Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

Giri [義理]

The Weight of Obligation

A Parable


Unpaid debt breathes still —

the samurai bows his head;

honor restores all.

 

Seasons come and go —

what one hand gives, one receives;

the root holds the tree.

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


CAVEAT (Keikoku [警告])

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body. All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction; readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force. Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors’ imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental. All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

 

I. Before the Story Begins — A Word on What Giri Is

Let us start simply, the way a good teacher always does. Imagine you are sitting cross-legged on a tatami mat in a small village in the mountains of Okinawa, or perhaps in one of the great castle towns of feudal Japan. A village elder leans close and says, quietly but with unmistakable weight: “You owe a debt, and that debt has a name.” That name is Giri.


The word itself is written with two kanji. The first,  (gi), carries the meaning of righteousness, justice, or righteous conduct — the kind of uprightness that Confucian scholars had been writing about for centuries. The second,  (ri), speaks to principle, reason, or the natural order of things — the logic by which the universe runs, including the logic of human relationships. 


Together, Giri means something like "righteous principle as it applies to obligation" — or, to put it more plainly, the moral duty we carry toward those who have done something for us, or to whom we are bound by social and familial position.


Now, that might sound a bit dry as a definition, so let us bring it to life. Think of Giri not as a legal contract, not as a written rule, but as the invisible weight you feel when someone has helped you, sacrificed for you, or simply stood by you when the world was not kind. It is the thing that gets you out of bed in the morning to fulfill your promise to someone who trusts you. It is the reason a samurai would ride through a storm to repay an old master's kindness. It is the force that holds communities together when nothing else can.


II. The Long Shadow — A History of Giri

To understand where Giri comes from, we have to go back a very long way — at least to the Japan of the Heian period (794–1185 CE), when aristocratic court culture was beginning to develop its elaborate codes of proper conduct, and perhaps further still, to the Confucian thought arriving from the Chinese mainland and the Korean peninsula.


Confucius, writing in the fifth century BCE, described a world held together by right relationships — between ruler and subject, parent and child, husband and wife, elder brother and younger, and between friends. Each relationship carried its own obligations. This framework, known broadly as the li(ritual propriety) tradition, did not travel to Japan unchanged, but it traveled. By the time of the Kamakura period (1185–1333 CE), and through the long centuries of samurai governance that followed, these imported Confucian ideas had blended with indigenous Japanese values around loyalty, honor, and community to produce something distinctly Japanese: a web of obligation that could be as beautiful as lacquerwork and as binding as iron.


During the Tokugawa period (1603–1868 CE), Giri became something close to a social science in Japan. Neo-Confucian scholars systematized it. Playwrights dramatized it. The period's great fictional tradition — the domestic dramas known as sewamono — was filled with ordinary merchants, craftspeople, and farmers being torn apart by the conflict between Giri, their obligation to family and community, and Ninjō (人情), their own personal feelings and desires. The heartbreaking choice between what you must do and what you want to do was not abstract philosophy to Edo-period Japanese — it was the stuff of daily life, of business, of love, and of death.


The anthropologist Ruth Benedict, in her landmark study The Chrysanthemum and the Sword (1946), identified Giri as one of the central pillars of Japanese social organization, placing it alongside On () — the original debt or grace one receives from parents, lords, teachers, and the Emperor. Benedict argued that Giri was essentially the mechanism by which On was repaid and balanced. You receive On; you discharge it through Giri. The system, she observed, made Japanese society extraordinarily cohesive, though also, at times, extraordinarily binding.


By the Meiji period (1868–1912 CE) and into modern Japan, the explicit language of Giri began to soften as industrialization and Western legal frameworks offered alternative structures for managing social obligation. Yet the culture never fully shed the concept. You still find its shadow in the annual giving of gifts at ochugen(midsummer) and oseibo (year-end), in the giving of Valentine's Day chocolate to male colleagues who are not romantic interests (the famous giri choco — “obligation chocolate”), and in the complex calculations that attend any Japanese wedding, funeral, or business relationship to this day.


III. The Parable of the Rice Merchant’s Son

Now we come to the story itself — because a concept like Giri cannot be fully understood in the abstract. It must be lived, at least on the page.


The Village

In a mountain village in the province of Yamashiro, there lived a rice merchant named Kenji Murata. Kenji was not a wealthy man, but he was a careful one. He kept his accounts in a small leather book, and he knew to the grain how much rice he owed and how much was owed to him. He believed that a man's reputation was built one transaction at a time.


One bitter winter, when the snows came early and the mountain roads closed, Kenji's warehouse caught fire. He lost nearly everything — his stock, his tools, his records. He stood in the cold ash of what had been his livelihood and did not know what to do.


His neighbor, a farmer named Taro Hayashi, saw what had happened. Taro was not a rich man either, but he had a small reserve of rice, a strong back, and a memory. He remembered that Kenji had once — without being asked, without expectation of return — extended him credit during a drought, had let him take rice on a handshake and pay back when the harvest came. Taro loaded his cart with half his reserve and drove it to Kenji's ruined warehouse. “You helped me stand when I could not,” Taro said. “Now I help you stand.”


Kenji accepted. There was no contract. There was no lawyer. There was no written record. There was only Giri — the invisible thread between two men who understood what it meant to be bound to one another by right conduct.


The Son

Years passed. Kenji rebuilt his business. His son, Ichiro, grew up watching his father honor Taro at every opportunity — sending gifts at the harvest, helping with Taro's eldest daughter's wedding expenses, appearing unasked to help repair Taro's roof after a storm. Ichiro asked his father once, “Father, when does the debt end?”


Kenji looked at his son for a long moment. “You are asking the wrong question,” he said. “Giri is not a debt that is paid off and forgotten, like a bill at the market. Giri is a relationship. It is what holds us to the people we belong to. When it ends, something in the relationship ends with it. You would not ask when your love for your mother ends.”


The boy thought about this for many years. When he was grown, and Taro was old and his own sons had moved to the city, it was Ichiro — Kenji's son — who arranged for a doctor to visit Taro in the last months of his life, who ensured Taro's grave was kept clean, who told his own children the story of what Taro Hayashi had done for their grandfather in the winter when the warehouse burned.


The thread of Giri had passed between generations. It had become not a burden but a bond — and in that bond, a community.


IV. The Philosophy of Obligation — What Giri Teaches Us

What does this parable teach us philosophically? Quite a bit, it turns out.

First, and most importantly, Giri is grounded in the idea that human beings are fundamentally relational. The great twentieth-century sociologist Takie Sugiyama Lebra, in her analysis of Japanese reciprocity, argued that the On-Giri framework reflects a worldview in which the self is not an isolated unit but a node in a network of obligation and care. You are who you are, at least in part, because of what others have given you and what you have given them. This is not merely a Japanese insight, but Japanese culture developed the vocabulary for it with particular precision.


Second, Giri draws a meaningful line between obligation and compulsion. This is subtle but vital. In the Giri framework, you fulfill your obligations not because someone will punish you if you do not, but because you understand yourself to be a person of honor who inhabits a web of meaningful relationships. The samurai scholar Yamamoto Tsunetomo, writing in the early eighteenth century in the classic work known as the Hagakure, understood this clearly: conduct arose from an internalized sense of what a person of character does, not from external enforcement.


Third, the tension between Giri and Ninjō — obligation and human feeling — is not presented in Japanese tradition as something to be resolved by simply picking one over the other. The playwright Chikamatsu Monzaemon, whose domestic dramas of the early eighteenth century are still studied today, built his entire literary reputation on this tension. The moral weight of his plays comes from the fact that both sides of the conflict are legitimate. Your obligation to your community is real. Your longing for personal happiness is real. The question is how a person of character navigates between them — and that navigation is the substance of a moral life.


Fourth, and finally, Giri points toward something that modern Western ethical frameworks sometimes undervalue: the moral significance of gratitude as a form of action, not merely a feeling. In the Giri tradition, gratitude is not complete until it is expressed through conduct. To feel thankful but do nothing is insufficient. The obligation becomes real through behavior — through the gift sent, the roof repaired, the old man's grave kept clean.


V. Giri in the World We Actually Inhabit

It would be a mistake to think of Giri as a museum piece — something that belonged to samurai and Tokugawa-era merchants and has nothing to say to us now. In fact, Giri speaks directly to several of the most pressing concerns of modern life, and not just in Japan.


In Martial Arts Practice

For practitioners of Okinawan and Japanese martial arts, Giri is not a concept you read about in a book — it is something you practice every time you set foot on the mat. The relationship between student and teacher (deshi and sensei) is saturated with it. Your teacher has invested time, knowledge, and care in your development. That investment creates an obligation — to train seriously, to represent your lineage with honor, to eventually pass what you have received along to students of your own. The tradition does not continue by accident. It continues because each generation takes its Giri seriously.


In Isshin-ryū and the broader Okinawan tradition, this is expressed in the concept of respecting the lineage — knowing where your techniques came from, honoring the teachers who shaped your instructors, and understanding that you are a temporary custodian of something that belongs to a much longer story than your own training career.


In Business and Professional Life

If you have ever had a mentor who went out of their way to sponsor your career — who vouched for you, introduced you to the right people, or simply told you the truth when everyone else was being polite — you have received something that carries the quality of On. The Giri that follows is not discharged by saying thank you over email. It is discharged by doing your work with excellence, by representing that mentor well in everything you do, by being, when your time comes, the kind of mentor to someone else that you were fortunate enough to receive.


Ronald Dore, in his study of Japanese industrial organization, observed that long-term business relationships in Japan were structured by something deeper than contract — by a sense of mutual obligation that created stability and trust precisely because it was not purely transactional. The Giri-infused relationship expected that you would not immediately abandon a supplier for a slightly cheaper one when times were good, because they had stood by you when times were hard. This is not mere sentimentality. It is a form of social capital that produces resilience.


In Community and Family

In our own communities — neighborhoods, families, religious congregations, civic organizations — the informal fabric of obligation and reciprocity is what determines whether people show up for each other or not. The neighbor who brings a meal when you are ill, the friend who helps you move, the colleague who covers for you during a family emergency: these are not zero-sum transactions. They are deposits in a shared account of mutual care that makes a community genuinely livable.


When that fabric frays — when people feel no obligation to one another, when individualism shades into isolation — the result is not freedom but loneliness. Giri, rightly understood, is not the enemy of individual flourishing. It is the social infrastructure within which individual lives can actually mean something.


VI. A Final Word — The Thread That Holds

Let us return one last time to Ichiro, the rice merchant's son, standing over the grave of old Taro Hayashi, his grandfather's neighbor, telling his own children the story of the winter the warehouse burned.


What he is doing is not merely performing a ritual obligation. He is teaching his children something about the kind of people they are — about the web of relationship and responsibility that gives their lives texture and meaning. He is saying, without saying it in so many words: We are people who remember. We are people who repay. We are people who belong to something larger than ourselves.That is Giri. Not the obligation chocolate bought out of social anxiety. Not the compulsory gift exchange that has lost its meaning. But the genuine, freely-embraced recognition that our lives are entangled with the lives of others, and that entanglement is not a trap but a gift.


The Japanese martial tradition, the Confucian philosophical heritage, and the daily social life of communities across the centuries have all, in their different ways, circled back to this same insight: that a person of character does not stand alone. They stand in relationship. And they take that relationship seriously.


Giri, the weight of obligation — carried with awareness, with gratitude, and with a willingness to act — is not a burden. It is the thread that holds the fabric of human community together. Without it, the fabric unravels. With it, even a burned-out warehouse can be rebuilt.

 

Bibliography

Benedict, R. (1946). The chrysanthemum and the sword: Patterns of Japanese culture. Houghton Mifflin.

Bellah, R. N. (1957). Tokugawa religion: The values of pre-industrial Japan. Free Press.

Chikamatsu, M. (2001). Four major plays of Chikamatsu (D. Keene, Trans.). Columbia University Press. (Original works published 1703–1721)

Dore, R. P. (1958). City life in Japan: A study of a Tokyo ward. University of California Press.

Dore, R. P. (1987). Taking Japan seriously: A Confucian perspective on leading economic issues. Stanford University Press.

Lebra, T. S. (1969). Reciprocity and the asymmetric principle: An analytical reappraisal of the Japanese concept of on. Sociological Inquiry, 39(2), 129–137. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-682X.1969.tb00808.x

Lebra, T. S. (1976). Japanese patterns of behavior. University of Hawaii Press.

Nitobe, I. (1900). Bushido: The soul of Japan. Leeds & Biddle.

Smith, R. J. (1983). Japanese society: Tradition, self, and the social order. Cambridge University Press.

Yamamoto, T. (1979). Hagakure: The book of the samurai (W. S. Wilson, Trans.). Kodansha International. (Original work published c. 1716)

Page of

Rules of Engagement

Military Authority and Civilian Self-Defense Compared


by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


─── Haiku I ───

Orders bind the sword —

the civilian stands alone,

law whispering: not yet.


─── Haiku II ───

Two warriors meet —

one fights for chain of command,

one fights for front-door rights.

 

CAVEAT (Keikoku [警告])

The content presented here is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or a certified self-defense methodology. Laws governing the use of force vary by jurisdiction. Readers should consult a qualified attorney and seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection.

 

Introduction: Two Worlds, One Trigger

Imagine two people, each facing a threat. One is a Marine sergeant on a dusty road in Fallujah, the other is a retired schoolteacher in Reno whose front door is being kicked in at 2 a.m. Both may draw a weapon. Both may fire. But the legal and moral universes they inhabit are separated by a canyon so wide that confusing the two can put an innocent person in prison — or the grave.


Military rules of engagement (ROE) and civilian self-defense law share a common ancestor — the ancient human recognition that force may sometimes be necessary to preserve life — but they have evolved into very different creatures. Understanding both is not merely academic. For veterans who transition back to civilian life, for martial arts practitioners who train for real-world application, and for anyone who has ever thought 'what would I do?' it is essential.


This piece walks through both frameworks in plain language. We'll use a few parables and stories to ground the abstract in the concrete, and we'll make sure to hear the best counterargument before closing. 


Pull up a chair.


I. What Are Rules of Engagement?

Rules of engagement are the command-issued directives that tell a service member when, where, how, and against whom force may be used. They are, at their core, a policy tool. They reflect not just military necessity but political reality, international law, mission objectives, and the rules of war codified in documents like the Geneva Conventions and customary international humanitarian law.


ROE are hierarchical. At the top sits international law. Below that, national law and policy. Below that, theater-level ROE issued by the combatant commander. Below that, mission-specific orders. 


A Marine private on patrol does not get to freelance — he operates within a nested set of permissions and restrictions, and those change depending on where he is, who the enemy is, and what his command has authorized.


The Inherent Right of Self-Defense

Here's the one thread that runs through all ROE and into civilian law alike: the inherent right of individual self-defense. No ROE has ever — or could ever — eliminate a service member's right to defend themselves from a direct, imminent threat to life. The standing rule, found in virtually every U.S. military ROE card issued since Vietnam, is that a service member may use deadly force when facing a hostile act or demonstrated hostile intent. That's the floor. Everything else is ceiling — commanders can impose additional restrictions (more permissive environments) or tighten them further (highly constrained environments like peacekeeping operations).


What ROE add on top of self-defense is something civilian law does not have: offensive authority. 


The legal right under ROE to engage targets proactively — 

to strike a Hostile Declared Force before they fire at you — 

is unique to military operations. 


A civilian in Nevada cannot shoot someone because they 'look threatening' and seem like they might be planning something. A joint terminal attack controller in Afghanistan might, under specific ROE, be authorized to do something functionally analogous.


A Parable: The Guard at the Gate

A young corporal stands guard at a forward operating base. Intelligence says a car bomb was used in this province last week. A vehicle accelerates toward the gate, ignoring hand signals to stop. Under ROE, the corporal has a tiered response: warning shout, warning shot into the ground, aimed fire at the engine block, then aimed fire at the driver if nothing else works. He has about four seconds. He fires at the engine block. The car stops — it was driven by a panicked local whose brakes had failed. The ROE process saved a life.

Now imagine a civilian homeowner in the same scenario — a car on a rural road accelerating toward his fence. He has no ROE card. He has no chain of command. He has only the law of his state and his own judgment. If he shoots, he will be judged by a jury of his peers, not a military tribunal. The 'reasonableness' test will apply. It almost certainly will not end the same way.


The parable illustrates the most important structural difference: the military works within a pre-approved decision tree; the civilian must construct one in real time, under stress, with no institutional backup.


II. Civilian Self-Defense: The Legal Architecture

Civilian self-defense law in the United States varies by state but rests on several common pillars. Most jurisdictions require some combination of the following before deadly force is legally justified:


1. Imminence — the threat must be happening now, or about to happen. Not yesterday, not maybe next week.

2. Proportionality — the force used must match the force threatened. You cannot shoot someone for slapping you.

3. Reasonableness — a hypothetical "reasonable person" in your position would have felt the same threat. Subjective fear alone is insufficient.

4. Necessity — in many states, you must have had no reasonable alternative to using force (the duty to retreat, where applicable).


Stand Your Ground vs. Duty to Retreat

The United States is currently split into two broad camps. Roughly half the states have enacted Stand Your Ground laws, which eliminate the duty to retreat when you are in a place you have a legal right to be. The other half retain some version of the duty to retreat — you must attempt to withdraw from the confrontation before using deadly force, unless you are in your home (the castle doctrine).


This distinction matters enormously. A veteran trained in a culture of 'take the fight to the enemy' instinctively seeks a dominant position. Civilian law in a duty-to-retreat state may demand the exact opposite — and failing to retreat, even when retreat was possible, can transform a legitimate act of self-defense into a criminal homicide.


A Parable: The Samurai and the Shopkeeper

In feudal Japan, a samurai was permitted to cut down a commoner who showed disrespect — a legal sanction rooted in rank, not in threat. The commoner had no such right. He could not respond in kind, no matter the provocation.

Modern America has reversed this hierarchy in one sense: citizens have the right to defend themselves that the feudal commoner did not. But it has preserved the asymmetry in another sense: trained warriors returning from overseas cannot bring their battlefield ROE homeThe social contract that permits civilian self-defense is narrow and precisely drawn. Exceed it, and the law treats you like any other perpetrator of violence. The samurai's sword, once home, must be sheathed under different rules — or left on the wall.


This is something Tatsuo Shimabuku, the founder of Isshin-Ryu karate, understood intuitively. He taught that the martial arts were not for aggression, but for protection — and that the disciplined warrior knew exactly when not to act. The civilian self-defense framework codifies that wisdom into law.


III. Where They Converge — and Where They Collide

Convergence: The Imminent Threat Standard

Both military ROE and civilian self-defense law anchor themselves to imminence. Even the most permissive ROE do not permit shooting someone because you heard they were dangerous last month. Similarly, civilian law does not permit preemptive strikes against anticipated future harm. This shared root is not coincidental — both frameworks trace back to just war theory and the natural law tradition, the idea that lethal force is morally defensible only when no other option exists to stop an immediate, otherwise-lethal threat.


Collision: Proportionality and Collateral Damage

Here the two frameworks diverge sharply. Military ROE include provisions for collateral damage — the lawful but regrettable harm caused to non-combatants in pursuit of a legitimate military objective. A well-placed airstrike that kills two civilians while destroying a weapons cache is legally, if not morally, distinct from what would constitute criminal homicide in a civilian context.


Civilian law has no doctrine of acceptable collateral damage. If you shoot at an attacker and the bullet passes through and injures a bystander, you may be criminally and civilly liable for that injury, regardless of how justified your original act was. Collateral harm is not a protected concept in civilian self-defense. Period.


Collision: Offensive vs. Defensive Authority

As noted above, military ROE can authorize offensive action — the authority to target hostile forces before they attack. The U.S. legal doctrine of imminence in the military context has been interpreted broadly enough to include anticipatory self-defense at the state level (though that's international law). Civilian law does not extend this far. You cannot legally shoot an attacker who is walking toward your property and 'looks like trouble.' Intention, no matter how obvious it seems, is not imminence.


This collision is where veterans get into trouble. 


The threat recognition patterns trained into them — reading body language, interpreting intent, acting before the enemy can act — are survival tools in combat. In a Walmart parking lot, applying those same patterns can result in charges of aggravated assault or worse. 


The cognitive rewiring required to transition from a military threat-response framework to a civilian one is substantial, and it is not automatic.


A Parable: Two Sentries at Different Posts

Two sentries are assigned to protect the same principal — a diplomat visiting a volatile city. One is a private military contractor operating under a permissive ROE package that allows preemptive fire on any vehicle that enters a defined exclusion zone. The other is the diplomat's personal bodyguard, a civilian licensed to carry, operating under local law.

A car enters the exclusion zone. The contractor is legally authorized to engage. The bodyguard is not — not until the car shows a hostile act. Both see the same vehicle. Both feel the same risk. Only one is legally empowered to act. Afterward, if the car turned out to be a threat, both may be called heroes. If it turned out to be the wrong car, only one has institutional and legal cover. The other faces prosecution. That is the difference between operating under ROE and operating under civilian self-defense law, in one scene.


IV. The Veteran's Dilemma

This is not an abstract problem. The United States has roughly 18–20 million veterans. Many carry sidearms legally. Many have spent years — sometimes decades — operating under military ROE, building threat-pattern libraries that are calibrated to a context that no longer applies the moment they set foot on American soil.


The Department of Veterans Affairs and numerous researchers (MacManus et al., 2012; Sreenivasan et al., 2013) have documented elevated rates of aggressive threat-response in combat veterans, not as a character flaw but as an adaptive survival mechanism. The problem is that civilian law is not calibrated to adaptive survival mechanisms — it is calibrated to the 'reasonable person' standard, and that hypothetical person has never been in a firefight.


The practical implication: any veteran who carries a firearm in civilian life should receive explicit training in the use-of-force laws of their state. Not because they are more dangerous than the average person — the data suggest they are not — but because their internal threat model is calibrated to a different operational environment, and that mismatch, uncorrected, can be lethal to their freedom.


V. The Four-Second Problem

Here is something both frameworks share that does not get enough attention: most real-world use-of-force decisions happen in under four seconds. The Tueller Drill, developed by Salt Lake City police sergeant Dennis Tueller in 1983, demonstrated that an attacker with an edged weapon can cover 21 feet before an average person can draw, aim, and fire — a process that takes approximately 1.5 seconds for a trained individual.


The legal architecture of civilian self-defense was not designed to be consulted in real time. Juries deliberate for hours over decisions made in fractions of a second. The law asks, 'Was it reasonable?' but the brain doing the deciding had no time to be reasonable — it was operating on threat-pattern recognition honed by genetics, experience, and training.


This is why pre-event preparation matters so much. The time to learn your state's use-of-force laws is before you are ever in a confrontation. The time to train your threat-recognition system to civilian-appropriate thresholds is at the dojo or the range, not in the parking lot. The military has pre-event ROE briefings for exactly this reason — they program the decision tree before the trigger moment arrives. Civilians must do the equivalent on their own.


VI. The Counterargument — Hearing the Other Side

Perspective-Taking and Intellectual Humility

A thoughtful critic of the framework we've laid out might argue — and not without merit — that the comparison between military ROE and civilian self-defense law is itself misleading, and perhaps even dangerous. Let's steelman that position.


The counterargument goes something like this: 


By placing ROE and civilian self-defense side by side as if they are two answers to the same question, we risk importing military logic into civilian contexts where it has no business. The military operates in lawless spaces — war zones where the state has failed and violence is the currency. Civilian society has institutions precisely to avoid that state of affairs. When we frame civilian self-defense as a parallel track to ROE, we subtly legitimize a warrior mindset in a domain that should be governed by de-escalation, institutional trust, and the rule of law.


There is empirical weight behind this concern. Donohue (2017) found that Stand Your Ground laws are associated with a statistically significant increase in homicide rates — the opposite of what deterrence theory predicts. If civilians are given broader authority to use deadly force, and if that authority is conceptually framed in military terms, the result may not be more safety but more death.


Furthermore, the critic might note that the communities most affected by expansive self-defense doctrines are not the communities most likely to invoke them successfully. Race, socioeconomic status, and geography all influence how self-defense claims are adjudicated. A legal framework that sounds neutral on paper may function in deeply non-neutral ways in practice (Roman, 2013).


This is a serious argument, and we hold it with respect. The appropriate response is not to dismiss it but to integrate it. Understanding the difference between military ROE and civilian self-defense law is not an argument for expanding violence — it is an argument for precision. Knowing exactly what you are and are not permitted to do narrows the space for error, reduces the probability of tragic mistakes, and deepens respect for the legal structures that civilian society depends on. The goal is not to militarize the citizen, but to educate them.


We grant the critic this much: anyone who walks away from this piece feeling empowered to act more aggressively has missed the point entirely. The lesson is restraint through knowledge, not license through comparison.


VII. Conclusion: Different Swords, Different Sheaths

Military rules of engagement and civilian self-defense law are not opposites — they are not even the same kind of thing. One is a command instrument calibrated to war; the other is a legal doctrine calibrated to a society that has chosen not to be at war. Both share a moral foundation in the sanctity of life and the reluctant legitimacy of lethal force when no other option remains. But their operational grammar is entirely different.


The veteran knows this in the body long before the mind catches up. The karateka knows it too — years of training end with Shimabuku's implicit admonition: the technique exists so that you never have to use it. Knowing exactly where the line is — legally, morally, situationally — is not a constraint on your safety. It is your safety.


So pull that ROE card out and look at it again, or study your state's use-of-force statute, or find a qualified self-defense attorney and spend an hour with them. The four seconds you don't have when it counts need to be filled in advance. That is the only kind of preparation that matters.

 

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