tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post6091389895912005986..comments2024-03-18T04:20:15.987-04:00Comments on Statement Analysis ®: Understanding the Depths of PersuasionStatement Analysis Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13607372649929274491noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-30122753545591190902015-03-08T16:19:28.698-04:002015-03-08T16:19:28.698-04:00Has anyone seen the movie Whiplash? I thought of t...Has anyone seen the movie Whiplash? I thought of this post as I watched it.Susnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-36010924603983240942015-03-08T15:11:29.170-04:002015-03-08T15:11:29.170-04:00"He spoke of how his father, basically, told ..."He spoke of how his father, basically, told him that he was worthless, a failure, and would never amount to anything, and his loss to Holmes was the fulfillment of that which he was brought up hearing."<br /><br />His plan to "go the distance" didn't work. His failure in the ring brought all those childhood feelings flooding back - he was no good, worthless, a bum. It's amazing how, as a successful boxer, one loss, one setback in a career made those feelings of self loathing come to the surface. Deenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-76552069203456186312015-03-06T18:38:45.459-05:002015-03-06T18:38:45.459-05:00I read a few more words describing his statements ...I read a few more words describing his statements to the press that basically threw rotten tomatoes at him for losing and calling him the "Great White Hype."<br /><br />They wanted to beleive the advertising banners at face vaule. He was a mere man.<br /><br />He explained how his boxing training was also sidetracked by taking care of his brother and he only had one family-something the jeering crowd and media would know nothing about.<br /><br />The ridicule may have reminded him of his father. Some think it's the best way to produce super humans.For others, like his brother, the ridicule defeats them for life.<br /><br />Still, in the article I read, the author presumes to be the psychiatrist......again.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-37034638418229739292015-03-06T18:32:22.227-05:002015-03-06T18:32:22.227-05:00I'm going to try one more time, lol
I see the...I'm going to try one more time, lol<br /><br />I see the interview with the day care worker as a 'bad interview', but I don't think that is what you were addressing as a danger of analytical interviewing. What those detectives did is the opposite of analytical interviewing. <br /><br />Is it the subject's desire, or need to please/relate to the interviewer that could result in manipulation? (In the wrong hands)Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02680510856590830567noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-73946130355141018022015-03-06T18:04:42.681-05:002015-03-06T18:04:42.681-05:00DesensitizationDesensitizationAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-31658811185215131832015-03-06T16:16:36.655-05:002015-03-06T16:16:36.655-05:00My guess is that for a person to start talking fro...My guess is that for a person to start talking from their internal dictionary of familiarity, based on the example given, the person needs to feel some form of defeat. They may feel that no matter what they say matters after a failure, so they say what is on their mind because they feel like they have nothing more to lose.<br /><br />People can badger themselves emotionally when they don't live up to their own, or other's expectations.<br /><br />Cooney lost and he felt like a failure and that feeling was a recognizable emotion because he grew up with it thru his dad. There was a certain comfort level for him in feeling like a failure because it was familiar territory. <br /><br />I don't know what you call it Peter, but that is my attempt to explain it.<br /><br /> <br /><br /><br />GetThemhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08199998926590078915noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-17120845397766526822015-03-06T14:45:25.157-05:002015-03-06T14:45:25.157-05:00I commented on the other article that I couldn'...I commented on the other article that I couldn't quite explain what I was thinking, but I kept thinking about the case someone commented on the other day, where the girl with the low IQ seemed to have been bullied into confessing to a crime that didn't happen. (Based on the medical examiner's amended report.)<br /><br />She was repeatedly told that something happened, that she did it, that they understood she wasn't a bad person, let them help her, etc...and she seemed to not have any understanding of the implications of her 'confession', as she was still expecting to go home. <br /><br />I noted that she made no reliable denial, but given that she had poor verbal skills, and was being badgered by the two officers, I wondered if she was too intimidated to say she didn't do it, fearing more aggression from the officers? <br /><br />Now I'm thinking along the lines of suggestion/persuasion by feigned sympathy. (which still doesn't nail my thoughts on the matter)Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02680510856590830567noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7164794708270892518.post-81637451358661231672015-03-06T11:52:29.275-05:002015-03-06T11:52:29.275-05:00The question from part one continues in this artic...The question from part one continues in this article here...getting warmer!<br /><br /><br />A bit back on "propaganda" where I recently read an interesting "definition" of it:<br /><br />it is when one tells you that what you see, you didn't see; and...<br />what you heard, was not what you heard.<br /><br />I find this interesting. <br /><br />Peter Statement Analysis Bloghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13607372649929274491noreply@blogger.com