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Regarding George's initial post on this topoic that referred to my email to Dr. Phil, I wanted to note that this email was sent several times both to his "we welcome your feedback" and to his assistant, but it was neither acknowledged nor put on the "feedback". Apparently he only posts feedback that support his prejudices. For most such prejudices, that's no problem, but this particular prejudice, backed by his great public guru-like authority, supports the second most serious social disease in North America after AIDS.
All the best, John
Posted by: JunkMan Posted on: Sep 20th, 2005 at 12:01am
It never ceases to amaze me that people watch his show. He does no research on anything. Check out his ramblings on gun control using "facts" pulled from thin air.
Posted by: ILGA_RITA Posted on: Sep 19th, 2005 at 7:44pm
I JUST HAPPENED TO BE HOME AND SAW THE PROGRAM. IT'S FRIGHTENING TO KNOW THAT SOMEONE AS POWERFUL AS DR. PHIL IS PERPETRATING THE MYTH. I HAVE ALREADY WRITTEN THE SHOW AND CHALLENGED DR. PHIL'S STAFF TO DO SOME RESEARCH ON ANTIPOLYGRAPH.ORG AND PRESENT A SHOW WITH SOME OF THE PEOPLE WHO CONTRIBUTE TO THIS SITE. I ENCOURAGE ALL OTHER PEOPLE ON THIS SITE TO DO THE SAME.
Posted by: Sergeant1107 Posted on: Sep 19th, 2005 at 4:39pm
My wife had the show recorded on our DVR and I watched it.
The polygraph was given through a translator, which is something I’ve never heard of before. The examiner would ask the question, the translator would relay it, the subject would answer, and the translator would relay that. It seemed ridiculous to me that they could even pretend it was going to get to the truth.
I sent him an email asking him to please do his own research on the accuracy of the polygraph rather than call up the APA and ask them if the polygraph works. It never ceases to amaze me when someone will contact a polygrapher in order to find out if the polygraph is a useful tool in determining truth or deception. Isn’t that like calling Big Tobacco and asking them if cigarettes are okay to smoke?
Posted by: George W. Maschke Posted on: Sep 16th, 2005 at 1:53pm
Shame on Dr. Phil McGraw, who yesterday (15 September 2005) falsely told viewers of his Dr. Phil show that polygraphs "are highly scientific." The opposite is true. While polygraphs may be profitable to daytime television talk show hosts seeking a ratings-boosting gimmick, there is broad consensus amongst scientists that polygraph lie detection has no scientific basis. Dr. Phil should know better.
Yesterday's installment of the Dr. Phil show was about the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, an American teenager who went missing in Aruba earlier this year. The following web page provides a summary of the show, including, among other things, an account of a "test" conducted by Dr. Phil's hired polygraph operator, Jamie Skeeters, of a witness in the case: