Quote:Your 'fix' is just as bad as the disease. If you truly loathed the polygraph, you'd denounce it, quit doing them, quit reviewing the 'alleged' (your word, not mine) false positive results, resign from the APA entirely, and join Douglas Williams on his crusade.
TheRealist19 -- or should I say Honest Joe McCarthy (aka "Amy Baker"),
I disagree with your all-or-nothing approach. As a change-agent, I am much more effective working from within the APA and the polygraph indu$try.
Your gas chamber analogy is laughable. I'm actually neutralizing the poison gas.
My multi-faceted role as polygraph consultant, educator and examiner allows me to convincingly make the argument that polygraph is not science, but pseudoscience.
In other words, I'm venting your symbolic gas chamber and pumping in life-giving oxygen.
My system works. At the end of my comprehensive multi-media consultations, polygraph consumers (both primary and secondary) fully understand why "test" outcomes are much like coin flips.
In the words of SCOTUS Justice Clarence Thomas,
"there is simply no way to know in a particular case whether a polygraph examiner's conclusion is accurate, because certain doubts and uncertainties plague even the best polygraph exams." But, for me personally, here's the best part: Being a polygraph consultant and educator, along with doing QA "test" reviews, is far less tedious than running exams and infinitely more satisfying -- plus, the money is better -- a lot better.
With hundreds of thousands of polygraph "tests" being run in the US annually, there are hundreds of thousands of victims. Clearly, the demand for independent polygraph consultants is there.
As president-elect of the APA, I will more effectively blaze a trail of enlightenment -- and career opportunity -- for those critical-thinking examiners who are not afraid of breaking away from the bondage of the APA's cult-like traditions.