I'm in Seattle for a wedding and was in a Starbucks (coincidence!) with my wife getting coffee for the wedding party about an hour ago. It was mildly crowded and some homeless dude was in line. He took a metal tumbler and was hanging on to it in line like he was going to buy it. Obviously, he was looking for a second to bolt with it- you could tell by his body language. The staff was eyeball fucking him, especially the sole brawny dude behind the counter.
It's probably a good place to drop in that I've trained no gi grappling since 1995 and boxing and MMA since about '05, but I'm not one of the guys who trains that fights in the streets. I love combat sports, but I work an office job.
Anyway, so the homeless guy finally makes his move and leaves the line and heads for the back exit. Immediately this little chick from behind the counter chases him and says he can't leave without paying for the tumbler. He erupts at her that he didn't steal it- a tactic that I'd not seen before, but made total sense to me. What did she think he was going to do, just say "yeah, you got me here you go" and give it back? It felt like, why bother stopping him if you're not going to grab him?
So now, Brawny guy comes out from behind the counter and tells the guy he can't take the tumbler and he has to leave. The guy becomes irate and starts screaming that it's his and he didn't take it. He knocks some Grab N' Go items over in a rage and pushes brawny guy.
At this point, I feel like I have a responsibility to end this, so I say, "OK, stay here" to my wife and I'm thinking I'm going to run over, double leg the guy, take his back and just put him to sleep. I can't handle all the yelling. So I start moving to the fracas, but the homeless bolts out the front door before I get anywhere near him.
Closest I've ever come to getting into a physical altercation.
My question is: should I have put him out sooner? Should I not have intervened at all? I'm not Anderson Silva or anything, but there's no doubt in my mind that Tumbler Stealer would have had about ten seconds of consciousness once I got a grip on him. I can't stand the "bystander" mentality and of course every other person in the coffee shop was standing around watching, shocked...
I guess the question is: because I can, should I?
It's probably a good place to drop in that I've trained no gi grappling since 1995 and boxing and MMA since about '05, but I'm not one of the guys who trains that fights in the streets. I love combat sports, but I work an office job.
Anyway, so the homeless guy finally makes his move and leaves the line and heads for the back exit. Immediately this little chick from behind the counter chases him and says he can't leave without paying for the tumbler. He erupts at her that he didn't steal it- a tactic that I'd not seen before, but made total sense to me. What did she think he was going to do, just say "yeah, you got me here you go" and give it back? It felt like, why bother stopping him if you're not going to grab him?
So now, Brawny guy comes out from behind the counter and tells the guy he can't take the tumbler and he has to leave. The guy becomes irate and starts screaming that it's his and he didn't take it. He knocks some Grab N' Go items over in a rage and pushes brawny guy.
At this point, I feel like I have a responsibility to end this, so I say, "OK, stay here" to my wife and I'm thinking I'm going to run over, double leg the guy, take his back and just put him to sleep. I can't handle all the yelling. So I start moving to the fracas, but the homeless bolts out the front door before I get anywhere near him.
Closest I've ever come to getting into a physical altercation.
My question is: should I have put him out sooner? Should I not have intervened at all? I'm not Anderson Silva or anything, but there's no doubt in my mind that Tumbler Stealer would have had about ten seconds of consciousness once I got a grip on him. I can't stand the "bystander" mentality and of course every other person in the coffee shop was standing around watching, shocked...
I guess the question is: because I can, should I?