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Stages de survie CEETS

Auteur Sujet: Expect Nothing - Dave Spaulding  (Lu 2373 fois)

03 novembre 2011 à 16:33:57
Lu 2373 fois

** Serge **


http://paladinplanet.blogspot.com/2011/11/expect-nothing.html

I spoke with a street cop today who almost died in an attack. He is experienced and skilled, being state-certified in firearms, defensive tactics, and OC instruction. I have had him in my classes, and he knows what he is doing. During a stop for a routine traffic violation, the citizen became incensed at being detained and attacked in what the officer called a “raging bull state,” against which the officer’s OC and ASP baton had no effect. The suspect tried to take the officer’s service pistol, all the while telling him that he was going to kill him, before a group of citizens intervened and helped restrain the crazed man. The officer told me that none of his skills worked and everything he believed in was a lie.

Unfortunately, this officer's story is not a new one . . . at least not to me.

I have long questioned the practice of spraying students with OC or hitting them with a Taser during training, as it gives them an unrealistic expectation of what the tool can do. Students in training are not filled with a chemical cocktail of cortisol and epinephrine that can turn off any pain signals to the brain temporarily. They feel the full effects of the given tool and think their opponent will too. Expect nothing. It is well documented that people can be shot through vital organs, such as the heart, and still be mobile for 20 to 40 seconds — what has been called “ambulation after death” — causing havoc and death before they finally succumb. The human organism might not be hard to kill, but it is certainly hard to stop quickly.

No matter what skills you decide to incorporate into your skill set, often referred to as your “toolbox,” understand they may not work quite as well as they did on the range or in the dojo against a partner who was a bit more willing to comply than an aggressive attacker. As a matter of fact, do not count on any technique to work . . . expect nothing . . . and plan to move to a contingency technique or skill instantly. Shooting rounds, swinging a baton, or throwing a punch and expecting instant incapacitation is likely to meet with failure. Train hard; stay on guard; and shoot, punch, kick, or b!te your opponent until he or she thinks it’s time to stop. All you can do is help them arrive at that conclusion.


2011 - © - Dave Spaulding

Dave Spaulding is a retired law enforcement officer with 28 years of experience. Having retired as a Lieutenant from the Montgomery County (Ohio) Sheriff's Office, he worked in all facets of law enforcement including Communications, Corrections, Court Security, Patrol, Evidence Collection, Investigations, Undercover Operations and Training. He spent 12 years on the SWAT team, 8 of which as Training Officer. He supervised his agency's training program for five years and spent five years as the commander of a federally funded, multi-agency Narcotics Task Force that worked investigations from Miami to Seattle.

      Dave has a Bachelor's Degree in Social Psychology from the University of Dayton with a minor in Physical Education. He is a graduate of most of the major firearms training schools including Thunder Ranch, Gunsite, the Smith & Wesson Academy, the SIG Arms Academy, the Heckler & Koch International Training Division, Defense Training International, CQB Services, Ltd., the Tactical Defense Institute and the Mid South Institute for Self Defense Shooting. He has been a multiple attendee and presenter at the international training conferences for ASLET and IALEFI and was the host for the 2004 international training conference for IALEFI. He has served as an adjunct instructor for H & K, the Tactical Defense Institute and is a past president of the Ohio Tactical Officer's Association.


                           
"The quality of your life is a direct reflection of the quality of your communication with yourself and others." - Anthony Robbins
http://jahozafat.com/0029585851/MP3S/Movies/Pulp_Fiction/dicks.mp3
"Communications without intelligence is noise; Intelligence without communications is irrelevant." ~ Gen. Alfred. M. Gray, USMC

 


Keep in mind

Bienveillance, n.f. : disposition affective d'une volonté qui vise le bien et le bonheur d'autrui. (Wikipedia).

« [...] ce qui devrait toujours nous éveiller quant à l'obligation de s'adresser à l'autre comme l'on voudrait que l'on s'adresse à nous :
avec bienveillance, curiosité et un appétit pour le dialogue et la réflexion que l'interlocuteur peut susciter. »


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