Steve
Mostly Harmless
Vin Diesel is white?????Sometime I don't know who is more scary, a long hair China man,
or a bold head white guy.
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Vin Diesel is white?????Sometime I don't know who is more scary, a long hair China man,
or a bold head white guy.
![]()
This presumes that you are competent to control the situation. This post seems to illustrate the crux of the discussion perfectly. I may desire to control the spacing and the distancing. Whether I am competent to do that will depend on how I train.My first NGA instructor's main tenet was, "If they want to box, I'll grapple. If they want to grapple, I'll box." It's essentially the same thing your'e saying here: don't play to their strengths if you're not stronger there.
So, by your logic, all martial arts training is good? Come on, man.There is a huge difference between lack of knowledge and 'faith based'. I have never heard that term in regards to MA's from anyone or anywhere else. Something it appears you use to support your argument. If there was consistent validity it may hold water. The hard fact is Everything you hang your hat on originated from TMA or a derivative. Yes, there is crap in all styles/systems, including MMA but there is no escaping this fact. So condemning that which creates you is beyond ludicrous. That you only involve the 'evidence' you choose to use supports the fact that your argument does not hold water much of the time. Some of the time? Yes. All of the time? A foolish assertion and assumption that you have wholly bought into, I assume you are heavily influenced by your piers and environment. Not uncommon but still wrong.
My first NGA instructor was a former Golden Gloves boxer. My second and third instructors were both trained by him. I've had training partners who were experienced competitors in other combat sports. I've taken the time to spar with a few folks who were also experienced in combat sports. This is all stuff you should already know, since I've told it to you before.
I never bothered to compete, because it never interested me. I wish I had, looking back, because I'd have profited by the experience. But I'm not an inept striker, as you seem to have assumed (based on whatever you've imagined).
But because I teach with a self-defense orientation, using a base art that has the word Aikido in it, you assume I'm something without evidence. Because bias.
Firstly, I’m wondering where you get “I’m upset” from “hilarious”. Or are you just assigning me the emotion you want me to have, just as you’ve been assigning me the training you want me to have?
To the rest...nope, no video. It has never seemed important to me to have any. I’ve certainly missed some opportunities to analyze.
But I’ve sparred. Mostly light, mostly technical. Occasionally at moderate intensity or higher. Rarely at full contact levels. Probably about the same levels most common everywhere else. Mostly for a chance to see what works and where I’m vulnerable. And more striking than grappling. When it’s grappling, more groundwork than standing.
Why?
So you assume others do that, too?
The above statement makes me wonder if you read my post at all. Not much wiggle room in this comment.Yes, there is crap in all styles/systems, including MMA but there is no escaping this fact.
I cannot count the degreed engineers I have worked with that were borderline/fully incompetent. There are countless examples of people in all trades/positions who have had excellent teacher/trainers who just could not do a specific job well if at all.If you are learning from someone who does something... a plumber, a carpenter, a boxer, a pilot, a surgeon, and then you do that thing, you will eventually become competent, and may even become an expert.
This paragraph straight up contradicts your above comments. EVERYONE has learned from someone who has learned from someone else, be it academic or hands on. It is just the way it works. No red flags there. We are not always the First person to do something. That is a silly assertion.When someone says they learned from someone who learned from someone who was special forces, etc, that is a HUGE red flag. That's like learning to fly a plane from someone who's never actually flown a plane. Or learning surgery from someone who's never performed a surgery. Or learning to plumb a house from someone who's never actually plumbed a house.
No, very, very few planes can fly all by themselves. It is a mutual relationship between the plane and the pilot(s).Can we all agree that most planes can fly?
I feel the first sentence is the root of why most of us train in the first place; so that we CAN use a technique/skill.So, when you talk about origins, I personally think the question of whether a technique CAN work is far less important than whether I (or YOU) can use that technique. Just like it's irrelevant to talk about whether a toilet can be installed correctly vs whether YOU can install a toilet correctly. And the more complex the tasks, the higher the cost of failure, and the more urgent the tasks are, the more critical this becomes. Replacing a toilet is relatively easy.
I don't follow at all. Are you familiar with blitz campaigning in advertising? This is what MMA does. They overload every conduit with their material to the point that it completely unbalances the equation. No matter what is seen/heard in regards to MMA it is good. No matter what is seen/heard about TMA it is bad.So if the term faith based was a more popular term you would accept it?
Because of faith?
And nobody else produces evidence. You argued against having to produce any at all. Instead hoping that the free market. (Popular opinion) would support valid claims over invalid ones. A hope that is based again on faith.
I am having conversation with people who refuse to think rationally about this subject.
Maybe you are more familiar with the term bullcrap.
i started to reply, but I really don’t think it’s worth my time. I invite you to read my post for comprehension and then respond again if you like, because you entirely missed the point. I mean, completely. If you were close, I’d take a run at responding.I cannot count the degreed engineers I have worked with that were borderline/fully incompetent. There are countless examples of people in all trades/positions who have had excellent teacher/trainers who just could not do a specific job well if at all.
The trainer is maybe 1/2 of this equation.
This paragraph straight up contradicts your above comments. EVERYONE has learned from someone who has learned from someone else, be it academic or hands on. It is just the way it works. No red flags there. We are not always the First person to do something. That is a silly assertion.
No, very, very few planes can fly all by themselves. It is a mutual relationship between the plane and the pilot(s).
I specifically said the root techniques/skills of MMA originated from TMA or a derivative like wrestling or boxing. Do not muddy the water by identifying TMA as a specific tool/skill. It in and of itself never has been. There is nothing wildly new in MMA.
I feel the first sentence is the root of why most of us train in the first place; so that we CAN use a technique/skill.
Talking about how to install a toilet is the basis of how many people learn how to install a toilet correctly. There are far fewer people who can just decide to install a toilet. Fewer still who are naturally competent at a MA.
Naturally the more complex anything is the greater likelihood of failure. Applied skill through academic learning and hands on learning are paramount for mission critical tasks. Again, very few people just 'know' how to do this stuff.
I have no clue what you mean about the ease of replacing a toilet in context. Are they easy? Under normal conditions, sure. If the toilet has been leaking for a long time and the floor is rotted out, not so much.
You asked. I answered. Yeah, I’ve “sparred” (common term you seem to think is used to hide something) folks who competed. Not “a guy”, but a few. Off the top of my head, this would include folks who competed in TKD (both major rule sets, I think, but not sure), boxing, wrestling, Judo, and BJJ...though as I think that last one was an MMA guy, but we were just doing ground stuff at the time, and I’m pretty sure his base was BJJ. There are probably others I’m forgetting (both styles and people). I’ve also had some fun workouts with a prison guard.So you were trained by a guy who was trained by a guy who won? A golden gloves? Just competed in a golden gloves?
And you "sparred" a guy who was "experienced" in "combat sports"?
And this is some sort of definitive answer.?
And this golden gloves?
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The place where your argument falls flat is the use of the word “refusal”, where you clearly paint it as a purposeful attempt to hide information. Until your bias leads to that, you make a reasonable argument about the utility of using competition to validate and sharpen a system. If you could stay on message, you’d make more impact.There are red flags. Weasel words, refusal to show evidence, operating on hypotheticals rather than first hand knowledge and creating these pseudo logical nightmares to justify a position.
There is a good video somewhere this kung fu guy came up with this whole thing where MMA was biased towards kung fu because t huge floor was too soft or something. (I will see if I can find it)
That sort of thing.
Otherwise we the red flag guides are pretty accurate and can be applied over the internet.
Had it made any sense I may have gotten it. You were all over the place.i started to reply, but I really don’t think it’s worth my time. I invite you to read my post for comprehension and then respond again if you like, because you entirely missed the point. I mean, completely. If you were close, I’d take a run at responding.
i don’t know, man. I mean, sure, I didn’t write a novel or run it by my editor. But you got everything wrong. If I have some time with a keyboard tomorrow. I might take another run at it for you.Had it made any sense I may have gotten it. You were all over the place.
I look forward to it.i don’t know, man. I mean, sure, I didn’t write a novel or run it by my editor. But you got everything wrong. If I have some time with a keyboard tomorrow. I might take another run at it for you.
I have noticed, however, that when you miss the point, it’s always the other guy. I’m noticing a pattern.
Vehemently defending a position is all fine and good, if you're taking the time to understand folks. Even here, you didn't get it, or maybe didn't want to get what I was saying. The pattern isn't your defense of your opinions. It's that you never seem to accept any accountability when you fail to understand something. The other person just didn't say it right, every time.I look forward to it.
You are correct that I vehemently defend my position most of the time. I do not hide this at all. Again, no pattern to find since it was never hidden.
I don't follow at all. Are you familiar with blitz campaigning in advertising? This is what MMA does. They overload every conduit with their material to the point that it completely unbalances the equation. No matter what is seen/heard in regards to MMA it is good. No matter what is seen/heard about TMA it is bad.
Faith has zero to do with any of it. I get your 'not seen or heard' assertion but it is just a load of bull crap to use your wording.
The place where your argument falls flat is the use of the word “refusal”, where Until your bias leads to that, you make a reasonable argument about the utility of using competition to validate and sharpen a system. If you could stay on message, you’d make more impact.
I think you mean "highly ranked" "bjj black belt".So just a thing that popped up on my feed. This is a highly ranked bjj black belt doing blindfold drills.
This is why I really like to see the video when people make claims.
He does "spar" by the way