Jocko Willink's Opinion On Detroit Urban Survival Training

2022 ж. 19 Шіл.
461 638 Рет қаралды

Watch the full episode here - • Jocko Willink - Creati...
Jocko Willink gives his thoughts on Detroit Urban Survival Training. What does Jocko Willink think of Dale Brown? Does Jocko Willink think that fake martial arts are still at play? How dangerous is street fight advice?
#jockowiliink #detroiturbansurvivaltraining #selfdefence
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  • Watch the full episode now - kzhead.info/sun/n6eiipZ_aXmJjGw/bejne.html

    @ChrisWillx@ChrisWillx Жыл бұрын
    • Thursday is tomorrow.

      @manubishe@manubishe Жыл бұрын
    • YOU MOST READ THIS, THE BEST SURVIVAL TRAINING IS THIS. Most of these attackers, have truma/ posttraumatic stress disorder (ptsd) and bad childhoods. The best way is to show them love and respect tell them that you cares about them, give them promise and hope that they will look forward to, that will enable them not to killed you because you have give the hope/assurance. "Because they value what you have or what you can give them, not you" If it's female attacking you tell her that you love her so much give her romantic vibes promise or maybe if you don't have any promises even lies, can work. Remember be loyal to your promises/lies. If it's male show him respect, give him inspirational/Motivational vibes. Or make deal with him, deal in the sense that it promises, say ok if you don't kille me I will give you this or that. By doing that you show Sense of Phycology/emotional intelligent. Always remember to be Persuasive/Manipulative. YOU SHOULD ALWAYS MANIPULATE THE MIND OF THE ATTACKERS=AND USING THE TECHNICE. IF YOU FAILE TO USE BOTH OF THAT YOU'RE DEAD. ROBERRY'S LIKE WHEN SOMEONE SHOWS THEM LOVE, RESPECT, PERSUASIVE, AND MANIPULATIVE. REMEMBER DON'T RETALIATE IF THE ATTACK IS TOO INTENSE USING ANY TECHNICS YOU ARE HAVING. NOT STUPID ONE BUT BRILLIANT ONE, SIMPLE MISTAKE WILL MAKE YOU LOSE YOUR LIFE. IMPORTANT: IF IT'S TO ASSASSINATE YOU. REMEMBER THE STORY OF, DAVID AND KING SAUL. In (1Samuel-26:1-25) BE SURE TO READ THAT EXCELLENT STORY PLEASE 🙏 CAUTION: I'M NOT AN EXPERT. ALL WHAT MENTIONED ABOVE IS BASED ON REAL LIFE SITUATIONS. I HOPE IT WILL BE HELPFUL. MAY THE LOVE OF GOD BE WITH YOU IN ANY PROBLEMS.

      @Joel796.@Joel796. Жыл бұрын
    • @@Joel796. This is just a bunch of mushy Satanic bullshit. It's false love. You said, "CAUTION: I'M NOT AN EXPERT. ALL WHAT MENTIONED ABOVE IS BASED ON REAL LIFE SITUATIONS. "" No kidding, you're not an expert on anything, much less logic, because you just contradicted yourself. An expert has real life experience, which you claim to have, but never explain what that is. So why should anyone listen to you and read your wall of text? You don't know Jesus Christ, either. Jesus Christ moved believers to wage war, but it was done by His wisdom and leading. You're just spamming whatever comes to mind. You're not really coherent, but the gist of what I'm seeing is just "Oh, words will stop an aggressor!" Yeah, no. If someone is intent on killing you, they're usually past the point of listening. So your drivel is just emotional nonsense.

      @nicholaspreston9586@nicholaspreston9586 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Joel796. "1Samuel-26:1-25" David had the opportunity to spare, so he did. He had every right to defend himself from Saul, who was after him and had lost the Lord's annointing. I don't think the Lord would have a problem with it had David defended himself and defeated Saul. However, God moved David to have mercy for His purposes. As for David, he trusted the Lord with his life, even under threat (and yes, David did fight and kill. You ignore that, conveniently). This DOES NOT remove the need for people to defend themselves - believer or unbeliever - to stop evil. We have plenty of vermin running around destroying and killing. Your spiel here reeks of Ashtoreth worship.

      @nicholaspreston9586@nicholaspreston9586 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Joel796. "Most of these attackers, have truma/ posttraumatic stress disorder (ptsd) and bad childhoods." So what? They're still doing evil. Are we just going to let them throw their fits, tantrums, rapes, thefts, murders and inury? According to you, YEP! Let dogs piss, shit, rip, tear, bite and growl!

      @nicholaspreston9586@nicholaspreston9586 Жыл бұрын
  • As a street cop, the amount of training I have is laughable. I do my best to do what I can on my own but with the amount of hours I work and my family responsibilities make that extremely limited. Departments absolutely need to do better

    @jwilliams3170@jwilliams3170 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for your service.

      @tylernestor2431@tylernestor2431 Жыл бұрын
    • Agreed brother, but try to lend free training to dept and they act like you are “less than” and that they are all super bad ass and are above most “civilian” offered course. Sorry sorry dude hate to say it, but time and time again modern cops out themselves as ego-freaks

      @samhellion@samhellion Жыл бұрын
    • Get a different job then

      @amacca2085@amacca2085 Жыл бұрын
    • @@tylernestor2431 😂😂😂 he gets paid you know not doing it out the good of his heart 😂 you Americans 😂🤡

      @amacca2085@amacca2085 Жыл бұрын
    • Sounds like you need to do better

      @Backwoodsmachinist@Backwoodsmachinist Жыл бұрын
  • Lol Chris deserves credit for keeping the conversation going. I like jocko, but he's a man of few words

    @bri_____@bri_____ Жыл бұрын
    • He talked a lot here

      @mad-official@mad-official Жыл бұрын
    • And he has a podcast

      @mad-official@mad-official Жыл бұрын
    • I've only seen clips, as I'm not that interested in Jocko, but the conversation did seem a little stilted, as though Jocko wasn't enjoying it, which is the opposite to most of Chris' interviews.....

      @casperme6552@casperme6552 Жыл бұрын
    • @@casperme6552 Most people that interview him in podcasts ask bad questions because they make assumptions about what he'll say, being a SEAL. If you listen to his podcast you may be able to get some better questions. If he answers a question with few words he's essentially saying it's a dumb question. Most interviewers just expect him to be the person they imagine he is rather than finding that out through the interview.

      @phil5037@phil5037 Жыл бұрын
    • @@casperme6552 agree as Jocko can speak a lot but the questions seemed more statements rather than really thought out points

      @andrewstorm8240@andrewstorm8240 Жыл бұрын
  • What Jocko said about training, is so true, in every dynamic profession. I spent my career in aviation as a training pilot, and less than 1% of time is dedicated to dynamic situations; the exception being, military. Military, like firefighters, spend 80% of their time training, for that other 20% of actual applicable action. The results are obvious ... & lifesaving.

    @patrickphelan3676@patrickphelan3676 Жыл бұрын
    • I’m a firefighter and we don’t spend 80% of our time training.

      @kless001@kless001 Жыл бұрын
    • I’m military and a helicopter pilot in training and your statement is so on point.

      @j3ffcoop@j3ffcoop Жыл бұрын
    • @@kless001 what do you do then?

      @chulito1981357@chulito1981357 Жыл бұрын
    • @@chulito1981357 mess about on our phones or watch movies

      @kless001@kless001 Жыл бұрын
    • @@kless001 sad. We have so much wasted tax payer programs all over the place.

      @chulito1981357@chulito1981357 Жыл бұрын
  • Awesome, I love Mr Willink's outlook he doesn't bad-mouth people he focuses on the positive and what/how things could be improved, cheers for this.

    @danielmarshall4587@danielmarshall4587 Жыл бұрын
    • Agreed 💯💯

      @VinnyAlvarez-dx1nm@VinnyAlvarez-dx1nm2 ай бұрын
  • I have been a federal law enforcement officer for 22 years and we definitely train way less than 1% of the time.

    @RealitySurvival@RealitySurvival Жыл бұрын
    • Pig

      @bear5945@bear5945 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bear5945 Thug

      @RealitySurvival@RealitySurvival Жыл бұрын
    • they should pay you less

      @shoyupacket5572@shoyupacket5572 Жыл бұрын
    • @@shoyupacket5572 He's out there helping enforce the law and protect communities, he deserves the pay for putting his life on the line.

      @thesynergy2@thesynergy2 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thesynergy2 pffft, that's a big maybe.

      @shoyupacket5572@shoyupacket5572 Жыл бұрын
  • “If you wanna learn how to fight, you have to learn how to fight.” Exactly. Thank you, Jocko! Those Detroit videos are entertaining and quite the hustle, but 99% of what that dude tells you will get you killed lol

    @Los150@Los150 Жыл бұрын
    • You play basketball or football. Back in my younger yrs those sports taught competitiveness and toughness and almost everyone who played could fight

      @ivufit5846@ivufit5846 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ivufit5846 lol

      @Dan-di9jd@Dan-di9jd9 ай бұрын
    • @@ivufit5846bro what, basketball players and football players have no chance against combat sport athletes

      @glock_9ine956@glock_9ine9569 ай бұрын
  • You are very correct regarding law enforcement training. In my old department many officers fired they handguns once a year at the annual training and qualification. And we did semi-annual PPCT reviews for 1 hour. I was part of a small group of “weirdos” who trained with our sidearms regularly and I took Muay Thai classes.

    @XLC-zd8dn@XLC-zd8dn Жыл бұрын
  • One aspect of "learning to fight" that is generally ignored is learning how to take a hit so you don't get a major shock when it happens in real life. I recall attending some martial arts classes where they were very uncomfortable when I told them to hit me progressively harder at my invitation. I wanted to get acclimated to the feeling of hard contact, but this part of the equation seems to get ignored.

    @entropiated9020@entropiated9020 Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly. Sparring is as important as learning the actual fundamentals. But, even the most dangerous man in the world in unarmed combat can get snuck, or can get a knife to the kidney or can get shot. Real violence Is usually random, calculated by the aggressor, and the victim is always at a disadvantage when it comes to the initiative. No Amount of training can beat situational awareness. Just pay attention to your surroundings, to the subtle cues that things are not quite right, and stay out of places you know you probably shouldn’t be. Then you’ll avoid 99 percent of most violent encounters.

      @haveaday1812@haveaday1812 Жыл бұрын
    • I 10000% agree with you.

      @theauntofdragons@theauntofdragons Жыл бұрын
    • Welcome to the Infantilised Safety obsessed West. Insurance and Risk Assessments would never allow such a thing!

      @Carroty_Peg@Carroty_Peg Жыл бұрын
    • @@Carroty_Peg To be fair, some people just don't want to get punched in the face every week. Whether that is good for their 'Martial arts training' is another thing though 👍

      @casperme6552@casperme6552 Жыл бұрын
    • Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth!

      @ssgdean1969@ssgdean1969 Жыл бұрын
  • Oh yes yes yes!! I first heard about him from James Corbett when he mentioned the many, many successes of non-State solutions. John Stossel's excellent coverage of the various topics are also fascinating. Thanks Chris!

    @Carroty_Peg@Carroty_Peg Жыл бұрын
  • I really dig your stuff, please keep it up mate!

    @sadkjuliwefuhwviergbvo@sadkjuliwefuhwviergbvo Жыл бұрын
  • Jocko is always on point man...

    @edwinviterelli5443@edwinviterelli54438 ай бұрын
  • I’ve been working in law enforcement for several years now and the “train 20% of the work week” idea is great in theory but unfortunately it’s not feasible for the vast majority of departments out there. Most departments are understaffed and mandatory overtime is often needed just to get the minimum amount of officers on the streets everyday. Most departments are not going to be able to pull on duty officers away from their actual work for 20% of their week and still properly function.

    @nickt3169@nickt3169 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree with you. This might be a good goal to reach one day but it's not really workable in the current condition of most departments. That being said, the old phrase "Don't let perfect be the enemy of good." (or something like that) applies I think to the subject of Police training. Can't train 20% of the time? Ok, but could you send 10 Officers a YEAR to say.....the "Sheepdog Response" course they talked about? Can you add ONE more DAY of DT or Shooting to each Quarters training this year? A half day? Can a Department fix up or buy new equipment for their range or DT room? I think even measurably "small" changes in a Departments DT/Shooting/First Aid/Fitness program(s) will have HUGE results in the long term. Small changes might just add up to BIG results in safety and training proficiency. My opinion.

      @davidcarik1761@davidcarik1761 Жыл бұрын
    • This is not much of an excuse for me, and I'll tell you why. People shouldn't be employed in jobs they aren't suited for or don't already have the qualifications for. Period. If someone doesn't know how to fight or grapple or wrestle or shoot straight...if those aren't the sort of interests that someone already has and has already pursued to some degree...they should have NEVER been a police officer in the first place. Here's an example from another profession so as to compare: You can't become a computer programmer without already knowing how to program computers, and then spend all day at work looking at facebook or some other completely unrelated task, and later complain that you never had time to learn how to program because you spent so much time at work. That's retarded.

      @bentaylor8038@bentaylor8038 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bentaylor8038 Just left LE this year after seven years. Hiring standards are completely compromised by political correctness. There is zero incentive to perform and practically no accountability to maintain standards. Capable people are not going to be a LEO in this political climate for such little pay.

      @jfkst1@jfkst1 Жыл бұрын
    • Black people

      @6036000@6036000 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bentaylor8038 I don't know what you have against women in tech positions....................

      @6036000@6036000 Жыл бұрын
  • In my experience as a son and brother of law enforcement when they got into k9 the dedicate one day a week to training plus the schools for explosives and other specialties but that's when you're in an exclusive branch of law enforcement with old veterans who realize training is key so a full day and night every week keeps the Alexandria va police k9 one of the best.

    @Devineservent17@Devineservent17 Жыл бұрын
  • Self defense is NOT about fighting. It's about thwarting an attack and escaping. Also, self defense must also be coincide with additional training, such as what jocko stated. Most good self defense training teaches you NOT to fight because you know nothing of your opponents skills, desires, weapons or willingness to harm you.

    @tvaldez6655@tvaldez6655 Жыл бұрын
    • Um, trying to escape? Maybe if you're in a commie state like New York or California. We have stand your ground in the free states. Try to harm me, my family, or anyone around me? We're going toe to toe and one of us isn't leaving alive, and it's most likely the attacker, because I am armed with the greatest equalizer there is, firearms and combat experience.

      @Lovell93@Lovell93 Жыл бұрын
  • People with training in the martial arts rarely get into street fights. I've been on the streets and I've seen quite a bit of violence. Nothing can really prepare you for a real fight with the human animal. There's very little nobility in that kind of interaction, people resort to all kinds of things. More often than not, the winner is the one with the most experience.

    @sarahahmad9891@sarahahmad9891 Жыл бұрын
    • “I’ve been on the streets” - Sarah Ahmad

      @JA-oo9qp@JA-oo9qp Жыл бұрын
    • @@JA-oo9qp Being homeless isn't a joke.

      @sarahahmad9891@sarahahmad9891 Жыл бұрын
    • People should stop saying "street fights" instead call it what it actually is "street violence". Violence and fighting are two totally different things... Today's street violence mostly means is that other person has no qualms about killing u...I repeat a violent robber has no plans to "defeat" u , actually he is ready to kill u for no reason. A violent criminal will use anything as lethal weapon...Guns,machetes,knives,cars,wires,,rock,stones ,any heavy physical object etc. And here is the truth... Many people are good martial artists but not violent people....And the harsh reality is that more violent you are then more is the chance of you coming out on top in the streets.

      @vivek27789@vivek27789 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sarahahmad9891 I can’t even make a crude joke without being made to feel bad! My condolences

      @JA-oo9qp@JA-oo9qp Жыл бұрын
    • Well you're right about one thing for sure... More often than not the one with the most experience is the winner hope your situation gets better

      @diogenes42069@diogenes42069 Жыл бұрын
  • I think its great he answered bluntly and didn't try to flower his response up to show that it's not a complicated issue

    @fredletel7276@fredletel7276 Жыл бұрын
  • So much respect for Jocko

    @1003chrislee@1003chrislee Жыл бұрын
  • Its understanding that it will hurt, a lot, and you will have to cause pain. You don't get to just push someone away and say no. Chances are you will need to break something.

    @SaltyRoast@SaltyRoast Жыл бұрын
  • Good interview

    @jeffreykellett8660@jeffreykellett8660 Жыл бұрын
  • A real street fight is no holds barred , a free for all in every sense of the term.You have to be willing to use whatever means necessary to survive .

    @bradwardenbradwarden1854@bradwardenbradwarden1854 Жыл бұрын
    • theres limits though ,yes the point is to win the fight because your life depends on it in some cases but if its to the death mortal Combat style ,when the fights over you dont go more , if your opponent or you is down either you defuse desclate and dissapear or Drop ,Dunk Dent ,Drown 😂 example your getting your ass handed to you and think your going to die and pull out your knife and stab him ending the fight , you dont need to stab him 20 more times because heat of the moment 😂, imo When its not to the death both parties should realize when ones had enough ,theres no honor on kicking a dude thats paralyzed and cant even get up , either if your losing fucking run for it if you can , get help , or fight with everything you got and lick your wounds later , who cares about wining the fight , its all about keeping your life and not the bragging rights of winning

      @m4a1_delta66@m4a1_delta66Ай бұрын
  • Based on my streetfights I dont think the average person realizes how quickly they are exhausted/spent

    @callmebigpapa@callmebigpapa4 ай бұрын
  • My father always was a proponent for martial arts (I personally am a 3rd degree black belt in Wado Ryu out of the Westchester Academy on 87th street in Los Angeles) but he used to say, in one variation or another that “violence is a language like English or Spanish. If you try speaking English to a person who only understands Spanish, then your message will not be conveyed and won’t be communicated. Some people speak the language of violence and if you don’t know how to speak that language yourself you’ll be at their beck and call when it’s time to speak it” I’m happy to say that I’m well versed in the language of violence.

    @nameredacted1176@nameredacted1176 Жыл бұрын
  • Thats true as far as training as a cop. I'm a current LEO after the academy it's up to you we have standard training several times a year for recerts ie. range, defensive tactics etc. you have to take it on yourself to continue your training

    @unclefreedom213@unclefreedom213 Жыл бұрын
  • Chirs I actually have a gear question for you....what kind mics are you using.. and what is your editing software? The mics have GREAT BASE... and sound great.. just curious. Thank you for your response. Perhaps do a "what's my gear" segment. thanks.

    @mikesnufferreports254@mikesnufferreports254 Жыл бұрын
  • Video quality is fire !t's better than real life. wow

    @lohitsharma8263@lohitsharma8263 Жыл бұрын
  • I've had a few street fights in my life time, and I remember my brother asking me once; when you get in a fight what's the first thing that goes through your mind? I told him; you're going to get hit and you're most likely going to get hurt, and you simply have to accept that concept.

    @t.s.9656@t.s.9656 Жыл бұрын
    • Another word of advice is people always sucker punch. Don't look away or anything like that cause you'll get hit. Damn near every fight that i have been in or seen started with a sucker punch

      @frenchonion4595@frenchonion4595 Жыл бұрын
  • love the production quality what cameras is your team using?

    @media4841@media4841 Жыл бұрын
  • "Everyone has a plan until you get punched in the face."

    @George-vf7ss@George-vf7ss Жыл бұрын
    • Love this quote by Jocko

      @Afed390@Afed390 Жыл бұрын
  • When I saw DUST on Master Ken, it was everything I needed to know. An epic classic troll from hell. He does have his moves polished, I'll give him that.

    @aulusflavius9635@aulusflavius96357 ай бұрын
  • Thats why boxing is #1, the focus on all out sparring is unmatched

    @sekokhan5307@sekokhan5307 Жыл бұрын
  • Not only do law enforcement officers not train 20% of the time, as in this day of dangerously understaffed departments, the type of training officers would need would never be approved by the state training and standards. Furthermore, the type of tactics that officers need to use to win over a violent subject have been banned by their departments and in many cases, criminalized by the state, and now even the federal government. That is all deliberate and has been since 2009 in order to demoralize good cops to get out altogether.

    @Luv2tickt@Luv2tickt Жыл бұрын
    • Fortunately I know a department that’s implementing BJJ but yes not common

      @djw5415@djw5415 Жыл бұрын
    • Duck the police and their training

      @mrcla55yguy20@mrcla55yguy20 Жыл бұрын
  • I’ve taken a lot of martial arts over the years to include being a black belt in Karate and Taekwondo and can attest the formal type martial arts just don’t hold up in an actual “street fight” or more importantly IRL; as a LEO I’ve gotten in fights, arguable for my life, and wish I knew then what I know now. I wish I had a higher focus in graveling as every seeming fight that hasn’t been one sided has ended up on the ground. I’ve taken a lot of defensive tactics and they for the most part focus on the planned out moves, which barring a few times have never worked well for me. Another big thing that I never got was the need for stamina as form fighting of martial arts is all time based and limited and a real fight is energy draining, quite quickly, and isn’t limited to time.

    @libertarian1637@libertarian1637 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video!

    @danawhiteisagenius8654@danawhiteisagenius8654 Жыл бұрын
  • I feel like people should take a class in Detroit Urban Survival Training. It's pretty fun, to be honest. Plus he tells you at the beginning not to do what he's showing you and most people are just having fun. Way better than the more serious stuff. I'm betting you'd know about the same level of information if you took a Jocko Willink class and comparatively took a Detroit Urban Survival Training class which amounts to nothing practical. Both classes thrive on the idea that you probably won't get into any of the situations mentioned and both classes make you sign a waiver. Also, those that do get into such situations probably won't be taking a Jocko or a Detroit class and consider it a department approved training. It's sort of like a NFL star QB taking off to a high school football camp and coming back to play a game.

    @Dan-di9jd@Dan-di9jd9 ай бұрын
  • i think the reason why stuff like this is successful is because people want so badly to be able to go and quickly learn really good techniques that can help keep themselves safe (be it they dont have the time for more work or dont have the drive/interest to dedicate a lot to it) and without knowledge and experience in these things they don't know that it's straight up impossible to do that a quick and convenient way to defend yourself is so desireable because the only actual real option is to train how to actually fight AND also train your body and put on muscle which you have to eat for too, since you need to be atleast physically fit and strong to be effective fighter. all these things aren't convenient and can be daunting to the average person who has a job and responsibilities

    @Skalias@Skalias Жыл бұрын
  • Wow that was Awesome!

    @azeemali7102@azeemali7102 Жыл бұрын
  • Jocko droppin' facts.

    @davidcrossfield6943@davidcrossfield6943 Жыл бұрын
  • One thing I learned about street fights...everything and anything is bound to happen in them. I trained in boxing...not for street fights...just cause I enjoyed it. Thing is ten years later...I still remember it all so If I were to fight ever again in the street it'll be there for me to use. Other than that...I just don't wanna fight anymore. I'm too old and I. Don't wanna go to jail. I would only fight if I have to protect myself or a loved one. It's not worth it otherwise.

    @antonlifer4449@antonlifer4449 Жыл бұрын
  • My parents came up with a Detroit Urban Survival System....They moved

    @dtogo4286@dtogo4286 Жыл бұрын
  • As brother Special Operators (I was an 18E SF/H.A.L.O. and was both an Operator both entry and Sniper qualified) I have great respect for both Jacko and Tim and while I concur completely with what Jacko states, the interviewer is missing very critical points. To further validate myself, I am both a Muay Thai and San Shou (aka Sanda) Kickboxing Instructor (I was the U.S. Sanda team assistant Coach), Japanese Judo and Jiu Jitsu BB (who has cross trained extensively in both BJJ and Catch Wrestling), a former HS/College wrestler, boxer (trained at the 5th street gym Miami and with Coaches at Ft. Bragg from the Army boxing team. Additionally, I am an Army H2H combat, Krav Maga Instructor and former head MMA Coach at Gracie Jiu Jitsu of Louisville. Additionally, I am one of the few individuals who teaches genuine Native American tomahawk and knife. I am a retired Federal Agent who served 15 years as an SRT Operator and was one of my agencies lead tactics and DT Instructors. What the interviewer is criticaly missing is that (while Detroit Urban Tactical is a joke) he thinks other valid self defense techniques can't be employed if they fall outside of the techniques "perceived" because they are not seen in MMA. There is good reason we don't allow a groin kick in MMA (how many times have you seen a fighter need a time out!) don't blind someone with a thumb to escape a submission or hit with a palm heel due to a tightly wrapped and gloved hand and the list old go on. Does employment of what are considered "Street techniques" eliminate the need for actual sparring and rolling, absolutely not! However training in skills that apply in reality sport fighting and qenuine street combat does not negate both the validity AND necessity of incorporating other "non sport" techniques. Incorporation of these techniques along with defenses against blades, pipes, Firearms, ect. is of critical importance and while active pressure testing must be employed to ensure validity and skill under stress they are far outside the realm of skill of the "typical" Muay Thai, BJJ or MMA Coach. The best way I can describe it is take all the arts you think of as genuine from MMA, take Combative programs like Krav Maga, systema, ect and take bladed styles like Kali, escrima, ect. draw overlapping circles and where they connect in the middle is true "reality combat". Meaning all good styles have portions that are critically valid, but all also have portions with only a sport application or techniques that they believe will work, but, won't. Only cross training and gaining experience in all these areas will provide you the skills and expose the weak portion of the other areas that should never be used in real combat. Unless you have a rare Instructor like Jacko, Tim, Ryan Stephans, Tu Lam (Ronin Tactical) or another who has both technical knowledge and reality Spec Ops Military/Law Enforcement team experience, you can't find it all in one place, period. I know this was long, but I hope it shed some light.

    @carminedowney9561@carminedowney95618 ай бұрын
  • Keep knocking it ‘oot’ the park brother!

    @DannyBradshaw@DannyBradshaw Жыл бұрын
  • I’m a retired Cop after 25+ years. I’ve been in a lot of fights. The amount of training police need isn’t the amount of training they get in fighting. Or anything else for that matter. The best advice I have when it comes to fighting is if you’re using a technique, which isn’t working, you need to change techniques. The sooner a Use of Force ends, the less likely you are to getting hurt.

    @kenl9215@kenl92152 ай бұрын
  • If you don’t want to risk getting seriously hurt and are threatened, the choice is simple, Maintain your space so you can clear you pistol and shoot. That’s the Texas way. It is always best is not to get in conflict with others.

    @georgesmiley1474@georgesmiley1474 Жыл бұрын
  • I have known and or worked with a various LEO's, and even those on the SWAT teams, where trained up on their own time and dime for the most part. When you work 40-60hours a week, have family, etc, and the $ it takes to get good training and or ongoing training, it makes it very difficult for them to be not just adequately trained, but able to train ongoing and retain those skills. Everyone says "LEOs need more training" but no one wants to pay for it. One major PD I knew well, reduced their 2x per year firearms qual (which was super easy BTW but another topic...) reduced it to 1X per year to save $. True story...

    @willbrink@willbrink Жыл бұрын
    • This is true of all state institutions as they violate the most basic tenants of economics. Anything state run via taxation is, by definition, a Socialist/Soviet system that suffers all of the pitfalls that the Nobel prize economist, Murray Rothbard, pointed out in his analysis of Soviet socialism: because the money coming in is completely divorced from natural supply/demand for the service, dislocations in capital allocation abound: agencies that don't need more, get more than they need, those that need more don't, and none of it has anything to do with the actual amount of crime, not to mention the political shenanigans and the massive conflict of interest in having state paid police, policing people who have their money taken by threat of force by the police. It's also obvious that those who pay the paychecks never get touched or, if they do, it's purely a political move having nothing to do with morals or ethics.

      @EnFuego79@EnFuego79 Жыл бұрын
  • Palm uppercut to nose defo works 😂

    @letsdebate839@letsdebate8399 ай бұрын
  • Haha, he was so right as to being like “wtf does that have to do with Detroit Urban Survival?” Haha

    @jenniturtleburger3708@jenniturtleburger3708 Жыл бұрын
  • jocko looks like if a fist was a person

    @areyoutheregoditsmedave@areyoutheregoditsmedave Жыл бұрын
  • Jacko with the simple truths. Every one should train more in aspect of their life.

    @stunner55@stunner55 Жыл бұрын
  • I spent 10 years in the military and all I did was train. My entire career was cleaning, eating, sleeping and training. They might as well have put it in my contract, all you are doing to do is practice doing your job. You are never actually gonna do it. Ever. I worked with nuclear weapons. So it’s cool.

    @mortyrosenstein4211@mortyrosenstein4211 Жыл бұрын
    • Sure buddy, so what work did you actually do. So you never did your actual job.

      @lilcourtny08@lilcourtny08 Жыл бұрын
    • 46N.

      @ilc07@ilc07 Жыл бұрын
    • @@lilcourtny08 he’s saying that he never launched a nuke at an enemy because obviously America has not nuked a nation in over half a century

      @chief5981@chief5981 Жыл бұрын
    • @@chief5981 guy just told. Complete lie

      @lilcourtny08@lilcourtny08 Жыл бұрын
    • @@lilcourtny08 you’re probably right. Do you think that he’s lying and he actually did nuke somebody or is he lying and he was never in the military.. never trained, never slept, and never cleaned?

      @chief5981@chief5981 Жыл бұрын
  • If someone is trained to fight though usually they understand and control emotions so you more than likely don’t fight some super experienced fighter but most people have a background of some type of physical sport or activity. Plain and simple don’t go out seeking fights because if you don’t know what you’re doing and want to do that you might piss the wrong person off

    @OG__GreenCrack@OG__GreenCrack Жыл бұрын
    • You have Introverts and extroverts introverts are the guys staring off into the jungle then there are your extroverts screaming come get some and shooting anything that moves from any direction forward to hate kill they are not trained to control emotions they are encouraged to feel them like a ferocious dog we usually call them navy seals or just marines Don't assume everyone with training can control their emotions that's why you don't fuck with veterans and don't hire combat soldiers to be your police when they get home they will fick you up.

      @TheManCone@TheManCone Жыл бұрын
  • A street fight or bar fight or club fight in Vegas…. Was always a higher possibility you would be in a fight with a novice or decent boxer or MMA student. That being said a larger amount of Vegas cops were training in MMA off duty as well. Vegas is a fighter town for sure.

    @mixflip@mixflip Жыл бұрын
  • 3:15 I think it varies, it definitely depends on the Department. Bellevue PD in WA, virtually all their staff train bjj for example

    @forekin836@forekin836 Жыл бұрын
  • Law enforcement is a job that honestly has less risk then a large number of other jobs,its not even in the top 10 swat and warrant officers are about it when it comes to needing large amounts of combat training

    @Little_Sams_Top_Guy@Little_Sams_Top_Guy Жыл бұрын
    • For death or permanent injury that is correct. For on the job injuries it is high.

      @jfkst1@jfkst1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jfkst1 yeah most of those injuries are health related,this nation’s police are overweight and out of shape

      @Little_Sams_Top_Guy@Little_Sams_Top_Guy Жыл бұрын
  • Chris is playing just the tip with us on this one

    @rocklobster5225@rocklobster5225 Жыл бұрын
    • It’s pretty fucking annoying tbh

      @HenryPaulThe3rd@HenryPaulThe3rd Жыл бұрын
  • Jocko Go on the go. Good.

    @paulmurphy3922@paulmurphy3922 Жыл бұрын
  • I was fortunate enough to receive training in krav maga from actual serving Israeli military - before it turned into the cash-cow boxercise bullshit it is now. They all pretty much said the same thing - you get in a knife fight, you WILL get stabbed. You're outnumbered? You're in deep shit. You think choreographed, flashy techniques will work in a real violent confrontation? Guess again. Best defence is a strong offense; Jocko is dead right on this. Boxing, Muay Thai for the fight on the feet, and BJJ and/or wrestling when it ends up on the ground - and they're 5yerw to help you get back to your feet asap. You start doing submissions in a street fight and your head is going to get stomped by his mates. Hard and fast, then get the hell out.

    @Stevie-74@Stevie-74 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm glad you mentioned the watering down of Krav. I've been training in Krav for almost 5 years now, and luckily my school actually teaches us properly, lets us spar and kickbox, and pressure tests us on top of being realistic. When we learned knife defences, our coach literally told us to count how many times we got poked when attempting to grab the knife/hand. Really eye opening. They even go so far as to say if a fight happens, run! Compared to another local school that teaches its students to kick knives out of hands and one punch "finishes", its sad to see such a beautiful MA suffer the Seagal treatment. I've more recently been training BJJ too and its helped me get more comfortable on the ground (my Krav school had alot of JJ/Wrestling base). I do think Krav has more practical use for anything outside of a gym, but I also agree that if you learn straight MMA you're never going to be at a disadvantage for sure.

      @NoobZxReviewZ@NoobZxReviewZ Жыл бұрын
    • @@NoobZxReviewZ Hah, Seagal treatment. Absolutely agree; it really is a crying shame. As a result of that awful commercialisation you now have so many clowns calling it a rubbish system - and sadly, in many cases it now is. That stress training, sparring etc is absolutely essential. We'd regularly batter each other senseless in the pursuit of finding which techniques actually worked in high stress situations - and, shock horror, it was always the simplest ones. The more technical they got the harder it was to get right, a luxury you just don't have in a real confrontation. One of the Israelis we had over here (UK) said to some of us that even though krav has dozens of different techniques by the time you hit instructor level (including utterly useless stuff like 'hand grenade defenses'...), you've got loads of techniques you're expected to know. But he advised to learn around 10, the ones we deemed the most useful. And drill the hell out of them. That minimalist mindset has been really useful; and is why even a regular understanding of the basic principles of BJJ, boxing etc is a big advantage in a street confrontation. Edit: Oh dear god Sawyer, that kicking the knife out of the hand thing 😂😂😂🤦🏻‍♂️ Absolutely kills me dude lol. I left my club when my instructor - keen to rake in the cash by attracting the Jason Bourne wannabes - started teaching long weapon disarms. We are in the UK for crying out loud, when was the last time anyone here ran into a bloke running around with an AK?! Utterly idiotic.

      @Stevie-74@Stevie-74 Жыл бұрын
    • You don’t know squat if you never took tai Bo lol

      @JR-ld1et@JR-ld1et Жыл бұрын
    • always punch the biggest guy in the face first of the gang that is attacking you, the other guys will be like WTF

      @DeepThinkingGPU@DeepThinkingGPU Жыл бұрын
  • I saw a recent video of a kid getting stabbed in the neck. I think it was in Australia. I couldn't believe how fast the stick was and how quick he bled out. I see a knife I'm getting as far away as possible.

    @ryanscarborough6703@ryanscarborough6703 Жыл бұрын
  • Few people rise to an occasion, most revert to previous experience or training

    @kotylee7722@kotylee7722 Жыл бұрын
  • Jockos a good guy, doesnt talk shit about peoples business but tells it how it is.

    @videoezy2372@videoezy2372 Жыл бұрын
  • Would kill to go train with Tim for like 6 months, he's so knowledgeable. I've trained mma for years and had a good amount of street experience otherwise 6 months probably wouldn't be enough to learn much

    @tribex11@tribex11 Жыл бұрын
    • There are so many better trainers out there Kennedy hangs a lot of his success of thinks that he hasn’t been a part of in a long time

      @Little_Sams_Top_Guy@Little_Sams_Top_Guy Жыл бұрын
  • Jocko for president

    @thomasomalley510@thomasomalley510 Жыл бұрын
  • The best self-defense you can learn is to always be aware of your surroundings. It’s that simple. Learn to read your environment and the body language of people around you. Be aware of your own body language. It’s amazing how effective these measures are at keeping you safe and preventing an attack upon yourself.

    @domi69ify@domi69ify Жыл бұрын
  • When I was a deputy Sheriff the physical means of control (that’s what it’s called) was beyond a joke. Fortunately I trained in martial arts (Goju Ryu) in a a fighting dojo before and during my career. That’s on the individual LEO because their departments will only train them to state standards that are only designed to reduce department liability. It’s a great time to be retired.

    @markscott4881@markscott4881 Жыл бұрын
    • Departments care about checking the "done" liability box, not the "done well" box. I work in one too. Regardless of what Jocko says, my Uechi Ryu dojo is a fighting dojo, also. I respect whatever someone will do to help themselves because departments won't do much for you.

      @stephk5255@stephk5255 Жыл бұрын
    • Keep your head on a swivel friend and win every fight.

      @markscott4881@markscott4881 Жыл бұрын
    • Girl Scouts eh? Well it is 2022 I’m sure they’d accept you and that you would fit in remarkably.

      @markscott4881@markscott4881 Жыл бұрын
    • @Aragorn you sound like a sheep that doesn’t know what individual accountability

      @5five6rudy@5five6rudy Жыл бұрын
    • Did you ever suk a cok?

      @timmathews803@timmathews8036 ай бұрын
  • I’ve gotten away with kicking in the groin and screaming “THATS MY PURSE I DONT KNOW YOU!”

    @Unpluggedx89@Unpluggedx89 Жыл бұрын
  • I kickbox. I got jumped one time by a guy who very clearly knew how to box, and he got me by surprise. I managed to run, but not before taking some serious blows. Real fights aren't pretty. Just because you train doesn't mean you're gonna kung-fu you're way out of a streetfight.

    @darkJohnSmith@darkJohnSmith Жыл бұрын
    • No but you have a MUCH higher probability if you train.

      @o-redbeard-o1036@o-redbeard-o1036 Жыл бұрын
    • Sorry man, Cardio kickboxing isn't training.

      @jonahpatton8879@jonahpatton8879 Жыл бұрын
  • I’ll crack this off right away, “street fight” is a street fight. There’s no rules in a street fight

    @DSToNe19and83@DSToNe19and83 Жыл бұрын
  • People don’t fight where I live…they shoot!🙏🏽🥴

    @sallyhemings2295@sallyhemings2295 Жыл бұрын
  • Damn. Time to hit the gym and learn how to fight.

    @6anned@6anned Жыл бұрын
    • It's never too late! But just avoid violence at all costs unless there's no other way and treat it as an absolute last resort,that's what I do.

      @JR-ju3kj@JR-ju3kj Жыл бұрын
  • A lot if not most people have never had to deal with someone who has zero interest in your wellbeing and will hurt you for personal gain or just because they can.

    @superdutyzack@superdutyzack Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you...im not sure who said " don't fight someone who has nothing to lose ".So with streetfights people will be shocked at the intensity of the violence. if you fight someone who's goal in life is to smash the fuck out of anyone aynwhere including stabbing glassing biting your nose/ear off or gouging your eyes out...then most people who train aren't used to that level of violence.

    @simonsimple666@simonsimple666 Жыл бұрын
    • All Sounds good but a trainer fighter can do all That and then also actually fight. The amount of people that get murdered thinking they have that “mentality” and are just gunna “black” out is insurmountable. A trained fighter 99 percent of the time wins in altercation. Don’t fool urself. Also are u willing to bite a nose off?

      @jimmyoryan2257@jimmyoryan2257 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jimmyoryan2257 I won't say what I would or can do.i avoid conflict like poo on a stick 😂

      @simonsimple666@simonsimple666 Жыл бұрын
    • Then you got these kinda fights kzhead.info/sun/fMhyoMhwsZiHlqs/bejne.html

      @herculesbrofister265@herculesbrofister265 Жыл бұрын
  • Thoughts before watching video “ oh this is gonna be brutal “

    @eobardthawne3133@eobardthawne3133 Жыл бұрын
  • He is right but for a different reason. Those techniques are mostly valid but they require a huge amount of quickness and practice PLUS they must be performed against resistance such as evasion or them hitting you back.

    @hectorrodriguez2686@hectorrodriguez2686 Жыл бұрын
  • Best advice for a street fight: don't get in one.

    @pjdiver3@pjdiver3 Жыл бұрын
  • I do agree with basics for non-fighters. 1st basic: If you are not a fighter, don't fight.

    @alanvatcher8374@alanvatcher837421 күн бұрын
  • 20%. 1 day per week. Does that really sound like excessive training for people who are walking around with guns and handcuffs and pepper spray and tasers and the authority to use all of them on you and imprison you... So, that person shows up to work 4 days per week to patrol the streets, and 1 day training on weapons, combat, de-escalating situations, medic training, even therapy sessions to prevent PTSD and burnout, volunteer work, community outreach... Defund the police? You want them to have LESS training??

    @joshpointoh@joshpointoh Жыл бұрын
    • There is absolutely no appetite in America to increase the cost of their police force by 20% annually. Also, given how recruitment is based on lowest risk factors and NOT most capable of doing the job, you can give many current LEOs unlimited training time and they will NEVER be capable as they shouldn't even be LEOs in the first place. So really, it would require a 25% increase minimum for better recruiting, pay, and training.

      @jfkst1@jfkst1 Жыл бұрын
  • Where is the actual full episode

    @manwhohasnoname6549@manwhohasnoname6549 Жыл бұрын
  • Dale from Detroit urban survival is the New Dragon Fly Jones 👍

    @coldworldTV@coldworldTV Жыл бұрын
  • A street fight is like nothing you know. You will get hurt. Badly

    @hervebenganga5590@hervebenganga5590 Жыл бұрын
  • He never actually gave his opinion.. he just directed the convo in another direction.

    @CuttySobz@CuttySobz Жыл бұрын
  • We had guy with 10 years of state patrol experience under his belt come into the gym.... I rolled with him (light) and MAN... they are not trained to handle themselves in a scrap. He was a regularly built guy- not a wuss. It's just training.

    @andym1594@andym1594 Жыл бұрын
    • they operate with egos and guns. not surprised you manhandled him.

      @mattcoffee1269@mattcoffee1269 Жыл бұрын
  • I wonder if some of that stuff might work sometimes I’m only saying that because of that video of that marine disarming that guy trying to rob that convenient store. It’s pretty slick the marine just turns and grabs the gun out of his hand but they have great situational awareness the perpetrators were completely stunned it was awesome. Most of that stuff I’d say you get yourself shot.

    @nathanammon4021@nathanammon4021 Жыл бұрын
  • My Dad, a Federal Agent that was killed in a helicopter crash used to say ALL THE TIME that a police officer should be someone who can win a street fight against multiple attackers. I cannot begin to count the number of fights he got in as an officer. He came home (before I was born) with multiple broken ribs (still arrested the guy). He and a fellow officer were in a fight with a very violent felon who broke the other officer's arm and dislocated my Dad's nose (still arrested the guy). After Dad's death, people that worked with him told stories about fights he had been in with criminals that my Mom and I had no idea about. He didn't want us to worry. The standards of police departments have seemingly dropped due to inability to recruit. This is a direct effect of the media trying to turn people against police. It's despicable the way officers are treated now.

    @cotybowman8825@cotybowman8825 Жыл бұрын
    • Yep, but too many cops do horrible things. Have been wrong. Along with the tactic of escalation for any petty offense. Once a cop lies, makes someone’s life take a turn. That person is always a victim of police abuse. Police must be made to pay for their crimes and those effected by their wrongs repaid. So society can heal.

      @thepain321@thepain321 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thepain321 No one that I know (police officers especially and I know quite a few) disagrees that corrupt or dirty officers should be allowed a pass. My point is that you cannot paint around a million Americans as being racist or wanting to harm people on purpose. And to be clear, I am not suggesting that you are calling police racist or anything remotely like that. I'm referring to the media. There are exceptions. The officer that killed George Floyd should be on death row. I 100% agree with you that when an officer lies it can ruin a person's life. I have just lived on the other side of it where I remember as a kid that multiple people put death threats out on my Dad and they fully intended to carry it out. I believe that 9/10 officers are good people. The bad apples have to be fired and prosecuted. I believe that you and I most likely agree on much, much more than we disagree on the subject. It's great to be able to have discussions on sites like this. I wish that salaries and training budgets would increase dramatically so that it would attract more selection for the officer pool and would lower fatal encounters for officers, the public, and criminals included. The preservation of life is the first job of the police officer.

      @cotybowman8825@cotybowman8825 Жыл бұрын
  • Depends on the situation.. looks to me like there are 2 opposing takes and neither are wrong : 1st, if you might die anyway, try something wild bc it could work. Get dna under your nails. Stun and run. 2nd, if OTHERS lives depend on your obedience, then maybe don’t be a hero and get people killed unnecessarily.

    @LetsBeClear87@LetsBeClear87 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm in law enforcement, in a medium sized city. We are "given" 20 hours (2 full days) of training per year by the department. At least half of that is not in important topics. The rest of the year, whatever training we do is on our own time/money.

    @trwiles3451@trwiles3451 Жыл бұрын
    • The same was true for us until recently. We used to do a week's worth of training and some of it was just mandatory CIT classroom stuff with no prac ap. Check in the box. Fortunately, our training division got some new blood and we do much more department mandated stuff, dynamic prac ap across a lot of different subjects plus other classes that are optional but a lotta guys sign up for it. Hurts staffing sometimes but we've managed so far. It isn't as much as we'd like but it's better than it was and improving.

      @odgreen9113@odgreen9113 Жыл бұрын
  • Tell ‘em Jocko

    @LtChia-nq3xk@LtChia-nq3xk Жыл бұрын
  • Does Jocko like old school games like Mercy, or Native American arm/leg wrestling?

    @anaMoc1038@anaMoc1038 Жыл бұрын
  • Jab your tactical pen in attackers' eyes and ears. Blind attackers with brain punctured tend to back off.

    @johnwatson9518@johnwatson95188 ай бұрын
  • The link you point to is for the huberman episode bro

    @seankovarik4444@seankovarik4444 Жыл бұрын
  • There is a set of crocodile pants and crocodile vest arm sleeves that will absorb 95% of any taser amperage will barely feel a buzzing from it, very effective in the field

    @DanLoFat@DanLoFat Жыл бұрын
  • He should be training actors to make believe fight for movie scenes not for real self defense

    @joshuahawkins2743@joshuahawkins27437 ай бұрын
  • What is Jockos thoughts on 52 blocks

    @3941602@3941602 Жыл бұрын
  • The number 1 thing people with no combat experience don't understand and will never understand untill they experience it is the negating factor of another human being. I have trained and completed my whole life and even I find myself falling victim to it. You will see one man on top of another and say to yourself " come on, just throw him off of you" or you will see two guys fighting for position and say to yourself "come on they aren't even doing anything" they so often view a fight through the first person perspective they fail to consider that opposite them is another human being with similar weight, strength, agression and will to survive.

    @dominicvioli7098@dominicvioli7098 Жыл бұрын
    • people dont understand how tough having a human as an opponent in anything is too, obviously there'll be slouches but humans tend to be crafty and determined. you have to put a lot more in when you're against another person who wants to win

      @Skalias@Skalias Жыл бұрын
    • @mate oh you are so on point with this comment. Ive played so many sports growing up including division 1 football and still to this day I have never been more fatigued or expended as much energy as I did during wrestling matches or street fights. It's the act of planting your foot/feet into the ground and drawing energy up through your feet>knees>thighs>glutes>hips>core and then extending out through your arms and hopefully into the opponent. This kinematic sequence is the essence of all athletic motion and it is highly, highly fatiguing. A basketball player will do this when he jumps for a rebound or dunk or when he changes direction. Or a football player when they make a block or tackle or throw the ball down the field ect. But in every sport their is moments in between these burst of energy where the athlete can pace their output. In fighting the entire bout is essentially doing this over and over and over again. And it's not just when they strike. It's when a guy puts his weight into you, you have to plant your feet and draw energy to push back. When a guy does a head snap you have to plant to reisist. Every punch every kick every block every sprawl. It's all energy conservation.

      @dominicvioli7098@dominicvioli7098 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Skaliastell me you've never fought them. Unfortunately I had the privilege of fighting for my life in prison quite a few times I'm an expert mixed martial artist trained with professionals for the last 15 years was considering trying to fight and now I'm just a corner man. I fucked people up easily effortlessly it wasn't even an issue ran the dorm. Have you ever go to Florida ask about Russia lmfao you can tell Jaco is not a fighter and he never really was a shooter either he just sent his boys out to be shot

      @MaddenMagician@MaddenMagicianКүн бұрын
  • I've been practicing bjj for years and I respect Jocko a lot. But in this case I have to disagree with him. We all know that D.U.S.T. is the real deal because the guy wears a company badge to teach self defense and this, my friend, is enough to make me trust him. 🤣

    @Logan2thousand@Logan2thousand Жыл бұрын
    • "Badges? WE don't need no stinkin' badges."

      @SenorJuan2023@SenorJuan2023 Жыл бұрын
    • He’s been around since 96 in the industry as security

      @willismarshall2593@willismarshall2593 Жыл бұрын
    • @@willismarshall2593 you can be bad at a job and still do it for a long time

      @Alf763@Alf763 Жыл бұрын
  • Haha the question was quite clear what he meant regards Detroit urban survival

    @warbler1984@warbler1984 Жыл бұрын
  • Sad but true... Bad unrealistic training will get you killed. If you're in law enforcement you better be in shape you better be ready.💯 If you're not in shape trained ready to go you shouldn't be on the streets. JOCKO. "RESPECT"🤟🇱🇷🇱🇷🇱🇷🇱🇷

    @laztoth3104@laztoth3104 Жыл бұрын
  • In cities like San DIego you also run the serious risk that someone's carrying a knife that you won't see and only know the other guy has it when you feel it stab you.

    @johnpauljones9310@johnpauljones9310 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm careful to be clear with my students there is teaching, and there is training . Or if you prefer information and knowledge. Sometimes I do classes that are 100% teaching then tell them to go train whatever parts they think will be useful to them. And unless they do they most likely won't be able to use it in real life. I know people that have decades of martial arts practice under their belts but have never been hit full force in the face . I know the first time I was it knocked whatever theories I had clean out of my head .

    @MrByaeger@MrByaeger Жыл бұрын
  • Of course the tactical fighting stuff is like 10% or less of policing. Your ability to just deal with people is so much more useful on a daily basis and for the majority of calls than tactical or combat acumen.

    @ThatKenpoGuy@ThatKenpoGuy11 ай бұрын
  • That DUST guy is legit

    @pixadragon46@pixadragon46 Жыл бұрын
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