The polygraph is a complete fraud. How do I know this? Two ways: when I was telling the truth and being scored "deception indicated," and when I got on board with TLBTLD and essentially lied on an exam and was scored "no deception indicated." I'm a sex offender. I molested my daughter. For those of you who expect me to minimize what I did, sure, I'll engage in that just a little bit: whatever the worst things you can think of is not what I did, but what I did was 100% inappropriate and my fault. I took responsibility for what I did from the very beginning and stood up to take my whacks. I can assure you there is nothing you can say to make me feel worse than what I've done to myself in that regard. What a colossal blunder. It cost me a military career and over a million dollars in lifetime retirement benefits. It cost my family its husband and father. I did jail time and probation, which has been successfully completed. All I'm waiting for now is the scarlet letter and fame on the internet. [pausing 30 seconds for the obligatory slams, slurs, put downs, condemnation, etc. Let me know when you're finished so I can continue this post.] The first few years of probation was a never ending stream of inconclusive, pass-fail mix, or all deceptive, and that was when I was telling the truth. I was "consequenced" as an incentive to perform better (i.e., pass the test). You can only begin to imagine the discouragement from being told you were being deceptive when you're telling the truth. That's one of the worst injustices for a lot of people - being accused of lying when you know you are telling the truth. It was and is a common practice for polygraphers to try and elicit admissions and confessions during the post-test interview. Those attempts were made over a week later when I'd call the polygrapher to ask how I did. "What were you thinking about this question, Mr. So-and-so?" Being naive, I admitted some totally unrelated thought, whether it was something about a book I had just read, or a movie, a song stuck in my mind, whatever. "Okay, I'll factor that [what I admitted or disclosed] into the scoring and see if it makes a difference. That is an out-and-out lie. Even on my last one, the polygrapher asks me if there is anything I want to say, better confess now, the test looks iffy either way. Nope, I really don't have anything else to say. Results of the test: passed. So, I'd like to thank the polygraphers who scored me as being deceptive for getting me on board with this site. The countermeasures work like a charm. In fact, I improved on the technique by using a thought and trying to create that feeling you get when you almost trip or fall, that little adrenalin rush you get. It's like the "Ohmigod I'm on fire!" technique. Pick a control question to use it on, spike the question (don't go too overboard, it may take a test or two to calibrate your reaction), and relax and tell the truth on the remaining questions. Embellish the reaction by talking about that control question in between the test panels or at the end of the exam. "Have you ever lied to anyone in a position of authority?" Of course I have, just as everyone else has. "No, I mean something really serious." In my case, no. So at the end of the exam, gee, I felt bad about kind of having to lie to my supervisor about why I needed the time off [the four hours it takes to take the exam], even though I have the hours and I can take them whenever I want. I'm not advocating lying on relevant questions, but on the other hand, the less you disclose, the less ammunition there is to be used against you. The polygraph is a complete fraud. What the process boils down to for most people is a gut check. You want to tell the truth. Most people feel bad about lying. But, when you've been screwed over and over for false positives, you need to do what it takes to pass. If it means using countermeasures to protect your self-interests, then do what you have to do. The science behind the polygraph, well, let me start over. The attempt to apply scientific principles to the use of the polygraph is just that: an attempt. Much the same way Marston and Wonder Woman's lasso of truth are related. That is so ironic, the history behind the polygraph and its concocter (inventor is too generous a term), and I'd really be laughing at the irony if it hadn't cost me thousands of dollars in repeated exams that, in fact, were quite unnecessary. So, yeah, I'm on board with helping to bring about the end and demise of this voodoo science.
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