From Your
Editor By Phil Elmore
Thank
you for checking out our premier issue!
So, you’re asking yourself — what is martialism?
What does it mean to be a martialist? We hope our first issue, full
of great editorials and edifying articles, will educate you and therefore
assist you in the goal we all share: success in self-defense.
But what is self-defense? Are we preaching one or another end of the
force continuum, advocating extreme pacifism or extreme viciousness?
Laurence Clark writes, “When attacked,
strike the eyes, nose, ears, throat, groin, and knees of the aggressor
repeatedly and fervently. Punch, elbow, kick, tear, stomp, pinch, bite,
lacerate, truncate, and gouge your attacker until he stops his aggression
or he expires. Any resultant pernicious or quietus state the miscreant may
experience is the result of his coercive action. He directly compromised
your inviolable rights and freedoms. To put it simply, kill him if he
persists!”
Those are harsh words. Do we mean that anyone
who offends you, who looks at you funny, who harms you by accident, has
“got it coming” and deserves to be terminated at all costs?
No! The choice of any action is, as always,
yours. Facing a drunk who swings at you once and then collapses
hardly justifies stomping the man’s head in while he’s on the ground or
cutting his throat with the latest in tactical folders. But the
attitude Mr. Clark expresses could be applicable if you are a woman
facing an abusive spouse or a rapist. Is that spouse or rapist
administering a beating that, if not stopped, could cause permanent injury
or death?
Tony Manifold
writes, “It is the duty of the defender to make a reasonable judgment
based on the information available to him. If I can make a reasonable
assumption that the person opposite me is preparing to hurt me, I can hurt
him first. If I can make a reasonable assumption that the person opposite
me is going to kill me, I can kill him first. He doesn’t have to have a
weapon; all he needs is two or three friends wearing gang colors and I can
reasonably assume death is a possible outcome. I don’t even have to be
sure that death in the desired outcome or even the most probable outcome.
I just have to be sure that death is very possible outcome. If someone
pulls a gun on me, he may just want to rob me, or threaten me, but I will
assume he means to kill me.”
Of course — and Mr. Manifold would be the first to
tell you this — such preemptive actions may or may not be seen as
justified by juries. If such action is to be seen as legitimate, you
will have to establish that a “reasonable person,” by objective,
reasonable standards, would have — given the evidence available to your
senses and not simply from your intuition — come to the same conclusion
that serious physical harm was imminent and credible.
Tony goes on to address the other extreme in the use
of force, however. He writes, “The problem is that many martial
artists have this Mister Miyagi/Caine from Kung Fu mentality [that
constitutes the expectation] of defeating the attackers without harming
them, whilst teaching them an important lesson.
“The problem is, this isn’t TV and I am not that
good. If I am going to survive against someone who has shown the intent to
hurt me, I have to start at the extreme end and back off from there as
appropriate. If I feel my life is threatened and I kill someone, society
may disagree with my judgment — but if, when I made the call, it appeared
reasonable to me, I can go to my grave feeling morally justified.”
Mr. Manifold would also agree, of course, that
feeling morally justified doesn’t mean a thing when facing a jury or a
judge who believes you acted improperly.
As you will read many times in perusing The
Martialist, the choice is yours.
Make it wisely — or suffer for it.
“Stay ‘unreasonable.’ If you
don’t like the solutions [available to you], come up with your
own.”
–
Dan Webre
“Simply put, you must
pay attention to your personal security. Failure to do so
may result in total tragedy for you or your family. If you
don’t pay at least nominal attention to your personal security,
then you deserve what comes your way.
“The crime rate right now (1999)
is lower than it’s been since the mid 1960s. However, the
incidence of violence in those crimes is much higher — less
crime, more violence. The FBI has amassed statistics that
tell us a person generally stands a six percent chance in his or
her lifetime of being victimized in some way…
“…This is not melodramatic, just
truthful, prudent, and appropriately concerned.”
– Jim Grover, in Street
Smarts, Firearms, & Personal Security
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THIS
ISSUE’S SUBSCRIBER CONTENT
Knife
Defense: The Cutting Edge of Survival and Effectiveness
By Andrew
J. Cartwright
Get A Grip: A Knife and Gun
Grip Improvement You May Have Missed
By Don Rearic and Phil Elmore
Welcome to the Criminal
Mind
By Dan
Webre
Learning Defensive Shooting
By Ken
Cook
The CRKT Pesh-Kabz
By
Lawrence Keeney
Victims
Win
By Andrew
J. Cartwright
Stopping
Power: Unrealistic Expectations
By Robert
Bolt
I
Have Something for You
By GF
Matheis
First
Strike: Mastering the Preemptive Strike for Street Combat A
Book Review by Phil Elmore
Beyond Aliveness
By Coach Scott Sonnon
DISCLAIMER
I AM NOT A LAWYER
and THIS IS INFORMATION
ONLY. I do NOT
encourage you to do anything. You MUST consider the legal
implications of everything you do, exercising
YOUR JUDGMENT
as an adult. You also MUST follow the law or
PAY THE CONSEQUENCES.
The Martialist is for entertainment purposes only and cannot
be construed as legal advice.
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THIS ISSUE’S FREE CONTENT
The Martialist vs. The
Pacifist
By
David W. Pearson and Phil Elmore
Our monthly feature, in which your editor and his teacher David debate the
virtues of martialism versus pacifism.
Read the article>>
A View from the Dark Side By James A. Keating
Master at Arms Jim Keating offers his opinion on a tragic knife-related
killing that occurred recently in New York City.
Read the article>>
Combatives and
“Martial” Sports By Phil
Elmore
This editorial, prompted by a screed posted on the web by a traditionalist
judoka, addresses the condescension with which some sports practitioners
regard combatives exponents.
Read the article>>
Making Your Martial Art
More Combative By Tony
Manifold Military
combatives exponent Tony Manifold addresses the issue of making any
martial art more aggressive and efficient.
Read the article>>
Streetfighting Essentials A
Video Review by Phil
Elmore Alain
Burrese, well-known contemporary of Marc “Animal” MacYoung, has
produced a two-volume streetfighting tape that is among the best available
for beginners.
Read the article>>
Cold Steel Warrior’s Edge A
Video Review by Phil Elmore Lynn
Thompson of Cold Steel has created a lengthy series of videotapes that
imparts the system of “long-range knife fighting” he
advocates.
Read the article>>
Badger Advantage
by Laurence
Clark In
ancient times some Kung Fu styles were based, legend has it, on animal
movements. What if we modeled contemporary self-defense on one
little animal in particular?
Read the article>>
Wing Chun: Effective Close
Combat
by Anthony
Iglesias with Phil
Elmore Effective,
efficient combatives are as close as your local Wing Chun Kung Fu
school. Sifu Anthony Iglesias explains why.
Read the article>>
Right Now Someone is
Training to Kick Your Ass
by Tony
Reyes You
may have heard this statement before, but do you understand its
implications? Tony Reyes sets the reader straight in no uncertain
terms.
Read the article>>
Clawed
Arm of the Law: The Spyderco Matriarch
by Lawrence
Keeney What
do angry, gun-toting Crips and whitewater rafting have in common?
They’re both good reasons to carry a Spyderco Matriarch, as Associate
Editor Lawrence Keeney explains.
Read the article>>
Carrying Pocket Sticks
by
Phil Elmore
Small but effective, pocket sticks are the best personal protection
accessory you might not be carrying.
Read the article>>
Cold Steel XL Voyager
by
Phil Elmore A
brief product review of a large folder that may meet your needs as a
self-defense knife.
Read the article>>
A Prospective AR15
Owner/Builder’s Primer
by Ron
Wu Ron
“Gun Collector” Wu imparts his knowledge of the AR15 in this
reprint of his 1997 article. There’s a lot of information here sure
to be of interest to fans of “the black rifle.”
Read the article>>
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