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Posted On:
10/05/2011 7:59pm -
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Posted On:
10/07/2011 1:45am -
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Posted On:
10/07/2011 9:06am -
pro nonsense self defense
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Posted On:
10/07/2011 10:54am--
There's lots of effective techniques you don't see in Felony Fights, because those guys are usually awful fighters and their idea of a choke is probably a 2 handed pizza's-not-dinner choke. Also, it's usually obvious when a choke has knocked someone out, and at that point you can hold your control position but loosen the choke to confirm it before letting them go. To kill with a choke, you'd need to hold it on quite a good deal longer after they're unconscious.
In a fight where nothing short of losing consciousness will stop someone, a choke is probably the safest way to make that happen. A knockout via strikes is a lot more dangerous, from damage from the strike itself, whiplash, and hitting the head on the ground.For the life of me I cannot recall a single fist fight I ever got into being caused by something I would be comfortable explaining to a jury that justified killing a guy for. Ending with a choke outside a controlled environment is a big lose/lose AFAIK.
I agree, and even someone that believed it would be an idiot to say that in court ("Its better to be judged by you twelve than carried by six")."It's better to be judged by 12 than carried by 6" might look cool on a T shirt but will sound much worse spoken aloud in a court room. -
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Posted On:
10/07/2011 3:19pm -
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Posted On:
10/07/2011 3:36pm
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Agreeing entirely with Permalost and adding some vague numbers: A good choke can render someone unconscious in less than 10 seconds. Opinions vary greatly on how long it takes to cause permanent brain injury or death. The lower end of the range seems to bottom out around a minute, and estimates of “1–5 minutes”, “1–6 minutes”, or “several minutes” appear to be typical for cerebral ischemia (=strangulation by cutting off blood supply to the brain, as opposed to asphyxiation where air supply is limited and oxygenation continues for much longer until the blood is deoxygenated). Thus, it seems reasonable to assume that unless you hold a choke on for at least a minute after someone goes unconscious, you’re vanishingly unlikely to cause any kind of permanent harm, and if you want to be sure of killing someone, you should hang on for at least 5–10 minutes (there are reports of hangings taking up to 15–20 minutes!). There’s a pretty wide margin between unconsciousness and serious risk of injury; hopefully it won’t take you an entire minute to realise that the guy’s already out!
It seems to me that choking somebody unconscious, without continuing to murder-choke them to death for the next several minutes, is considerably less harmful than knocking them out (concussing them, having them crack their head on the pavement, &c.), or breaking their joints (which, well, breaks their joints).[ petterhaggholm.net | blog | essays ]
[ self defence: general thoughts | bjj: “don’t go to the ground”? ]
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Posted On:
10/07/2011 7:39pm
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Originally Posted by CheeksWWAC
Ive choked a couple of people out in fights, the trick is drawing a dick on their forehead before they wake up.
Fixed.
You must also warn them ahead of time that you are not a very good artist and often resort to tracing.
For Permalost : Once upon a long time ago it was considered routine for police to use chokes on anyone not coming along quietly. "When in doubt choke 'em out". It became a big no no after a few sensationalized deaths and currently occupies the same level on the use of force continuim as a firearm. Mr Policeman is certainly not going to look kindly upon you if you go using it more casually than he does.
Justifying the fight at all will be difficult enough, justifying a known lethal technique is a bridge too far. -
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Posted On:
10/08/2011 3:06am -
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Posted On:
10/08/2011 3:18am
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I have heard anecdotaly that it the choke is coming back in favor again down here. Police do have a sort of yeah if you gotta rule. Of course it is now called a vascular restraint.
On another note we had a bouncer in Mackay recently break a persons neck so it does have its risks.
http://www.dailymercury.com.au/story...-manslaughter/Last edited by gregaquaman; 10/08/2011 3:22am at .

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Posted On:
10/05/2011 7:53pm