Le b0wski
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2024
So you are saying I've wasted my time training my body to trick the polygraph machine I'll eventually be connected to?Above posters 100% right about how bullshit a polygraph is.
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So you are saying I've wasted my time training my body to trick the polygraph machine I'll eventually be connected to?Above posters 100% right about how bullshit a polygraph is.
It’s also why it’s completely inadmissible in a court of law and used as a tactic by the police to bully people with a science-fiction to try and invert the burden of guilt.The big thing with the polygraph is that it is simply an interrogation technique that provides information to the police.
If they view you as a suspect (a given since you're being subjected to this pseudo-science bullshit) anything you say can be made to look incriminating.
Polygraph operators are trained in interrogation and how to slant results in the way they want.
There are actually exceptions. While in many places, they're inadmissible in all circumstances, including by the defense, some courts allow them if their admissibility is stipulated by both parties.You should ALWAYS refuse a polygraph. It's bullshit that's about as accurate as aura reading or tarot cards used by cops to convince retarded criminals to confess. There's a reason they haven't been admissible in court for over 20 years.
Lots of glowies require them.What the actual... why would your employer want you to take a polygraph ?
Not 100% true but psychopaths display a lot less physical response to danger than normal people, which is what most polygraphs are testing for. One of the major problems of polygraphs is that the physiological response to being falsely accused of something can be mistaken for the physiological response to the stress most people feel when lying.You know the one group of people who will always “pass” these tests? Psychopaths. That’s how useful this test is.
This was already addressed a couple pages back:The death of Elisa Lam always creeped me out, it's well known though. Maybe it was the elevators not closing, or how she mashed the buttons in a panic within the video where she was last seen. I assumed since she was undermedicated or unmedicated at death, it was a suicide but how she got into the tank always baffles me. What really freaked me out about the whole case was how something was wrong the water pressure, the colour being black and some describing it tasted like lead.
She walked up the stairs, through the open doors, climbed up a ladder that had been left there by maintenance and jumped in. The hatch had been also left open and it was still open when her body was discovered, but were shut by the discoverer in his shock and panic.
Pretty much every mystery in the Lam case is covered by, "Mentally ill young woman off her meds and in a severe state of psychosis staying alone at a severely run down massive hotel where one maintenance bloke was doing the work of twenty". If you haven't watched the Netflix series I recommend that you do so. It goes into a lot of areas that most other investigations don't.
Almost 35 years ago, a relative went to trial for a serious crime. He passed the lie detector test with flying colors.You should ALWAYS refuse a polygraph. It's bullshit that's about as accurate as aura reading or tarot cards used by cops to convince retarded criminals to confess. There's a reason they haven't been admissible in court for over 20 years.
Hiker here. I have got lost countless times trying to take short cuts or mistaking a landmark and suddenly ending up in dense woodland. Fortunately we don’t have animals that will kill us here and our bands of murdering rapists live in cities, so things like this and most Missing 411 cases aren’t that mysterious to me.Small example: people love to insist that they had no reason to go off trail, as the end of the trail is clearly marked. Except said clear markings were only added after, and almost certainly as a response to, their deaths. The Pianista trail beforehand just sort of stopped, and if you weren't aware or careful, it was very easy to wander into the jungle.
It was left open because the staff was incompetent. Also, people who have paranoid delusions often try to hide in the bodies of water for some reason. I remember the case where one black girl was obsessed with a black pastor and then found dead in the lake. People speculated that he had an affair with her and killed her, but it was revealed that she was mentally ill and he had an alibi.but how she got into the tank always baffles me
I've read before that autistic children are at higher risk of drowning, and that when they elope, they often beeline for water. I wonder why that is? A quick search didn't turn up anything beyond some fluffy 'water is very sensory', which I guess is an explanation, but I wish there was some more concrete research about it.It was left open because the staff was incompetent. Also, people who have paranoid delusions often try to hide in the bodies of water for some reason. I remember the case where one black girl was obsessed with a black pastor and then found dead in the lake. People speculated that he had an affair with her and killed her, but it was revealed that she was mentally ill and he had an alibi.
I am not a psychiatrist, but from what I see autist are afraid of human touch because of sensory overload however still crave it so they can have the same experience with heavy blankets and something alike. Maybe getting submerged into water of reasonable temperature gives them the same feeling.I've read before that autistic children are at higher risk of drowning, and that when they elope, they often beeline for water. I wonder why that is? A quick search didn't turn up anything beyond some fluffy 'water is very sensory', which I guess is an explanation, but I wish there was some more concrete research about it.
This reminds me, has anyone brought up the Mount Asahi SOS Incident in this thread?Hiker here. I have got lost countless times trying to take short cuts or mistaking a landmark and suddenly ending up in dense woodland. Fortunately we don’t have animals that will kill us here and our bands of murdering rapists live in cities, so things like this and most Missing 411 cases aren’t that mysterious to me.
It’s easy to do dumb shit just to get to your goal. I’ve had a couple of close scrapes on mountain peaks.
That's an interesting story, thank you for sharing.This reminds me, has anyone brought up the Mount Asahi SOS Incident in this thread?
Had Mike 'Madman' Marcum pop up on my recommended videos so watched it.Cool story of Mike 'Madman' Marcum
https://youtube.com/watch?v=j-tGHCHVM_o
Punchline- He is alive, trying to make another machine. I doubt that any of it happened.
"Oh shit, my welder just cut space=time and sent my electrode 2 years into the future."
Reminds me about the 'Radioactive Boy Scout'. Autistic fan-boy of a technology.
Remember, time-travel isn't real, but arc-flash explosions are.
More proof that Minky Momo is cursed as fuck. In other news, Perry County Jane Doe/Girl with the Turquoise Jewelry was identified as Doris Joanne Girtz of Ravenna, Ohio."The rest of the tapes included music from the anime TV shows, Macross and Magical Princess Minky Momo. In addition, a cutout of artwork of "Magical Princess Minky Momo" was used as a case for the cassette tape."
If you read the wiki article, there's a section on the SOS sign:Most likely it was just Kenji Iwamura himself, a hiker who somehow got injured, and died trapped there. I wonder what kind of injury would cripple his ability to escape the mountain but still allow him to make such a large SOS sign from tree trunks. In the recording, he mentions being trapped by sasa, a kind of thick plant. A news team who were reporting on the case got caught in this same sasa and needed rescuing. But in order to make the SOS sign, he would have had to be ambulatory before getting caught in the sasa, so that still doesn't answer what stranded him there in the first place.
ThllThe wooden letters of the SOS sign were made by stacking large fallen birch trees, and it was estimated that it took about two days and considerable effort to create such a giant sign. It was speculated that the sign was made by the missing person that the skeleton belonged to, but in the autopsy of the skeleton that was found, who investigators believed was Iwamura, the body was described as thin and weak to the point that it would have been impossible for him to make the sign on his own. No axe that could have been used to cut trees down to make the sign has been found. Some have pointed out that Osamu Tezuka's Astro Boy has a scene in which fallen trees are arranged in the shape of SOS.[8][13][5]
Historically ( and sometimes today) parents used to be " harder" on the older children then mellow out with the younger. The parent didn't necessarily have reasonable expectations of toddler/teen behavior and would often parentify the oldest daughter. Worse, Christina was a raised during a not particularly child-centric era. If she ended up "raging cluster B" it's not surprising given her role model.Which biography? And if that’s the case, what about the twins?
Autists are the true Atlanteans and they're trying to return to their ancestral home.I've read before that autistic children are at higher risk of drowning, and that when they elope, they often beeline for water. I wonder why that is? A quick search didn't turn up anything beyond some fluffy 'water is very sensory', which I guess is an explanation, but I wish there was some more concrete research about it.
Water being a sensory experience is the most likely reasoning. Autistic people enjoy high sensory stimulation and being in the water acts on multiple senses continuously - touch, visual, auditory, and even smell. They actively seek out sensory input and if they are understimulated they will make their own (rocking, hand flapping, spinning, etc.). Kids in general also just fucking love playing in water, the enjoyment is just exponentially higher for autistic kids.I've read before that autistic children are at higher risk of drowning, and that when they elope, they often beeline for water. I wonder why that is? A quick search didn't turn up anything beyond some fluffy 'water is very sensory', which I guess is an explanation, but I wish there was some more concrete research about it.