Saturday, July 23, 2022

The eyes miss nothing.

 

There is ever so much more to be addressed in the study of karate than basics, kata, kata application study and kumite.

 

 

As stated in the Isshinryu Code of Karate

 

The eye must see all sides

The ear must listen in all directions

 

Patrick McCarthy’s translation of the Bubishi

 

See what is Un-seeable

Expect what is Unexpected

 

Ken Penland translation of the Bubishi

 

The eyes must watch all four directions (Left, Right, Up and Down). Do not become so engrossed in your own techniques that you fail to observe your opponent’s actions. This will cause you to lose.

 

The ear must listen in all eight directions (Left, Right, Up, Down, Forward, Behind, Left Angles and Right Angles).

 

Eight Important Phrases of ‘Karate’ from Karate Jutsu (Funakoshi Ginchin) translated by John Teramoto

.

The eyes miss nothing.

The ears listen well in all directions.

 

Each a different way to suggest what amounts to the same thing.

 

Of course pretty words, but IMO something rarely addressed in our studies.

I would suggest two real world situations that highlite the problems.


The first occurred when the statue that was to be presented to former President Ronald Regan was smashed when an individual just walked out on the stage and smashed the statue.

Now Ronald Regan as a former President was under Secret Service protection, however they did not really observe the attacker doing so as it occurred. Surely not the same level as a sitting President, but IMO the attacker kept his focus on the statue and no one observed his focus as they were focused on Regan’s speech.

Thus his actions did not registered as they occurred.


A similar but different situation occurred a few days ago.

NY Governor Candidate Lee Zeldin was attached while he was speaking on stage. The attacker casually got onto the stage, approached the candidate to attack him with a weapon-ized key chain. Showing no intent that this was an attack, he took hold of the candidate, but was wrestled to the ground and restrained before something more serious occurred.

Again I suggest his focus was not showing intent. Falling beneath others focus and allowing him to approach the candidate.

 

I believe these events suggest how difficult it can be to simply observe what is happening.

IMO something to think about.

I am following this piece with accounts of the two attacks I described.



Man Rushes Reagan on Stage, Smashes Statue

L.A. TIMES ARCHIVES

APRIL 14, 1992 12 AM PT

FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS —

 

An anti-nuclear activist rushed the stage while former President Ronald Reagan was giving a speech Monday and smashed a large crystal statue that Reagan had just been given. Pieces of the statue hit Reagan in the head, but he was not hurt.

 

The activist then tried to speak into the microphone as Reagan, appearing angry but unhurt, stood beside him. Secret Service agents quickly grabbed the protester and hustled him away.

 

The 81-year-old Reagan was jostled during the scuffle. He later returned to the podium, picked up a piece of the broken award statue, then finished his speech to the National Assn. of Broadcasters.

 

“I think I’m going to go out and see who that guy is,” Reagan said at the end of his speech.

 

Reagan later told reporters: “He hit me with a fist, but it just bounced off.”

The protester was identified as Richard Paul Springer, 41, of Arcata, a small college town in Humboldt County, north of San Francisco.

 

Secret Service spokesman Carl Meyer said Springer wore the badge required to attend the broadcasters’ convention, but he did not know whether Springer had a legitimate reason to attend the meeting.

 

After making his way to the stage, the assailant ran to the podium and picked up the two-foot-high, crystal eagle statue, raised it over his head and smashed it on a pedestal. Meyer said the statue weighed 30 pounds.

 

Flying glass hit Reagan in the face and upper body, but apparently did not cut him.

 

Springer is the founder of the 100th Monkey anti-nuclear group, said Lisa Law, a group organizer. She said Springer came up with the idea of staging a weeklong series of events protesting nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site. Hundreds of anti-nuclear protesters are in Las Vegas this week for the demonstrations.

Law said Springer participated in a morning demonstration at the Department of Energy building in Las Vegas, then left.

 

“He didn’t tell us he was going to do it,” she said. “We are as shocked as you are.”


 



Richard "Rick" Paul Springer (c. 1951 – 2010) was an anti-nuclear activist. He was best known for his arrest after smashing a crystal statue in front of former President Ronald Reagan at a luncheon in 1992, and his subsequent imprisonment on various charges.

 

On April 13, many participants traveled to Las Vegas for a demonstration at a U.S. Department of Energy office, during which 24 people were arrested.[1][2] The same day, Springer walked onto the stage of a National Association of Broadcasters luncheon in Las Vegas, Nevada, while former President of the United States Ronald Reagan was addressing the attendees. On stage, Springer smashed a 30-pound crystal statue that had earlier been presented to Reagan and then attempted to commandeer the microphone into which Reagan was speaking. He was quickly swarmed by special agents of the United States Secret Service and dragged off-stage. Springer had accessed the luncheon using a press credential issued by Indian Voices, a Native American affairs newsletter. At the time, the Secret Service did not have a policy of examining the press credentials of persons attending appearances by former presidents.[3]

Springer was arraigned and released on his own recognizance pending trial.[1][3] The following week he was interviewed by CBS This Morning about the incident, and explained that he was hoping to raise awareness about the dangers of nuclear testing. In the interview, Springer went on to say, "I certainly must offer an apology to Mr. Reagan", explaining that he was committed to non-violence

 and regretted any concern he had caused for Reagan's safety.[1][4]

The following February, Springer pled guilty to a misdemeanor charge of interference with the Secret Service. Springer was due to surrender himself to begin serving a four-month jail sentence over the incident on June 2, 1993. Instead, however, he sent a fax to a Nevada television station saying he would not surrender himself to authorities until the United States government began adhering to all treaties "calling for the cessation of all nuclear weapons tests in all atmospheres for all time". Springer also sent a letter to the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada denouncing the United States as an "oppressor nation" and alleging mistreatment of the Shoshone. Five days later an arrest warrant was issued for Springer.[1]

 

Springer was apprehended two months later and charged with Failure to Surrender. In his subsequent trial, he pled not guilty, stating that a higher moral law required he continue anti-nuclear activism rather than go to prison. His first trial on the new charges resulted in a hung jury; however, he was convicted on a second attempt and sentenced to prison, being released in 1995.[5][6]







Lee Zeldin, New York GOP gubernatorial candidate, attacked at campaign stop

New York Rep. Lee Zeldin was unharmed after the incident


Garden City, N.Y.: Republican Party nominee for New York State Governor, Lee Zeldin, speaks at the party's convention in Garden City, New York, on March 1, 2022.  (Photo by Reece T. Williams/Newsday RM via Getty Photos)

After the attack, Zeldin went back on the stage and continued talking, according to the report.

 

The Monroe County Sheriff's Office told Fox News that it is "aware of an incident at the speech of gubernatorial candidate Zeldin this evening. A suspect is in custody and Major Crimes is investigating. We will update as further information becomes available."

 

Katie Vincentz, a spokesperson the gubernatorial campaign, said that Zeldin and lieutenant governor nominee Alison Esposito are safe following the attack. 

  


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