You mean people like Rush Limbaugh??
"University Studies" <gov-statistics@no.spam> wrote in message
news:z47ld.18$k%4.6@trndny07...
Among the problems needing to be cleaned up in America are the goofy
psychology teachings which claim an illness can make a person break the
law.
This is one of the most preposterous claims ever to be out forth, and
really
it is used an a poor excuse by criminals attempting to escape justice.
Legislation has already been written by the OSP Co. that would forbid any
court from allowing an insanity defense, but would hold all people fully
accountable for any crime committed.
Every person who commits a crime chooses to do so, and every person knows
exactly what he is doing regardless of any drugs, alcohol or illness
present.
No illness can make a person break the law, nor can any drugs or alcohol
Another foolish psychology theory we must teach our children to ignore is
the one claiming a person can "hear voices in his head.
It is incorrect grammar to say someone can "hear voices" in his or her
head.
A person uses his ears to hear, not his mind. A person uses his mind to
think. The correct phrase is "thinking in words".
In a few obscure TV movies it is sometimes made to seem like a person
heard
voices in his head telling him to commit some crime, where that person
then
went and committed that crime. This is pure fiction.
No one "hears voices in his head"
It would be incorrect grammar to say this
Occasionally we may hear of some criminal who attempted to escape jail by
falsely claiming an illness made him break the law, where he says "he
heard
voices" in his head telling him to. This is a fictitious defense. It's a
poor excuse given by a person trying to avoid jail. It rarely ever works
in
court and it often backfires on the criminal, since he isn't admitting to
a
crime he has committed.
The insanity defense is a bogus defense.
There is actually no such thing as insanity.
The rock band Disturbed has a song that jokes around with the foolish,
incorrect term "hearing voices". In this music video, the main character
gets pushed around by some coworkers at work. He then daydreams about
getting back at them. After choosing to "think in words" a lot, the actor
decides it's a waste of time and forgets about it all. He instead chooses
to
get into rock n roll music and have fun.
This music video shows no one "hears voices in his head" but rather, a
person chooses to think, or he chooses not to think. Nothing can make a
person break the law.
See the music video "Voices", by the rock band Disturbed
http://mp.compuserve.com/video.index.adp?mxid=1101043&refID=005000&partner=&_AOLFORM=w597.h395.p7
A song against corporate greed
This groundbreaking rock band Disturbed also has a music video called
"Stupified" that speaks out against corporate greed in America and Russia,
where billionaires seem to be concerned more with their own money rather
than with children and families.
See the music video "Stupified", by the rock band Disturbed
http://mp.compuserve.com/video.index.adp?mxid=1101042&refID=005000&partner=&_AOLFORM=w597.h395.p7
Musicians sing out against school violence
The rock band POD has a good music video that sings out against school
violence. The song "Youth of a Nation" was written in response to the
Columbine school shooting when 15 youths lost their lives.
See the music video "Youth of a Nation", by the rock band POD
http://mp.compuserve.com/video.index.adp?mxid=1103004&refID=005000&partner=&_AOLFORM=w597.h395.p7
The Power of Love
The band POD has another good music video that sings about the power of
love. How love helps us deal with problems in life more easily.
See the music video "Alive", by the rock band POD
http://mp.compuserve.com/video.index.adp?mxid=1199172&refID=005000&partner=&_AOLFORM=w597.h395.p7
.