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Yeah, except it didn't go down like it did in the video. They pulled the man off of the woman and held him down to the ground, in a way that anyone could have done, unlike the knife defense techniques in the video. Nobody's bagging on TKD. I'm just saying TKD wasn't used.
I am all for bagging out TKD. But it is funnier when you make sure you are right.
I also have no idea why everyone else danced around that for so long. I mean it was pretty easy to find
If I were to claim that the majority of assaults, sexual or otherwise, that were stopped by others were stopped by people who are untrained, would you bet money against me?Stopping the attack without anyone being inured is commendable and takes a vast amount of training to accomplish this.....
Let's grant you that, for the sake of argument.Training someone in Martial Arts is not a matter of teaching techniques that fit into particular box, like the proper word fitting in a crossword puzzle.
You teach them to think, to use their body in different ways that can be adapted to different things. All it takes is hard work and time.
Let's grant you that, for the sake of argument.
If the TKD training is what made them either willing or able to act, then does that mean that without the training they would have turned a blind eye to what was going on? Or that if they tried, they would have been unsuccessful?
Neck ride for ten minutes?Yeah, except it didn't go down like it did in the video. They pulled the man off of the woman and held him down to the ground, in a way that anyone could have done, unlike the knife defense techniques in the video. Nobody's bagging on TKD. I'm just saying TKD wasn't used.
Training someone in Martial Arts is not a matter of teaching techniques that fit into particular box, like the proper word fitting in a crossword puzzle.
You teach them to think, to use their body in different ways that can be adapted to different things. All it takes is hard work and time.
Yeah. People forget what is and isn't part of a system is literally made up.
Yes, but before "there used to be" there was more grappling. More grappling > less grappling > more grappling. The old ways are being rediscovered, mostly thru kata and historical references. A number of TMA styles/schools, however, never lost this application over the decades. Nice to see this original concept of karate being revived.there’s more grappling in most styles than there used to be
Yeah. Because there wasn't 3,000 years of wrestling.Yes, but before "there used to be" there was more grappling. More grappling > less grappling > more grappling. The old ways are being rediscovered, mostly thru kata and historical references. A number of TMA styles/schools, however, never lost this application over the decades. Nice to see this original concept of karate being revived.
No,If I were to claim that the majority of assaults, sexual or otherwise, that were stopped by others were stopped by people who are untrained, would you bet money against me?
An’s father, Hong, yanked the attacker away by his shirt and pinned him to the ground. ... An and his brother helped subdue the attacker.they managed to stop the assault and hold him,
An’s father, Hong, yanked the attacker away by his shirt and pinned him to the ground. ... An and his brother helped subdue the attacker.
It takes 3 trained MA persons to control 1 untrained person. Something must be wrong in this picture.
In school, you train "1 against many" and not the other way around.
Of course, what they did was a noble thing. But in MA, many against 1 is considered as "un
Perhaps it was a martial arts school that wasn't trained very well but regardless of how many it took they got the job done and everyone was safe.... win-win.An’s father, Hong, yanked the attacker away by his shirt and pinned him to the ground. ... An and his brother helped subdue the attacker.
It takes 3 trained MA persons to control 1 untrained person. Something must be wrong in this picture.
In school, you train "1 against many" and not the other way around.
Of course, what they did was a noble thing. But in MA, many against 1 is considered as "unfair fight".
Any one of them could have subdued. If I read the article correctly, the owner of the school kept him pinned for 10 minutes after that, demonstrating control. But if you have the advantage in numbers, even if you could succeed 1 on 1, what purpose is there to give up your advantage?An’s father, Hong, yanked the attacker away by his shirt and pinned him to the ground. ... An and his brother helped subdue the attacker.
It takes 3 trained MA persons to control 1 untrained person. Something must be wrong in this picture.
In school, you train "1 against many" and not the other way around.
Of course, what they did was a noble thing. But in MA, many against 1 is considered as "unfair fight".
IMO, the attacker forfeited any right or expectation to a fair fight when he committed unjustified violence against an innocent female. That was unfair. He just reaped what he sowed.But in MA, many against 1 is considered as "unfair fight".
A female MMA fighter captured a man [1 on 1] who robbed a store. (MMA can be used for "self-protection.")An’s father, Hong, yanked the attacker away by his shirt and pinned him to the ground. ... An and his brother helped subdue the attacker.
It takes 3 trained MA persons to control 1 untrained person. Something must be wrong in this picture.
In school, you train "1 against many" and not the other way around.
Of course, what they did was a noble thing. But in MA, many against 1 is considered as "unfair fight".
No doubt, she used her training there.A female MMA fighter captured a man [1 on 1] who robbed a store. (MMA can be used for "self-protection.")