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This is a lethal situation with a determined attacker.
Unless you're packing or trained you have no business wading into that.
Now, if it's your wife or child that's another matter. Of course you'll risk your life for them - lay it down if need be - but not for a stranger.
(Pretty sure this is the 'official' OBJ opinion, too. The Virtue of Selfishness addresses this.)
Of course, if you know what you're doing, that's a different story. Then it's up to your own judgment about how manageable the situation is. Bruce Lee isn't facing the same situation as Joe Guy from accounting.
And yes, taking nothing away from the folks on the plane, but they knew they were dead unless they fought. Not the same situation at all.
One last thing - if you're not afraid of a 4 inch knife - you need to learn more about knives. Try asking the dead man on the floor.
Agree with your post, Jan, especially the above......excellent.......+ 10
I refuse to be a passive victim. I am not altruistic, and consider it one of the greatest evils. I value my own life far more than some random thug. The odds of my being on the train empty handed are non-existent, and there is always something at hand. Improvised weapons may not be pretty, but they can be effective, and I don't fancy going against a knife with empty hands. If nothing else, a belt can be a bit of an equalizer.
This is primarily another story of the right to self defense having been taken away. Concealed carry, even a BIGGER knife - "Now, That's a Knife!" I think if I were a DC resident (forbid!), I would routinely carry a taser, a blackjack, ANYTHING to take control of a situation. That is what an objectivist would do.
I am 5'7"...and I look like the archetypal, invisible, 'little brown woman'. You would not look twice at me if you passed me in the street - I could be anybody.
I have also done martial arts for >50 years. I would have been in that fight in an instant. I would have done my best to tear the knifeman's arm off, stick his own knife in his own eye, break his head, or perform some other type of socially-needed remediation for his personality.
I have pointed up a lot of responses on this thread. Bravo to the folks who would have acted! For those of you who said that you would have regarded it as philosophically correct not to have acted in defense of the victim, please be aware that if that is the type of society you laud and would construct from your philosophy: I will not be any part of it. That is not a world in which I would live.
My (late) mother, at 80 years of age and in ill health, would have tottered up to that fight and beat the attacker to death with a loaf of French bread. My father would have crawled off his death bed to tackle the knifeman around the ankles.
There are many kinds of strength.
Jan
"This is essentially the opposite of the spirit of United Flight 93—the heroic selflessness that prompted a group of courageous passengers on 9/11 to attack their hijackers, .."
Under similar circumstances, my own self interest would dictate that attack is the best form of action to survive. while I may not succeed, and others might live, the point is for my OWN sake, I would attack knowing the certainty of not attacking is death.
The author never faced the wrong end of a knife in a situation like this.
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