Aikido + Arnis para nako ok na...
Pero mas maau mag andam ka og PunTsi (Punit Tsinilas... dayon dagan...)
Kay ang mo dagan maoy pinaka-isog... coz he lives to fight another day.
Aikido + Arnis para nako ok na...
Pero mas maau mag andam ka og PunTsi (Punit Tsinilas... dayon dagan...)
Kay ang mo dagan maoy pinaka-isog... coz he lives to fight another day.
[quote="Persian_King73"]Mao ba? Ngiga gud anang convincing words gud niya, lupig ghandi ana? confucious kaha? :Originally Posted by Michbern
[quote="Michbern"][quote="Persian_King73"][quote="Michbern"][quote="SaYoD_KAa?!!!"]I'd just based upon his statements..above..Originally Posted by Persian_King73
[quote="Michbern"][quote="Persian_King73"][quote="Michbern"][quote="SaYoD_KAa?!!!"]I'd just based upon his statements..above..Originally Posted by Persian_King73
Patrixxx73, have you ever seen that movie?
Not yet... but i'm planning to watch it on VCD if ever i can secure a copy of that movie (The Hunted).Originally Posted by Persian_King73
Originally Posted by munchkins 4u
[size=18px]Kali Fighting System[/size]
http://www.huntedmovie.com/home.html
Martial Art: Kali
Translation: "Bladed Weapon"
Country of Origin: Philippines
Created: circa 750 AD
Kali is the native art of the Philippines, it consists of both Weapons and bare hand skills. The art mainly uses synchronised stick training drills along with body angling and fluid movement to gear to a person toward better hand and eye coordination and being stable in almost any position during confrontation, along with phasing out the factor of fear associated with being confronted with a weapon.
Escrima, Arnis and Kali are essentially all the same martial art and are sometimes collectively known as Filipino stick fighting. Kali originates from the Southern Philippine islands, Escrima from the central islands and Arnis from the Northern islands. Records date back to 750 AD (at least for Kali). All three variants where originally introduced by travellers from Indonesia and Malaysia, but were greatly influenced by the arrival of the Spanish invaders in 1521. Escrima takes its name from the Spanish word escrima meaning skirmish and Arnis comes from the Spanish term arnis de mano meaning "harness of the hand". Unlike many martial arts, weapons training is introduced first followed later by hand and foot techniques. Although best known for the use of stick fighting it covers 12 areas of study including projectile weapons, anatomical weapons and bladed weapons. The Spanish technique of fighting with sword and dagger "Espada y Daga" was incorporated into this system and practitioners are well known for fighting with stick and dagger; single or twin sticks and the machete like knife known as the bola. The name Kali means "bladed weapon" in Malay.
Ngiga aning pinoy ah..
Originally Posted by patrixxx73Code:There is no such thing as the most dangerous martial arts... martial arts is just a discipline...an art... a self-defense... The organic humans makes it dangerous... He may posses the knowledge... and it's a matter of applying these knowledge makes it dangerous... Just like an advanced T800 machine... The most dangerous perfect killing machine!...
[/quote]Code:There is no such thing as the most dangerous martial arts... martial arts is just a discipline...an art... a self-defense... The organic humans makes it dangerous... He may posses the knowledge... and it's a matter of applying these knowledge makes it dangerous... Just like an advanced T800 machine... The most dangerous perfect killing machine!...
A comparison between machine and humans with regards to "Martial Arts", is technically inconsistent. Martial Arts is solely for rational beings like me and you.
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