I'm glad the interviewer was skeptical. I wouldn't say people are literally faking the stun effect. But I think there may be a psychological effect on the students in the "stun gun" instructor's school that doesn't affect the outsiders who aren't in that community--the reporter, the jiu jitsu students.
So I doubt the "stun" technique would work on an attacker who isn't in the community.
2 comments:
I'm glad the interviewer was skeptical. I wouldn't say people are literally faking the stun effect. But I think there may be a psychological effect on the students in the "stun gun" instructor's school that doesn't affect the outsiders who aren't in that community--the reporter, the jiu jitsu students.
So I doubt the "stun" technique would work on an attacker who isn't in the community.
Bob, thank you for commenting. I am surprised the video ranked so high on Google.
If the technique only works on 40% of the population, I do not think it would be useful as a self-defense strategy.
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