Saturday, September 05, 2015

Robert Keith English, Tell Them to Maintain Team and Sector Integrity!

They get complacent right when they should've had their guards up

They come up to a woman sitting in the middle of a hallway.

Robert Keith English, The 19th. The lead man should have kept his distance, and tried verbal interaction. The other guy would've provided cover. The other two should've also been there to provide cover.

Almost immediately, they let their guard down. One guy gets too close to her and gets tackled. The other guy failed to keep his weapon aimed at her in the middle hallway.

Around this time, a man comes out of the shadows and attacks the partner. There was enough time, between the time the second bad guy comes out of the shadows, and the time that the partner could've fired some rounds into him.

In reality, neither would've approached the woman. With her stance not known, the two guys "tactically" moving down the hall would've kept their distance, and kept their weapons pointed at her. This is based on the scenario in the video.

Also, in reality, all four would stayed together. Two guys in the front would continue to cover their sectors diagonally. The third guy would've continued to cover their six. A fourth guy would've tried to interact, verbally, from a standoff position, with the woman sitting in the middle of the hallway.

They would've had more than enough to overpower the two bad guys had they stuck together.

As they approached the woman, they still would've kept their distance. At least one of them would've kept his weapon pointed on the woman sitting on the floor while the others covered their sectors of fire.

As the preview progressed, a fight ensues. They temporary regain control of the situation, then take the attention away from the opposition. They could've at least "cuffed" the opposition that was down, or used something to restrain his/her movement.

Robert Keith English, The 19th. Where are the other two? Now the other guy maintains security, instead of turning things around by helping his buddy. Had the other two been there, they could've provided security while two guys overcome the bad guy.

The opposition regains control of the situation. The other two team members are nowhere in sight as the current pair gets ambushed. During the second struggle, the man had plenty of time to get off a couple rounds on the attacker. He did nothing.

If this scene would've taken place in reality, one event would've been consistent. Those guys that attacked the two men would've gotten shot. The four people would've stayed together, covered their sectors, and would've rapidly shot anybody that tried to come at them from the shadows.

This is where reflexive fire comes in handy prior to being in a situation like this.

This is just a very simple, very basic, look at the military/police tactics that Robert Keith English contributed to this film. Those tactics that they used are a reflection on Robert Keith English. They painfully show that Robert Keith English has no relevant military experience as it relates to this film.

Yet, he is showcasing himself as having military experience in order to attempt to get people to hire him as a consultant on fighting films.

Robert Keith English, The 19th. More than enough time to put rounds in the bad guy.


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