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Karate is illegal in Québec

Masterj810610

Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2022
Messages
329
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec
 
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Come on Canada why? Are these people out of their minds? They will ban Martial Arts now?

This is institutionalized sissification that they are enforcing, and for people to be utterly defenseless. While invaders etc will be well into crime, people who are civilized will be unable to even self defend in anyway.
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Come on Canada why? Are these people out of their minds? They will ban Martial Arts now?

This is institutionalized sissification that they are enforcing, and for people to be utterly defenseless. While invaders etc will be well into crime, people who are civilized will be unable to even self defend in anyway.

They are turning civilizations into rape stocks , ready to be raped anytime.
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Come on Canada why? Are these people out of their minds? They will ban Martial Arts now?

This is institutionalized sissification that they are enforcing, and for people to be utterly defenseless. While invaders etc will be well into crime, people who are civilized will be unable to even self defend in anyway.

It's Quebec......their level of communism and stupidity makes even America's most-ultra Leftist people look like hardcore conservatives in comparison (many gay Americans support gun rights, and a chunk of American Black leftists aren't cool with the race-mixing agenda). Not even the majority of Canada likes putting up with 'em.

They're literally trying to undo what Stephen Harper did, while I'm not fan of mainstream political drama, I gotta say, Stephen Harper tried to give the Canadians "some semblance" of resistance.

He destroyed their long-gun registry, made many banned guns un-banned, and even gave Canadians a legal framework of self-defence (Sections 34 or 35 of their federal Criminal Code). Every time Harper even "as so much" loosened some draconian gun law, Canadian Leftists went crazy, makes BS claims that he's trying to turn Canada into a "redneck batshit society where everyone carries AR-15s".

When Trudeau won their 2015 Parliamentary Elections, I knew it was over for the Canadian people.

Not only has the guy been banning many AR-15 models (2020), he also went after hand-guns (as of May this year), and now.......martial arts.

What's next....banning "simply looking like" you're able to defend yourself?

I also find this.....extremely hypocritical, for a province that constantly likes to talk about "seceding" like the way Texas and the Southern states do. Ottawa will never sign Quebec into independence, unless shekels (and massive amounts of it) are involved.
 
I do not remember what movie that was, but I do recall vividly that there was a movie where something like this escalated, all people were programmed to never be able to defend themselves in anyway on a planet.

Then the "Elohim" or hostile aliens came in and totally enslaved them while removing their consciousness. And they sacrificed them and all sorts of things, "willingly" as their minds were blanked into a "Good" state where they could not even understand they would get sacrificed.

Then the sheep would be called through a siren into certain gates where they would be sacrificed.

Whomever did not want to be sacrificed from the native species, was also considered 'evil'. The movie plotted around how some people woke up. This is a very old movie too.

"Do not practice any Karate or Judo, Kung Fu, this is very bad for you. It might make you into a self controlled, self respecting individual, and maybe also turn your mind from being an NPC. Let us all hold max power while you can't even land a kick, goy, because even an imaginary kick could be used in your goy mind against a jew" -Rabbi Kikestein
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
I do not remember what movie that was, but I do recall vividly that there was a movie where something like this escalated, all people were programmed to never be able to defend themselves in anyway on a planet.

Then the "Elohim" or hostile aliens came in and totally enslaved them while removing their consciousness. And they sacrificed them and all sorts of things, "willingly" as their minds were blanked into a "Good" state where they could not even understand they would get sacrificed.

Then the sheep would be called through a siren into certain gates where they would be sacrificed.

Whomever did not want to be sacrificed from the native species, was also considered 'evil'. The movie plotted around how some people woke up. This is a very old movie too.

"Do not practice any Karate or Judo, Kung Fu, this is very bad for you. It might make you into a self controlled, self respecting individual, and maybe also turn your mind from being an NPC. Let us all hold max power while you can't even land a kick, goy, because even an imaginary kick could be used in your goy mind against a jew" -Rabbi Kikestein

They even told the kid (my 3yo takes karate courses), saturday morning, to not use karate elsewhere because if they do, they will get banned from the courses... Like I will them if she uses it...
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Come on Canada why? Are these people out of their minds? They will ban Martial Arts now?

This is institutionalized sissification that they are enforcing, and for people to be utterly defenseless. While invaders etc will be well into crime, people who are civilized will be unable to even self defend in anyway.

Canada probably has it's own npc commie problem,an with trudeau canada has its work cut out for them, the npcs or useful idiots probably persuaded whoever that it's cultural appropriation, an got people to stop teaching

(Reeeeeeeeeeee cultural appropriation reeeeeeeeeeee praise trudeau reeeeeeeeeeee give me social credit daddy government muh can't think for myself )


Anyway What I would do is teach it in secret or,create your own, add a little Karate, to it an teach it say it's not Karate,but I'm sure the useful idiots will come after it next,
 
First, self-defense, guns, now martial arts too?! Soon they will be banning yoga next oy vey! Wait, I think in a part of Russia they already did such a thing, and it was even shared here. People will have only one way around this retardation which is to practice in secret.

Taekwondo, Judo, ju-jitsu, and others are probably next, with other provinces (and even other libtard states firstly) to follow eventually, although I really hope not. I hope enough people get pissed off enough to protest this. This is just another scheme to leave people unable to defend themselves when big brother comes cracking down.
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
"Do not practice any Karate or Judo, Kung Fu, this is very bad for you. It might make you into a self controlled, self respecting individual, and maybe also turn your mind from being an NPC. Let us all hold max power while you can't even land a kick, goy, because even an imaginary kick could be used in your goy mind against a jew" -Rabbi Kikestein


:lol: :D :lol: :lol: :lol:
 
Shadowcat said:
First, self-defense, guns, now martial arts too?! Soon they will be banning yoga next oy vey! Wait, I think in a part of Russia they already did such a thing, and it was even shared here. People will have only one way around this retardation which is to practice in secret.

What!? They banned yoga in parts of Russia?

Well......if this isn't proof that yoga ISN'T EVIL like the Christturds wanna claim.....then I don't know what will. If meditation and yoga were sooooooooooo evil, not sure why the kike gov'ts wanna ban then so bad?

They want all societies to degress into violence and toxic behavior.....and I'm quite seeing the manifestation of that.
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
I do not remember what movie that was, but I do recall vividly that there was a movie where something like this escalated, all people were programmed to never be able to defend themselves in anyway on a planet.

Then the "Elohim" or hostile aliens came in and totally enslaved them while removing their consciousness. And they sacrificed them and all sorts of things, "willingly" as their minds were blanked into a "Good" state where they could not even understand they would get sacrificed.

Then the sheep would be called through a siren into certain gates where they would be sacrificed.

Whomever did not want to be sacrificed from the native species, was also considered 'evil'. The movie plotted around how some people woke up. This is a very old movie too.

"Do not practice any Karate or Judo, Kung Fu, this is very bad for you. It might make you into a self controlled, self respecting individual, and maybe also turn your mind from being an NPC. Let us all hold max power while you can't even land a kick, goy, because even an imaginary kick could be used in your goy mind against a jew" -Rabbi Kikestein

Sounds very much like 'Dark City'

I would not worry about Canadians getting 'pussified' or attacked, they luckly still have hockey lol
 
Canadians want to get rid of Communism? They should leave their churches, disrespect Jewsus, take a piss on the bible while they're at it, and hold up signs that say "fuck Jesus" when they're protesting. I'm not sorry.
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Come on Canada why? Are these people out of their minds? They will ban Martial Arts now?

This is institutionalized sissification that they are enforcing, and for people to be utterly defenseless. While invaders etc will be well into crime, people who are civilized will be unable to even self defend in anyway.

Sorry if this is old, I just found this post and your comment and I REALLY have to mention something.

Not sure how many know this, but apparently (books on martial arts report this especially) 'martial arts' were banned in China for about 300 years during the Qing dynasty.
Story goes like this (brief version):
The Qing 'Emperor'/communist mafia sat on the throne and decided that people shouldn't practice or even know martial arts as they were a threat to the empire (the emperor's army obviously had every military privilege, from martial arts to all the weapons). So, the army burned the 5 main temples (one for each of the 5 animal styles practiced there), killed all the monks and declared that practice or knowledge of martial arts was punishable by death.

(Sounds like what the kikes could pull on "owning guns", aye?)

So the surviving martial artists went to hide in the mountains and caves and secretly and 'illegally' passed on their styles to their kin. Much knowledge has been lost, but tragedy pushed these people to the extreme and they survived. Wing Chun (a short ranged martial art that uses great body mechanics to either excel in defence and attack, and none other than Bruce Lee's first martial art, learned from Ip Man) was apparently created in this period, in secret, and could sometimes be performed in public because of its 'unlikeliness to be a martial art' (the 'kata/taolu' looks pretty odd, you don't know what it is unless you know what it is for).

After 300 years when the Qing dynasty ended and there was no empire anymore, martial arts started to slowly flourish again (although many masters were still passing on their skills in secret for fear or leaking knowledge to their enemies).

When I read this history I just thought "Jews". I don't think it's surprising that they're trying to ban martial arts again.. they're already banning things like Yoga, which (although has incredible physical and spiritual benefits) isn't even technically a 'weapon' used to fight or anything.
This age is without a doubt going to see the worst or the worst in terms of madness and lying and manipulation of the masses..

By the way, Commander.. do you know/recommend any martial art in particular? I started with Karate as a child but then studied a lot of Chinese kung fu styles and never really stopped. 30 years later I'm still learning about new martial arts that weren't popular back then.

Hope this was useful somehow.

HAIL SATAN FOREVER!
 
Eagle Bearer 666 said:
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Come on Canada why? Are these people out of their minds? They will ban Martial Arts now?

This is institutionalized sissification that they are enforcing, and for people to be utterly defenseless. While invaders etc will be well into crime, people who are civilized will be unable to even self defend in anyway.

Sorry if this is old, I just found this post and your comment and I REALLY have to mention something.

Not sure how many know this, but apparently (books on martial arts report this especially) 'martial arts' were banned in China for about 300 years during the Qing dynasty.
Story goes like this (brief version):
The Qing 'Emperor'/communist mafia sat on the throne and decided that people shouldn't practice or even know martial arts as they were a threat to the empire (the emperor's army obviously had every military privilege, from martial arts to all the weapons). So, the army burned the 5 main temples (one for each of the 5 animal styles practiced there), killed all the monks and declared that practice or knowledge of martial arts was punishable by death.

(Sounds like what the kikes could pull on "owning guns", aye?)

So the surviving martial artists went to hide in the mountains and caves and secretly and 'illegally' passed on their styles to their kin. Much knowledge has been lost, but tragedy pushed these people to the extreme and they survived. Wing Chun (a short ranged martial art that uses great body mechanics to either excel in defence and attack, and none other than Bruce Lee's first martial art, learned from Ip Man) was apparently created in this period, in secret, and could sometimes be performed in public because of its 'unlikeliness to be a martial art' (the 'kata/taolu' looks pretty odd, you don't know what it is unless you know what it is for).

After 300 years when the Qing dynasty ended and there was no empire anymore, martial arts started to slowly flourish again (although many masters were still passing on their skills in secret for fear or leaking knowledge to their enemies).

When I read this history I just thought "Jews". I don't think it's surprising that they're trying to ban martial arts again.. they're already banning things like Yoga, which (although has incredible physical and spiritual benefits) isn't even technically a 'weapon' used to fight or anything.
This age is without a doubt going to see the worst or the worst in terms of madness and lying and manipulation of the masses..

By the way, Commander.. do you know/recommend any martial art in particular? I started with Karate as a child but then studied a lot of Chinese kung fu styles and never really stopped. 30 years later I'm still learning about new martial arts that weren't popular back then.

Hope this was useful somehow.

HAIL SATAN FOREVER!
What are your thoughts on karate vs kung fu? If it were a choice between them, which would you recommend doing?
 
existentialcrisis said:
What are your thoughts on karate vs kung fu? If it were a choice between them, which would you recommend doing?

Now THAT is a difficult question to answer, Brother.
Not gonna say 'impossible' but I'll try to compare the two and give you my thoughts.

I'll start with Karate for the sake of the explanation.
As you may know, Karate, although technically 'created' in Okinawa, is actually the Japanese version of martial arts from China, imported by travelling monks and taught to farmers to defend themselves against thieves and marauders.
The Japanese took the arm related techniques (fists, blocks, elbow strikes mostly) and called it 'Karate' (meaning "empty hand").
The kicks of Karate don't come from Japan, but from France. When France passed a law that forbade people from carrying swords for self defence (as this resulted in a lot of murders on the streets), sailors and seamen thought about something else to try and defend themselves. Fencing was made with swords, but they couldn't carrying swords, so they invented "fencing with feet (with hard shoes)" and called it 'Savate' (which means 'shoe').
Word is, French kicks were somehow imported in Japan and added to the hand techniques of Karate, and thusly modern "Karate" was born.

Karate is pretty static for a martial art, it has simple, stoic stances, and a strong grounding, so it's usually strongly recommended for people who are either bulkier, heavier, or simply prefer to avoid anything overly complicated. It's probably the most simplified martial art, focusing on aesthetics as well as combat, and focuses a lot on ending a fight in the shortest amount of moves, developing a lot of body strength and resistance to pain.
Plus, the "blocks" in Karate, called 'uke', are more than just blocks. 'Uke' means 'to receive' and the techniques that look like blocks are actually 'strikes' (that block attacks) or 'intercepting strikes' which are meant to deviate enemy fists and kicks by reinforcing the wrists.
To put this shortly, Karate is "badass" and values strength probably as much as technique. People who practice Karate usually tend to misunderstand it and only embrace the idea that it's a striking martial art, they disregard real training on the blocks (common mistake) and in combat/sparring they often feel so limited in the use of hand techniques that they resort to only kicking, turning 'Karate' into Savate or Taekwondo (Korean martial art meaning "way of the fist and the foot", although practitioners, like in Karate, also tend to forget about hand techniques and flair their arms around while they only kick).

In my opinion a true karateka is a VERY fierce and dangerous opponent, lacking nothing in terms of combat if not mental preparation (a dojo prepares you physically, but your mind in a stressful situation where you actually face danger, can fuck up your entire training and make you forget you ever learned Karate).

As for kung fu....
When you say "kung fu" you're actually talking about something like a 100 different styles (at least, books report 108 but some are just very similar), so there is a LOT of variety.
I'll cut to the chase and say right away that your ideal kung fu style will depend on the kind of person you are, not just physically (bulky or light on your feet, thin or muscular, tall or short) but also on how you fare mentally (shy or outgoing, extrovert or introvert, kind and gentle or opportunistic and fierce, simple minded or creative).

For example, if you choose for yourself an animal style like the Tiger, you should be ideally stronger than the average person, but also aggressive, never shy, not too creative, sturdy and heavier than your opponent.
While if you choose something like Snake style or Mantis style, you should be ideally light on your feet, strong in a flexible way, not very heavy and bulky, and very creative and opportunistic, as these styles are meant to surprise, feign, strike when least expected, and dodge with higher agility than something like Tiger style.

In that regard, kung fu offers a LOT of choice, but the downside of this is that you may not know yourself very well yet, and choose a style that cannot maximize your potential, OR you may be simply more attracted to something harder to master and fancy looking and choose that instead of a style that could actually teach you how to efficiently defend yourself in combat making good use of what makes you 'you'.

Needless to say, martial arts (real ones, not modern watered down bullshit) require you to know yourself a lot before you can efficiently state that you mastered a style. Sparring in a dojo is a good start to get the grip on how it feels to fight someone (of course in a dojo the danger factor is very low and your sensei/sifu/instructor will stop a fight that gets out of hand), but you'll need to mentally prepare yourself to enter the mindset of someone who actually *is* in a fight.

Meditation here helps a lot in my opinion:
you could visualize an ideal enemy, either someone you know that would deserve a beating, or anyone that you can make up, as long as it feels real in your mind. The goal here is to train your mind to cope with stress, so the scarier and stronger you make your mental opponent, the more stress you'll feel.
If you ever heard of Shadow Boxing, this is basically it, but next level.
In Shadow Boxing you physically train against an opponent that you visualize. He's not there but you imagine him trying to hit you, you dodge, sway, evade and punch and kick him. It's quite the remarkable training and can make you very tired, but it's worth it as your body will learn the muscle memory needed to stay out your enemy's way (this won't be 100% efficient but it'll be pretty good exercise, only real combat can ultimately teach you how to fight).
This is the physical part..
The mental 'shadow boxing' is harder as it necessitates you to find a good opponent and he must be *scary*.

Not gonna lie, mate.. fighting can be scary, especially if you never fought anyone before, or if you haven't fought for a while and you're caught by surprise. The stress escalates quickly and your body listens to your primal brain, telling it 'prepare to fight or die'. It's a pretty unpleasant feel, but you get used to it with time. The important thing, also, is to focus on your breathing.

Karate notoriously advertises using breathing control to enhance technique power, but the real deal here is that breath is the tool that removes fear of your enemy.
I can't stress this enough: when you enter a fight, even if it's just someone calling you names, raising his voice, trying to look bigger, red in the face, angry, staring at you, displaying hostile body language... your body will immediately tense up and harden. Your blood vessel will contract, making your skin more pale. This is a natural defence mechanism as the paler you are, the less likely you are to bleed if cut or injured. Someone might call you 'scared' because you look pale as a ghost or something, but this is actually good news for you. The dangerous fighter isn't the one red in the face, but the pale one, AS LONG as he breathes and controls his fear level.
Combat paralysis has been known to make martial art masters forger they ever learned martial arts. As we all know here, fear is a powerful tool, and it should be dealt with before it becomes a future problem. There's nothing unmanly or wrong in being scared, but letting the fear win over your mind is a mistake.

_______________________________

Lately, I've been doing a lot of training in martial arts, even got more fit and stronger than I was without doing any gym or weight lifting, so as my body changed I pondered what style I should rely on more.

Karate or Kung fu?

When you're physically stronger and bulkier you may not be at your peak in agility (to say the least), so fancy Kung fu moves and footing may not be the greatest choice here. In that regard, I prefer to use Karate stances, sturdier and more grounded.
BUT... I also know Kung fu, and can't disregard moves that I know to work and that easily maximize my power. For example, I know 7 Star Mantis style (Tanglangquan) and while I'm not even considering the most acrobatic stuff or the lowest stances, I know that some techniques can be well translated into Karate. Mantis style uses a lot of speedy hand techniques that allow you to block or capture your opponent's limbs (like a fist), so I can use that to avoid a punch and retaliate before the opponent can throw a second.
If you learn some Wing Chun (I made another post on this some time ago, you're welcome to check it out) you'll see that, unlike many other martial arts, blocking and attacking is done at the same time, meaning your fist will land on your enemy while your other arm blocks. Can this be translated into Karate or Mantis techniques? Yes? Perfect. Use them.

When people say "MMA", Mixed Martial Arts, I personally call that 'bullshit for a stage'. When I encourage you to 'mix martial arts', I mean.. take the style you feel most comfortable and natural with, and add something from another style.
Does it work? Yes? Perfect, keep it and make it your own.

I hope that wasn't too long (I know it was) and boring. When you ask something like that you'd better be prepared to a lot more information lol..

To give you one final piece of advice, I came up with a deduction lately:
"Martial arts are divided roughly into CONCEPT and STYLE.
The style doesn't define the concept.
The concept may belong to an entirely different style and it's what the martial art is all about.
The style is simply the way the concept is applied."

Hope that helps.

HAIL SATAN FOREVER!
 
Eagle Bearer 666 said:
existentialcrisis said:
What are your thoughts on karate vs kung fu? If it were a choice between them, which would you recommend doing?

Now THAT is a difficult question to answer, Brother.
Not gonna say 'impossible' but I'll try to compare the two and give you my thoughts.

I'll start with Karate for the sake of the explanation.
As you may know, Karate, although technically 'created' in Okinawa, is actually the Japanese version of martial arts from China, imported by travelling monks and taught to farmers to defend themselves against thieves and marauders.
The Japanese took the arm related techniques (fists, blocks, elbow strikes mostly) and called it 'Karate' (meaning "empty hand").
The kicks of Karate don't come from Japan, but from France. When France passed a law that forbade people from carrying swords for self defence (as this resulted in a lot of murders on the streets), sailors and seamen thought about something else to try and defend themselves. Fencing was made with swords, but they couldn't carrying swords, so they invented "fencing with feet (with hard shoes)" and called it 'Savate' (which means 'shoe').
Word is, French kicks were somehow imported in Japan and added to the hand techniques of Karate, and thusly modern "Karate" was born.

Karate is pretty static for a martial art, it has simple, stoic stances, and a strong grounding, so it's usually strongly recommended for people who are either bulkier, heavier, or simply prefer to avoid anything overly complicated. It's probably the most simplified martial art, focusing on aesthetics as well as combat, and focuses a lot on ending a fight in the shortest amount of moves, developing a lot of body strength and resistance to pain.
Plus, the "blocks" in Karate, called 'uke', are more than just blocks. 'Uke' means 'to receive' and the techniques that look like blocks are actually 'strikes' (that block attacks) or 'intercepting strikes' which are meant to deviate enemy fists and kicks by reinforcing the wrists.
To put this shortly, Karate is "badass" and values strength probably as much as technique. People who practice Karate usually tend to misunderstand it and only embrace the idea that it's a striking martial art, they disregard real training on the blocks (common mistake) and in combat/sparring they often feel so limited in the use of hand techniques that they resort to only kicking, turning 'Karate' into Savate or Taekwondo (Korean martial art meaning "way of the fist and the foot", although practitioners, like in Karate, also tend to forget about hand techniques and flair their arms around while they only kick).

In my opinion a true karateka is a VERY fierce and dangerous opponent, lacking nothing in terms of combat if not mental preparation (a dojo prepares you physically, but your mind in a stressful situation where you actually face danger, can fuck up your entire training and make you forget you ever learned Karate).

As for kung fu....
When you say "kung fu" you're actually talking about something like a 100 different styles (at least, books report 108 but some are just very similar), so there is a LOT of variety.
I'll cut to the chase and say right away that your ideal kung fu style will depend on the kind of person you are, not just physically (bulky or light on your feet, thin or muscular, tall or short) but also on how you fare mentally (shy or outgoing, extrovert or introvert, kind and gentle or opportunistic and fierce, simple minded or creative).

For example, if you choose for yourself an animal style like the Tiger, you should be ideally stronger than the average person, but also aggressive, never shy, not too creative, sturdy and heavier than your opponent.
While if you choose something like Snake style or Mantis style, you should be ideally light on your feet, strong in a flexible way, not very heavy and bulky, and very creative and opportunistic, as these styles are meant to surprise, feign, strike when least expected, and dodge with higher agility than something like Tiger style.

In that regard, kung fu offers a LOT of choice, but the downside of this is that you may not know yourself very well yet, and choose a style that cannot maximize your potential, OR you may be simply more attracted to something harder to master and fancy looking and choose that instead of a style that could actually teach you how to efficiently defend yourself in combat making good use of what makes you 'you'.

Needless to say, martial arts (real ones, not modern watered down bullshit) require you to know yourself a lot before you can efficiently state that you mastered a style. Sparring in a dojo is a good start to get the grip on how it feels to fight someone (of course in a dojo the danger factor is very low and your sensei/sifu/instructor will stop a fight that gets out of hand), but you'll need to mentally prepare yourself to enter the mindset of someone who actually *is* in a fight.

Meditation here helps a lot in my opinion:
you could visualize an ideal enemy, either someone you know that would deserve a beating, or anyone that you can make up, as long as it feels real in your mind. The goal here is to train your mind to cope with stress, so the scarier and stronger you make your mental opponent, the more stress you'll feel.
If you ever heard of Shadow Boxing, this is basically it, but next level.
In Shadow Boxing you physically train against an opponent that you visualize. He's not there but you imagine him trying to hit you, you dodge, sway, evade and punch and kick him. It's quite the remarkable training and can make you very tired, but it's worth it as your body will learn the muscle memory needed to stay out your enemy's way (this won't be 100% efficient but it'll be pretty good exercise, only real combat can ultimately teach you how to fight).
This is the physical part..
The mental 'shadow boxing' is harder as it necessitates you to find a good opponent and he must be *scary*.

Not gonna lie, mate.. fighting can be scary, especially if you never fought anyone before, or if you haven't fought for a while and you're caught by surprise. The stress escalates quickly and your body listens to your primal brain, telling it 'prepare to fight or die'. It's a pretty unpleasant feel, but you get used to it with time. The important thing, also, is to focus on your breathing.

Karate notoriously advertises using breathing control to enhance technique power, but the real deal here is that breath is the tool that removes fear of your enemy.
I can't stress this enough: when you enter a fight, even if it's just someone calling you names, raising his voice, trying to look bigger, red in the face, angry, staring at you, displaying hostile body language... your body will immediately tense up and harden. Your blood vessel will contract, making your skin more pale. This is a natural defence mechanism as the paler you are, the less likely you are to bleed if cut or injured. Someone might call you 'scared' because you look pale as a ghost or something, but this is actually good news for you. The dangerous fighter isn't the one red in the face, but the pale one, AS LONG as he breathes and controls his fear level.
Combat paralysis has been known to make martial art masters forger they ever learned martial arts. As we all know here, fear is a powerful tool, and it should be dealt with before it becomes a future problem. There's nothing unmanly or wrong in being scared, but letting the fear win over your mind is a mistake.

_______________________________

Lately, I've been doing a lot of training in martial arts, even got more fit and stronger than I was without doing any gym or weight lifting, so as my body changed I pondered what style I should rely on more.

Karate or Kung fu?

When you're physically stronger and bulkier you may not be at your peak in agility (to say the least), so fancy Kung fu moves and footing may not be the greatest choice here. In that regard, I prefer to use Karate stances, sturdier and more grounded.
BUT... I also know Kung fu, and can't disregard moves that I know to work and that easily maximize my power. For example, I know 7 Star Mantis style (Tanglangquan) and while I'm not even considering the most acrobatic stuff or the lowest stances, I know that some techniques can be well translated into Karate. Mantis style uses a lot of speedy hand techniques that allow you to block or capture your opponent's limbs (like a fist), so I can use that to avoid a punch and retaliate before the opponent can throw a second.
If you learn some Wing Chun (I made another post on this some time ago, you're welcome to check it out) you'll see that, unlike many other martial arts, blocking and attacking is done at the same time, meaning your fist will land on your enemy while your other arm blocks. Can this be translated into Karate or Mantis techniques? Yes? Perfect. Use them.

When people say "MMA", Mixed Martial Arts, I personally call that 'bullshit for a stage'. When I encourage you to 'mix martial arts', I mean.. take the style you feel most comfortable and natural with, and add something from another style.
Does it work? Yes? Perfect, keep it and make it your own.

I hope that wasn't too long (I know it was) and boring. When you ask something like that you'd better be prepared to a lot more information lol..

To give you one final piece of advice, I came up with a deduction lately:
"Martial arts are divided roughly into CONCEPT and STYLE.
The style doesn't define the concept.
The concept may belong to an entirely different style and it's what the martial art is all about.
The style is simply the way the concept is applied."

Hope that helps.

HAIL SATAN FOREVER!
Excellent post, brother. I didn't expect such a detailed answer. I appreciate the effort you put in and you seem very knowledgeable, you've given me alot to think about. It was not boring at all. Thank you.

I want to train a martial art for each of the 3 forms of combat(striking, grappling/ground and armed), so as to be versatile. I hadn't initially considered eastern martial arts besides (brazilian) jiu jitsu as I had the preconcieved notion that they are more art than they are martial. Yes, ignorant, I know.

The one MMA place I saw near me seemed to try too hard to be "tactical", it looked LARPy. I would rather commit to learning and mastering one specific system at a time than go to a random mutt martial arts gym, anyway.

But lately, and I don't know why, I have been thinking about karate and kung fu more and more. I definitely like the idea of the culture and history and structure behind it, but mixed feelings on the formality.

There's a few dojos for karate/kung fu where I am, but I'm unsure of their quality or authenticity. Do you have any advice on finding a good dojo? What should I expect going there?
 
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Why dont people question this law?
They need to protest
 
Missrainbow1 said:
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Why dont people question this law?
They need to protest

Only people praticing karaté did complain afterward. I haven't check is this dumb law is still in application tho.
 
existentialcrisis said:
Excellent post, brother. I didn't expect such a detailed answer. I appreciate the effort you put in and you seem very knowledgeable, you've given me alot to think about. It was not boring at all. Thank you.

I want to train a martial art for each of the 3 forms of combat(striking, grappling/ground and armed), so as to be versatile. I hadn't initially considered eastern martial arts besides (brazilian) jiu jitsu as I had the preconcieved notion that they are more art than they are martial. Yes, ignorant, I know.

The one MMA place I saw near me seemed to try too hard to be "tactical", it looked LARPy. I would rather commit to learning and mastering one specific system at a time than go to a random mutt martial arts gym, anyway.

But lately, and I don't know why, I have been thinking about karate and kung fu more and more. I definitely like the idea of the culture and history and structure behind it, but mixed feelings on the formality.

There's a few dojos for karate/kung fu where I am, but I'm unsure of their quality or authenticity. Do you have any advice on finding a good dojo? What should I expect going there?

Glad to be of help where I can. You're not wrong in thinking you should train striking, grappling and some weaponry. My knowledge of grappling is below the average I suppose, but only if you consider grappling "people on the floor rolling from one lock to another" or something like that. When it comes to grappling, I like to think of Taichi. People wrongly assume it is just about "slow movements" and "wellness", if you do it right you can definitely fight with it, but in my opinion it takes a very seasoned fighter and martial artist to actually pull it off (keeping that mental calm and applying the technique with enough expertise).

Here's an example of some "Taichi grappling" you might want to check:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fppm0s5ABCw

These make great use of the tactical advantage when using one's anatomy against them, same principle as in Aikido. Mind you, to pull off something like this in a dojo is usually challenging, to pull it off in an actual street fight, given the amount of stress/fear involved, I (PERSONALLY) highly discouraged it, unless you're a very good fighter and don't get easily scared by danger. For a real street fight, I only really recommend Karate and the Kung fu techniques that one can adapt to it, keeping your stances as grounded and solid as possible. "To be like an unmovable mountain" is probably the best way I see things working out for me, but this is a personal deduction given my OWN skill and my OWN body structure (I would not apply the same in a fight against someone 6'5 tall or something, who's been bodybuilding for years and relies on strength as his greatest asset).
To know your own weaknesses is your greatest strength.

As for weaponry, luckily this can be a very flexible topic.
Consider this:
you can't walk around with a Chinese sword, a katana, a wakizashi, or a long staff without looking like you're on a warpath or, at the very least, looking extremely suspicious.
Luckily, there are a bunch of less conventional weapons that you can carry around without attracting unwanted attention.

A few examples here, just to give you the idea of what I'm talking about. These weapon examples are mostly taken from actual Ninjutsu weapons, as they can either be used as weapons or the everyday objects they are.
1. Pencil
This is obviously a striking/piercing weapon. Not for nothing pens and pencils are usually closely monitored in prisons and they often end up being used as shivs to stab someone. The "B" pencil types are the soft graphite ones (like the common "2B" for drawing), you'll want to get yourself some 10H pencils and have one on yourself at all times. Don't stab anyone with it (unless you absolutely have to in a life or death/bad injury situation).
2. Rope/Chain
I love this one. I've done a lot of research on "rope/chain as a weapon" and there's are lot of history on the subject. Apparently, the Japanese police in the Edo era (I think) used a short light chain (2 feet long) to perform arrests instead of the modern handcuffs. The weapon was called Kusari Fundo (Kusari=chain and Fundo=weight). The 2 feet chain ended with two small weights to make it easier to handle.
The weapon itself can be used
-like a nunchaku (you don't have the two "bars" to hold so it's more flexible) or like a whip..
-you can strike someone's face with it and that will pretty much end the fight or almost end it as you can easily hit the eye and temporarily blind your opponent, giving you an easy follow up chance ..like a kick in the balls or a powerful incapacitating strike).
In some countries "carrying a chain" equals "carrying a weapon" so if you can't carry a piece of chain (with two fishing weights at its ends or something) you can carry a piece of rope. It's less likely to harm unless you use it with enough force and speed, and it's far safer to carry (I don't think anyone would bother you for carrying two sturdy feet of rope in your pocket). If you do choose rope over chain, make sure you pick a tough/heavy enough rope to actually swing like a chain, or a strike with it will not be effective.
3. "Pocket sand"
This is the least conventional of the list, but potentially the most effective. Japanese mechants and shop owners used to carry "pocket sand" in their pockets or satchels to throw it in the eyes of unsuspecting marauders, thieves and attackers on the road to and from home.
Pocket sand is, as the name suggests, sand of any type that you carry on your person when you exit your home. The use is something so easy a child could take advantage of it, it requires no martial arts training whatsoever and it's not illegal to carry it, unlike a Kusari Fundo. It's also mistakable for an environmental/circumstantial weapon, meaning you "may have found the sand on the floor in a critical moment and used it to defend yourself".
The sand can be actual sand, gravel, sand from your cat's litter box, a handful of dirt you picked up and put in your pocket, or even spare change/coins (although this last one is far less preferrable since it will be much less likely to hit your opponent's eyes, blinding them).
During a fight...
Your pocket sand should already be in your closed fist, whether your hand is in your pocket, at your side as you simply stand and try to talk your way out of the impending fight, or in your fist while you take a stance. Do not hold your pocket sand fist behind your back as this will draw attention and form suspicion. Ninjas were about deception. "All warfare is based on deception." (Sun Tzu, The Art of War; 1.18)
You should ideally throw it in the eyes of your attacker when he's advancing/striking, as this will be the most effective timing and grant you the best odds to hit your target (the face/eyes), allowing you for a quick follow up (strike) or retreat (run, if you don't want to fight/don't think you can fight).

Personally, I'd take the opportunity pocket sand creates to teach the fucker a lesson and break him a rib or something, just to make sure he learns not to fuck with me again, but that's me.

I could make more "conceivable/legal weapon examples" but I think you get it by now.

As for "finding a dojo", I guess that's the hardest part.
Today's modern dojos (most of them at least) will teach you nothing but "kata" (forms) and limit combat/sparring to the very minimum. Most people earning Black belts in Karate in the Western world have no real combat experience and they'd be lost in an actual fight. I suppose in Japan or some rare places martial arts are actually taught, but I'm not so optimistic when it comes to that. You may enter competitions and such, if you want to learn about fighting in a safe environment (where a referee will stop the fight after each point/strike received), so you can get the feel for how it is.. I DO suggest you focus on your defence BEFORE you enter an actual fight (even in competition) though, as the point of learning how to fight is learning how to protect yourself, not "scoring points".
This at least concerns Karate... there are SOME championships at least. I never was too lucky and only have been in a couple when I was too young to really make it worth my time, had to learn later in time.

As for Kung fu, the only "sparring/combat" they do is called 'Sanda', and it's basically "fight with any style you want", but most people tend to use (*drums.......*) surprise surprise... Taekwondo kicks lol.
'Sanda' mostly refers to 'modern Chinese combat', so it's probably the most worthless and un-Kung fu-like fighting you'll ever see coming out of a Chinese gym. I wouldn't recommend that, based on what I've seen so far.

Lastly, I can only really suggest you to try different things and see what feels like your best choice. Always keep in mind that the dojo you're visiting that day might be run by someone who hasn't got real fighting experience, or a big mouthed idiot, or a poser, and that the martial art they 'use' is much more than what little they can show you.

I hope that helps some.. if you have any questions, do not hesitate to ask.

HAIL SATAN FOREVER!
 
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

This news surprised me greatly!
Martial arts, including karate, generally teach mental discipline, courtesy and, of course, how to fight without weapons. And physical strength gives confidence.
 
I know there are many Canadians who are good people. But Canadians are slaves to a communist government, they have no rights, and no ability to defend themselves or their families. Keep voting for leftist communist jews and see where that gets you. See where it has already gotten you.

Your country is literally led by Fidel Castro's son. Look this up, the Trudeu family were actually friends with Fidel Castro and frequently visited him and had parties with him. Trudeu's mom had an affair with Fidel Castro and they all know about it.

 
trudeau_castro.jpg


 
justin-trudeau-fidel-castro-1-1023x937.jpg



Justin Trudeu's mother with Fidel Castro.
margaret-fidel-pierre.jpg



Eh-5157XkAIidPh.jpg


129qgrzrax121.jpg
 
Ol argedco luciftias said:
I know there are many Canadians who are good people. But Canadians are slaves to a communist government, they have no rights, and no ability to defend themselves or their families. Keep voting for leftist communist jews and see where that gets you. See where it has already gotten you.

Your country is literally led by Fidel Castro's son. Look this up, the Trudeu family were actually friends with Fidel Castro and frequently visited him and had parties with him. Trudeu's mom had an affair with Fidel Castro and they all know about it.

 
trudeau_castro.jpg


 
justin-trudeau-fidel-castro-1-1023x937.jpg



Justin Trudeu's mother with Fidel Castro.
margaret-fidel-pierre.jpg



Eh-5157XkAIidPh.jpg


129qgrzrax121.jpg

How many Canadians actually oppose Kikeism, Cucktianity, and Pisslam? If they don't figure out these programs (I'd rather just call them criminal enterprises, because they make people suffer in all fronts and get away with it.) are the blueprints for Communism, they'll very likely end up just like China and North Korea.
 
A couple years ago I was having lunch at a restaurant and saw some poor guy get the beat down of his life for something I heard was very trivial. All I see are a bunch of people passing by looking, some of them just standing there in place place around the guy as they beat the turd out of him like an NPC. All the guy could do was protect his face.

So if you're ever counting on someone coming to save your ass in time of need, you may as well jump off a bridge. There isn't always a chance a samaritan may be close by. We also know by the time the Boys in blue come by that the 1-3 minutes of waiting can be life and death. However, authorities should always be consulted first and foremost, if safely possible.

From what I hear, Brazillian Jiu jitsu is the go to when it comes down to it. Next is Muay Thai and then maybe Krav Maga if you don't value your honor and there's nothing else.

A HIGHLY recommended book to read for the dangers of everyday life.
Meditations On Violence; A Comparison Of Martial Arts Training & Real World Violence
https://archive.org/details/Sgt.RoryMillerMeditationsOnViolenceAComparisonOfMartialArtsTrainingRealWorldViolence

We should also not take aura of protections and aura cleaning for granted either.
 
Masterj810610 said:
Since is not an official sport in the next olympics, it is now criminal in Québec to practice Karaté. What a bunch of fuckers.

https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2022/10/16/le-karate-hors-la-loi-au-quebec

Communists on China also killing spiritual Falun dafa/gong practitioneers for organs, I have booklet where it is said, they do this because organs from practitioners are much healthier, if you want transplant organs, you don’t need to wait years and years for donor anymore, go to China and get it emmediately! :)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_harvesting_from_Falun_Gong_practitioners_in_China

I add booklet photos which I get from one of practitioners, I already shared it but this can’t be forgotten:

https://postimg.cc/gallery/D7x0Jvw



 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

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