Teacher Had Sex With Students Gets AA Get Out Of Jail Early Card

<b>DAY 3:</b> Stacy Schuler talks with a family member during a break in her trial.

Teacher turned AA member was jailed after recieving 16 felony counts of sexual battery and three misdemeanor counts of providing alcohol to minors, which were her students. While in jail she attended AA Meetings. She requested early release that was granted provided she continue her ” drug and alcohol treatment and counseling for sex offenders”. Hopefully your teenager wont be sitting next to this X-teacher, mentally ill sex offender.

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KILLER OF 96 YEAR OLD WOMAN ALLOWED TO ATTEND ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS MEETINGS UNSUPERVISED

Convicted Calgary killer who escaped prison granted unescorted leaves

 George Vincent Gyuricza, 45, serving a life sentence for the murder of a 96-year-old woman in 1986, will be allowed unescorted passes to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

Photograph by: Calgary Herald/Files

A convicted killer who escaped jail and was recaptured after going on a bank-robbery spree has been granted a small step of freedom.

The Parole Board of Canada says George Vincent Gyuricza has earned unescorted temporary absences to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings to “develop a pro-social support network,” the board wrote in its Oct. 17 decision.

Gyuricza, 45, is serving a life sentence for killing 96-year-old Margaret Machon with his bare hands on Oct. 10, 1986.

He was high and intoxicated when he sneaked into the elderly widow’s second-storey downtown Calgary suite through an open balcony door and stole $60. He choked her and stabbed her twice in the throat with the handle of her hairbrush. Continue reading

Young People In AA Are Falling Through The Cracks

 

Young People are being failed by AA in more ways than even this article outlines. In this Washington Post article author Chelsea speaks about the drug connections and party buddies she met at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Continue reading

California State Mental Hospitals Plagued With Assaults And Rising Violence

Alcoholics Anonymous Hospitals & Institutions volunteers visit mental hospitals, and offer AA to the mentally ill. Even though I understand they feel they are trying to help the ‘addict still suffering’. I do not understand how they invite upon release, mental patients to outside local AA meetings, that they also have children and teens going to the very same meetings.

Read the story below about the growing violence by mental patients in the state of California. One killed a hospital worker. Why are they continuing the practice of bringing the mentally ill, violent felons and sexual offenders to co-mingle with minors? Continue reading

KBR Chief Gets Light Sentence For Attending Alcoholics Anonymous In Billion Dollar Bribery Case

In a BILLION dollar bribery case a former chief executive got a light sentence in part because of his attendence at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings! Wow, Alcoholics Anonymous has become so powerful that they can effect sentencing in a
multi billion dollar bribery case. Unbelievable. Sounds like he had AA members march in to testify what a good AA member he was.

Albert Stanley

Halliburton: Ex-KBR Chief Jailed For Bribing Nigerian Officials

HOUSTON — After years of sentencing delays, a former KBR Inc. chief executive received two and a half years in prison Thursday for his role in a scheme to bribe Nigerian government officials in return for $6 billion in engineering and construction contracts.
Albert “Jack” Stanley also must serve three years of probation and pay $1,000 a month in restitution after he is released.
Stanley pleaded guilty in 2008 to conspiring in the decade-long scheme related to the company’s natural gas operations in Nigeria from 1995 to 2004. Stanley was KBR’s chief executive until 2001 and chairman until June 2004.
The 69-year-old spoke to U.S. District Judge Keith Ellison in court Thursday, saying that alcoholism played a role in compromising the traditional American values of hard work, honesty and integrity that he brought to his professional life.
“I lost touch,” he said. “I wish to be very clear that I accept full responsibility for what I have done … and hope to be able to continue to make amends for my past.”
Larry Veselka, Stanley’s lawyer, asked the judge to forgo a prison sentence for Stanley, citing his involvement in Alcoholics Anonymous and mentoring relationships with people in Houston and North Carolina, where Stanley now lives. About two dozen people also attested to Stanley’s volunteer work in court Thursday.
Indeed, Stanley’s sentence is lighter than his plea agreement had outlined, as he had faced the possibility of seven years in prison for violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. A federal presentencing report suggested punishment of three and a half years.

http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/2012/02/23/1944648/ex-kbr-chief-to-be-sentenced-in.html

Bogus Labeling Of Adolescents As Addicts And Having A Brain Disease

All this talk about Whitney Houston’s death has brought out a plethora of talking 12 step heads hyperventilating about how addiction is a life long disease and the children of addicts have “The Gene”. This can become a self fulfilling prophecy. Dr Drew and Jane Velez-Mitchell are all over TV spouting lots of information as if it is fact.

The fact is many people do not agree with the 12 step dogma at all. What is most upsetting though is how they are stigmatizing our children into thinking they have a disease and inherited a gene from there addicted parents.
The Fix has an excellent article about this below.

We need to stand up to this 12 step madness and save the kids from emotional harm from this brainwashing from 12 step zealots.

How a Bogus Addiction Panic is Criminalizing Our Kids
The new official definition of addiction will likely label many more young Americans with the disease. Do we really want to dump this on the next generation?

By Maia Szalavitz
02/15/12

The DSM V—the next edition of psychiatry’s diagnostic bible—will redefine addiction in ways likely to have long-lasting, real-world consequences. As I explored in my column last week, psychiatrists are eliminating the seriously problematic terms “Substance Abuse” and “Substance Dependence” and placing all related conditions into a single new category: “Substance Use and Addictive Disorders.”

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Indeed, research shows that some people who meet the full criteria for alcoholism or addiction can return to controlled use—though this proportion decreases as severity of the problem increases. The data also shows that a large proportion of people who would currently be diagnosed as “substance dependent” recover without any type of treatment or self-help involvement at all.

In short, no one can predict which college drunk will go on to skid row—and which one will become President.

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Even now, however, a great deal of treatment energy and time is currently aimed at trying to get people in recovery to admit that they have “the disease of addiction” and to label themselves as “addicts” or “alcoholics” in therapy groups. Counselors and other staff press clients to confess to a greater and greater problem severity, due to the pervasive suspicion that most people with addiction lie about how much they use. (This continues to be done in the face of research showing that doing so does not benefit recovery—if anything, “confronting denial” is linked with more relapse, not less.)

This push to adopt an addict identity happens even in adolescent treatment— despite the fact that most teens in treatment do not meet criteria for being addicted (some don’t even meet criteria for drug abuse!). Indeed, the vast majority are, not surprisingly, nondaily binge users of booze and pot. Nonetheless, at ever-younger ages, these kids are being pressured to view themselves primarily as addicts and alcoholics and to admit to having a chronic, lifelong illness with a 90% chance of relapse. Very little research has been done on the effects of this “treatment”—but given what we know about the fluidity of adolescent identity, it certainly has the potential to do significant harm.

For one, it can be a self-fulfilling prophecy—and I’ve spoken with quite a few people who have gone into adolescent treatment as marijuana users and emerged as cocaine or prescription drug misusers, in part because they felt that they were “already addicts anyway.” Second, since research cannot predict which teens will outgrow their problems and which will have a chronic course, does it really make sense to have them all embrace a stigmatized identity centered around a disease?

Bogus Labeling Of Teens As Addicts

The Complete Article-
http://www.thefix.com/content/addiction-definition-phony-epidemic-DSMV8765