That was one of many opinions that I have collected from another forum about "self-defense". It was not my opinion.
http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?66958-Train-for-self-defense&highlight=defense
My opinion is as simple as "Whether you want to call it fighting, self-defense, or MA, it's just as simple as "fist meets face".
Except it's not that simple at all (well, except for possibly just fighting). "Fist meets face" can mean that you've failed terribly when looking at self defence, whether it's your fist or your face (contextually, of course... some self defence require it, obviously)... and it's a complete oversimplification of martial arts... so, well, no.
Oh, but with the link you provided, I'd like to address something you raised there (stemming from my question to you):
Kung Fu Wang said:
Someone asked "How is competition or sport testing "self defence"? Whoever like to use the term "self defence" always like to get knife fight involved. Their argument are since sport fight doesn't deal with knife fight, sport fight is no good for self defence.
Frankly, there's a fair number of words put into my mouth there, and I don't think they're warranted. What I was asking you was why you think training for one thing is the same as training for something different... there was no implication of knife defence at all. But, so you know, Tomiki Aikido is a sport form of Aikido that deals with knife defence (even in their competition format), and you could easily class a lot of what's done in the Dog Brothers group as being fairly similar to sports (a lot more than self defence, really)...
Honestly, the argument is simple. Training for sport is training for sport. It is geared towards the skills and tactics that generate success in sports competition. To think that it is doing anything else is to be thoroughly blind to the realities of what training does. The aims are different for sports as for self defence. The optimum tactics are different... in cases, completely opposite to each other. The criteria for success are also, in cases, directly opposed to each other. So why would training for a situation and application that is, in ways, opposite to what you'd actually want to achieve be a good thing?
No. I'm not sure why you think that there are no studies because that's not true at all. I can point to no less than SEVEN separate studies which, do, in fact, show there are vastly more "defensive gun uses." Perhaps it's just that no one has ever presented them to you.
No. of Defensive
Gun Uses per Year Source
2.1 million Point Blank: Guns & Violence in America, Gary
Kleck
989,883 "Measuring Civilian Defensive Firearm Use: A
Methodological Experiment." By David McDowall and
others. Journal of Quantitative Criminology,
March 2000.
http://www.springerlink.com/content/rngn3274255v6j67/
700,000 Mauser study
650,000 Hart study
498,000 1994 survey conducted by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
108,000 1993 National Crime Victim Survey
83,000 Rand, Michael J. (April 1994). "Guns and Crime:
Handgun Victimization, Firearm Self Defense, and
Firearm Theft". U.S. Department of Justice,
Office of Justice Programs,Bureau of Justice
Statistics. Retrieved 11 November 2012.
http://bjs.gov/content/pub/ascii/hvfsdaft.txt
76,000 1996 National Crime Victim Survey
Significantly, even using the lowest estimate, 76,000 violent crimes are
prevented by armed citizens each year. Thus, the number of violent crimes
thwarted by armed citizens is about four times the annual murder rate.​
​
Hey Kirk,
Er... who mentioned "defensive gun uses"? But, for the record:
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/...un-deaths-than-any-other-country-study-finds/
They concluded that more guns do not make people safer
http://www.theatlantic.com/national...key-questions-with-13-concise-answers/272727/
How often are guns used in self-defense?There are no comprehensive records kept of incidents where guns are used in self-defense, so the only way to know is to ask people. Data from the National Crime Victimization Survey suggest that a gun is used in self-defense about 60,000 to 120,000 times each year. Several other surveys confirm this estimate. By comparison, each year about a million violent crimes involve guns. This means guns are used to commit a crime about 10 times as often as they are used for self-defense.
A few surveys in the early 1990s suggested that there are millions gun self-defense incidents each year, but there are very good reasons to believe that these estimates were improperly calculated and these numbers are way off, more than 10 times too high. If the numbers really were this high, this would imply that pretty much every gunshot wound in America is the result of somebody protecting him or herself.
Even among the more accurate surveys, according to a panel of criminal court judges who reviewed survey respondents' stories, about half the time the gun use was "probably illegal," even assuming the gun itself had been purchased legally.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/18/gun-ownership-gun-deaths-study
Not at all. The U.S. has a shockingly low level of violent crime per capita, particularly when compared to our "more civilized" friends in Europe.
Hmm.... let's look at that. Forgive the Wiki links, they were just the first ones thrown up when I googled for results.... more importantly, they're not the sole ones I look at.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_of_guns_per_capita_by_country
Number of guns... first in the world is the US, with 89 per 100 persons. The next closest is two thirds of that.
http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2012/jul/22/gun-homicides-ownership-world-list
Gun ownership and homicides... the only countries with more homicides than the US are drug-controlled and violence-ridden Central and South America, and places like South Africa. When compared with like-for-like countries (what are often termed "Developed Countries"), the US stands well and truly out in front.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_firearm-related_death_rate
And the same is seen again.
http://www.thenational.ae/news/worl...rts-but-other-countries-tell-a-different-tale
And really, the thing is, we're not discussing just violent crime, we're specifically dealing with the usage of firearms.
I could probably dig up some stats for you or you could believe that I'm not lying.
Nah, I don't think you're lying, Kirk. As said in one of the articles, the US simply has a very different way of looking at guns than other nations... which leads us to:
What it boils down to is this, after all of the emotion and rhetoric, when looking at hard, cold numbers, the U.S. doesn't have a "gun problem" at all.
Peace favor your sword,
Kirk
Yes, you do. Which is a direct result of your gun culture. But, rather than re-hash everything again here, this is a thread where I laid out my opinion on things already. It's only really page 2 and 3, and honestly I learnt a different take on things like the origins of the second amendment... but I'll let you go through it and see how much you disagree... ha!
http://www.martialtalk.com/forum/sh...Armed-Citizen-the-key-to-a-free-society/page2