What’s Best for Self Defense? A Profoundly Subjective Decision
“What’s best” is a fallacious concept because there is no set of objective criteria for evaluation that works “across the board,”so to speak.
“What’s best” is a fallacious concept because there is no set of objective criteria for evaluation that works “across the board,”so to speak.
Parking lots are prime hunting grounds for predators, especially after dark. In a low light situation, things are a lot more difficult. You want to be more aware, but the darker it is the more difficult it is to see what’s going on around you. Carrying a flash light can be as important as carrying a gun in a self defense situation.
You can’t create a fortress, but what can you do to make it tougher for someone trying to get in? The best defense is one that is thought out and planned in advance, has layers of protection and provides early warning.
In this episode, The Best Defense team takes you through a worst case scenario at a movie theater. It is one of the most terrifying situations you can ever find yourself in. We give you some ideas on how to increase your survivability.
When criminals look for victims, they look for the weakest they can find. If you are disabled, you are more than twice as likely to be targeted than if you’re able-bodied. However, not being optimal, does not mean you can’t respond optimally.
In this groundbreaking video, acclaimed self-defense instructor Michael Janich gives you those skills and dispels the many myths that surround the use of pens in self-defense.
Do you have the upper body strength to pull yourself up and over a wall or fence? Can you help endangered loved ones up and over? Fleeing the scene of a life threatening event can be the best course of action, but can you?
This week, Michael ponders the concept of making your own gun and considers the self-defense implications of a world where terrorists kill soldiers on the streets.
You hear a sound outside. Someone is on your property looking into your home. You grab your weapon and go outside to solve the problem…. or does the problem solve you?
I have been thinking a lot about the London terror attack and what it can teach us. In truth, when a person gets knocked down by a car, the first thing that goes through that person’s mind isn’t likely to be that the car’s drivers is going to jump out and attack with meat cleavers.