netnin, Like anonymous, I made absolutely no admissions during the polygraph. I had met with my BI previously, and I was very upfron t with her. I told her everything that i even thought might be a problem, so that when I did take the polygraph, it would be with a clear conscience. Unfortunately, I may have been too honest. I can't think of any serious crimes that i may have committed, but that's one of the areas where i ahd problems. Truly, I find that ridiculous - the suggestion that i may have committed a serious crime. My Investigator had completed my background, and if she didn't find anything, then why should it be assumed that I am a criminal, just b/c that POS computer (piece of Sh!$) asid so? I mean, rape, murder or arson? They think I'm now an individual capable of that? If there's such faith in the polygraph, then I should be removed form my current job, as I am in a position where I'm exposed to classified info on a daily basis. Hell, I may have even lied on my last credit card application, maybe they should be taken a way also - maybe even my library card? Where do we draw the lline with this ridiculous test that accuses people who admit their mistakes that thye're hiding something (for the record, I admitted it all of my possible transgressions on my initial applications and SF-86). For good or bad, my life is an open book. I'm not proud of everything that's happened to me, or that I've done in my life, but I owe up to my mistakes, and have never tried to hide anything about myself. I should be judged on those merits, not the results of a procedure that is unproven (at best). It's the year 2002, and we're really no better at predicting the weather today than we were 50 years ago. What makes us so arrogant to think that we can understand human emotion, and the concept of a lie? If it's as simple as they suggest (polygraphers and the agencies that use them)than shouldn't it be possible for psychiatrists to predict human behavior, and stop psyhotics or depressed individuals from killing their children (the woman in TX who drowned her 5 kids , I am referring to - she had been treated previously by mental health people)? Obviously, we're not where we think we are, and these polygraph tests should not continue.
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