Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform > Aspen Education Group
"TheWho"'s True Identity
TheWho:
--- Quote from: "Guest" ---
--- Quote from: "RFG" ---Guest 1. On fire
Guest 2. Frigid
--- End quote ---
Better?
9784684691 01982
--- End quote ---
damit, I like that. Thank you.
Troll Control:
--- Quote from: "TheWho" ---So far I agree with you, where we part a little is when you mention 14+ have died in 2000 and how many of these would have lived if they remained home and that the number is too high. I agree but we will never know. How many of the graduates who lived would have died if not for the, as you call it "'therapeutic' bubble"? Are the kids entering these schools at a higher risk of harming themselves then your average high school student? Less risky? We dont know. So how does one approach this?
If one child dies do we shut every school down?
2 die, 3? and what do we base our decisions on? If parents pay 70k they should expect 0 deaths, but the ones who are there on state money can accept a couple of deaths, that I dont buy. I dont think the money is a factor, who cares what it costs, the schools dont set the price the parents do. They charge exactly what the parents are willing to pay and not a penny less, the same as anything else in America, milk, gas, weed. The prices are set by the people, they stop buying and the price goes down.
Over time the data will speak for itself, even if it has flaws and people are not being honest. Once you start comparing the results to previous years and other institutions the problem areas stick out and you go after them
--- End quote ---
I guess one death isn't enough for TheWho, even one of his own.
He sure loves some data though. http://www.linkedin.com/pub/dir/peter/dunbar. No wonder he thinks you can't rely on first-hand accounts. You have to have the DATA!
He likes to talk about business a lot, too. He fancies himself a businessman, but he never completed business school either :waaaa: TheWho is a quitter student and a quitter parent, but he'll never quit Fornits.
Troll Control:
Ahhhh....This explains his need to post the "data matrix".
Anonymous:
--- Quote from: "Guest" ---He sure loves some data though. http://www.linkedin.com/pub/dir/peter/dunbar. No wonder he thinks you can't rely on first-hand accounts. You have to have the DATA!
He likes to talk about business a lot, too. He fancies himself a businessman, but he never completed business school either :waaaa: TheWho is a quitter student and a quitter parent, but he'll never quit Fornits.
--- End quote ---
HASTE is never an excuse for posting links which contradict your claims.
TheWho:
--- Quote from: "TheWho" ---So far I agree with you, where we part a little is when you mention 14+ have died in 2000 and how many of these would have lived if they remained home and that the number is too high. I agree but we will never know. How many of the graduates who lived would have died if not for the, as you call it "'therapeutic' bubble"? Are the kids entering these schools at a higher risk of harming themselves then your average high school student? Less risky? We dont know. So how does one approach this?
If one child dies do we shut every school down?
2 die, 3? and what do we base our decisions on?
--- End quote ---
You make a good point, although, we shouldnt just focus on the numbers alone. The safety of the children in general should be looked at, not just individual deaths.
--- Quote --- If parents pay 70k they should expect 0 deaths, but the ones who are there on state money can accept a couple of deaths, that I dont buy.
--- End quote ---
I dont either. It shouldnt matter if the child is there on a free ride, private money or if the parents are paying for it.
--- Quote ---I dont think the money is a factor, who cares what it costs, the schools dont set the price the parents do. They charge exactly what the parents are willing to pay and not a penny less, the same as anything else in America, milk, gas, weed. The prices are set by the people, they stop buying and the price goes down.
--- End quote ---
Exactly. So if the parents stop sending kids there the price will go down and eventually they wont be able to meet expenses and they will fold.
--- Quote ---Over time the data will speak for itself, even if it has flaws and people are not being honest. Once you start comparing the results to previous years and other institutions the problem areas stick out and you go after them
--- End quote ---
I guess I see what you are saying.
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