Shown: posts 1 to 5 of 5. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by dbc on July 21, 2008, at 16:57:29
No this isnt crazy conspiracy nonsense this is apparently happening in india.
"During BEOS profiling, an accused is asked not to give answers verbally; experiential knowledge is retrieved from his brain. Experiential knowledge is acquired only through participation in an event, leading the person to have an experience of that activity. The technique detects and differentiates whether the accused was actually involved in committing a crime or only learnt of it. It helps in the reconstruction of events. "
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/This_brain_test_maps_the_truth/articleshow/3257032.cms
And you thought RFIDs and vaccines were scary.
Posted by Sky Brite Line on July 25, 2008, at 0:03:21
In reply to Thought patterns being used to convict criminals?, posted by dbc on July 21, 2008, at 16:57:29
get that machine down to Dallas, tx County Court's
Its about time they throw away the old lie detector machine. In with the new.
Posted by blueboy on July 28, 2008, at 9:51:35
In reply to Re: Thought patterns being used to convict criminals?, posted by Sky Brite Line on July 25, 2008, at 0:03:21
> get that machine down to Dallas, tx County Court's
>
> Its about time they throw away the old lie detector machine. In with the new.Would you rather be arrested for a crime (for which you are innocent) in Dallas or Raleigh/Durham, NC?
We visit my wife's family in North Carolina frequently. I told her that if she dies while we
are in NC, I'm going to put her body in the trunk of the car and drive over the state line before I call the police :)On the other hand, if I were black, I'd get the hell out of Texas, period.
Posted by yxibow on July 29, 2008, at 1:06:25
In reply to Re: Thought patterns being used to convict crimina, posted by blueboy on July 28, 2008, at 9:51:35
> > get that machine down to Dallas, tx County Court's
> >
> > Its about time they throw away the old lie detector machine. In with the new.
>
> Would you rather be arrested for a crime (for which you are innocent) in Dallas or Raleigh/Durham, NC?
>
> We visit my wife's family in North Carolina frequently. I told her that if she dies while we
> are in NC, I'm going to put her body in the trunk of the car and drive over the state line before I call the police :)
>
> On the other hand, if I were black, I'd get the hell out of Texas, period.
>Mm.... stereotypes, stereotypes.... However I wouldn't live a country mile near Texas if we're on this subject. But then this is for the political board as I am completely against the death "penalty" (vengeance is what it is really, since the person is dead, they can't possibly learn from it.).
Posted by yxibow on July 29, 2008, at 1:09:51
In reply to Thought patterns being used to convict criminals?, posted by dbc on July 21, 2008, at 16:57:29
> No this isnt crazy conspiracy nonsense this is apparently happening in india.
>
> "During BEOS profiling, an accused is asked not to give answers verbally; experiential knowledge is retrieved from his brain. Experiential knowledge is acquired only through participation in an event, leading the person to have an experience of that activity. The technique detects and differentiates whether the accused was actually involved in committing a crime or only learnt of it. It helps in the reconstruction of events. "
>
> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/This_brain_test_maps_the_truth/articleshow/3257032.cms
>
> And you thought RFIDs and vaccines were scary.
>I'm highly skeptical of this, considering its coming out of one country. Sure, there are some very good Indian doctors who have to be recertified when they come to this country, but I don't think this would stand up any more than a lie detector.
Second of all lie detectors are not admittable in court unless the defendant agrees to it.
This is the end of the thread.
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