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Watching any contact sport you can assume bodily harm is the goal, low rent districts or high class gyms..boxers are boxers. When I boxed with my brother, was I trying to cause him bodily harm? Many who watched thought so..Yes knocking out your opponent is often a goal or the outcome but not the objective. It is a very complicated sport (those who oppose it only focus on the hitting) and has evolved much since the bareknuckle days (Boxers were bareknuckled for much the same reasons hockey goalies had no protective mask or others had no helmets). Boxing is not boxing without rules, a Boxer is not boxing if he engages in street fights even though he will likely apply his skills learned.
Candan, seems to be a question of the individual's
intent and skills. If you were to interchange boxing with a current karate style and competition format, you would end up saying the same. If you take away the rules and put it out on the street, should it be automatically assumed that the "martial artist" would be more
lethal than a "boxer" just because he practices insertname-ryu?
Finally, consider if we are truly serious about studying a "martial art" in the sense of being able to inflict death with maximum efficiency, I propose most of us are doing it all wrong. Way too much time on empty hand techniques which are the lowest part of the force continuum. Study the knife, stick, sword and gun. Indeed, the late Donn Draeger would maintain most of us are studying "budo" vs "bujutsu" -- no matter that we
likr to call it a "martial art" -- for the very fact of the emphasis of personal unarmed training over weapons training. I tend to agree with him.
Personally, I believe a year of study in knife work will allow the person (with right mental/pyschological attributes) to take out the majority of "empty hand" masters of 30, 40 or 50 plus years of training. I know others will disagree and that's okay.
david
[This message has been edited by david (edited March 23, 2002).]