Author Topic: Criminal Quack Surfaces in Colorado  (Read 822 times)

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Offline ajax13

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Criminal Quack Surfaces in Colorado
« on: July 09, 2009, 09:56:44 PM »
Squeaky Luciano, having left AARC under mysterious circumstances, has floated to the top of the toilet bowl in Colorado.  When last heard from in Calgary, Squeaky was rumored to have tried to steal her AARC client files while making a run for it.  This only  a few months after she had pledged before Judge Crook-Stanhopeless to take resonsibility for putting a young man through AARC against the wishes of the boy's own mother.  
In fact, Squeaky is now president of her own board of directors.  Another quack triumph.
http://www.linkinghumansystems.com/docs ... 202008.pdf

Squeaky claimed to have learned her trade in Miller Newton's Kids, although this has been disputed.  Whether she was in Kids, or just a fan of Newton's, her new scam revives Newton's penchant for treating addictions to all manner of things, such as love and food.  I'm tearing up a bit as I think of Squeaky picking up the torch that Father Cassian has dropped.  And, true to her Newton totem, Squeaky's new gig is meant for those who are "resistant" to treatment.  Once a criminal quack, always a crimnal quack:
"An addicted individual will not change until the people closest to him/her take action and motivate him/her into treatment. If s/he does hit bottom and is forced to go to treatment without support from family and friends, s/he is less likely to go into long-term recovery."

How about this gem:
"All addiction affects the brain. The neuro-physiological pathways are stimulated both by substances and process addictions. The functional changes can even be seen on brain scans. The result of the change to the brain is that the family starts to feel that they have lost their loved one and that they are living with a stranger. The brain can recover allowing the loved one to return to normal if the addiction stops. Depending on the intensity of the use, the functional wdamage to the brain can start to heal within 3-6 months. However, it is not fully complete until 2-5 years after stopping the addictive behavior. If the addiction does not stop, the functional damage will continue and become permanent. It is urgent to help the loved one get into recovery."
This is in stark contrast to the notion that Squeaky spent years forcing people to accept at AARC.  Why only eighteen months ago, Squeaky was telling her captives that their disease would last the rest of their lives.  No doubt squeaky makes sure to have those brain scans done frequently to indicate the course of recovery.
http://www.ariseinterventionnow.com/addiction.html
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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Offline anonAARCgrad

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Re: Criminal Quack Surfaces in Colorado
« Reply #1 on: July 10, 2009, 09:25:05 PM »
Here we go! Lisa RAN from Kids, managed to sneak back across the border from NJ and could not maintain her own sobriety right up until she was hired by Vause at AARC the SECOND time.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »