Post reply

The message has the following error or errors that must be corrected before continuing:
Warning: this topic has not been posted in for at least 120 days.
Unless you're sure you want to reply, please consider starting a new topic.
Attachments: (Clear attachments)
Restrictions: 4 per post (4 remaining), maximum total size 192 KB, maximum individual size 64.00 MB
Uncheck the attachments you no longer want attached
Click or drag files here to attach them.
Other options
Verification:
Please leave this box empty:
Type the letters shown in the picture
Listen to the letters / Request another image

Type the letters shown in the picture:
How many states are in the United States? (numeral):
Shortcuts: ALT+S post or ALT+P preview

Topic summary

Posted by beech trees
 - Feb 16, 2002, 12:43 PM

Quote from: False + on Feb 16, 2002, 07:35 AM
I was watching a report on TV regarding the figure skating scandal, and there was this protest against the judges (particularly against the French and Russian judges I think) where someone had a huge sign reading: "Polygraph the judges!"

I had to laugh. But I knew it's still a sad fact that the public at large trusts polygraph tests..

I wonder where polygraph law will be the next time the winter olympics roll around..

I saw that as well. Actually, the sign read: "Drug test the athletes, polygraph the judges!" As an ex-athlete myself (made it as far as the Olympic Trials in 1992), I have to scoff at *both* premises. Every athlete that makes it as far as the Olympics will have ingested banned substances at one point or other in preparation for the games. The ability to hide or mask the banned substances is childishly easy and compares with the ease with which one can pass a polygraph.
Posted by George W. Maschke
 - Feb 16, 2002, 07:53 AM
False +,

I'm optimistic that by the time of the 2006 winter Olympic games in Turin (Torino), polygraphy will be universally banned from the American workplace and the public belief in the myth of the polygraph will have been shattered.

I read a recent article about a Yale professor who was sentenced to 15 years in a federal penitentiary for possessing and receiving child pornography. The judge also sentenced him to three years of supervised release after completing his sentence, which will include periodic polygraph "tests." I wonder how they're going to find a polygrapher in the year 2017. I suspect they'll be almost as hard to find as practicing phrenologists are today.

 ;D
Posted by False +
 - Feb 16, 2002, 07:35 AM
I was watching a report on TV regarding the figure skating scandal, and there was this protest against the judges (particularly against the French and Russian judges I think) where someone had a huge sign reading: "Polygraph the judges!"

I had to laugh. But I knew it's still a sad fact that the public at large trusts polygraph tests..

I wonder where polygraph law will be the next time the winter olympics roll around..