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Grex > Oldcoop > #76: member initiative: do not restore two items | |
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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 357 responses total. |
other
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response 211 of 357:
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Jan 21 17:50 UTC 2004 |
I've said my piece.
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cyklone
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response 212 of 357:
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Jan 21 17:58 UTC 2004 |
And you said it very well. I share your views.
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gull
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response 213 of 357:
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Jan 21 21:24 UTC 2004 |
I'm not convinced that mary had any 'professional and legal
responsibility' to do what she did. I accept that she felt she had a
moral responsibility to do so, though. I think it's regrettable that
she didn't also feel she had a responsibility to express her concerns to
jep before going over his head.
If I were him, I'd be pretty annoyed with her, too.
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jaklumen
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response 214 of 357:
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Jan 21 21:38 UTC 2004 |
I'm curious why she didn't express such concerns with jep.
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cyklone
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response 215 of 357:
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Jan 21 21:50 UTC 2004 |
I believe Mary did express just such concerns to jep. Of course with the
item now deleted no one can say for sure. However, I seem to recall
several posts of hers stating words to the effect of "jep, what you are
writing sounds like threats and you should be aware that experience
teaches that such words must be taken seriously in the context in which
you have used them." Jep also admitted to stalking behavior, let's not
forget.
I *know* I warned jep (using a pseudo) when I said his words were
chillingly similar to those of a domestic violence assailant. I also
warned him about the stalking type behavior. If Mary did make a formal
report to the police, then in my opinion she went too far, although I am
not going to hold that against her. For all any of us know she has
personal knowledge of domestic violence and felt a line was crossed. I
certainly can't fault her for informally consulting with an expert to get
a second opinion.
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mary
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response 216 of 357:
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Jan 21 21:51 UTC 2004 |
But I did express my concerns to jep. Multiple times.
Participating in the conferences with an expectation of
privacy is a topic ripe for discussion. That was my
intent with #195. But what probably shouldn't happen
is dragging specifics about John's divorce into that
conversation. That's unnecessary.
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mary
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response 217 of 357:
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Jan 21 21:51 UTC 2004 |
cyklone slipped in without my permission. ;-)
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slynne
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response 218 of 357:
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Jan 21 22:00 UTC 2004 |
Yeah, I remember mary warning jep in those items too. She found his
behavior much more scary than I did but I have to admit that if I
actually thought he was a threat to someone, I would have gone to
someone with the item.
FWIW, I have made hard copies of items in the past and then shown them
to people for various reasons. Usually because someone wrote something
very interesting or expressed a point well.
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tod
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response 219 of 357:
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Jan 21 22:41 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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aruba
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response 220 of 357:
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Jan 21 23:36 UTC 2004 |
I have printed out items too. Don't remember why.
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mary
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response 221 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:02 UTC 2004 |
Sure, tod. Read respone #195 in this item. Then tell me what you
think would be the best response in that scenario. But the given is
that you are pretty sure the person is so out of control that he
could harm himself. Do you tell his partner or parents? Do you ask
for advice from someone who can read such threats better than you
can? Are you supportive in the item and cross your fingers that is
enough? Do you just read the item and do nothing?
Would it make any difference if the person talking suicide is a
minor? What if the behavior being discussed is instead child abuse?
What's the expectation of this community when a discussion discloses
a potentially life threatening danger?
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tod
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response 222 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:15 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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naftee
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response 223 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:27 UTC 2004 |
mary's a nurse? I thought she was retired...
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mary
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response 224 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:44 UTC 2004 |
You get to set the threshold for your criteria. The assumption is
*you* see the person as dangerous to himself or others. Now what?
It's a hard place to be.
From your question it almost seems like you are looking to be sure
that the risk is genuine. And that is exactly why I'd be seeking a
second opinion before doing anything dramatic. Being supportive and
seeking more information happens concurrently.
John won't let me retire. ;-)
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tod
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response 225 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:51 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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gull
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response 226 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:54 UTC 2004 |
A guy I used to know once had someone call a suicide hotline on his
behalf. Man, was he ticked off. It took him hours to get the hospital
to release him. I don't know if he was billed for the privilage, as well.
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tod
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response 227 of 357:
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Jan 22 00:55 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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willcome
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response 228 of 357:
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Jan 22 01:02 UTC 2004 |
Listen, you don't know what it's like to be a cop. It's a high-pressure job,
and we made a mistake that time.
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tod
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response 229 of 357:
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Jan 22 03:41 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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aruba
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response 230 of 357:
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Jan 22 04:45 UTC 2004 |
Re #226: That doesn't necessarily mean it was a bad thing to do.
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mary
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response 231 of 357:
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Jan 22 14:02 UTC 2004 |
Re: #225 You don't run off to Dr. Phil because you're not at all convinced
the person is at risk. Again, just this one time, tell me what you'd do
if *you* thought he was in bad enough shape he could kill himself.
What I'm suspect is maybe all you'd be comfortable doing is supporting the
person online. That's a legitimate answer. But if it is your answer is
it because you'd be uncomfortable seeking help or because you feel Grex's
unwritten privacy code would be violated?
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cross
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response 232 of 357:
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Jan 22 17:08 UTC 2004 |
If something someone said online led me to believe they were suicidal,
then knowing what I do (which admitedly isn't that much) about how much
human communication is distorted in a medium like this, I'd go over
to the person in question's house and talk to them to see if my fears
were justified.
Mary, shame on you. You ought to know better than to presume that what
you read on a computer screen is going to be a sufficient for you to
make a good determination of a person's state of mind. You engaged
in an action that could have had serious consequences for JEP and his
son without first doing sufficient due diligence to see if your fears
were well-founded.
Don't Nurses have to take some equivalent of the Hypocratic Oath?
``First, do no harm.'' In this case, your actions don't appear to have
affected the outcome of events. I think that's luck. What you did
had potential to do real harm, and you don't seem to understand that.
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mary
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response 233 of 357:
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Jan 22 17:57 UTC 2004 |
And you are making assumptions about what I did that are inaccurate.
But don't let that temper your judgement. ;-)
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jep
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response 234 of 357:
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Jan 22 18:30 UTC 2004 |
Mary's actions are irrelevant to this item, which is a policy
discussion in coop of whether to direct the staff to leave my items
deleted. My state of mind from two years ago isn't very relevant,
either.
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jp2
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response 235 of 357:
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Jan 22 18:32 UTC 2004 |
This response has been erased.
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