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Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => The Troubled Teen Industry => Topic started by: Perrigaud on December 20, 2004, 04:46:00 AM

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 20, 2004, 04:46:00 AM
What shadey things were occurring if any?
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 21, 2004, 11:05:00 AM
I personally never saw any beatings. This may even sound crazy but I miss the place at times. Of course the times I'm referring to were the last few months I was there. I have a lot of happy memories from that place. Thankfully they don't include abuse of any sort.  :grin:
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 21, 2004, 11:29:00 AM
That's because they programmed you to call it "discipline" and believe there was nothing wrong with it.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 21, 2004, 11:53:00 AM
Blah Blah Blah brainwash Blah. No, they didn't. I wasn't programmed. I'm a human not a robot. You people are so annoying. There probably were abuse cases. That sucks but then again nothing in life is 100% pure. So, if this so called brainwashing helped me (not forced) to keep others as well as myself safe then so be it. I was a terror. I had no regard for people, life, or anything positive. In a way they saved you from paying the taxes that would've kept me in jail for committing malicious crimes. I had already done my share of proving myself one of the top juvinile delinquents.  [ This Message was edited by: Perrigaud on 2004-12-21 08:56 ]
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: ehm on December 21, 2004, 12:11:00 PM
Well, you were programmed to think we're making this up, and that everything you went through was necessary.

Why don't you explain the program at Cross Creek? Help me understand your position a little better. :smile:
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 21, 2004, 12:50:00 PM
http://www.rickross.com/reference/teenb ... oot33.html (http://www.rickross.com/reference/teenboot/teenboot33.html)

Quote
In Utah, officials are wrestling with Majestic Ranch, which takes children as young as 10, and where a program director was recently charged with child abuse, as well as with a new program at the flagship affiliate, Cross Creek, for clients over age 18. Neither program has obtained the required operating license, state officials said.

Robert Lichfield, who once said he believed only Satan stood in the way of the programs' goals, said state authorities were merely reacting to pressure from parents or reporters, adding, "If I was in their position, I would be doing the same thing."

Federal authorities are also taking a look at Wwasps. On July 10, Representative George Miller of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Education Committee, asked the Treasury Department to see whether Wwasps received unusual "tax deductions, tax credits or any special tax treatment."

Affiliates gross perhaps $70 million a year, an estimate based on their enrollment, tuition and fees. A company spokesman, James Wall, said it had always filed its federal income taxes properly. But Mr. Wall said Wwasps, which calls itself a nonprofit corporation in Utah, had never applied for nonprofit, tax-exempt status with the Internal Revenue Service.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Nihilanthic on December 21, 2004, 02:59:00 PM
He called government records for donations by the industry to politicians rumor and heresay.

Dont waste your time.

Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.
Thomas Jefferson, 1787

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 22, 2004, 04:04:00 AM
No, what's the point? Not everything was necessary. I retained what I felt fit at that time. In the end it helped me. There might have been a different solution but I didn't go through that. Bottom line is that I'm successful and happy. I know that not everyone came out with the same experience be it good or bad. All I know is what I went through personally.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 22, 2004, 07:08:00 AM
You may know and remember what you went through, but I doubt you can think about it critically and logically. Being a WWASP graduate, you see everything through WWASP's ideology. There are numerous examples of abusive practices used by WWASP, but I'm certain you would call it necessary or say that there's nothing wrong with it, or that the child "deserved it", which in your eyes makes it OK.

Example #1:
A child is grabbed by an adult staff member. The child's arms are twisted behind his back, and he is taken to a small room where he is made to lie on his face for days. WWASP calls this "treatment". Normal people call it abuse.

Example #2:
A child is made to stand before a group of strangers, and relate intimate experiences from her past. This information is then used to humiliate the child and break her down psychologically. WWASP calls this "emotional growth". Normal people call it abuse.

There are dozens of other examples. My point is, that while I'm sure you remember your experience just fine, you are unable to see it for what it was. You can only look at it through the eyes of a WWASP devotee. And that is why I don't believe you when you say there was no abuse: you define "abuse" using WWASP's definition. I can't believe you when you say that WWASP offers a legitimate, helpful program because I know what kind of program they offer, I know the results it brings, and I know why you speak of WWASP the way you do.

I am glad to hear you're doing well and that you're happy. I hope you'll keep on being happy with your life. I also hope you'll snap out of the WWASP/LifeSpring mind-prison you're in. In any case, good luck.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Nihilanthic on December 22, 2004, 01:46:00 PM
So, because you survived it, its okay that you were 'helped' (if you even needed it) by being broken down and abused, so its okay.

Lets apply your logic to something else....

I'll go emotionally rape and physically abuse your mom the next time she gets a cough. As long as she survives it, and the cough stops, its okay, and it 'worked' for her! She isnt coughing anymore!

Funny how your logic doesnt work anywhere else but with kids locked up in programs. And only in your mind.

We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately.
-- Ben Franklin At the signing of the Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776.

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 22, 2004, 03:23:00 PM
So typical.  Someone comes on here and says they weren't abused, they took what they needed from the program they were in, and learned a lot of important life lessons...and is now being told that it was all an illusion and that they were in fact abused.  Who's trying to brainwash who?
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Nihilanthic on December 22, 2004, 05:24:00 PM
So, throw a kid in some BS program abuse and humiliate them, and when they come out, they've grown up.

And its the programs doing? Coallation is not causation buddy. You might as well put a kid in a program for having a cold. When the cold ends and they come out and anent coughing anymore, theyd claim it was their doing.

Also, anon, when the programs give no specific facts at all, wtf am I gonna go by? More general bullshit?

The inspiration of the Bible depends on the ignorance of the person who reads it.
--Robert G. Ingersoll, American politician and lecturer

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 22, 2004, 06:28:00 PM
Quote
On 2004-12-22 12:23:00, Anonymous wrote:

"So typical.  Someone comes on here and says they weren't abused, they took what they needed from the program they were in, and learned a lot of important life lessons...and is now being told that it was all an illusion and that they were in fact abused.  Who's trying to brainwash who?"


Well, reasonably, it kind of depends on what happened and what didn't, doesn't it?

I had a friend who was gang raped at 5 by a group of neighborhood boys.  They were 11 and 12--I don't know how many there were, but more than two.

She didn't think of it as rape, even though she was uncomfortable about it and thought it had been a bad thing for her life, because she hadn't said no.  Neither did her 5 year old friend who was also gang raped by the same boys.

It didn't dawn on her that it *was* rape until I said to her, "Look--imagine you're not talking about or to *you*.  Imagine you're talking to any other person you know.  Would you tell them that a five year old, any five year old, was competent to consent to sexual intercourse?  No?  So now what would you tell *you*?"

And that's when she started crying.  Heavily.

And that's when she started to get better, too.  Because she could put what happened in context, and grieve that it happened, and so could *finally* start getting over her grief.

Now, naturally, if you're having to be hypnotized to "remember" a bunch of junk, then nobody really knows whether it did happen and you repressed it, or whether it was a false memory *created* by what the hypnotist did to you.

To get back to the subject of Cross Creek---whether someone was abused or not depends on what actually happened.

Did things happen that child welfare agencies would have considered abuse if the parents did it, or not?

I have no idea.

My usual touchstone is to ask someone how long it's been since they've been in a program.

If they've been out for five or more years I figure they *probably* have a pretty good handle on what happened and are probably seeing what happened fairly clearly.

If they've been out less than five years, I generally reserve judgement unless there's enough detail to their account to convince me it's plausible.

Timoclea
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 22, 2004, 07:24:00 PM
Thank you Timoclea for posting that.  Until someone can take a deep look at and acknowledge what happened, can the healing begin. It's what Cross Creek therapists and the seminars create for the students in a safe environment.  As you said, it hurt for this little girl to remember and talk about what happened.  My wish is that she was able to come to terms with one of her "defining" moments and not live as a victim to something she had little or no control over.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 23, 2004, 04:52:00 AM
Again, I reitterate that I don't doubt that there were some abusive cases. I was not emotionally raped...you know what, people will always have their own opinions. I'm coming to realize that whatever I say will always bring those who are for and against it. All I know is that I don't regret one day I spent at CCM. So with this I am done defending and proving. All that matters is what I know.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 23, 2004, 05:24:00 AM
Quote
Until someone can take a deep look at and acknowledge what happened, can the healing begin. It's what Cross Creek therapists and the seminars create for the students in a safe environment.


Cross Creek is an abusive gulag. There is nothing safe when it comes to WWASP. WWASP is the most dangerous, abusive treatment cult in operation today. WWASP takes away any feeling of security of safety or support, so that the child will feel completely abandoned and alone, which makes it easier for WWASP to break them down and re-wire them (as Jay Kay so aptly put it).
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 23, 2004, 07:31:00 AM
Unsafe? Nah, not all of the facilities were unsafe.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 23, 2004, 08:07:00 AM
Oh, OK....just SOME of them were abusive and that makes it OK cause the other ones WEREN'T. :roll:  :roll:
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 23, 2004, 09:59:00 AM
The program itself is abusive. The program is based on breaking the child's spirit, and then traumatising them enough so they can be "re-wired". The program is offered (well, it's not really "offered", since those incarcerated can't choose whether they want to take part in it or not-- they are forced to participate) in all of WWASP's facilities. Therefore, there is no WWASP facility which is safe, not even one, since they are all in the business of taking normal human being, breaking them down, and re-molding them against their will. And that is abusive.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 23, 2004, 12:03:00 PM
Quote
On 2004-12-23 02:24:00, Anonymous wrote:

"
Quote
Until someone can take a deep look at and acknowledge what happened, can the healing begin. It's what Cross Creek therapists and the seminars create for the students in a safe environment.



Cross Creek is an abusive gulag. There is nothing safe when it comes to WWASP. WWASP is the most dangerous, abusive treatment cult in operation today. WWASP takes away any feeling of security of safety or support, so that the child will feel completely abandoned and alone, which makes it easier for WWASP to break them down and re-wire them (as Jay Kay so aptly put it). "


See what I mean?  This is a great example of anyone can post anything on the internet and there's no fear anymore of being taken to court for posting this crap.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 23, 2004, 12:21:00 PM
Quote
On 2004-12-23 09:03:00, Anonymous wrote:

"
Quote

On 2004-12-23 02:24:00, Anonymous wrote:


"
Quote
Until someone can take a deep look at and acknowledge what happened, can the healing begin. It's what Cross Creek therapists and the seminars create for the students in a safe environment.





Cross Creek is an abusive gulag. There is nothing safe when it comes to WWASP. WWASP is the most dangerous, abusive treatment cult in operation today. WWASP takes away any feeling of security of safety or support, so that the child will feel completely abandoned and alone, which makes it easier for WWASP to break them down and re-wire them (as Jay Kay so aptly put it). "




See what I mean?  This is a great example of anyone can post anything on the internet and there's no fear anymore of being taken to court for posting this crap. "


The court's decision has proven what everybody already know-- there isn't, nor there should be, a penalty for speaking the truth. And the truth is that WWASP is an abusive, dangerous program. No matter how much you cry about it, no matter how many times you repeat what your seminar facilitator told you, it's not going to change what's happening. It's not going to change the truth.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Anonymous on December 23, 2004, 03:27:00 PM
I would say this much is simply a fact:
Quote:
WWASP takes away any feeling of security of safety or support, so that the child will feel completely abandoned and alone, which makes it easier for WWASP to break them down and re-wire them (as Jay Kay so aptly put it).
End Quote

That wwasp is an abusive gulag, may be more along the lines of an opinion. . .
However, I feel confident, any rational human being would agree, that the above stated facts, make the following opinion, more of a corrisponding fact.

WWASP is by its very nature abusive and negligent.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Nihilanthic on December 23, 2004, 03:42:00 PM
Apparently shock, being treated bad, and 'broken down' is good for you in the minds of a lot of americans.

*Groan*

P.S. - Happy Holidays fornits. I just hope the program kids might get off a little easier for a week =

May your days be joyously challenging and your words artfully true.
--Ginger Warbis

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 24, 2004, 02:58:00 AM
::argue:: I suppose this is a subject in which everyone has a strong opinion. Brainwash? I don't think so. Abusive? In some cases yes. I never said that it was ok. My feelings won't change just as others wont as well. That's the beautiful thing about being an individual. One can feel as they need to.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Nihilanthic on December 24, 2004, 04:34:00 PM
Not if you've been manipulated.

And, basically, what I'm getting from you is that because you're successfull it doesnt matter what the program did or didn't do.

Thats bullshit. I'm okay now but my father was abusive. That make it okay?

No.

It (the Bible) is full of interest. It has noble poetry in it; and some clever fables; and some blood-drenched history; and some good morals; and a wealth of obscenity; and upwards of a thousand lies.
--Samuel Clemens "Mark Twain", American author and humorist

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Perrigaud on December 25, 2004, 05:29:00 AM
Yeah, that's not what I'm saying at all. When it comes down to it everything has a corrupted line to it. Is it ok? No. Did I ever say that? No. Stop putting words into my mouth. I am a big believer in karma. So, for those individuals who took advantage of the position they were in (in a negative effect) and harmed others their time will come. I'm merely saying that i strongly disagree with blaming the whole program. I am an advocate of it. However, I do believe that it is not for everyone.
Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Nihilanthic on December 25, 2004, 05:11:00 PM
You dont.

The programs, the edcons, and the parents all seem to think it is.

And for that matter I'd question its for anyone.

Insanity in individuals is something rare - but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.
--Friedrich Nietzsche

Title: Cross Creek:How bad was it really in 2002-2003?
Post by: Michelle. on January 02, 2005, 10:40:00 PM
I agree the notion that some people were abused while others weren't.  It isn't an absolute thing that happens to everyone who goes there, but it does/did happen to some.  Also, the term "abuse" can be subjective, and it's important to remember that.

I was at CCM a long time ago now, as a 16 year old in 1994.  I didn't suffer any significant personal physical abuse, but I did witness it.  By my definition of physical abuse, some of the things that happened in my room and/or group would surely be considered abuse, and even crimes in the outside world.  

As for emotional abuse, that happened too.  But again, what's "therapy," and what's "abusive" can be very subjective and I don't dare presume that what I consider to be mentally or emotionally abusive would necessarily be viewed in exactly the same light by all other people.

So that's just my two cents.