César Rodríguez (taekwondo)

César Rodríguez Luna (born in Mexico City)[1] is a Mexican taekwondo practitioner and international medalist. He competed at the 1982 and 1983 World Taekwondo Championships, where he received a silver in each tournament. Rodríguez is a member of the Taekwondo Hall of Fame. He is the founder and president of Absolut Taekwondo Company in Mexico, served as President of Taekwondo in Tlalpan region of Mexico City, and is author of the book Arte Taekwondo.[2]

César Rodríguez
Medal record
Representing  Mexico
Men’s taekwondo
World Taekwondo Championships
1982 Ecuador
1983 Denmark
Pan American Taekwondo Championships
1978 Pan American Taekwondo Championships
1980 Pan American Taekwondo Championships
2003 Pan American Taekwondo Championships

Career achievements

  • 1974- Mexican National Champion - Mexico City
  • 1977- Mexican National Champion - Mexico City
  • 1978- 1st Pan American Taekwondo Championships - Mexico City - Gold
  • 1979- North American TKD Championships - Hawaii- Gold Medal
  • 1980- North American TKD Championships - Toronto, Canada - Bronze
  • 1980- Pan American Taekwondo Championships - Houston - Gold
  • 1982- World Taekwondo Championships - Ecuador - Silver
  • 1983- World Taekwondo Championships - Denmark - Silver
  • 1987- Mexico Taekwondo Open Championships -Mexico City - Gold
  • 1989- European Taekwondo Championships - Spain - Silver
  • 1992- US Open Taekwondo Championships - Colorado, USA - Bronze
  • 2003- Pan American Taekwondo Championships - Gold
  • 2003- USA Open Taekwondo Championships - Silver
  • 2003- Iberian Taekwondo Games - Silver
gollark: I mean, those apply to some narrowly defined things in physics, for limited definitions of "action" and such, but not in general so far as I can tell.
gollark: I don't think so, unless you really stretch the definition most of the time or claim it's metaphorical or something.
gollark: Like "colourless green ideas sleep furiously" and such.
gollark: It's just that stuff like "thought isnt action. so things that started as thought are just concepts in action, the action is still the same action as all other actions, push and pull." and "every action has an equal and opposite reaction" don't seem like... semantically meaningful sentences. I mean, they're... valid sentences, but don't look like they're actually conveying any true useful information.
gollark: Sure?

References

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