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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 18:15:33 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

I wonder if Wayne thinks that if government spending for sick people was
cut back, there would be more money to waste on his former bankster
employer when it finds itself on the ropes again.


===

Without the global IT infrastructure that our large banks provide,
electronic payment systems like credit cards, ATMs, funds transfer,
check clearing and international letters of credit would cease
operation within seconds. That would make the great recession into a
global depression in no time at all, not to mention chaos, misery and
social unrest on a massive scale. You should really learn to like the
banks. Someday they might even learn to like you again but that's a
bit of a stretch.
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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On 8/29/2013 5:09 PM, BAR wrote:
In article , says...

On 8/29/13 3:55 PM,
wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 15:16:40 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

On 8/29/13 3:11 PM,
wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 13:23:31 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

On 8/29/13 1:12 PM,
wrote:

I believe that is because of the support component that Harry
dismisses in such a cavalier way.

I don't dismiss support programs for substance abusers. Once again,
apparently, you cannot comprehend what you read. What I did say is that
the religious-osity, as it were, of 12-step programs, is offputting to a
substantial percentage of substance abusers. There is significant
published criticism for various reasons of 12-step programs.


The hard choices an addict needs to make is the main thing that puts
them off. They just use "religious-osity" as one more excuse.


Gee, I'm glad you have so much experience dealing with the huge variety
of substance abusers and therefore feel qualified to state that those
who disdain the 12 steps approach because of religious reasons do so as
an excuse. Obviously, whatever your profession was, you chose
poorly...since you could have been a first-rate therapist.


What is your experience?


I'm married to a first-rate psychotherapist who has seen and
successfully treated a great number of substance abusers in several
settings over her two decades as a licensed practitioner. She sometimes
talks about what works and what doesn't for various folks who remain
anonymous. Her doctoral dissertation was on a significant aspect of
substance abuse, and she has written other papers that also have been
published. She consults with NiMH professionals on substance abuse topics.

Additionally, I've read "the lit" that comes to the house (professional
papers and journals) and I know thought my union work a lot of
construction workers in many trades who at some point in their careers
suffered severe injuries, were prescribed heavy duty meds, got hooked,
and then got clean and stayed clean.

As a result, I wouldn't make the sweeping statements you make about
substance abusers, or that, as you implied, a large number of those who
disdain the 12 step programs because of their religious-osity just do so
so they can remain outside of a therapeutic or support service.


Meaning you have no first hand experience.

My wife is a battery expert, she can build them, analyze them and tell you why they are not
performing well. I am just a battery user.


And then you have to ask yourself if you believe any of what harry
says... Nobody here does, well nobody who thinks for themselves.
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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On 8/29/13 8:08 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 18:15:33 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

I wonder if Wayne thinks that if government spending for sick people was
cut back, there would be more money to waste on his former bankster
employer when it finds itself on the ropes again.


===

Without the global IT infrastructure that our large banks provide,
electronic payment systems like credit cards, ATMs, funds transfer,
check clearing and international letters of credit would cease
operation within seconds. That would make the great recession into a
global depression in no time at all, not to mention chaos, misery and
social unrest on a massive scale. You should really learn to like the
banks. Someday they might even learn to like you again but that's a
bit of a stretch.



Ahhh. Bankster PR bull****.

I have good relationships with a couple of banks and a credit union, to
the point that when I occasionally walk into the lobby of one them, the
branch manager tries to sell me on more services, so she obviously likes
me. I turn her down cordially, because she's eliminated fees for me a
few times on outgoing wire transfers. I've never been in the lobby of
the other bank.

I do like the ability to deposit checks from my home office with my iPhone.
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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On 8/29/13 8:15 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 8/29/2013 5:09 PM, BAR wrote:
In article ,
says...

On 8/29/13 3:55 PM,
wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 15:16:40 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

On 8/29/13 3:11 PM,
wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 13:23:31 -0400, "F.O.A.D."
wrote:

On 8/29/13 1:12 PM,
wrote:

I believe that is because of the support component that Harry
dismisses in such a cavalier way.

I don't dismiss support programs for substance abusers. Once again,
apparently, you cannot comprehend what you read. What I did say
is that
the religious-osity, as it were, of 12-step programs, is
offputting to a
substantial percentage of substance abusers. There is significant
published criticism for various reasons of 12-step programs.


The hard choices an addict needs to make is the main thing that puts
them off. They just use "religious-osity" as one more excuse.


Gee, I'm glad you have so much experience dealing with the huge
variety
of substance abusers and therefore feel qualified to state that those
who disdain the 12 steps approach because of religious reasons do
so as
an excuse. Obviously, whatever your profession was, you chose
poorly...since you could have been a first-rate therapist.


What is your experience?


I'm married to a first-rate psychotherapist who has seen and
successfully treated a great number of substance abusers in several
settings over her two decades as a licensed practitioner. She sometimes
talks about what works and what doesn't for various folks who remain
anonymous. Her doctoral dissertation was on a significant aspect of
substance abuse, and she has written other papers that also have been
published. She consults with NiMH professionals on substance abuse
topics.

Additionally, I've read "the lit" that comes to the house (professional
papers and journals) and I know thought my union work a lot of
construction workers in many trades who at some point in their careers
suffered severe injuries, were prescribed heavy duty meds, got hooked,
and then got clean and stayed clean.

As a result, I wouldn't make the sweeping statements you make about
substance abusers, or that, as you implied, a large number of those who
disdain the 12 step programs because of their religious-osity just do so
so they can remain outside of a therapeutic or support service.


Meaning you have no first hand experience.

My wife is a battery expert, she can build them, analyze them and tell
you why they are not
performing well. I am just a battery user.


And then you have to ask yourself if you believe any of what harry
says... Nobody here does, well nobody who thinks for themselves.



Ahh, the crazy man re-emerges. How's your blood med level? Lunacy under
control for the moment?
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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

In article , says...

On 8/29/13 7:23 PM,
wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 16:17:49 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

What is your experience?


I'm married to a first-rate psychotherapist who has seen and
successfully treated a great number of substance abusers in several
settings over her two decades as a licensed practitioner. She sometimes
talks about what works and what doesn't for various folks who remain
anonymous. Her doctoral dissertation was on a significant aspect of
substance abuse, and she has written other papers that also have been
published. She consults with NiMH professionals on substance abuse topics.


NIMH and NIH seem to have a paucity of data online about their success
rates. Are you just going to counter my anecdotes with your wife's
anecdotes?


Additionally, I've read "the lit" that comes to the house (professional
papers and journals) and I know thought my union work a lot of
construction workers in many trades who at some point in their careers
suffered severe injuries, were prescribed heavy duty meds, got hooked,
and then got clean and stayed clean.


There is a difference between a person who took a course of pain
killer drugs adjunct to an injury or an operation who was clinically
addicted and someone who simply chose to use drugs and is chronically
addicted.

In spite of that I still refuse pain pills.

As a result, I wouldn't make the sweeping statements you make about
substance abusers, or that, as you implied, a large number of those who
disdain the 12 step programs because of their religious-osity just do so
so they can remain outside of a therapeutic or support service.


They do so because it is largely a volunteer effort without all of the
credentials a medical program requires, yet they still seem to have
similar long term outcomes.

Again, if you can find data, we can read it together.
I looked on the various NIH/CHC and government drug abuse sites for
several hours and "outcome" studies are very rare.


You might have more success with a university search system, a paid or
the LC search system. My wife used all three to gather the papers needed
for her disseration.

My wife has sent people to 12-step programs *after* they have been
through professional detox and therapy programs, and she has talked
about better outcomes for some patients on buprenorphine instead of
methadone, but such is way over my pay grade of understanding.


Yet your wife can prescribe anything.


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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 20:17:37 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

I do like the ability to deposit checks from my home office with my iPhone.


===

That transaction is almost certainly being processed in some way
through one of the big NYC banks. They invented the infrastructure
and continue to maintain it.
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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On Thursday, August 29, 2013 7:05:36 AM UTC-4, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 8/28/13 11:57 PM, wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 17:40:56 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:




On 8/28/13 5:35 PM,
wrote:



OK your turn. Show me some peer reviewed studies about the 10 year


success of "rehab".






I'm sure you can do your own lit search. Have at it.




I have not found any reliable study that says any significant number


of substance abusers come out of rehab, therapy or any or any other


program with a 10 year success rate. There are a few people selling


rehab who say they have amazing success rates but they are selling


something, not doing research.




It was your contention I was wrong. Prove it.




I would accept 25% as a win for you if it was a real study that


actually tracked patients for any significant amount of time.


(not just people who stopped coming back)




I only have to look at the half million or more addicted homeless to


see all is not going well in paradise. That does not include those dis


functionals who are living with friends or family.




Then you have the addicts who are working at some level of


functionality and the high functioning addicts.










Once again, you are exhibiting an inability to think abstractly. Drug

addiction is not an illness like, oh, the usual childhood diseases that

can be prevented by an inoculation or that caught once, tend not to

haunt you again. Drug addiction treatment, once administered, does not

mean the individual who receives it has lifetime or even 10-year

protection from a relapse.



Drug addiction is a chronic disease, and it can be managed properly and

successfully. But relapses are more than possible, as they are with

other chronic medical illnesses, such as asthma or hypertension. And

because there are strong possibilities of relapses with drug addiction

doesn't mean treatment is a failure. As with other chronic illnesses,

treatment for drug addiction necessitates lifetime evaluation and

perhaps modifications when necessary. If you suffer from diabetes,

proper treatment can help you get it under control and most of the

symptoms will disappear, and the treatment is successful.



What happens if you discontinue treatment for your chronic disease? It

probably returns and you have a relapse. When a drug addict relapses, it

doesn't necessarily mean the treatment he is receiving (or ignoring) has

failed. It may just mean the treatment needs to be re-started or changed.



Many people with certain mental/emotional illnesses get relief with a

combination of medications and therapy that help them feel better and

regain control of their lives. Some of those illnesses will require

patients to take medications for the rest of their lives. After a while

on meds, though, some patients talk themselves into believing they are

"cured," so they stop the medications. So, what happens? In many cases

the symptoms of the mental/emotional illness returns.



Oh, and once again, 12-step programs are not treatment…they provide support.


You are an english major, and as such, are not qualifified to make any statements concerning this subject.
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Default Religious Craziness Sends Man Back to Jail

On Thursday, August 29, 2013 8:40:13 AM UTC-4, iBoaterer wrote:


And I may add, the assholes that said Oh, if so and so wanted to quit

(insert what drug here) they could! That of course is horse****, I've

watched it with my own eyes.


Obviously when looking in a mirror.
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