Quote from: Kona on Oct 15, 2003, 03:11 AMDad,There is the basic problem of what is honest. Is it honest to lie in order to pass a polygraph? Sure it can be rationalized with the argument that it's only in response the polygrapher's lies. That's not a bad argument. Still, it eats at me as well as many others that have posted. I am just glad I don't have to face such choices.
You need to concentrate on the present, not the past. Obviously you told the truth by disclosing that you applied to another law enforcement agency. Obviously you wouldn't try to hide the fact that you failed a previous polygraph with that agency. That would just be stupid. If you told the total truth on that polygraph, then you really DON'T know why you failed, do you? That is all you have to tell the polygrapher, and leave it at that. Don't go off on a tirade on how you were wronged, or how you've since studied the polygraph, and know everything about it. I guarantee that if you do that, you will be setting yourself up for failure. Just answer his questions, keep your opinions to yourself, and use countermeasures. Bottom line, you have to ask yourself a question; do you want the job or not? If you do, then just play the game, and get over this hurdle.
Kona
Quote from: TheDad on Oct 14, 2003, 03:43 PM!!!
i was honest in my control questions.
if what you say is true, then i would have been flat-lining on my control questions. Why on earth would i lie to the control questions??? that seems stupid to me.
what you're saying is that an honest person has a higher chance of getting a false positive!