• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

[Video] - Learn how to instantly incapacitate a chiobu so you can rape her without resistance



**No, the claim that this "knockout pressure point" (a simple strike or hit near the shoulder) works **every time** to instantly incapacitate or knock someone out is not true.** It is heavily exaggerated and misleading, typical of martial arts demonstration videos.

The technique shown is usually a strike or press to the **brachial plexus** area (nerves in the side of the neck/shoulder junction, sometimes called the "shoulder point" or supraclavicular nerve area). A well-placed, moderately forceful strike here **can** cause:
- Sharp, radiating pain or numbness down the arm
- Temporary muscle weakness or "dead arm" effect
- In some cases, dizziness, disorientation, or even a brief faint (vasovagal response in sensitive people)

However, it is **far from reliable** for a true knockout in a real fight or self-defense situation. It does **not** work "every time," on everyone, or with "merely a light hit without much force" against an unwilling, adrenalized, or resisting opponent.

### Why Volunteers (Men and Women) Frequently Faint or Collapse in These Demos
This is the key to why the videos look so dramatic:

1. **Controlled environment & willing volunteers**
The people being hit are almost always students, fans, or seminar participants who are relaxed, compliant, and often expecting the effect. They stand still, breathe in a certain way, or even hyperventilate slightly beforehand. This makes them much more susceptible.

2. **Psychological/suggestibility factor**
Many people anticipate the "knockout," so expectation + sudden pain/shock triggers a **vasovagal syncope** (a common faint response where the vagus nerve causes a sudden drop in heart rate and blood pressure). The brain temporarily reduces blood flow, leading to passing out. This is the same mechanism behind fainting from blood draws, fear, or standing up too fast — not a true neurological knockout like a punch to the jaw.

3. **No scientific evidence of a reliable "knockout" mechanism**
A 1999 medical study (published in *Journal of Emergency Medicine*) on volunteers during pressure-point martial arts demos found **no significant changes** in blood pressure, oxygen saturation, heart rhythm, or brain activity (EEG) during the "knockouts." The researchers concluded the exact mechanism was uncertain, but it was **not** due to reduced brain blood flow or cardiac issues in the way true knockouts work.

4. **Real-world limitations**
- In actual fights, adrenaline makes people highly pain-resistant.
- The target is small and moves — very hard to hit cleanly under stress.
- Many trained fighters (including UFC/MMA tests) report that these "light" pressure-point techniques fail completely against resisting opponents.
- A hard strike to the area can stun or hurt, but it's nowhere near as guaranteed as the videos suggest.

### Summary
- **Real element**: Hitting certain shoulder/neck nerve clusters can cause pain, temporary arm weakness, or (in ideal conditions) make someone dizzy/faint.
- **Ridiculous/exaggerated part**: The idea that a light tap to the shoulder "works every time" to incapacitate anyone is **martial arts myth/marketing**. These demos are heavily staged for effect through willing participants, expectation, and sometimes subtle setup.

This genre of video (including the one you linked) is popular because the reactions look dramatic and impressive, but they do **not** represent reliable self-defense. Real self-defense relies on gross motor skills, powerful strikes to bigger targets (jaw, nose, eyes, groin, etc.), and situational awareness — not hoping for a perfect "magic" nerve hit.

If you're learning self-defense, focus on proven, high-percentage techniques rather than these demo-style pressure points. - Source : Grok AI
 

You are treading on thin ice - these are dangerous thoughts that will get one into trouble.

Just read the news - some men in Singapore have done this and had their asses caned into oblivion - courtesy of the Singapore justice system.
 
You are treading on thin ice - these are dangerous thoughts that will get one into trouble.

Just read the news - some men in Singapore have done this and had their asses caned into oblivion - courtesy of the Singapore justice system.


Thanks for informing it works
 
Fake lah. I don't believe a tiny bit.

That's the point, both the video content and the thread title are obviously jokes. Only idiots get offended by this, macam HWZ EDMW or Reddit where members will try to get you banned for such joke posts.
 
That's the point, both the video content and the thread title are obviously jokes. Only idiots get offended by this, macam HWZ EDMW or Reddit where members will try to get you banned for such joke posts.
If a light tap can knock one's out, no need Wing Chun already. :roflmao:
 
OP should incapacitate himself in a worker dorm and let the Banglas rape his asshole
 
Back
Top