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Topic Summary - Displaying 23 post(s).
Posted by: Administrator
Posted on: Oct 21st, 2008 at 2:44am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 21st, 2008 at 2:34am:
Administrator wrote on Oct 21st, 2008 at 1:15am:
Further posts to this message thread should substantively address the original topic.


I'm sure Mr Cullen appreciates your assistance in changing the subject.

Sancho Panza


It is you who initiated subject-changing in this thread. Again, any further posts to this thread should address the original topic.
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 21st, 2008 at 2:34am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Administrator wrote on Oct 21st, 2008 at 1:15am:
Further posts to this message thread should substantively address the original topic.



I'm sure Mr Cullen appreciates your assistance in changing the subject.

Sancho Panza
Posted by: notguilty1
Posted on: Oct 21st, 2008 at 1:20am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 21st, 2008 at 12:50am:
Notguilty1

When William Gaddis wrote that "Stupidity is the cultivation if ignorance" I can't help but think he had you in mind.

I did not address you or ask you anything and yet, you act just like the little boy in Kindergarten class who raises his hand to speak, not because he has something to say, but because he has an uncontrollable need to say something, so he doesn't feel left out.

Sancho Panza

P.S.  TC thinks you are a cowardly cur because you use an alias.
sp



OK well, I am interested in hearing any other charms of wisdom you may have on the OP or any other post for that matter. It is amusing Grin
Posted by: Administrator
Posted on: Oct 21st, 2008 at 1:15am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Further posts to this message thread should substantively address the original topic.
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 21st, 2008 at 12:50am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Notguilty1

When William Gaddis wrote that "Stupidity is the cultivation if ignorance" I can't help but think he had you in mind.

I did not address you or ask you anything and yet, you act just like the little boy in Kindergarten class who raises his hand to speak, not because he has something to say, but because he has an uncontrollable need to say something, so he doesn't feel left out.

Sancho Panza

P.S.  TC thinks you are a cowardly cur because you use an alias.
sp
Posted by: notguilty1
Posted on: Oct 21st, 2008 at 12:03am
  Mark & Quote
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 8:45pm:
T.M. Cullen wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 5:37pm:
Not using an alias, like some cowardly cur

Mr. Cullen I think we have addressed the anonymity issue sufficiently. You should now take it up with TwoBlock, NotGuilty1. Sergeant1107, Poly-ana and the rest. I think you are trying to bait me.  With a little more practice you may become a black belt and eventually a master.

You need to stop and consider who you are backing here.
When I asked him "Have you ever participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan in which you describe or explain the countermeasures described in your book? "; he could have said simply "NO", but instead tries to tap dance around the question with responses like  "none of your business" I respect privacy" and then he plays the race card. 

With this type of direct question, I think it is fair to conclude that any response but "NO" is actually a "YES". If he has in fact had these conversations he was either delivering information he believed to be accurate in languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan or he was deliberately delivering mis-information at the behest of the U.S. Government or some other intelligence agency.  Since we already know that based on Dr. Maschke's own statement,  our government has determined that Dr. Maschke is not ever going to be placed on their list of people who get to decide what information should be translated and released to the enemies of our country then I think the former is more likely than the latter. 

Mr. Cullen, what about you? Can you answer a direct question with either a yes or no?   

Have you ever knowingly provided information to a foreign national that you believed could be used at any level to damage the objectives of The U.S. Military or intelligence services?

I just can't hardly wait to see if are actually going to answer or put on your tap shoes and start dancing.


Sancho Panza


Sancho,

If you were not so funny you'd be boring!
Who may I ask promoted you from lie detector genie to protector of our country against terrorists?
You don't see who silly you sound and thats what so dam funny.
Please Sancho stop chasing shadows and leave national security to the guys who actually know what the hell they are talking about. 
They don't seem worried about GM, TC  or this site but YOU ARE!!  Grin Grin
You are making a complete ass of your self.
Hey were you hall monitor of the year in school? I bet you were  Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin


Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 8:45pm
  Mark & Quote
T.M. Cullen wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 5:37pm:
Not using an alias, like some cowardly cur

Mr. Cullen I think we have addressed the anonymity issue sufficiently. You should now take it up with TwoBlock, NotGuilty1. Sergeant1107, Poly-ana and the rest. I think you are trying to bait me.  With a little more practice you may become a black belt and eventually a master.

You need to stop and consider who you are backing here.
When I asked him "Have you ever participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan in which you describe or explain the countermeasures described in your book? "; he could have said simply "NO", but instead tries to tap dance around the question with responses like  "none of your business" I respect privacy" and then he plays the race card. 

With this type of direct question, I think it is fair to conclude that any response but "NO" is actually a "YES". If he has in fact had these conversations he was either delivering information he believed to be accurate in languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan or he was deliberately delivering mis-information at the behest of the U.S. Government or some other intelligence agency.  Since we already know that based on Dr. Maschke's own statement,  our government has determined that Dr. Maschke is not ever going to be placed on their list of people who get to decide what information should be translated and released to the enemies of our country then I think the former is more likely than the latter. 

Mr. Cullen, what about you? Can you answer a direct question with either a yes or no?   

Have you ever knowingly provided information to a foreign national that you believed could be used at any level to damage the objectives of The U.S. Military or intelligence services?

I just can't hardly wait to see if are actually going to answer or put on your tap shoes and start dancing.


Sancho Panza
Posted by: T.M. Cullen
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 5:37pm
  Mark & Quote
Quote:
T.M. Cullen wrote on Yesterday at 2:47pm:
What difference does it make if insurgent, or Al Qaeda types use the info in GM's book?
Third. In case you haven't heard the news, Our government has determined that Dr. Maschke is not ever going to be placed on their list of people who gets to decide what information should be translated and released to the enemies of our country. The fact that YOU both believe that his countermeasures work and are OK that the information has been translated for our enemies reveals volumes about you. Have you ever wondered why if Dr. Maschke was able to convince our government that polygraph didn't work why he would think countermeasures are necessary?  If it doesn't work why does it have to be defeated by cheating?

Sancho Panza


If CMs don't work, and all the info and advice GM provides in his book is so false, then why are you making such a fuss about it?  The fact that you are making such a fuss about CMs and GM's book tends to indicate that you really DO believe CMs work, and that TLBLD is exposing the truth about the polygraph.  And you fear this, and it seems to have the polygraph community in a "tizzy".  In a made scramble to discredit the book and slander the authors.  But in an open and free society, the truth ultimately prevails.  Liars, magic potion sellers, gypsy fortune tellers...etc. are eventually exposed.  So join the club!

The polygraph is inaccurate and unreliable.  It does more damage than good with regard to our national security.  It brands honest, innocent people liars, while letting liars, spies, and cheats slip through the cracks.   

It is being kept in place for political/bureaucratic/administrative and economic reasons.  And has been for decades now.

We are now exposing the truth, and polygraph interrogators (like you) who make a living at it, are squealing like stuck pigs.  That is to be expected.  Along with your feeble and cowardly attempts to slander the truth tellers under an ANONYMOUS name.  In my book, if you are going to slander somebody, you should do it using your REAL name.  Not using an alias, like some cowardly cur.

TC
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 4:32pm
  Mark & Quote
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 3:28pm:
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 2:26pm:
Polygraphy is a pseudoscientific fraud


If you could really prove that statement, cheating on the test would be unnecessary. Polygraph is not "pseudoscience" and it is not fraud.


I'm afraid you are blinded by self-interest in your assessment of the scientific merits of polygraphy.

Quote:
Like I said before , if you think that Daniel Sosnowski has committed some crime or colluded with the Department of the Army in some type of bid-rigging scheme, why don't you lodge a formal complaint with the Department of the Army or the GAO instead of tossing about unsupported allegations ? Could it be that you won't lodge a complaint because you know you lack credibility with the U.S. Government?


For the moment, I am content to leave that option to such of Mr. Sosnowski's competitors as may feel they were unfairly disadvantaged by the contract award process.
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 3:28pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 2:26pm:
Polygraphy is a pseudoscientific fraud


If you could really prove that statement, cheating on the test would be unnecessary. Polygraph is not "pseudoscience" and it is not fraud.

Like I said before , if you think that Daniel Sosnowski has committed some crime or colluded with the Department of the Army in some type of bid-rigging scheme, why don't you lodge a formal complaint with the Department of the Army or the GAO instead of tossing about unsupported allegations ? Could it be that you won't lodge a complaint because you know you lack credibility with the U.S. Government?

Sancho Panza
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 2:26pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Sancho Panza,

Indeed, it appears to me that the Department of the Army's offer was tailored for a single contractor and that the contract was not awarded competitively. Ten days is very short notice on which to prepare a bid on such a contract.

But what I find most troubling is not that our government may have spent more than it might have to train eight Iraqis as polygraphers, but rather that the entire project is a complete waste of U.S. taxpayer money. Polygraphy is a pseudoscientific fraud, and to the extent that the Iraqi government places any reliance on the auguries of its newly indoctrinated polygraph chartgazers, it will undermine its security.
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 1:28pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 20th, 2008 at 2:24am:
The solicitation period opened on 21 March 2008 and closed a mere ten days later, suggesting that the U.S. Army was not seeking genuinely competitive bids, but had an awardee in mind from the outset. Nice work if you can get it


One thing about public contracts is that he can't respond to questions concerning his activities with "It's none of your business" He can't tap dance around claiming to "respect the privacy" of his business contacts and he certainly can't try to play the race card to try and shift focus away from his behavior. 

You insinuated that their was something improper with the way that his contract was awarded. 

If you really believe that there was collusion or "bid rigging" involved, why don't you lodge a complaint with the Department of the Army or the GAO?

Sancho Panza
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 1:16pm
  Mark & Quote
T.M. Cullen wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 6:47pm:
(the polygraph is bogus),and the advice given in the book DOES WORK


First Mr. Cullen the polygraph is not bogus. It works, just like polygraphers say it does. 
Second. Dr. Maschke and his co-author have been asked on more than one occasion to produce  a single research study that both (a) proved that the countermeasures he  teaches are an effective means of passing a polygraph and are undetectable and (b) cited in their book TLBTLD as the source of the advice or training for effective and undetectable countermeasures. 
They haven't been able to find one(not even one) yet. 

T.M. Cullen wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 6:47pm:
What difference does it make if insurgent, or Al Qaeda types use the info in GM's book?


Third. In case you haven't heard the news, Our government has determined that Dr. Maschke is not ever going to be placed on their list of people who gets to decide what information should be translated and released to the enemies of our country. The fact that YOU both believe that his countermeasures work and are OK that the information has been translated for our enemies reveals volumes about you. Have you ever wondered why if Dr. Maschke was able to convince our government that polygraph didn't work why he would think countermeasures are necessary?  If it doesn't work why does it have to be defeated by cheating?

Sancho Panza
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 20th, 2008 at 2:24am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
While the Federal Procurement Data System report of the contract awarded to Dan Sosnowski is short on detail regarding just what services he is required to perform thereunder, the solicitation for the contract (see attached Microsoft Word document) provides additional detail.

In short, Sosnowski's $365,440 contract is for the provision of 8 polygraph instruments and the training of 8 Iraqi Ministry of Defense and Ministry of Information employees as polygraph operators so that they can institute a polygraph screening program in the Iraqi government. The training was to run six months from 1 May 2008 to 31 October 2008. The U.S. Government was to provide Sosnowski with free lodging, meals, and training facilities.

The solicitation period opened on 21 March 2008 and closed a mere ten days later, suggesting that the U.S. Army was not seeking genuinely competitive bids, but had an awardee in mind from the outset. Nice work if you can get it.  Wink
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 9:39pm
  Mark & Quote
Tap dancing obviously isn't your forte'.  Excuse me, I meant to say you just aren't very good at it.

Absence of your denial is clearly a tacit admission. In other words a party's silence when confronted with a statement made in his presence under circumstances that would normally call for a denial constitutes an admission.

You aren't in court or a "Star Chamber proceeding. 

The First Amendment protects you from any tangible penalty that might result from a truthful response here, other than the possible exposure of information of which you would prefer your supporters remain ignorant. No one has asked you for the identities of the people to whom you have spoken and their privacy is not a t risk for exposure. 

My question is no more racist than your statement:
Quote:
It's worth noting that at least some Islamist insurgents in Iraq are well aware that polygraph "testing" is a fraud. See "The Myth of the Lie Detector" published in the Iraqi jihadist e-zine, Al-Fath, and available here in English translation. And for discussion, see Al-Qaeda Has Read The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.


My question seeks only to determine your level of participation in the aquisition of this information by "Islamist insurgents", "Al Qaeda" and the "Taliban". 

No one has made the case yet that you have intentionally provided this information to the enemies of the United States. I, for one, leave open the possibility that you were duped by the agents of our enemies. 

Sancho Panza
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 7:07pm
  Mark & Quote
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 6:16pm:
Well let's see, for starters, you deny translating your book into Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgentsin Iraq or Afganistan.


That's correct. I haven't translated The Lie Behind the Lie Detector into any language. Should I in future do so, such translation will be made available for download on AntiPolygraph.org.

Quote:
But you don't deny having participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgentsin Iraq or Afganistan in which you described or explained the countermeasures described in your book.


No. I neither confirm or deny it. It's none of your business. For starters, I respect the privacy of the people who have communicated with me regarding polygraphy, and I'm reluctant to say anything to you (or anyone else) regarding my private correspondence. It's simply no business of yours.

But moreover, I deeply detest and disavow the bigotry and racism implicit in your question, the unspoken subtext of which is that speaking with anyone about polygraph matters in languages such as Arabic or Persian (the vast majority of whose speakers, like those of every other language, are not terrorists) is somehow tantamount to an act of disloyalty to the United States.

Quote:
Are you familiar with the doctrine of tacit admission as applied by courts in the United States?


I am not a defendant on trial in your polygraph star chamber. If that disappoints you, you can go pound sand.
Posted by: T.M. Cullen
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 6:47pm
  Mark & Quote
Quote:
Well let's see, for starters, you deny translating your book into Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan.


What difference does it make if insurgent, or Al Qaeda types use the info in GM's book?   According to you, the info contained in it is bunk.  Countermeasures do not work, and can be detected!  The NAS report is Bullshit!

So why all the fuss?   

OTOH, if the info contained in the book is true (the polygraph is bogus),  and the advice given in the book DOES WORK, and is being used by our nation's enemies, and you KNOW this is the case, yet you, your cohorts, the DOD bureacrats, the intel agencies...etc. still cling stubbornly to it, and protect it like some washed up old actor, despite warnings by the NAS, THEN THAT is the real problem!  You are letting stupid personal pride stand in the way of our nation's security!  All to make a lousy buck!  You're either deluded or a traitor!  Maybe both!

There is going to be REAL political HELL TO PAY, when the truth about US government policy concerning the polygraph becomes widely know by the public.  I hope it happens during my lifetime!

"Well, duh, the polygraph isn't perfect, but, well, duh, it's the  only thing we have.  Guess we'll just have to keep it.  It's not very reliable, but we gotta rely on something, to some extent.  The American people expect it.  Maybe we'll have the NAS produce another report on the polygraph for congress, so we can ignore that one too!  Let's go guys!  Tee time is at 8!"   

What BULLSHIT!

TC
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 6:16pm
  Mark & Quote
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 5:09pm:
Quote:
Thank you  Considering everything else you deny; your lack of denial here tells me what I need to know.


And what precisely is that?

Quote:
Did you translate your book into any of those languages?


No. If I (or anyone else acting in cooperation with AntiPolygraph.org) had done so, such translations would be available on this site.


Well let's see, for starters, you deny translating your book into Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan.

But you don't deny having participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan in which you described or explained the countermeasures described in your book.

Are you familiar with the doctrine of tacit admission as applied by courts in the United States?  

Sancho Panza
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 5:09pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Quote:
Thank you  Considering everything else you deny; your lack of denial here tells me what I need to know.


And what precisely is that?

Quote:
Did you translate your book into any of those languages?


No. If I (or anyone else acting in cooperation with AntiPolygraph.org) had done so, such translations would be available on this site.
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 5:04pm
  Mark & Quote
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 2:20pm:
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 2:03pm:
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 9:06am:
Polygraphy may be bullshit, but it can be highly lucrative bullshit for those with the right connections

It seems the Department of the Army disagrees with you regarding the value of polyraph.


To be sure, it does. But then again, the Department of the Army also disagrees with the National Academy of Sciences regarding the value of polygraphy.

Quote:
I have long maintained that profanity is the refuge of the weak-minded or intellectually maladroit. You seem to resort to it it whenever you find yourself outside your comfort zone or when you are trying to emphasize a point.


Yes, I used "bullshit" for emphasis, because "humbuggery" and "poppycock" are too quaint.

Quote:
Quote:
It's worth noting that at least some Islamist insurgents in Iraq are well aware that polygraph "testing" is a fraud. See "The Myth of the Lie Detector" published in the Iraqi jihadist e-zine, Al-Fath, and available here in English translation. And for discussion, see Al-Qaeda Has Read The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.


Thoughout your postings I am amazed that you can appear so proud at the prospect that your information is being used by the enemies of our country while denying any responsibility for the translation of that information. Even if one believes you when you claim you did not translate your book into Arabic or Farsi, I can't help but wonder whether or not you have communictaed the information contained in your book to the enemies of our country, perhaps in another way? 

My question is this:
Have you ever participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan in which you describe or explain the countermeasures described in your book?


That's no business of yours.


Thank you  Considering everything else you deny; your lack of denial here tells me what I need to know.

Did you translate your book into any of those languages?

Sancho Panza
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 2:20pm
  Mark & Quote
SanchoPanza wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 2:03pm:
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 9:06am:
Polygraphy may be bullshit, but it can be highly lucrative bullshit for those with the right connections

It seems the Department of the Army disagrees with you regarding the value of polyraph.


To be sure, it does. But then again, the Department of the Army also disagrees with the National Academy of Sciences regarding the value of polygraphy.

Quote:
I have long maintained that profanity is the refuge of the weak-minded or intellectually maladroit. You seem to resort to it it whenever you find yourself outside your comfort zone or when you are trying to emphasize a point.


Yes, I used "bullshit" for emphasis, because "humbuggery" and "poppycock" are too quaint.

Quote:
Quote:
It's worth noting that at least some Islamist insurgents in Iraq are well aware that polygraph "testing" is a fraud. See "The Myth of the Lie Detector" published in the Iraqi jihadist e-zine, Al-Fath, and available here in English translation. And for discussion, see Al-Qaeda Has Read The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.


Thoughout your postings I am amazed that you can appear so proud at the prospect that your information is being used by the enemies of our country while denying any responsibility for the translation of that information. Even if one believes you when you claim you did not translate your book into Arabic or Farsi, I can't help but wonder whether or not you have communictaed the information contained in your book to the enemies of our country, perhaps in another way? 

My question is this:
Have you ever participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan in which you describe or explain the countermeasures described in your book?


That's no business of yours.
Posted by: SanchoPanza
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 2:03pm
  Mark & Quote
George W. Maschke wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 9:06am:
Polygraphy may be bullshit, but it can be highly lucrative bullshit for those with the right connections

It seems the Department of the Army disagrees with you regarding the value of polyraph.

I have long maintained that profanity is the refuge of the weak-minded or intellectually maladroit. You seem to resort to it it whenever you find yourself outside your comfort zone or when you are trying to emphasize a point.

Quote:
It's worth noting that at least some Islamist insurgents in Iraq are well aware that polygraph "testing" is a fraud. See "The Myth of the Lie Detector" published in the Iraqi jihadist e-zine, Al-Fath, and available here in English translation. And for discussion, see Al-Qaeda Has Read The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.


Thoughout your postings I am amazed that you can appear so proud at the prospect that your information is being used by the enemies of our country while denying any responsibility for the translation of that information. Even if one believes you when you claim you did not translate your book into Arabic or Farsi, I can't help but wonder whether or not you have communictaed the information contained in your book to the enemies of our country, perhaps in another way? 

My question is this:
Have you ever participated in a conversations or correspondance in Arabic, Farsi, Persian, or any of the other languages natively spoken by Al Qaeda , the Taliban, or Islamist insurgents  in Iraq or Afganistan in which you describe or explain the countermeasures described in your book? 

Sanch Panza
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Oct 19th, 2008 at 9:06am
  Mark & Quote


Daniel E. Sosnowski


Polygraphy may be bullshit, but it can be highly lucrative bullshit for those with the right connections. On 21 April 2008, the Department of the Army awarded polygrapher Dan Sosnowski's S.O.S. Services, Inc. a contract (see attached PDF) in the amount of $365,440.00 for the provision of "Polygraph Training and Equipment" in Iraq.

Sosnowski, of Marietta, Georgia, is a long-time board member of the American Polygraph Association is currently that organization's president-elect.

It's worth noting that at least some Islamist insurgents in Iraq are well aware that polygraph "testing" is a fraud. See "The Myth of the Lie Detector" published in the Iraqi jihadist e-zine, Al-Fath, and available here in English translation. And for discussion, see Al-Qaeda Has Read The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.
 
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