Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Experts says that workplace shootings are caused by poor management
EXCERPT:
July 13th, 2010 | Author: Dale Yeager
2 million employees of U.S. businesses are victimized each year. While at work employees suffered 396,000 aggravated assaults, 84,000 robberies, 1,000 homicides and 51,000 rapes and sexual assaults against women.
U.S. Department of Justice
Criminal analyst, Dale Yeager believes that most violence committed on the job could be stopped with proper training and management changes.

Yeager of SERAPH.net, who has studied the trend for the past 20 years, says that all workplace shootings are preventable.

“In each workplace shooting there were numerous indicators of the shooters exhibiting aggression and being socially isolated. These are two volatile components for a workplace crime.” says Yeager. “Workplace shootings are a direct result of poor management of employees. A well managed organization is a safe organization.”

Yeager says that a profile has been created by the U.S. Justice Department to identify individuals who are most likely to committee these types’ violent acts:

1. Male, 25-50 years of age.
2. High stress level usually caused by financial problems or workplace conflicts.
3. Socially isolated [few friends or activities outside of work, usually separated or divorced].
4. If married, has a deteriorating home life.

“The security of companies begins and ends with the hiring of quality people, effective discipline of problem employees, holding managers accountable for aggressive behavior and the proper monitoring of fired employees.” says Yeager.

Read more: http://www.seraph.net/2010/07/13/expert-says-that-workplace-shootings-are-caused-by-poor-management/#ixzz0tawkDqTg

Narcissists and money and abuse
EXCERPTs:
1. Money and the Narcissist

Money stands for love in the narcissist's emotional vocabulary. Having been deprived of love early on in his childhood, the narcissist constantly seeks for love substitutes. To him, money is THE love substitute. All the qualities of the narcissist are manifest in his relationship with money, and in his attitude towards it.

2. Narcissists Hate Happy People
Narcissists HATE happiness and joy and ebullience and vivaciousness and, in short, life itself.

The roots of this bizarre propensity can be traced to a few psychological dynamics which operate concurrently (it is very confusing to be a narcissist):

First, there is pathological envy.

The narcissist is constantly envious of other people: their successes, their property, their character, their education, their children, their ideas, the fact that they can feel, their good mood, their past, their future, their present, their spouses, their mistresses or lovers, their location...

Almost ANYTHING can be the trigger of a bout of biting, acidulous envy. But there is nothing which reminds narcissists of the totality of their envious experiences than happiness. They lash out at happy people out of their own deprivation.

3. Sexual Abuse
Sexual abuse can be interpreted as an extreme form of projective identification, a primitive defence mechanism. The abuser gets in touch with his weaker, needier, younger, immature, dependent, helpless part - the part that he derides, hates and fears - by having sex with a child. A child is weak, and needy, and young, and immature, and dependent, and helpless. Having sex with a child is a mode of communication. The abuser connects to these areas in himself that he abhors, holds in contempt, loathes, and is terrified of, the fault lines of his precariously balanced personality.

The child is forced to play these parts - neediness, dependence, helplessness - by the abuser. The sexual act is an act of auto-erotic narcissism (especially between a parent and his off-spring), an act of having intercourse with one's self. But it also an act of cruel subjugation and submission, a sadistic act of humiliation. The abuser symbolically humbles these parts in himself that he hates, through the agency of the abused child. Sex is to the abuser an instrument of dominance, a transformation of extreme aggression directed at the abuser's self but through a child.

The more "stereotypical" the child - the more "valuable" (appealing) it is to the abuser. If not helpless, needy, weak, dependent, and submissive - the child loses his or her value and function.

Dale Yeager investigated JonBenet Ramsey's death (Frank Hopkins)
EXCERPT:
Hopkins Detail:

Frank Hopkins profiles as a narcissist with sociopathic tendencies. Narcissists generally see themselves as special, uniquely talented individuals compared to other people in society. They also have a well developed skill for deception.

Many people have heard the term pathological liar. This is actually not a condition but a behavior that is part of a larger personality problem. My opinion is that Hopkins had serious childhood trauma and in his formative years he began to lie to create a happier life for himself. However by his teens he had changed the focus of his lies towards others to manipulate them.

Hopkins seems to have an underlying anger about his life and this would also be a contributing factor in his lies.

If the reports of his personal life are to be believed he had many children. While this is not uncommon for the time period it could point to possible sexual aggression. It is clear to me that Hopkins had a co-dependent relationship with his wife. Her willingness to continue his lies after his death and to create new lies shows his manipulation of her.

Lastly, it is interesting that Hopkins stories eliminate important details related to dates but add excessive details in other parts of his tomes. The use of excessive details in minor parts of a conversation or story points to deception.

Submitted:

Dale Yeager

Hidalgo
EXCERPT:
First, some background. When frankhopkins.com went live, before the release of Hidalgo, the site was relatively small, with just a few pages. It included (and still includes) the following:

According to the U.S. Remount Service Journal of 1936, [Frank Hopkins] competed in and won over 400 long-distance races, including a legendary 3,000-mile endurance ride across the Arabian Desert in 1890 on his mustang stallion, Hidalgo.

An upcoming Walt Disney movie is to be based on his legendary adventures in the saddle.

Please note: on the web site, it is a "Walt Disney movie," but in Mr. Fusco's response, it magically transforms into "my film." In addition, although Mr. Fusco says he never denied owning the web site, he never explained why, if that was the case, he didn't just come out and say so on the web site. Instead, it says: "this site is sponsored by The Horse of the Americas Registry & IRAM - the Institute of Range and the American Mustang." This reticence seems puzzling, considering Mr. Fusco's willingness to do many press interviews to promote the film.

A True story by Disney???
EXCERPT:
The True Story Of A Man Who Went Halfway Around The World To Find Himself.

Experience the incredible true story of a man who left behind the world he knew, and found the courage to do the impossible

Hidalgo and Frank Hopkins why did Disney do this story, did it change history?
Liar, Liar, Chaps on Fire
Hidalgo tells the true story of hero Frank Hopkins. Too bad it's all hogwash.

By Sara Solovitch

On March 5, Disney is releasing Hidalgo, an $80 million blockbuster based on "the incredible true story," as the studio puts it, of a legendary cowboy and his trusty mustang. Starring Lord of the Rings hunk Viggo Mortensen, the film is a nags-to-riches saga about American hero Frank T. Hopkins and his 1890 ride in the Ocean of Fire, a death-defying 3,000-mile race across the Arabian Desert.

Disney and The History Channel
EXCERPT:
Remaking history

A facsimile of the "Ocean of Fire" dunes, ethereal and wind-swept, drew Bill Brummel Productions deep into the Imperial Valley last June to re-create the race for a History Channel documentary. Still unaware of Hopkins' deceit and of the fact that Disney partly owns the History Channel, endurance riders from throughout Southern California answered the casting call, trailering their Arabians to the desert.

Under a staging tent on the morning of the dawn-to-dusk shoot, as horses and their costumed riders sweltered in the building heat, producer Bill Brummel explained that his researchers had stumbled while tracking Hopkins' story. "We had a hard time finding any dependable research," he said. "Everything seemed to go back to Frank's own writing. As documentarians, we look for multiple sources to back up factual material. We couldn't find a thing."

In their effort, though, they contacted the Kentucky-based Long Riders' Guild, a publisher and website devoted to riders who have ridden more than 1,000 miles in a continuous journey. Its founders, husband-wife team Basha and CuChullaine O'Reilly, fielded the queries and rounded up experts to hunt for the truth. They eventually published their own sweeping rebuttal of achievements attributed to Hopkins.

"Eighty academic experts in five countries helped us uncover documents showing Hopkins forged his equestrian credentials," Basha O'Reilly said. "[He] lied about his participation in Old West events, falsely posed as a Native American, stole the identity and accomplishments of a congressional Medal of Honor winner and bragged about riding a horse to death," she said. "The Hollywood caliphs should just admit that Hopkins looted the landmarks of other men's lives."

List of stations owned by Disney
EXCERPT:
Broadcast Television
ABC Network
Owned and Operated Television Stations
WLS - Chicago
WJRT - Flint
KFSN - Fresno
KTRK - Houston
KABC - Los Angeles
WABC - New York City
WPVI - Philadelphia
WTVD - Raleigh - Durham
KGO - San Francisco
WTVG - Toledo
Cable Television
ESPN (80%)
ESPN2 (80%)
ESPN Classic (80%)
ESPNU (80%)
ESPNEWS (80%)
ABC Family
Disney Channel
Toon Disney
SOAPnet

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