Author Topic: ex employees  (Read 25825 times)

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Offline tlcrescue

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« Reply #30 on: June 15, 2006, 10:05:00 AM »
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On 2006-02-13 20:35:00, AtomicAnt wrote:

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i'm not into all those psychology crap...when eidsor did what she should have, we didnt get smoked and when she didnt, we did. it was her fault, not my parents, or stupid loser adults...it was cheryl eidsor.



Simple logical question. Why should you have been smoked for another cadet's misbehavior? You can never be responsible for another's actions. The reason is solely that those in charge said so. That is all. Nothing more to it. The 'group consequences rule' is just a stupid rule and the only people who buy it are stupid people, or those with a sadistic agenda. It does not help any individual grow. It only helps to break an individual's will.



Here's a news flash. 'Smoking' children is flat out child abuse. Period. No exceptions. No excuses. No responsible adult would ever engage in this sort of behavior."


I do agree that it is wrong, it is one of many reasons I chose to pull my son out  But, as I clearly outlined above, one's actions can determine whether the rest of the group gets smoked as a result of their actions/choices.  My son's situation is a prime example.  If he went to the bathroom, the group got smoked, if he urinated on himself, he got smoked alone.  So, what did he do?  He chose to urinate on himself so that the others would not have to endure a smoking because of his physical ailment.  So, it is blatantly obvious that one can make a "choice" when it comes to involving the group as a whole in the smoking session.

Other instances that cause a smoking session for the entire group is a cadet arguing with a DS, or refusing to exercise.  This is how Thayer works.  They try to use peer pressure.  If you don't do what you are supposed to do, they punish the others so that the others get mad at the non-performing cadet and make the non-performing cadet work.  I don't agree with that method, but that is the method they use.  So, if the non-performing does not want the group to get smoked, they are expected to perform.  Again, that is a CHOICE.  The cadet can either (1) not perform and allow the others to be smoked or (2) perform and the others dont get smoked.  Like it or not, that is the policy at Thayer, and the cadets DO have a choice when it comes to that.  Now, it may not be a choice they like, but it is a choice nonetheless.

I AM IN NO WAY ENCOURAGING OR ADVOCATING SMOKING SESSIONS!  I DO NOT AGREE WITH THEM!  I THINK THEY ARE WRONG!  I AM SIMPLY TRYING TO POINT OUT HOW ONE'S ACTOINS CAUSES OTHERS TO BE SMOKED.
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Offline tlcrescue

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« Reply #31 on: June 15, 2006, 10:11:00 AM »
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On 2006-02-16 04:27:00, Anonymous wrote:

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On 2006-02-14 06:33:00, tlcrescue My son had a CHOICE to either go to the bathroom and allow the other cadet's to be smoked, or to urinate on himself and subject only himself to being smoked.



That's not a choice. At all.



 "


it may not be a choice that someone agrees with but, yes it is a choice. Per Websters, the definition for choice: The act of choosing; selection.

Selection:
(1) go to bathroom, team gets smoked; or
(2) urinate on myself, I get smoked

THAT is a choice.  Maybe it isn't a choice that you like, but it is a choice.  So based on the selection you make either the individual or the team gets smoked.
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Offline tlcrescue

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« Reply #32 on: June 15, 2006, 10:12:00 AM »
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On 2006-06-13 13:59:00, Anonymous wrote:

"O.k. I think this is lame with you two arguing about this...How bout this, your both right.  

A cadet is put into a place by thier parents without a choice. (so that makes it the parents fault.) The smoke sessions are orginized by TLC. (so that makes it TLC's fault)The cadet could not control the situation, so thus the parents and TLC are to blame. We see your piont.

On the other hand when the cadet is placed in that situation they then have a limited number of options but then agian there are options still the same. so they make a CHOICE They can do what they are told and deal. Or they disobey and get everyone else smoked until they deside to participate.

So all in all it is everyone's fault.

The parents for sending them their in the first place. TLC's for making up the stupid rules. And then the Cadet's for not following them. No matter how unreasonable they may be.

And by the way I would rather pee on myself then get everyone else smoked and be hated by the intire bootcamp...being hated in that invirnment is not the wisest place to be."


thank you.  that was my exact point.  my son agreed with you, he chose to urinate on himself so the team wouldnt get smoked.  i admire him for that.
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Offline tlcrescue

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« Reply #33 on: June 15, 2006, 10:13:00 AM »
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On 2006-06-14 03:25:00, cadet_cheung wrote:

"we only went to the bathroom like 6 times a day and drink like 4 shitload canteens of water, majority of the girls pee-d on themselves anyways and at the point we'd rather pee on ourselves then get everyone smoked, it was like they were all you got there. Oh yea those brown couches and stupid cushions with owls on them( if you still had them) were pee-d on by god knows how many people. "


so this was pretty much the norm?  kids having to urinate on themselves?  I thought maybe they used it as a tactic with my son because they were aware that he had a bladder condition.
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Offline Oz girl

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« Reply #34 on: June 15, 2006, 07:05:00 PM »
if the choice is between urinating on yourself (a punishment in itself)& then being punished, or being hated by your peers, How grotesque is that. I am beginning to think that the reason why kids are not believed when their teachers (or whoever those people who call the parents are) say they are lying is because what is done to them is so outlandishly horrible it does not seem believable. To be honest if my kid told me that they made him urinate on himself I would have a hard time believing it.  
Dont kids who are disrespectful (whatever that is exactly) need adults who are firm but fair. Most of these BTS sites talk about consequences for misbehaviour but the consequences are so illogical anyway that if your kid is in for something genuinely awful, i cant see how he would associate the consequence with whatever it is that he or she did. I also can not see how a kid with anger management issues would not be seething with rage if he is forced to do something as base and disgusting as urinating on himself!

The irony to me is that american kids are statistically no more drug addled, pregnant ot "troubled" than their peers in other western countries. They are also more likely to be church going. This makes me wonder if the kids who are even slightly outside of the box are seen by society as more "out of control" than they really are. Moreover having worked with mainstream American kids (and i am aware that they are not the "troubled" category that is spoken of in this industry)I foung that in some ways they are more polite and respectful to grown ups than their Australian counterparts. I can't tell you for instance, how much i had to bite back laughter the first time a kid called me maam! If a kid did that at home it would be laced with sarcasm!
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n case you\'re worried about what\'s going to become of the younger generation, it\'s going to grow up and start worrying about the younger generation.-Roger Allen

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #35 on: June 15, 2006, 10:32:00 PM »
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On 2006-06-15 16:05:00, Pls help wrote:

"if the choice is between urinating on yourself (a punishment in itself)& then being punished, or being hated by your peers, How grotesque is that. I am beginning to think that the reason why kids are not believed when their teachers (or whoever those people who call the parents are) say they are lying is because what is done to them is so outlandishly horrible it does not seem believable. To be honest if my kid told me that they made him urinate on himself I would have a hard time believing it.  

Dont kids who are disrespectful (whatever that is exactly) need adults who are firm but fair. Most of these BTS sites talk about consequences for misbehaviour but the consequences are so illogical anyway that if your kid is in for something genuinely awful, i cant see how he would associate the consequence with whatever it is that he or she did. I also can not see how a kid with anger management issues would not be seething with rage if he is forced to do something as base and disgusting as urinating on himself!



The irony to me is that american kids are statistically no more drug addled, pregnant ot "troubled" than their peers in other western countries. They are also more likely to be church going. This makes me wonder if the kids who are even slightly outside of the box are seen by society as more "out of control" than they really are. Moreover having worked with mainstream American kids (and i am aware that they are not the "troubled" category that is spoken of in this industry)I foung that in some ways they are more polite and respectful to grown ups than their Australian counterparts. I can't tell you for instance, how much i had to bite back laughter the first time a kid called me maam! If a kid did that at home it would be laced with sarcasm!"


That is all pretty much true. I spent the past 16 years living in and around New York City and was impressed by how nice most of the kids were. The fact is that, statistically, the current generation of kids do fewer drugs, smoke less, have less sex, and commit fewer crimes than my generation did.

It is the parents that are out of control with their stupid zero-tolerance policies and this drive to have perfect kids. There has been a huge cultural shift during my lifetime and it ain't good.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #36 on: June 16, 2006, 05:52:00 AM »
That is all pretty much true. I spent the past 16 years living in and around New York City and was impressed by how nice most of the kids were. The fact is that, statistically, the current generation of kids do fewer drugs, smoke less, have less sex, and commit fewer crimes than my generation did.



That is the other irony about an industry obsessed with taking kids away from a "worldly' envoronment. The other thing i remember about working with American Kids was their innocence. Being from a country where blasphemy is a cultural norm, & cynicism a way of life, I once made the error of casually using the word "hell" in front of the 12 year old Texan kids i worked with. (as in hurry up you guys. What the hell do you think this is)You would have thought I said something truly obscene. There was an audible gasp of horror.  :lol:
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #37 on: June 18, 2006, 05:40:00 PM »
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On 2006-06-16 02:52:00, Anonymous wrote:

"


That is all pretty much true. I spent the past 16 years living in and around New York City and was impressed by how nice most of the kids were. The fact is that, statistically, the current generation of kids do fewer drugs, smoke less, have less sex, and commit fewer crimes than my generation did.






That is the other irony about an industry obsessed with taking kids away from a "worldly' envoronment. The other thing i remember about working with American Kids was their innocence. Being from a country where blasphemy is a cultural norm, & cynicism a way of life, I once made the error of casually using the word "hell" in front of the 12 year old Texan kids i worked with. (as in hurry up you guys. What the hell do you think this is)You would have thought I said something truly obscene. There was an audible gasp of horror.  :lol: "


there are well behaved kids and bad kids no matter what generation you lived in.  i dont know about you...but where i live the kids have no respect for their elders or property and think they have a right of passage wherever they go and a sense of entitlement that is wrong.
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Offline Oz girl

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« Reply #38 on: June 18, 2006, 08:49:00 PM »
Of course not every kid anywhere is a saint,and i am aware that i take aglass 1/2 full approach to people, but I am unaware of any other country in the western world which has private schools or camps primarily designed to either modify or punish kids.

The culture that the websites seem to push particularly Thayer is that if your kid is misbehaving they can either "Modify" them or in extreme cases punish them till they become different people. As well as the obvious things like drug abuse often "A sense of entitlement" or "disrespect" are seen as illnesses that need to be cured. Surely this can be done at home. If a parent has genuinely indulges a kid too much why don't they just stop doing it, and make the kid aware of the plight of someone less well off than them. If the kid is consistently rude by all means penalise this but place the emphasis back on encouraging kids to live within a community not in some detention camp where they are bullied until they urinate on themselves or told that they need fixing and until they are better they do not deserve their families love!

Also why does anyone have the right to try and modify somebody elses personality? All people have good and bad qualities so why not place the emphasis on what is good about your kid. If a kid is materialistic then have them get a summer job where they can save for their first car. It will furnish their ambitions and teach them a work ethic.
If your kid is into "wicca" (another thing that seems to be viewed as evil by many of these programmes) then they are probably creative and a questioner. Find out what it is that they believe in, help them to channel that intellect and get to know their wierdly dressed friends. Who knows? you may just find that they are polite, decent kids who read a lot and are searching for a belief system. it may just be that they like the goth look!
But sending kids to a place that forces them to piss on themselves is not about building a better community! It does not teach anyone to respect their"elders" It just teaches kids that adults are sociopathic bullies and they should obey for their own safety till they are big enough to do the bullying.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
n case you\'re worried about what\'s going to become of the younger generation, it\'s going to grow up and start worrying about the younger generation.-Roger Allen

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #39 on: June 20, 2006, 12:46:00 AM »
i totally agree with you.  camps and behavior mod schools are not really helping anyone besides the owner's pocketbooks.  i especially think that making a kid drink so much watch and not enough potty breaks so that they piss themselevs is just sick and very wrong.  i do agree that parents need to start parenting and take control of their teens and never ever to send them to schools like tlc.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #40 on: June 20, 2006, 12:49:00 AM »
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On 2006-06-18 17:49:00, Pls help wrote:

"Of course not every kid anywhere is a saint,and i am aware that i take aglass 1/2 full approach to people, but I am unaware of any other country in the western world which has private schools or camps primarily designed to either modify or punish kids.



The culture that the websites seem to push particularly Thayer is that if your kid is misbehaving they can either "Modify" them or in extreme cases punish them till they become different people. As well as the obvious things like drug abuse often "A sense of entitlement" or "disrespect" are seen as illnesses that need to be cured. Surely this can be done at home. If a parent has genuinely indulges a kid too much why don't they just stop doing it, and make the kid aware of the plight of someone less well off than them. If the kid is consistently rude by all means penalise this but place the emphasis back on encouraging kids to live within a community not in some detention camp where they are bullied until they urinate on themselves or told that they need fixing and until they are better they do not deserve their families love!



Also why does anyone have the right to try and modify somebody elses personality? All people have good and bad qualities so why not place the emphasis on what is good about your kid. If a kid is materialistic then have them get a summer job where they can save for their first car. It will furnish their ambitions and teach them a work ethic.

If your kid is into "wicca" (another thing that seems to be viewed as evil by many of these programmes) then they are probably creative and a questioner. Find out what it is that they believe in, help them to channel that intellect and get to know their wierdly dressed friends. Who knows? you may just find that they are polite, decent kids who read a lot and are searching for a belief system. it may just be that they like the goth look!

But sending kids to a place that forces them to piss on themselves is not about building a better community! It does not teach anyone to respect their"elders" It just teaches kids that adults are sociopathic bullies and they should obey for their own safety till they are big enough to do the bullying. "



 :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:  :nworthy:
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #41 on: October 22, 2007, 06:54:00 AM »
Quote from: ""Guest""
i used to be @ tlc and i want to get in contact with any ex employees

 
          When did u work there and what did you do? I was there when they first opened
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #42 on: October 22, 2007, 07:19:16 AM »
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i am also an ex employee I was there over a year and actually quit.  I liked working with the kids at Thayer but didn't agree with the Bundys.  


when did you work there and whats your name?
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #43 on: October 22, 2007, 07:29:08 AM »
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when we all graduated in nov 04', we were allowed to get numbers of graduating cadets and staff.  sgt pikulas # is 4356329021. i hope that helps
 Whats your name?
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