*looks up the video*
I counted 10 seconds.
Also, you're assuming that his fight or flight response kicked in. Did it? How do we know? Are we just assuming every incident that involves a deadly weapon triggers a fight or flight response? If so:
- People don't usually rush at cops when they have their weapons drawn. People usually comply.
- People don't usually get into fist-fights with muggers when they have their weapons drawn. People usually comply.
- "I had no choice, I feared for my life!" is the kind of argument that you'd dismiss when the police say it.
What police site?
*refreshes*
Oh, okay, you edited your earlier post. I haven't seen any that before just now. Let me look back and review.
You seem to be think that some people are "wired" for the fight response, and others are just wired for the "flight" response, is that correct?
You seem to be saying "I'm a fighter, not a 'flighter', that's why I've fought off all those other guys" right?
I haven't seen anything to suggest that people are one or the other. It's just ONE response that increases your body's capabilities with the goal of survival. That's what all your links say.
Because:
- People don't usually rush at cops when they have their weapons drawn. People usually comply.
- People don't usually get into fist-fights with muggers when they have their weapons drawn. People usually comply.
- "I had no choice, I feared for my life!" is the kind of argument that you'd dismiss when the police say it.
If you think that is all it is saying here, then you are either not understanding the information being provided or not reading it.
"Canon made some unique observations about the connection between bodily functions in extreme emotions. "
" Fight or flight initiates in an area of the brain that is mediated by primitive or instinctual thoughts and emotions. The brain goes about its business in a normal manner until a novel stimulus is presented. This stimulus goes from the sensory cortex and eventually the brain stem. When a person is faced with a perceived life-threatening crisis, certain bodily functions are attenuated while others temporarily cease. "
"This response also alters perception. Officers can experience tunnel vision, where the focus is on the perceived threat; and visual acuity, where some things are seen with unusual clarity. Officers experience slow motion time or time distortion, and often a sense of disassociation or detachment. Some have reported automatic responses to certain things, memory loss and brief periods of false memory. "
"The fight or flight syndrome is mediated by an officer's perception. That is, what one person may perceive as a threat, another may see as a routine incident. An excited neighbor who gets in the face of an experienced brawler may get a "ho hum" response. If the same excited neighbor gets in the face of someone unfamiliar with butting heads, the response may differ."
The fight or flight syndrome or, 'fight or flight reflex', happens when a person experiences drastic bodily changes when presented with a threat. It is important that those in...
www.officer.com
Maybe the wording here will help:
" This is not a planned, deliberately thought-out reaction, but a rapid-fire, automatic, total body response that we share with other animals. "
sanctuaryweb.com
This is a rapid fire automatic response, not unlike the charging bull when it feels threatened. You can train yourself to have better control by repetition and knowing what to expect, but that does not mean it will always be effective. It is not something that you think about, or choose. I showed you videos of people attacking their muggers because you think that is somehow unusual, when it is actually pretty common.
In addition, People, in general are socially conditioned to comply with police, however, these attackers were not police. EVEN in the case of police, it is still common for people to have fight or flight kick in and either run or fight back, as often happen when officers try to get physical with people who otherwise have no history of violence. Including women, elderly and children have behaved in a protective manner when being physically confronted by police if the officers grab them, pull on them, or are screaming in their faces. Officers should be utilizing their deescalation training rather than behaving in an aggressive manner intentionally triggering a persons Fight or flight response.
We are just going in circles at this point. I have provided ample evidence showing you that this is a common, expected response that officers and medical providers are trained to recognize and address. You not wanting to recognize that and repeating yourself is not going to somehow change that this is in fact a well know issue.
Trying to blame the victim for being shot because his fight or flight response is different than yours isn't really making a case here. Armed men hunted this man down and murdered him in cold blood in the middle of the street in broad daylight. Trying to claim that him fighting for his life to defend himself should not have happened because " people do not usually do that" isn't going to change that it happens more frequently than you seem to realize.