Quantcast
Channel: Bullshido - The Art of Fighting BS
Viewing all 7799 articles
Browse latest View live

Embroidered Brown Belts (Judo)

$
0
0
I had my first grading as a 1st Kyu for Judo on the weekend and couldn't help but notice a decent chunk of the other brown belts had their names embroidered on their belts.

Now my personal take on this is that I don't have any intention of spending any longer on my brown than absolutely necessary so I can't real grasp why someone would bother with getting their name embroidered - save that **** for 1st Dan.

So does anyone out their either:
a) know people who do this
b) train at a club where its a common practice, or
c) do it themselves.

I'm basically trying to come up with an explanation as to why - and if you're that worried about losing your precious brown belt get one of those name tags sewn onto that you had in primary school.

Time to head on down to the Good will

$
0
0
Time to head on down to the Good will and pick up some old suits and the what not.




It would be interesting to make some "normal" clothes out of Gi material.


Got Called A Keyboard Warrior By This Guy

$
0
0
He was talking **** about these guys:



I said "let me guess you're a fat chunner who's never sparred hard in his life?".

He called me a keyboard warrior.

Checked out his channel and this is him (the fatter one).



Sure a some of the Nguni guys competing are probably beginners in their first tournament but every single one of them had more skill, athletisism and courage than Michelin man here.

Who are the most ridiculous people who've called you guys keyboard warriors?

60% Of Gracie University Affiliates Are Lead By Blue Belts

$
0
0
The exact reason, I recommend everyone looking for BJJ away from Gracie Academy/University Affiliates:


Quote:

Originally Posted by BJJEE
We crunched the Gracie university affiliate numbers in order to gain some sort of insight into the big picture when it comes to gracie jiu-jitsu practitioners.
After researching all the affiliates listed on the Gracie university map, accredited schools tab, results indicated that 60% of all affiliate academies are led by blue belts. Exact stats for USA are 60% of academies are owned by blue belts, 20% by purple belts, 5.3% by brown ones and finally 14.6% by black belts.
When we go worldwide, the numbers don’t really change, they are as follows: 60.57% blue, 20% purple, 4.8% brown, and 14.4% black. It’s also worth noting that Rener’s Torrance HQ and Ryron’s Beverly Hills academy count as black belt led Gracie academies which further colors the numbers.

http://www.bjjee.com/articles/60-of-...by-blue-belts/

Also combine this with "online" blue belts given by the Gracie Academy.

Fun with Kajukenbo Co-Founder Frank Ordonez

Best self defence for disabled people?

$
0
0
As some of you know my girlfriend is disabled and so can't run from a fight. I'm not around her 24/7 so I'd like her to learn some self defence.

She has a freakishly strong upper body for a woman her size. She can bench 75kg and rows 50kg for 10 reps. She was also a blue belt in judo as a kid. She's fairly good at groundwork but I think her club was extremely generous to allow her a blue belt.

Anyone had any experience training disabled people? What would you recommend?

Also I live in England, we're not allowed to carry knives let alone guns before someone suggest it.

Do police really need less than lethal weaponry?

$
0
0
So let me first start off by stating I am not a police officer I have done a few security guard things at some concert type events. Basically just radio and hand off stuff. So I am wondering what your guys-es views on less than lethal weaponry is? From what I understand is the bad guy doesn't have a weapon and is just non-compliant is when they use less lethal. If a person has a knife or hammer or gun or even if the person is ready to fist fight them they move to lethal force. So why have weapons like OC and such when they have to go hands on anyways to cuff the person and those things are sometimes ineffective. Why not use control holds and pressure points and such?


Thanks

Chimps Are NOT Superhuman

$
0
0
Sorry for the rant, got in to argument with someone on this topic today so I thought I'd write something out I can link in case the topic props up again.

Most of you have probably heard that chimps are 5-7 times stronger than humans. You may have even heard elaborate sciency sounding explanations as to why this might be the case but I've always been skeptical of this so I did some digging and found the evidence for this claim to be thoroughly lacking.

This myth has relevance to martial arts since people's belief in this myth often reflects people's poor understanding of physiology and athletic performance. One of these related myths is that humans are "geared" for endurance rather than strength. Whilst it's true that (active) humans have a very high capacity (though massively exaggerated) for endurance automatically make us weak.

This myth leads a lot of people to believe they should neglect strength training because it will slow them down which simply isn't the case. The fastest and most agile people in the world, elite sprinters and gymnasts are extremely muscular. As for endurance there are quite a few endurance athletes who are incredibly strong, Alex Viada and Scooby1961 come to mind and there is a considerable amount of research showing that improving your squat will also improve your marathon time. It makes sense, if you only need 25% of your strength to jog at a given speed chances are you can keep going longer than someone who needs 50%. Excessive muscle will reduce your endurance however, muscles require energy and there does reach a point where your lungs simply cannot keep up but unless you take a lot of anabolics this is unlikely to ever be an issue.

Anyway chimps certainly do have their strengths. They have evolved to climb trees so you'd expect them to be good at upper body pulling movements and have strong grips. They also have much stronger jaws than us since we have evolved to eat softened cooked food and walk upright carrying stuff in our hands.

This superior pulling strength is where the 5-7 times stronger myth originated. In 1926 a study found these results by testing pulling strength:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1373587...n_tab_contents

The study however failed the test of repeatability. In 1943 another test was performed with more rigourous methodology and found chimps have about the same pulling strength as men. Chimps are of course about half our size so for their size they are better at pulling which is exactly what we should expect.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/1374806?...n_tab_contents

So that is it for the evidence. Chimps are about as strong as men at pulling but are about half our size. Despite this reputable publications such as Scientific American repeat this myth and exaggerate it even further:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w98mem4FVQ0[/youtube]

They have taken the results of a flawed 1926 study, applied it to ALL aspects of strength/power rather than upper body pulls and rather than comparing chimps to average men they compare it to the strongest olympic lifter on the planet who trained their who life and took as many drugs as they could get away with to achieve that result. Moreover Olympic lifts are extremely technical. There are 50kg women who can out lift my at the olympic lifts despite having about half my strength at every other lift and I'm pretty sure my technique is better than a chimp's.

SA are using ad hoc reasoning to try and explain a premise which hasn't been proven in the first place. If it's true that chimps are so strong and have evolved to use this strength on a regular basis where is the evidence?

If it's true we should have at least one video of a chimp punching someone's head clean off, pulling another ape clean in half, tipping a car over, lifting it over their head or throwing another ape 30ft in to the air but we don't!

Absence of evidence where there should be evidence IS evidence of absence!

They can climb well and chew people's faces off but apart from that there is zero evidence of them being physically gifted and good reason to believe they are not.

Pushing strength has never been successfully tested and I see no reason to believe chimps are especially strong. Chimps don't need a strong chest, delts or triceps for climbing, fighting or fucking. Humans however strike with our fists, push and lift heavy things over our heads for building. we've likely been doing this for at least 2 million years. This does require strong pushing strength.

As for legs and back again chimps don't need to be especially strong in this regard, humans do! We build, we need to be able to carry heavy **** on our backs or in our arms and walk with it for hours a day. This is where our real strength specialisation lies. Even elephants 100 times our size can only pick up and carry 270kg with their trunks a feat which even local level strongman competitors can surpass.

It's likely SA have overestimated chimp strength by a factor of 30-60!

Video of a brawl makes the New York Post

$
0
0
It's not every day that a brawl makes the New York Post. Then again, New York City is becoming so gentrified that maybe a brawl is news these days.

http://nypost.com/2016/05/18/brawlin...on-expressway/

I rather liked this article as it had an embedded video of the brawl. The footage clearly showed two average combatants exchanging punches. No decisive hits were scored and the fight did not go to the ground, although the combatants were grabbing each other while throwing their punches.

Two female cops ran up and quickly handcuffed both combatants without difficulty.

This brawl hand shibumi. It was simple, neatly packaged, and understated. Surely, New York City is now highly gentrified. Even their brawls are neat and refined.

9mm rounds fired by NYPD fail to penetrate ordinary jacket

$
0
0
So, according to the New York Post, the NYPD is doing an investigation after 9mm rounds fired at a knife-wielding suspect failed to penetrate his ordinary jacket.

http://nypost.com/2016/05/19/nypd-ch...-cops-bullets/

Four of nine rounds fired lodged in the jacket instead of punching through and going into the suspect.

It's been said that these days, the issues of 9mm "stopping power" have been addressed by police departments switching to various types of JHP ammunition. However, there was apparently an ammunition performance problem in this case.

Is this a fluke, or typical?

According to http://www.tactical-life.com/firearm...sig-p226-frame the NYPD uses Speer's 124-grain Gold Dot hollow point +p cartridges.

Does anyone have experience using this round?

I'm No Hero

$
0
0
So, there is an ethic to when I will intervene on your behalf, vs when I won't.

1. If I'm paid to save you, I will save you. Period.
2. If you're running off at the mouth, I will not save you
3. If all the other guy is doing is running his mouth, I will not intervene
4. If I'm not being paid and it looks like a losing battle, I will not save you
5. If your whole plan was for me to save you, I will not save you
6. If you can save yourself, I will not save you

Perhaps that's a shitty ethic, but at the end of the day, male, trained, armed... none of it obligates me to save you.

Cracked - 6 Self-Defense Videos that Will Get You Killed

Sagging belly

$
0
0
Hi all,
I'm new here, Can anyone suggest some healthy exercises to reduce sagging belly?

Legit Judo-based combatives?

$
0
0
Hi everyone,

This is nothing more than satisfying an intellectual curiosity, but I appreciate any help that you might be able to provide.

Are there any legit judo combatives programs/curriculum that exist? I am thinking of how BJJ has the defensive focus to much of it's core curriculum and how there are also specific combatives programs such as Gracie Combatives, etc. A quick search on that for Judo didn't show much other than some people who claim to have invented "Combat Judo", who actually seem to have a legit Judo background, but the stuff they created looks a bit sketchy, and not much like Judo from what I saw. I also saw some people claiming to teach WWII Combatives which were largly Judo-based.

Any thoughts on this?

Thanks in advance!

Inside the Mind of a Delusional "Fighter"

$
0
0


This is not an amazing or important story. So just skip it if you’re looking for that. It’s just randomness from a discussion with a dumbass.

I shouldn’t be surprised when I talk to someone who is completely clueless about fighting. I’ve seen it so many times I should be immune to it by now and generally speaking, I am mostly immune to it. However, I had a discussion with a member of my extended family over the weekend that left me stunned by idiocy.

What surprised me the most wasn’t his level of cluelessness. His fight training consists of two or three TKD classes and his stepfather telling him how to “**** people up.” So, of course he doesn’t know ****. What surprised me was how adamantly he would argue his points, as if he held the secret key of fighting knowledge. My head damn near exploded.

One of my talents (and a talent shared by most rational humans) is that I’m able to recognize quickly when someone has more knowledge than me about something. For instance, if I strike up a conversation about clogged pipes with some dude and I realize he’s a plumber I’m probably going to pipe down and do more listening than talking. Not that I take the words of a more knowledgeable person as the gospel. I just am smart enough to recognize when they know more than me. And if I happen to disagree with him about how to clear a clogged pipe, I’ll probably keep it to myself because I recognize he may know something that I don’t. At the very least, I’ll advance my ideas gently and not forcefully. This avoids a lot of awkward situations and allows me to learn new things.

I don’t claim to be an expert on anything. I would classify my own level of martial arts knowledge and experience like this….I trained very hard for quite a few years. Unfortunately, a lot of that training time was mostly wasted because I didn’t understand what it took to become a good fighter. I wasn’t participating in the right kind of training. Eventually I figured that out and I spent some time exploring true quality training. I developed an understanding of what it takes to acquire the skill level I was hoping to achieve. I also realized I didn’t have the level of desire it took to actually achieve that skill level.

I was 30 something at the time. I had kids and a job and I was suffering injuries and I realized I didn’t want it enough. I stopped after spending a couple years immersed in quality training with quality partners. So I’m no expert and don’t claim to be one. But I can say with a fair degree of confidence that I did enough exploring to at least know what I don’t know. And I’ve learned a lot by talking with you bunch of turds. At the very least, I have a better understanding than a dude who learned to fight via a 15 minute lesson with his untrained stepfather.

Let me share some of the ideas which were argued confidently by this American badass, in no particular order:

• Grappling isn’t effective for street fighting.
• The best ways to win a fight are:
o Use a broken beer bottle.
o Hurl a brick.
o Pick up a rock (this was also his preferred way to defend himself when under mount).
o Pull a knife (I asked him if he had one on him and he said no).
o Shoot them (puzzling, since he doesn’t carry a firearm).
o Just go crazy.
o Be mean and nasty.
o Eye gouge.
o Bite.
o Squeeze the balls.
• Basically, his entire fight strategy is to Hulk out. Incidentally, I’d estimate his weight at 165lbs.

• Fights happen too quickly for grappling to work. There’s no time for grappling.
• If people train to grapple they’re at a disadvantage because they’re likely to attempt to grapple rather than using one of the more effective strategies listed above.
• Biting, ball grabs and eye gouges are absolute fight enders.
• Royce Gracie’s first name is pronounced identically to Rolls Royce.
• The best MMA fighters of all time were Tank Abbott, Kimbo Slice and Ken Shamrock. For real. I can’t even make this **** up.
• He has been in three or four whole drunken street fights. In one of them, he bit a “wrestler” who had him in a headlock. He let go. Clearly proof that biting is the equivalent of Thor’s hammer.

Fellas, trust me. I picked this **** apart carefully, patiently, calmly, thoroughly. Point by point. Argument by argument. When he first started in on grappling’s ineffectiveness, I assumed he was an advocate of striking instead. Now, this is a much more common argument and one that can at least be understood. It’s an idea that can even be held by people who have had some training of some sort. So I started explaining the challenges strikers are likely to face against skilled grapplers.

But then I realized that he wasn’t really an advocate of any martial arts training whatsoever. He never once explained why striking would be advantageous or why a kick is better, or anything like that. Because his belief was that anything other than spazzing out in the manner described above was silly bullshit. Unnecessary. Wasted effort that will let you down in a real fight. Because what wins real fights is being meaner. More willing to shove your adversary’s face into the hot lava that covers the mean streets of Charlotte.



I presented to him a carefully constructed argument to illustrate why, even if his methods happen to be effective, they’re not unique. That a trained fighter will have all of his Hulk smash strategy available to him in addition to a laundry list of other learned skills.

I didn’t even attempt to argue that he couldn’t use his asshattery against your average untrained fighter. I kept it even safer than that. I stuck to a point that seemed much easier to understand. That fighting a properly trained fighter is a completely different ball of wax than fighting an untrained fighter. That those fighters will enjoy advantages that your average Joe will never have.

Nope, nothing. He would hear none of it. He never flat out said it but it appears clear to me that he believes training to fight actually hinders your fighting ability. It also is clear to me that he believes that with approximately twenty minutes of training under his belt he is as prepared for a violent encounter as any man can possibly be.

Dudes, tell me……what the **** do you even say to that? I even shared with him my experiences being humbled the first times I got on the mats with decent grapplers. I tried to explain to him that some things can’t be understood without experiencing them. Nope. No acknowledgement that I could even have a valid point. Only an endless stream of silly arguments.

I could’ve just beaten his ass but it wasn’t the time or place. Finally I just gave up. After attempting to reach him with logic, I finally just told him that he was delusional and didn’t know what the **** he was talking about. After that he shut up and the conversation ended.

I’m not posting this looking for any answers. I understand the situation completely. He’s a dumbass who doesn’t know **** and thinks he does. It’s pretty simple. I just thought some of you may find some humor in the discussion. So there it is.

I thought of this video and actually referenced it during the conversation….

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fe3na9umxDA

Recommendations: budget canvas pants

$
0
0
I'm looking for some low-cost canvas pants for working out. Tired of $50 synthetics; I'm basically hoping to find cheap Gi pants suitable for exercise in a wide range-of-motion, without having to withstand contact MA practice.

I've been able to find some dirt-cheap ones online (as low as $14 a pair), but it's often hard to tell whether they're really suited for even calisthenic exercise. The cheapest items appear to be relaxed day-wear stuff from China, and I fear the inseam will split during stretches, squats, et cetera.

I've considered just picking up some sweatpants, but I live in a balmy climate and am just a sweaty dude as it is. Something similar to Gi pants or the pants I see Capoeira practitioners wear would be great.

Master Ken no!

$
0
0
How could the great master of Ameridote cheapen himself to the point of having this fraud on his channel?

Does a BJJ Gi imply you are ranked in BJJ?

$
0
0
So this seems to happen again and again. Black Belt in Japanese Jujutsu or some other TMA purchases a known BJJ Branded Gi but with their Black Belt in their other art. I am not referring to the Black Belt with the Red Bar synonymous with BJJ ranking but a standard Black Belt. Are they being disingenuous with what they representing?

On 1 side, BJJ Gis are cut a lot more comfortably than Judo Gis, they are often Lighter and have a Slimmer Fit. On the other hand, these Brand Logos are known for BJJ attire. Additionally, when a Japanese Jujutsu Instructor wears a Judo Gi, no one is claiming they are trying to pass as a Judo instructor.

Now does this change, if they teach Ground Fighting/Ne Waza?

I am curious as this happening again:

https://www.jiujitsutimes.com/anothe...-belt-exposed/
https://www.jiujitsutimes.com/bjj-in...kes-statement/
http://www.mixedmartialarts.com/foru...others:2562178

I know this is odd for me, because I have a Nidan in Japanese Jujutsu, but I don't feel I can represent it any more. While I still have the belt, my old Judo Gi from 6 years ago doesn't really fit anymore (too big) so the only Gis I have are BJJ Gis. Therefore, even if I am asked to teach a Japanese Jujutsu Class, I tend to wear my BJJ Purple Belt as not to misrepresent myself.

Decent places in osan korea

$
0
0
Hello all,

I have moved to osan Korea for a year and would like to take some martial arts classes. I don't want no BS fake crap either which is why I want to know what are good places to train in the area aroundosan air base. I would really like to get into muay Thai, if there are any good places around the area. Thanks in advance.

Sukui-nage! (no gi, no leg grab variation)

$
0
0
I'm no judoka, but this throw has interested me for quite a while. I then learned that the traditional way of performing the throw required grabbing the legs or gi pants. IIRC, grabbing the legs for throws is no longer allowed in IJF rules (or at least restricted.) I thought that kinda sucked and looked for ways to do it without grabbing the legs. This video shows exactly that (which is also a no gi version.)



So, what do you guys think? Or is my non-judo mind missing something?
Viewing all 7799 articles
Browse latest View live