Steve
Mostly Harmless
Ahh. Why didn't I see it before? That wrist lock worked in a dynamic situation because of institutional authority. Now don't I feel silly.
You don't see how?
Haha. Never let the facts get in the way of a good argument when you know you're always right.
A wise warning for us all, I think.
There is no one on earth that argues against BJJ being effective in many situations. Aikido is effective in fewer situations.
I'll take your word for it.
That is not a reason dismiss an entire skill set or art form. If you don't find personal value with it, don't study it. No one will twist your arm (see what I did there?) and make you learn aikido.
If you think I'm dismissing an entire skill set, you're completely off base. I'm critical of training models. Though, where the identity and culture of a style is intentionally muddled with the training model, it gets a little mushy.
I think it's great if Aikido works for you as a cop. I'm really only pointing out that the lessons learned aren't all that useful to anyone who isn't a cop (in my opinion).
I have used BJJ skills and aikido skills in many situations. Both have value for me... it's not 1 or the other.
Cool. Like what?