanks
Your Brother (Who's made mistakes in wording before too, and will again...)
John