[BOBPARKS-WHATSNEW] What's New Robert L. Park January 15, 2010
Aaron L. McQueen
mcqueena at UMD.EDU
Thu Jan 21 20:15:55 PST 2010
[BOBPARKS-WHATSNEW] What's New Robert L. Park January 15, 2010
WHATS NEW Robert L. Park Friday, 15 Jan 10 Washington, DC
1. EARTHQUACK: PAT ROBERTSON EXPLAINS THE HAITI DISASTER.
With the death toll in Haiti now estimated at about 50,000, the evangelist
broadcaster explained to "The 700 Club" what it all meant. In colonial
times, he said, Haiti cut a deal with the devil to get rid of the French --
and has been cursed ever since. According to a BBC news report White House
spokesman Robert Gibbs characterized Robertson's remarks as stupid.
There was in fact a lot of "stupid" going around this week.
2. CIA: HOW MANY SPIES HAS THE POLYGRAPH EXPOSED?
According to a CBS News account of the suicide bombing at a CIA base in
Afghanistan, "The double agent was brought onto the base without first
being given a polygraph test, one of the basic tools in establishing a
spys trustworthiness." Really? Aldrich Ames, the master Soviet spy who
was a high-ranking CIA analyst, routinely passed polygraph exams, even as
he passed information to the Soviets. Nor did the polygraph expose Larry Wu-
Tai Chin a Chinese language translator working for the CIA who sold
information to China, or Robert Hanssen of the FBI. In fact, not a single
spy has been caught by a polygraph screening exam. In 2003 the National
Academy of Science issued a report, "The Polygraph and Lie Detection," that
found the majority of polygraph research to be unreliable, unscientific and
biased. The high rate of false positives was considered unacceptable. I
have argued, however, that the small number of true positives is the real
problem. I propose replacing the polygraph with a coin toss. That would
identify 50 percent of the double agents compared to zero with the
polygraph. The unfortunate increase in false positives constitutes
collateral damage, which is inevitable in war.
3. BABY GABRIEL: THE REALITY OF LIE DETECTION IN POPULAR CULTURE.
A prospective adoptive-couple have been named as "persons of interest" in
the disappearance of an eight-month old baby in Arizona (Gabriel). The
couple appeared on television early this week demanding a polygraph test
to "determine absolutely whether we are telling the truth." The next day
the polygraph examiners announced the result: "inconclusive." The public
perception is that the polygraph is a scientific device that distinctively
signals a lie. This is abetted by the media which rarely mentions the
strong scientific objections to the polygraph. Devices claimed to be lie
detectors are even used in television game shows (Fox of course). In fact,
the polygraph looks for spikes in blood pressure, heart rate, respiration
and perspiration. In other words, you cant tell a lie from the sex act.
4. SEDENTARINESS: WATCHING TELEVISION IS LINKED TO HIGHER RISK OF DEATH.
The Personal Journal section of Tuesday's Wall Street Journal linked
watching TV to a higher risk of death. Of course, it may be the programming
rather than being sedentary that's bad for you.
THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.
Opinions are the author's and not necessarily shared by the
University of Maryland, but they should be.
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