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XiGamesNo, no, no: Don't deflect - I'm not sure even your conservative compadres would agree with that, actually...would anyone like to speak up in ViperOverLord's defense? - I directly responded to your statement in no uncertain terms. I have let you know exactly how meaningless your tactic was and you cannot accept it and now you're trying to tip toe your way out of it.Woodruff wrote:It was a direct response to your claim that "even your honorable foes would not say otherwise" about your intelligent posting. I'm not speaking about "likeability", I'm speaking about your precise statement...so stop trying to build up those strawmen before you need them (you seem quite concerned).ViperOverLord wrote:Another fallacy of logic; they are quite common in this thread. Likeability is not a correlative of intelligence.Woodruff wrote:I'm not sure even your conservative compadres would agree with that, actually...would anyone like to speak up in ViperOverLord's defense?ViperOverLord wrote:Oh you've called me out with your useless opinion. Oh I'm so hurt. I speak quite intelligably and even my honorable foes would not say otherwise.Frigidus wrote:Viper, this is rather embarrassing, I hate to let you know in public like this...you're not very bright. I mean, you'd think from what you're saying that you don't realize that. Maybe you're just slamming your head into your keyboard at random.
I will brook no babble.King Doctor wrote:V to the O, you're babbling.
What on earth are you on about?
See... you're almost completely incoherent today.ViperOverLord wrote:I will brook no babble.
What the hell does "aren't qualified" have to do with "based on their own personal morality"? The two have nothing to do with one another.bedub1 wrote:I absolutely would. Especially if they realize they aren't qualified and shouldn't be offering advice to the person in general.Woodruff wrote:I would not in any way support any counselor (gay or not) who would refuse to counsel a patient based on their own personal morality.bedub1 wrote:I find it funny that people that preach acceptance and understanding of other people and their ways of life are so damn fast to discriminate against a christian because of her beliefs....
If this was switched around....a gay counselor refusing to counsel to a christian etc it would be okay...but since it's a christian refusing to counsel a gay person it's totally wrong.
Pretend there isn't a conflict? Deceive your patients? I honestly don't know what you're going on about here.bedub1 wrote:To just pretend there isn't a conflict and deceive your patients and the others around you is definitely punishable by firing/expulsion.
No it isn't. Not even remotely, actually.bedub1 wrote:It's like the lady just got fired for coming out of the closet.
Some of you may be, yes.bedub1 wrote:I mean come on, are we still in the middle ages or what?
If she wants to be a religious counselor, then she should attend a religious university to get her degree, rather than a public institution that will have requirements of her that she won't be willing to follow through with. She would not have those problems at the religious university and could then be a "religious counselor" as opposed to a secular psychologist.bedub1 wrote:Part of the oath doctors take is to do no harm. I don't know if she has the same things. But a religious counselor giving advice to a gay person could definitely be considered harmful. She might consider it to be helping, but knows her patients will see it as harmful, so tries to follow the code of ethics she agreed to and decline to assist and try to transfer?
You seem extremely concerned - can't blame you for that. I haven't deflected anything...and you know what I'm not seeing here? Hint...it has nothing to do with liking or disliking you...ViperOverLord wrote:No, no, no: Don't deflect - I'm not sure even your conservative compadres would agree with that, actually...would anyone like to speak up in ViperOverLord's defense? - I directly responded to your statement in no uncertain terms. I have let you know exactly how meaningless your tactic was and you cannot accept it and now you're trying to tip toe your way out of it.Woodruff wrote:It was a direct response to your claim that "even your honorable foes would not say otherwise" about your intelligent posting. I'm not speaking about "likeability", I'm speaking about your precise statement...so stop trying to build up those strawmen before you need them (you seem quite concerned).ViperOverLord wrote:Another fallacy of logic; they are quite common in this thread. Likeability is not a correlative of intelligence.Woodruff wrote:I'm not sure even your conservative compadres would agree with that, actually...would anyone like to speak up in ViperOverLord's defense?ViperOverLord wrote: Oh you've called me out with your useless opinion. Oh I'm so hurt. I speak quite intelligably and even my honorable foes would not say otherwise.
Upon further reflection: I was being a bit presumptive. That goes for my post on HC too. We're cool.Woodruff wrote:
You seem extremely concerned - can't blame you for that. I haven't deflected anything...and you know what I'm not seeing here? Hint...it has nothing to do with liking or disliking you...
...because you seem to be the only person who recalls it.I refuted many of their claims as being false and sufficiently proved many fallacies of logic
Careful jones, I would hate for you to have any post labotomy cramps.jonesthecurl wrote:Viper, I believe that several people have asked you to show us exactly where the following happened...
...because you seem to be the only person who recalls it.I refuted many of their claims as being false and sufficiently proved many fallacies of logic
Homosexual counselors should, can and DO counsel Christians, providing it is secular counseling they want. A homosexual will not counsel a Christian in their faith because it is not appropriate.bedub1 wrote:I find it funny that people that preach acceptance and understanding of other people and their ways of life are so damn fast to discriminate against a christian because of her beliefs....
If this was switched around....a gay counselor refusing to counsel to a christian etc it would be okay...but since it's a christian refusing to counsel a gay person it's totally wrong
Ironically, your article supports OUR case, not yours.bedub1 wrote: EDIT: Interesting article from several years ago relating to Doctors and Religion
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,143926,00.html
oops...sorry...it's fox news and thus a lie. sorry.
He cannot answer them without questioning the bullshit that he is fed from Faux News, and therefore will ignore any questions that would cause him to question his beliefs.King Doctor wrote:I also would like to enquire where NightStrike went and why he still hasn't answered the hypothetical Muslim, Jehovah's Witness, Jedi and Holocaust Denier questions?
You did NOT address most of my points.. in fact tried to claim I was on some kind of "anti-Christian" campaign, which shows exactly how little you understood of my argument.ViperOverLord wrote: If you bothered to read the previous posts, you would know that I refuted many of their claims as being false and sufficiently proved many fallacies of logic. Their errors were so gross that I was not even envoking the battle of opinions. Please be informed next time rather than making senseless snipes based on your bias against me.
Absolutely, if a transfusion is medically required and you refuse on religious grounds (not simply because you are not trained in the technique), you WILL most certainly be violating ethical standards. Further, in a more direct scenario, if you enrolled in a medical program and refused to learn how to do transfusions and/or made it clear that you would not perform them, refused to do so even though it was part of the training program, then you would be rightfully ousted, just as this person was ousted, and you were earlier ousted for not complying with program standards.b.k. barunt wrote:Violating ethics? What ethics did she violate by reassigning a case? Use your blood transfusion scenario genius - if i as a doctor or intern have someone else do a blood transfusion am i violating some obscure ethical formula?
I really depends on the circumstances. If another person is readily available and truly IS more qualified, then a transfer might be OK. However, mostly that happens BEFORE much work is done.b.k. barunt wrote: Hell no! Lawyers reassign cases, doctors cover patients for each other, counselors reassign cases if they feel someone else is better qualified for that client. WTF?
I see, so according to you, someone who wants counseling, but is denied and complains is screaming "hate crime"? Seems you are the one who is illogical here.b.k. barunt wrote: Seems to me that the gayboys are ready to scream "hate crime!" anytime someone looks at them crosswise.
Honibaz
Oh puhleeze - are you making this shit up as you go along?Snorri1234 wrote:The ethics of not reassigning a case unless real problems develop regardless of one's beliefs?b.k. barunt wrote:Violating ethics? What ethics did she violate by reassigning a case?
*Gets a hernia from attempting to restrain self from burying this thread under a tide of smutty inuendo*b.k. barunt wrote:Would you know how to counsel a 12 year old nympho??
The difference is WHY and how you transferred the cases. First, it sounds like you did so from the outset and simply because there was someone else more suited to the job.b.k. barunt wrote:Oh niggapleez - are you making this shit up as you go along?Snorri1234 wrote:The ethics of not reassigning a case unless real problems develop regardless of one's beliefs?b.k. barunt wrote:Violating ethics? What ethics did she violate by reassigning a case?
I've worked as a counselor in substance abuse rehab and i did a stint with an alternative school for adolescents with charges ranging from pot to attempted murder. During my 6 month stay at the school i reassigned 2 cases, as the 4 counselors there had the option to do so between themselves in order to facilitate a more effective counseling strategy. The administrator explained this to me when she hired me as "combining our talents and determining when and where to use them".
The other 3 counselors were women, and strangely enough they reassigned all the extreme badasses to me. I got over 15 reassignments in the 6 months i was there and gave out 2. The 2 i reassigned were girls, 12 and 14, who were both raging nymphomaniacs and had probably had more sex than i ever did - wtf? Would you know how to counsel a 12 year old nympho?? What fooking "ethics" did i violate by reassigning these girls? I recognize a population that i don't really have the skills to deal with and i don't deal with that population if i don't have to.
Doctors, Lawyers and Therapists reassign cases wheneverthefuck they want to - they violate no ethics in doing so. Like i said you are making the shit up - cite any ethics from any of these three professions that would back up your gay rantings. Notice i said "cite". That means you find an ethic printed somewhere in the Mission Statement of one of these three professions and show where it came from when you quote it. Spare me the snorri inventions, please.
Honibaz
Really? "There was definite concern that she would not be able to simply hand over clients..." From your own source:PLAYER57832 wrote:The problem with this student was that she was told from the outset that counseling homosexuals would be required. It wasn't that she felt another counselor would do a better job, she flat out stated that she felt it her duty to counsel homosexuals against their sexual orientation. There was definite concern that she would not be able to simply hand over clients, for a lot of reasons, most specifically because she would often already be counseling them by the time the homosexuality issue came up. This concern was based on her own statements and position. And, she was ousted because she refused to fully participate in the program in which she enrolled.
Looks like it was her suggestion that the client go to a different counselor.I posted a few weeks ago about Julea Ward, who was expelled from Eastern Michigan University’s counseling graduate program because she insisted that as a Christian she had a moral obligation to steer gay counseling clients to “cultivate sexual desires for persons of the opposite sex.”
When Ward discussed this issue with her professors, they made it clear to her that if she offered such a suggestion in a therapeutic relationship, she would violate the code of ethics of the American Counseling Association. And so, when Ward was assigned to a gay client in the course of her counseling training, she suggested that this client be given a referral to another counselor.
A.4. Avoiding Harm and
Imposing Values
A.4.a. Avoiding Harm
Counselors act to avoid harming their clients, trainees, and research participants and to minimize or to remedy unavoidable or unanticipated harm.
A.4.b. Personal Values
Counselors are aware of their own values, attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors and avoid imposing values that are inconsistent with counseling goals. Counselors respect the diversity of clients, trainees, and research participants.
A.11.b. Inability to Assist Clients
If counselors determine an inability to be of professional assistance to clients, they avoid entering or continuing counseling relationships. Counselors are knowledgeable about culturally and clinically appropriate referral resources and suggest these alternatives. If clients decline the suggested referrals, counselors should discontinue the relationship.
These seem to clearly indicate that when a counselor feels that their personal values may come in conflict with being a neutral-perspective counselor, then they need to identify that and refer the client to another professional.C.5. Nondiscrimination
Counselors do not condone or engage in discrimination based on age, culture, disability, ethnicity, race, religion/spirituality, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, marital status/partnership, language preference, socioeconomic status, or any basis proscribed by law. Counselors do not discriminate against clients, students, employees, supervisees, or research participants in a manner that has a negative impact on these persons.
Well, Mr Habitual Inconvenient Question Avoider, that's all very interesting; but given that the issue here is that this woman (1) showed that she was not willing to qualify as a competent counsellor in the first place, and (2) had stated that she would not refer those clients to another professional, but would instead proselatise at them, all of that copy/pasta scree you just posted seems somewhat irrelevant.Night Strike wrote:These seem to clearly indicate that when a counselor feels that their personal values may come in conflict with being a neutral-perspective counselor, then they need to identify that and refer the client to another professional.
So you conveniently ignore that part I posted where after consulting with her professors, she recommended that the best course of action for her to take was to refer the client to someone else? That's the whole point of schooling!!!! She learned that trying to change a homosexual would be the wrong course of action, so she said that she would then refer them to another counselor. That's how a person learns proper procedure.King Doctor wrote:(2) had stated that she would not refer those clients to another professional, but would instead proselatise at them, all of that copy/pasta scree you just posted seems somewhat irrelevant.Night Strike wrote:These seem to clearly indicate that when a counselor feels that their personal values may come in conflict with being a neutral-perspective counselor, then they need to identify that and refer the client to another professional.
... moaned the poster who has been conveniently ignoring four hypothetical scenario questions since page one.Night Strike wrote:So you conveniently ignore that part I posted where after consulting with her professors, she recommended that the best course of action for her to take was to refer the client to someone else? That's the whole point of schooling!!!!