This is an incredibly valuable video. Watch ALL of it and listen to what this guy says.
ShivWorks ECQC Alumni will recognize this as textbook content streamed together in the Sunday Three Person Full Spectrum Evolution.
VCAST alumni will recognize elements of the Saturday evening evolution.
AMIS Alumni will recognize their training from the "Don't Shoot Yet" module on Sunday.
Things to consider:
-The importance of properly Managing Unknown Contacts.
-An assault in The Triangle of the vehicle and an inability to translate BJJ in a novel environment with specific contextualization.
-In-Fight Weapons Access.
-A "Don't Shoot Yet" situation that requires managing distance and potential with verbalization, all while "riding the brakes".
-A benign third party filming the altercation that is present but not part of the problem but still dividing attention.
-Ambiguity and Uncertainty.
-Interdisciplinary/Multi-Modal Problem Solving.
This is a civilian "Defensive Gun Use" that will not be recorded in any data base because there wasn't an arrest and there wasn't an injury severe enough to warrant medical attention.
How many DGUs are there like this that civilians manage that go unrecorded? This is the problem with basing one's curriculum strictly on "data" where shots are fired, arrests are made, or injuries are recorded. There's an entire range of problems that exist that have no evidence other than anecdotally like this incident.
This is why an instructor's "experience" most assuredly IS vital and not an "appeal to authority".
I know what I know because I've lived it and I'm not going to have a debate with you because you have a forty hour instructor certification under someone I have coffee with once a year at a conference.
I will continue to evolve ShivWorks Curriculum and POIs based on my own experiences, those of the Alumni, and what I have observed in the lab over the past 23 years.
That's what you're paying for. My lens.