On August 25, 2020, the popular website for people with security clearances to look for a job, ClearanceJobs.com, published an article entitled
How to Prepare for a Security Clearance Polygraph Examination.
I will comment on just a few things in the article.
Guideline 1: Don’t ask anyone who has taken a polygraph what theirs was like. Hmmm, why not? What difference does it make? Are they scared we will be more prepared to NOT make confessions and beat the polygraphers at their own game?
Guideline 2: Don’t spend time soul searching your life thinking of things that may be asked during the test. They seem to not want us to know what questions will be asked because then we will be prepared for those questions and not crumble during the polygraph interrogation, which is what it is. The polygraph is not an "exam."
Guideline 3: Don’t be influenced by any anti-polygraph websites. Which websites are they talking about here? Certainly not George Maschke's Antipolygraph.org site.
Guideline 4: Don’t anticipate what questions will be asked. Again, why not? It seems like they don't want us to be prepared. What is wrong with being prepared? Does that mean we will more likely pass and not make disqualifying confessions?
I find it interesting that the first four guidelines are against websites like this one and try to convince the public not to research the polygraph. To me, this means the Antipolygraph.org message is being disseminated thoroughly and people are doing their research, meaning less disqualifying admissions are being made, and more people are passing. Just look at the recent
Chinese spy cases in the U.S. in the last decade or two since this website has been up. Many Chinese spies worked for the U.S. government, passed polys, got clearances, before being arrested and/or convicted by the FBI for espionage. There are also articles about other polygraph-cleared federal employees who were arrested and/or convicted of crimes they committed before their polygraphs and were therefore able to conceal these crimes during the poly and beat it. The word is getting out. The poly is going down!
One thing strange about the article though, the publication date is August 25, 2020, but the Disqus comments are up to nine years old! I guess maybe the article was published first in 2011, then the publication date was change to "bump" the article into present day to revive its relevancy (or more like irrelevancy since the polygraph is garbage).