View Full Version : Frank Dux: Jewish liar
Antiochus Epiphanes
November 4th, 2004, 02:35 PM
Frank Dux alleged superfast punching Jewboy who was apparently in the armed forces talked a big game. For years people talked about this guy and then the movie Bloodsport came out, casting quarter Jew Van Varenberg (Van Damme) as Frank Dux in a fantasy about a "deathmatch" style tournament held in the Orient somewheres, won by ole Frank the Lying Jew Dux. You guys have seen it.
What you may not have seen is the boring, awful book by Frank Dux, entitled, of course, "Frank Dux International Jew of Mystery" which is a bunch of pics of Dux with Van Damme and innuendo about being in the CIA. LOL. Who would need a fat mouthy Jew in the CIA? CIA cant keep the fat mouthy Jews in DC bossing them around satisfied, why should they bring em on ship eh?
Anyhow, not long after this book came out, and flopped like a limp spaghetti, James L Pate or some other quality journalist writing at SOF "debunked" the fantasies of Frank Dux. He didnt poke fun at him being a fucking KIKE of course, but that part comes back to me pretty clearly from the book.
Can somebody dig up that article?
Antiochus Epiphanes
November 5th, 2004, 11:14 PM
here is somepfin I dug up on this kike liar:
http://martialarts.jameshom.com/library/weekly/aa073001b.htm
LA Times Controversy
Johnson's article sought to debunk Dux's story of the Kumite and his secret life as a military/CIA operative. Johnson found a North Hollywood vendor stating that Dux's Kumite trophy wasn't earned for combat on some tropical island, but was merely ordered and picked up just a few miles from Dux's Southern California home.
In his interview with me, Dux tackled the controversy head on. "That article made a big deal that the Kumite trophy was fake. But the receipt they claimed was proof didn't even have my name spelled correctly! They spelled it Ducks: D-U-C-K-S!"
Soldier of Fortune Controversy
Dux got into hot water again in August 1996 when Soldier of Fortune magazine printed the article "Full Mental Jacket," and a November 1998 article titled "Stolen Valor: Profiles of a Phony-Hunter." In the articles, Dux was lambasted for falsifying his military record, with photos of Dux in a military uniform that brandishes both Army and Marine medals.
Current Results
Dux explains that he was the target of a smear campaign by Soldier of Fortune publisher Robert K. Brown--and that he even sued Soldier of Fortune for libel and slander. Dux described how he, Brown, and Rogue Warrior author Richard Marcinko were seeking to launch similar movie projects--and how Brown sought to disparage his two rivals so his own project would succeed. Dux states that he doesn't claim to be a Vietnam veteran--he feels the confusion is due to him being active in veterans causes. And that incriminating photo? Just a snapshot from a cast party on a movie set--and the uniform was just garb from Central Costumes*.
These controversial articles were simple compared to the fight Dux would later have on his hands: a court battle with his former friend Jean Claude Van Damme.
*Correction: I was later told by David Silverman, Dux Ryu instructor at the University of Southern California, that the party was not a cast party, just a college Halloween party.
Antiochus Epiphanes
November 5th, 2004, 11:21 PM
"martial arts" circles are filled with self promoting pathological liars. here is a discussion about Dux as a fraud with a few other self identified CIA 'operatives.':
http://www.fightingarts.com/forums/ubb/Forum1/HTML/001813.html
http://www.karateforums.com/viewtopic.php?t=13340
Warhammer
November 6th, 2004, 12:33 AM
"martial arts" circles are filled with self promoting pathological liars. here is a discussion about Dux as a fraud with a few other self identified CIA 'operatives.':
http://www.fightingarts.com/forums/ubb/Forum1/HTML/001813.html
http://www.karateforums.com/viewtopic.php?t=13340
Wow. I've always known that Dux was a phony and had a falling out with Van Damme, but I had no idea it was to that extent. Sadly yes, there are allot of bullshitters in the martial arts world, unfortualy half of them seem to have Dojos.
Mr. Generic Karate sensei sometimes turns out to a graduate of YMCA self defense class, and a few minor local competitions. He's making black belts that have no power in their strikes and jumping all over the room like a retarded Spiderman . Be wary of the instructor that stresses form over function.
BTW – I know I have not posted a lot in the past and don’t “Know” anyone but to be fair, Rounders description of American Kenpo was accurate. Some sensei’s have in fact left the various "associations" due too exorbitant fees and requirements that limit modification of form due to "Tradition" and often incorporate basic Korean or Ishin Ryu, Judo/Akido forms as a supplement or to “finish the asshole off”.
If one has not devoted themselves to studying the other forms of the world, they would probably not even realize their origin.
EDIT- OOPS. I posted this in the wrong thread..So much for focus huh? :o
Warhammer
November 6th, 2004, 12:55 AM
Jap karate is a funny thing I was told that the japs taught it to the Americans in Japan after the second war because they needed the money. But not likeing Americans for obivous reasons taught it to them all wrong. And then the Americans went home and started teaching it the same wrong way. I was showed that of lot of the hard blocks are really supposed to be quick moving parrys/grabs and breaks/throws.
I’ve heard the same thing as well from the old timers. An exception to this was "the Cat" who brutalized his students, Jap or American. Those who could withstand his teachings were the real deal. They would be like, 80 years old now, and could probably still whoop some ass lol.
It's funny did you ever notice that Karate never seemed to catch on in the States until the 60's? The Army had been teaching Judo for years. Guy's like Bill Wallace, Ed Parker, Chuck Norris (later 60's-70's) and Al Farnsworth were the ones who modified the early forms and revolutionized MA in America and abroad.
Antiochus Epiphanes
November 10th, 2004, 08:58 AM
Jap karate is a funny thing I was told that the japs taught it to the Americans in Japan after the second war because they needed the money. But not likeing Americans for obivous reasons taught it to them all wrong. And then the Americans went home and started teaching it the same wrong way. I was showed that of lot of the hard blocks are really supposed to be quick moving parrys/grabs and breaks/throws.
that is what George Dillman says. I'm not too keen on his three strike knockout stuff, but I completely agree.
For example, the first black belt form we learned in TKD was actually the first form I learned in shorin ryu. Maybe it was called Koryo and Naihanchi shodan. Its goes to the left and right. Identical, but here were these tae kwon do guys teaching it all different and definitely inferior interpretation of the movements to the shorin ryu. And these korean karate guys often are ignorant or self deluding about the 50 years of occupation of korea by Japs which had a major influence on "tae kwon do" which in all sincerity, probably didnt exist as such before the japs took the country over in 1890.
Another thing I noticed about one of my tae kwon do forms, was that when I started aikido there was this very basic movement which is like a clothesline but with some tai sabaki meaning stepping out of the way with some circular footwork. People have seen this movement many times in Seagal movies. I think they call it shomen iriminage. But the thing was, when I went to learn it, I already knew it. I had to change my footwork, but it was already programmed into my "muscle memory" from doing a particular movement in a tkd form that neither I nor my instructors had the first clue. They used to say, ah, this is a parry followed by a spearhand thrust to the abdomen. And I would think, "spearhand thrust to the abdomen? that would never work." Of course not. It was a parry followed by a clothesline! But they never knew that.
So Dillman says, whatever the movement is, there may be hidden meanings. That is also consistent with my understand of "Tradition" gained from the writing of Julius Evola, by the way, wherein Evola talks about the hidden or esoteric meaning of certain religious rituals. Consider that martial arts is taught in a traditional ritualistic fashion; but without the "intiation," people can just be going through the motions in complete ignorance as to their meaning. Evola suggested that this is partly what had happened to Christianity, ie, that it had "decayed" and "lost its initiatic orientation" by becoming "solely an exoteric cult without an inner tradition."
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