Month: December 2008

Recovering from travel

Posted by – December 21, 2008

So posting will probably be light for a couple of days.

Criminals murder other criminals

Posted by – December 18, 2008

Orlando police chief’s top goal for 2009 is to take guns away from criminals

The article doesn’t explain how the police chief is going to go about accomplishing this, and I am sure the devil is in the details:

“It’s going to take a whole lot of people to help us do that,” said Demings, who pledged to work closely with the public, prosecutors and legislators for stricter gun control.

“It’s not about keeping guns out of the hands of law-abiding citizens who have every right to possess them,” she said. “Our initiative will focus on the people who are not supposed to have them.”

The most interesting bit of the article is here:

Data released Wednesday show the male murder victims and suspects share a common background of repeated arrests without imprisonment.

At least 95 percent of the victims and suspects had criminal histories. One-third of the suspects had been arrested at least 20 times. One quarter of the victims had been arrested at least 10 times. And about 40 percent of the suspects and victims had been busted for dealing drugs.

If 95% of the people getting murdered are actually criminals then taking guns away from them has a very good chance of increasing other types of crime. The sample size is pretty small here, but it would be interesting to know how many people killed by firearms (other than suicides) are in fact criminals.

Pain and Injury

Posted by – December 18, 2008

I hope it hurtsIt is important to discriminate between pain and injury. From the standpoint of self defense this is pretty simple: injury reduces the physical ability to fight or pursue. Inflicting injury can cause pain as well (though not always immediately), but pain by itself does not take away an assailants actual ability to fight.

A perfect example of this is professional soccer. Players who have been fouled roll around on the ground writhing in pain until the referee assigns the penalty and then they jump back to their feet and continue to play the game as if nothing happened. I am sure that the foul was “painful” but if they were “injured” they would be getting carried off the field. Part of being a professional athlete is being goal-oriented and shrugging off pain to get things accomplished.

Martial Arts and self defense systems that rely on using pain to influence behavior with pressure points, arrest-control holds, and the like are using pain to get voluntary compliance. These methods can fail against people who have either a higher tolerance for pain or are impaired by drugs or alcohol. The pain only lasts as long as the hold is being applied, so compliance after being released from the hold is voluntary behavior.

Injuring the assailant makes him unable to continue the attack. Knocking them unconscious, breaking bones, and causing significant amounts of blood loss all degrade his physical ability to fight regardless of his mental state or willpower. “Superficial” injuries might have some deterrence value, but assailant gets to choose if he is going to be deterred or not. If you can treat it with a band-aid it probably isn’t an “injury.”

Beware of fraud

Posted by – December 18, 2008

Sororities say they were duped by man posing as self-defense instructor