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Friday, December 29, 2017

Paladin Press - Put Him Out!


Put Him Out!

The Combative Use of Improvised Weapons

with Lee Morrison

SKU PUTDVD-P
805966 068534
155 minutes

DESCRIPTION

Lee Morrison often builds his combatives presentations around the "caveman" mentality. In fact, before he selected Urban Combatives as his brand name, he strongly considered Caveman because, from man's earliest existence, his primary instincts have been geared around simple tool carry. This is the message of Put Him Out! The Combative Use of Improvised Weapons: how to use the simplest and most effective tools to extract yourself from a fight you didn't want to be in the first place. 

Combatives is not recreational self-defense; it is counter-violence. In this video, Morrison teaches you how to tap into the resource you need most in a worst-case scenario: your brain. Having the proper mindset is key in any fight. Once you have good personal security, an effective game plan, and a toolbox of finely sharpened skills – then anything you can put in your hand will make you more efficient during a fight. 

As a resident of the United Kingdom, where most weapons carry is forbidden, Morrison knows the importance of being able to justify legally whatever defensive actions you take. According to Morrison, a legally justifiable improvised weapon is anything that you can carry or find in your environment to use. Moreover, he emphasizes the use of less-lethal alternative, because extreme or unnecessary use of force with an improvised weapon can cause serious consequences later, when you have to explain your self-defense actions. 

From key factors, combatives principles, types of improvised weapons, access, and deployment to strikes toolbox, the use of your environment as a weapon, and the deceptive employment of various tools, Put Him Out! shows you how to assemble a simple but effective arsenal of tools that can be employed when awareness and de-escalation aren't enough. For information purposes only.

AUTHOR BIO

Lee Morrison was born in Southeast London during the latter part of the 1960s to a single parent on a low income. Coming from a rough area and humble beginnings, he learned two things early on: that you have to stand up for yourself and that people treat you the way you let them. He began karate when he was 11 years old, training in various styles for the next seven years, but sought combat proficiency elsewhere after his karate moves failed him during a mugging by two thugs outside a London tube station. Over the years he has trained in Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Filipino weapon systems, wrestling, and Western boxing and combatives, but it was only after he started working as a club doorman that his urban combatives learning curve kicked in. He rapidly realized the need to whittle down his fighting moves to one or two good strikes that worked against all attacks.

CHAPTER LIST

DVD CHAPTER LIST 
1) Key Factors 
- Mentality and Attitude 
- Legal Perspective 
- Personal Carry 
- Weapons of Opportunity 
- Use of Environment 
- Synthetic Allies 
2) Types of Tools 
- Impact Weapons 
- Pointed and Edged Weapons 
- Flexible Weapons 
- Projectile Weapons 
- Shielding Weapons 
- Chemical Weapons 
3) Personal Carry Tools 
4) Tools of Opportunity 
5) Combatives Principles 
6) Access and Deployment 
- Preemptive Access 
- Situational Control 
- In-Fight Weapon Access 
- The Timing Rule 
7) Pointed and Edged vs. Impact Weapons 
8) Strikes Toolbox 
- Linear Strikes 
- Angular Strikes 
- Backhanded Strikes 
- The Skill Set 
- Impact Tool Strikes 
- Millwall Brick Strikes 
- Bottle Strikes 
- Rock Strikes 
- Synthetic Ally Strikes 
- Sap-Wallet Strikes 
- Belt Strikes 
9) Deceptive Use of Improvised Tools 
- Chemical Irritant 
- Synthetic Allies 
- Watch Deception 
- Newspaper Deception 
- Clothes Deception 
10) Use of Environment




Index of Paladin Press site archived pages:


Stickgrappler's Note: I am guessing the Paladin site will be shut down at the end of the year and I'm archiving select Paladin Press pages to my blog to preserve an essential part of martial arts from 1970-2017. Archiving some of my favorite Paladin titles.

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