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12-Step Coercion
The following is the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution: "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." Just whom do you think they are talking about here?
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12-Step Coercion
Please offer some stats. Which program comes in second place?
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12-Step Coercion
Stanton Peele's point is that 12-step coercion violates a person's constitutional right to religious liberty.
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12-Step Coercion
Why do you think I have a bias against religion? I am a Christian.
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12-Step Coercion
I'll be honest, open-minded and willing. I just wanted to ask you a few questions since you posted your credentials and also said you were a long-time member of AA, so I thought you would be well-informed enough to answer some basic questions. I don't want to take up a lot of your time so for the most part the answers can be short. Some people on this forum who are obviously familiar with AA claim it is not religious. What about it? Is AA religious? And here are a few more questions: Is alcoholism a disease? More than ninety percent of treatment programs in the U.S. are 12-step treatment programs. Is this not really religious indoctrination rather than medical treatment? Is treatment in the U.S. based on medical science or is it based on religion? Overall, is alcohol/drug treatment in the U.S. successful? Can you explain to me, in scientific terms, the role the 12-steps play in treatment? Several people have said that in AA your higher power can be a tree or a doorknob. Is this true? Can a tree or a doorknob actually remove a person's character defects? Step 6: "Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character." If so, can you explain, in scientific terms, how a tree or doorknob can do this?
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12-Step Coercion
Are you the teacher? If so then I am the pupil and I am ready to ask you some questions.
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12-Step Coercion
anyone who might believe that aa is not religious can read chapter 3 of this book: http://www.morerevealed.com/books/resist/index.html not to mention that numerous federal and state courts have ruled aa to be religious.
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12-Step Coercion
No, I'm not a nurse. Does that make me ineligible to express my opinion here?
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12-Step Coercion
Wow!!! Especially the quote by Justice Black!
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12-Step Coercion
are you saying that it would not hurt anyone to be forced to pray? if so then why would the u.s. state department be reporting on such human rights violations as mentioned below? "in taliban-controlled areas, the taliban had decreed that all muslims were required to take part in five daily prayers. those who were observed not praying at appointed times or who were late attending prayer were subject to punishment, including severe beatings. friday noon prayers at mosques reportedly were compulsory for all muslim men;" http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2001/sa/8222.htm isn't it just fine and dandy that my tax monies go to supporting the state department to roam the world looking for human rights violations when right here in the land of the free and home of the brave, the government forces people to pray. "and it is one of the most blatant and pervasive violations of constitutional rights in the united states today. after all, even murderers on death row are not forced to pray." archie brodsky senior research associate, harvard medical school's program in psychiatry and the law "aa abuse" http://www.peele.net/lib/aaabuse.html
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12-Step Coercion
This link was included in the original link of this thread: http://religiousfreedom.lib.virginia.edu/sacred/vaact.html In case you don't care to read down it that far it reads "Be it therefore enacted by the General Assembly, That no man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever"
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12-Step Coercion
I was allowed only fifteen minutes to speak and then turned over to the public relations director outside of the meeting. The Executive Director of the Board said she would look into the matter. The pr guy told me he thought it was all very interesting. He took my email address but I have not heard from him. Several times in my life I have considered law school, but it's out of the question now unless I win the lottery.
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12-Step Coercion
Yes, anyone who denies that prayer is religious is definitely playing a game of semantics. "Political language... is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind."George Orwell
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12-Step Coercion
Have you ever considered that the American treatment system may be harmful rather than helpful? Many writers claim that it is harmful including Dr. Stanton Peele, Dr. Herbert Fingarette, and Dr. Jeff Schaler who last year was featured on ABC News' 20/20 with John Stossel. Could the American treatment industry be blackening the record of medicine, just as did Dr. Benjamin Rush who just happens to be the first medical professional to claim alcoholism is a disease? Of Dr. Benjamin Rush, the "great" Revolutionary War doctor and signer of the Declaration of Independence, P.M. Ashburn wrote in his "History of the Medical Department of the U.S. Army", "By virtue of his social and professional prominence, his position as teacher and his facile pen, Benjamin Rush had more influence upon American medicine and was more potent in the propagation and long perpetuation of medical errors than any man of his day. To him more than to any man in America, was due the great vogue of vomits, purging, and especially of bleeding, salivation and blistering, which blackened the record of medicine and afflicted the sick almost to the time of the Civil War." On the cold, windy afternoon of December 14, 1799, a horse ridden by 37 year old Dr. Elisha Cullen Dick galloped up the snow covered driveway of Mt. Vernon. He was of a "newer" school of medical thought than the two older doctors who were tending General Washington, and he had been summoned for a more collective opinion. When Dr. Dick arrived the General had already been bled three times. "He needs all of his strength--bleeding will diminish it." was the iconoclastic young doctor's opinion. His advice was not taken by the two veteran bleeders, Dr. Craik and Dr. Brown. Washington was bled for the fourth time. He died that evening. Craik later wrote Brown that they should have listened to Dick. Had they "taken no more blood from him, our good friend might have been alive now. But we were governed by the best light we had; we thought we were right, and so we are justified."
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12-Step Coercion
recall that in post # 18 mjlrn97 wrote: "frankly, i think this whole topic is a smokescreen to enable the subject of the op to continue to live in denial" perhaps mjlrn97 or anyone else from the 12-step programs or the treatment field can explain to us just what "denial" is.