Hello all, This week I am participating in a DAAT, defensive and arrest techniques trainer school. We are learning techniques for general defense and offense as well as groundfighting. Police techniques in general center on concluding the active fight quickly, efficiently and with maximum force so that the situation ends quickly and order and position of advantage is gained and maintained.
You can imagine my surprise when the cutting edge techniques focus on moving along the 8 diffrent lines of attack, using a square with 8 lines drawn through to assist movement in the diffrent directions. When proper stance is described as loading your strong side back, to move forward with the strikes, etc.....see where this is going all of these cutting edge techniques have all-ready been taught to warriors say around....1200 or so.
I was used aa a demonstration dummy with one of the instructors for groundfighting who actually asked me during the presentation if I had been to a special groundfighting Police school called "spear" school. Imagine his surprise when he learned how old these techniques actually were.
That's why I feel WMA has such a direct corolation to Law Enforcement...Cops are in it for real, there are no sparring rules, ever. We either win or we lose then we die. The techniques tuaght in WMA really are focused on this mindset...win or die--that's where I feel we as WMA differ from some of the other systems out there, the mindset is much much diffrent from a sparring or sporting event.
Can I get some other thoughts on this? What do the rest of you in Law Enforcement think? Have you used any of these techniques out there, or care to comment on what I mean by a direct relationship to Law Enforcement... granted they are tailored as we are not trying to kill anyone with the technique, but what if they start to choke you or try and take out an eye? Now the rules are diffrent for us as Officers. What do people not involved in Law Enforcement think...say you get involved in a bar fight will you use maximum force and efficiency. Thoughts?

