Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Conversion therapists: We can talk the gay away

josephnicolosi.com

Joseph Nicolosi of Encino, Calif. has been practicing sexual orientation change therapy for 25 years.

By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

They?ve been dismissed as quacks, homophobes and in denial, but therapists who counsel patients on shedding their gay feelings insist that their work is needed.

?If a person wants to be gay, and thinks he is gay, then that?s perfectly fine,? said Joseph Nicolosi, who founded a so-called "reparative" therapy practice in Encino, Calif. ?I want to be available for those who want to change.?

In recent months, Nicolosi and his colleagues have come under fire for their position that people can diminish gay feelings through therapy, a process referred to as "sexual orientation change effort"?by the American Psychological Association.


  • Last week, four men who underwent conversion therapy sued their New Jersey provider, saying they were shamed and falsely led to believe they could be ?cured? of being gay.?
  • In California, Governor Jerry Brown signed a law that bans the use of sexual orientation change effort on minors. The ban, supposed to take effect on Jan. 1, was put on hold by a judge Monday, but only for three California therapists who challenged the law.
  • Psychiatrist Robert Spitzer, a leader in psychiatry in the 20th century, apologized in May for publishing an article saying that conversion therapy was possible for motivated patients. Exodus International, a nonprofit for ex-gay Christians, came out weeks later saying they don?t recommend ?therapies that make changing sexual orientation a main focus.?

But Nicolosi, who has been in practice for 25 years and who coined the term "reparative," stands firm: ?We need to understand there?s a lot of mystery about human sexuality. You can?t say gay once, gay always.??

Conversion therapy draws on Sigmund Freud?s theory that all people are born bisexual and that some become gay because of their upbringing, which he wrote about in Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality. Many therapists offered some form of sexual orientation change therapy until around 1973, when homosexuality was removed from the psychiatric guide to mental disorders, according to the American Psychological Association.

In a 2009 resolution, the association stated that therapists who persist with such therapies appeared to be part of the broader ?conservative political movements that have supported the stigmatization of homosexuality on political or religious grounds.?

Psychology can acknowledge different viewpoints, the resolution says, but such therapies contradict rigorous studies. ?Belief in the hope of sexual orientation change followed by the failure of the treatment was identified as a significant cause of distress and negative self-image.? ??

Related: Four men sue New Jersey organization over ?gay conversion therapy?

David Pickup, a licensed therapist in Glendale, Calif. who trained with Nicolosi, went through sexual orientation change therapy in his early 30s. Pickup, 56, believes he was attracted to men because he was molested several times by a high school student when he was five. He describes himself as a ?typically religious, conservative guy."

Rich Pedroncelli / AP file

David Pickup, a "reparative" therapist in California, urged state lawmakers to reject a bill banning the controversial form of psychotherapy for minors.

?I had challenges with homosexual feelings but never identified being gay for me was innate or inborn,? he said. ?I never lived the gay lifestyle. I just had sexual experiences.?

Pickup is quick to differentiate himself from those who practice aversion therapy, which tries to eliminate a behavior or desire by associating it with pain. Those who were sued in New Jersey were accused of shaming patients and forcing them to strip off their clothes in group sessions.?

?I can say this: I don?t do oranges therapy, and I don?t do naked therapy,? Pickup said. (In the New Jersey lawsuit, one of the young men said oranges were used to represent testicles.) Rather, he said, his practice is focused on talk therapy and working through a client's issues.??

Pickup is not married. ?I?m still looking,? he said. His friends are straight, for the most part, he said, although he remains close to a gay man from his past. He said they are like brothers, even though they disagree on matters of sexuality.

Both Nicolosi and Pickup belong to NARTH -- National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality -- which includes about 350 therapists, according to its vice president, David Pruden. Unlike Nicolosi and Pickup, Pruden said most of those therapists have just a few gay clients within a larger practice.

?People get the idea that someone comes in and we say, ?How do you feel about that?? and then, ?We?re going to fix that,?? Pruden said. ?You really don?t. What you really do is treat them like any other client that is distressed about anything, and you work on distress.?

Through talk therapy, he said, some clients say their same-sex attractions are diminished.

Most of Nicolosi's clients are men from conservative, religious backgrounds, he said. About 40 percent are teens, and about half of them, sent by their parents, say they don?t want to change or are confused.

?We say, fine, you want to be gay, but are you curious in understanding why you?re gay?? Nicolosi said.

Nicolosi's theory is that men are attracted to other men because of how they were raised. He bases this notion on conversations he had early in his career with gay men.

?As I listened to these men, I started to hear common themes of their childhood,? Nicolosi said. ?Overinvolved, intrusive mother, distanced, detached or hostile father, so that the boy did not bond with the father. That became the foundation of the understanding. I looked into the literature. I saw that there was an entire tradition of psychoanalytic understanding.?

So why not accept that his patients might be gay?

Knowing the reason for their same-sex attraction is consoling to patients, Nicolosi said. ?They?re no longer weirdos or perverts or degenerates or whatever. Now they realize that their same-sex attraction is an attempt to repair a sense of not belonging to men.?

On his website, Nicolosi has transcribed some of these conversations. In many, the men describe wanting a ?normal life.?

One man, married 31 years, told Nicolosi:??I wanted what most everybody wants ? I wanted family, security. I wanted to grow old together with somebody that I was committed to. I wanted children, a house, a job, and a picket fence, all of those things ? the American dream. And I couldn?t have that with homosexuality.?

In some places, gay couples can enjoy much of what Opp desired: Same-sex marriage is legal in nine states, and same-sex couples can adopt children together in all U.S. states except Mississippi and Utah.?

?Gay marriage doesn?t cut it for this clientele,? Nicolosi said. ?They want a woman. They want a male-female relationship. They don?t want to be living with a guy in a marriage. That?s too radical for them.?

Some patients take years to feel less gay; others never do, he said.

?Some can walk away and say they have no homosexual attraction, period,? he said. ?That?s rather rare. A lot of them say, ?My homosexuality comes up rarely and not really strongly. It?s something that I can dismiss.??

NARTH?s Pruden said fewer patients are seeking to change their sexual orientation these days because society has become more accepting.

?Once people felt less shamed ? and I think that?s really positive ? there was less a feeling that they couldn?t talk about it,? Pruden said. But those who do want to minimize those feelings, Pruden said, ?deserve to have their needs met as well.?

?To say to them, we?re not willing to walk alongside you in your journey feels to me as cruel as the other extremes we used to be at, when people were hurt for saying, ?I?m gay, and I?m OK with that,?? Pruden said. ?In a sense it?s a pro-choice movement ? people should have the right to deal with this.?

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/05/15658164-therapists-defend-gay-conversion-counseling-you-cant-say-gay-once-gay-always?lite

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Customer Service is Still Important | Business blog for small ...

[Today's guest post is courtesy of Wayne Baumgartner of HeadsetsDirect.com.]

Customer service is one of the most important factors potential new customers consider. How's yours?

Customer service is one of the most important factors potential new customers consider. How?s yours?

Customer service is one of the most valuable and irreplaceable products that your small business can offer. In fact, it?s one of the leading reasons that customers become loyal and continue to do business with any particular brand or business. Equally, poor customer service is one of the leading reasons for customers changing suppliers/providers.

Customer service is an attitude that a company has towards its clientele. How you treat them reflects how valuable they are to your company?and? small businesses are in a great position to offer personal attention. And when it comes down to the bottom line, customers are the key to success.

However, customer service reps are faced with several challenges. Undoubtedly, having to deal with clients without getting to talk to them face to face is the biggest of these challenges. In fact, the majority of customer service is done over the phone. Therefore, exceptional phone skills are essential to any model of customer service.

As a small business, you are responsible for developing loyalty through an excellent customer service response to their business?something lacking in some of your big-business competitors.

It is crucial that whoever your customers speak to is representing your company in a way that makes your customers feel welcomed, understood, and appreciated. Here are four qualities you should look for in a customer service rep.

1.? Courteous at all times

Customers cannot see you; they can only respond to how you sound over the phone. Attitude is perhaps the non-verbal characteristic that the customer picks up on first in a conversation over the phone. How you respond, your eagerness to serve the customer (that?s the goal), can be heard through your choice of words and the manner in which they are spoken.

2.? Cordial to all clients and considerate to their predicaments

In general, most customer service calls are made by clients who have a problem, so they are probably fairly upset at the beginning of a call.

Always consider the caller?s situation. While adhering to textbook responses can get the problem solved, it can make the conversation seem less human?and your customers want to speak to a human, not a robot. Customer service is about interacting and relating to the client so that you can better serve their needs and gain their respect.

3.? Communicates with clear and concise language

Great customer service staff go beyond the script and treat callers with genuine courtesy.

Great customer service staff go beyond the script and treat callers with genuine courtesy.

Communication is crucial to your conversation. When you speak, refrain from utilizing technical jargon that can confuse or belittle the customer. The goal is to help them, not to exhibit knowledge or expertise. Speak to the customer in a way that they will comprehend.

While it?s important to speak to the customer on their level, you need to be informative. If they don?t understand, take the time to educate them. This will help them better understand your company and appreciate the uniqueness of your customer service abilities.

4.? Conducts follow-up calls

Making follow-up calls is potentially one of the most valuable tools you have available and are generally appreciated by the customer. While the issue may have been resolved, a simple phone call can make a client feel appreciated. They get to feel that they matter to the company.

Customer service is an essential part to any business because it is what the customer is truly seeking. Products and services can be replicated, but excellent customer service is the only thing that you can offer which makes your business unique in the industry.

About the Author:

Wayne Baumgartner is a small business owner who takes care of customers using old fashion customer service skills and specializes in one industry headsets! Find him at headsetsdirect.com.

Source: http://www.clickandinc.com/blog/customer-service-is-still-important/

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Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Video: Tomorrow in 30: Housing, Jobs & Retail

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50077372/

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Victoria Advocate | Chesnick Furniture Co. to host grand opening for ...

  • IF YOU GO

  • ??WHAT: Whirlpool Appliance Gallery grand opening

    ??WHERE: Chesnick Furniture Co., 116 W. Juan Linn St.

    ??WHEN: 5-9 p.m. Wednesday

    ??For more information, call 361-578-3546 or visit their website.

After a 15-year absence, appliances are back at Chesnick Furniture Co.

On Wednesday, the store plans to celebrate.

Chesnick will host an in-store grand opening event for its Whirlpool Appliance Gallery at 116 W. Juan Linn St., said Bobby Leon, the store's owner. The event, which spans from 5 to 9 p.m., includes giveaways, special markdowns and refreshments.

The public is invited to attend.

Although Chesnick sold appliances in the past, Leon said the company got out of the business due to competition from home improvement stores. That decision changed recently with help from Mega Group USA, a furniture buying group working to get appliances back in furniture stores.

Chesnick joined Mega Group six years ago and is the group's second store nationwide to open an appliance gallery, Leon said. The first gallery opened in Alabama.

He said he hoped to fill the void in the Crossroads for Whirlpool products and to add a bit more to downtown Victoria.

"We thought this would give us just a little more," he said, noting the gallery includes Amana, KitchenAid, Maytag and Whirlpool appliances. "More retail options. We're excited."

The center will offer trained salespeople and a Victoria service technician, Leon said.



Source: http://www.victoriaadvocate.com/news/2012/dec/03/am_chesnick_120412_195665/

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APNewsBreak: Gacy's blood may solve old murders

FILE - This 1978 file photo shows serial killer John Wayne Gacy. Three vials of Gacy's blood were recently discovered by Cook County Sheriff's detective Jason Moran. The sheriff?s office is creating DNA profiles from the blood of Gacy and other executed killers and putting them in a national DNA database of profiles created from blood, semen, or strands of hair found at crime scenes and on the bodies of victims. What they hope to find is evidence that links the long-dead killers to the coldest of cold cases and prompt authorities in other states to submit the DNA of their own executed inmates and maybe evidence from decades-old crime scenes to help them solve their own cases. (AP Photo)

FILE - This 1978 file photo shows serial killer John Wayne Gacy. Three vials of Gacy's blood were recently discovered by Cook County Sheriff's detective Jason Moran. The sheriff?s office is creating DNA profiles from the blood of Gacy and other executed killers and putting them in a national DNA database of profiles created from blood, semen, or strands of hair found at crime scenes and on the bodies of victims. What they hope to find is evidence that links the long-dead killers to the coldest of cold cases and prompt authorities in other states to submit the DNA of their own executed inmates and maybe evidence from decades-old crime scenes to help them solve their own cases. (AP Photo)

This photo taken Friday, Nov. 30, 2012, in Chicago shows three vials of mass murderer John Wayne Gacy's blood recently discovered by Cook County Sheriff's detective Jason Moran. The sheriff?s office is creating DNA profiles from the blood of Gacy and other executed killers and putting them in a national DNA database of profiles created from blood, semen, or strands of hair found at crime scenes and on the bodies of victims. What they hope to find is evidence that links the long-dead killers to the coldest of cold cases and prompt authorities in other states to submit the DNA of their own executed inmates and maybe evidence from decades-old crime scenes to help them solve their own cases. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this photo taken Friday, Nov. 30, 2012, in Chicago, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, left, and sheriff's detective Jason Moran are photographed with three recently discovered vials of mass murderer John Wayne Gacy's blood. The sheriff?s office is creating DNA profiles from the blood of Gacy and other executed killers and putting them in a national DNA database of profiles created from blood, semen, or strands of hair found at crime scenes and on the bodies of victims. What they hope to find is evidence that links the long-dead killers to the coldest of cold cases and prompt authorities in other states to submit the DNA of their own executed inmates and maybe evidence from decades-old crime scenes to help them solve their own cases. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

(AP) ? Detectives have long wondered what secrets serial killer John Wayne Gacy and other condemned murderers took to the grave when they were executed ? mostly whether they had other unknown victims.

Now, in a game of scientific catch-up, the Cook County Sheriff's Department is trying to be creative: They've created DNA profiles of Gacy and others and figured out they could get the executed men entered in a national database shared with other law enforcement agencies because the murderers were technically listed as homicide victims themselves when they were put to death by the state.

The department's hope is to find matches of DNA evidence from blood, semen or strands of hair, or skin under the fingernails of victims that link the long-dead killers to the coldest of cold cases. And they're hoping to prompt authorities in other states to submit the DNA of their own executed inmates or from decades-old crime scenes.

"You just know some of these guys did other murders" that were never solved, said Jason Moran, the sheriffs' detective leading the effort, noting that some of the executed killers ranged all over the country before the convictions that put them behind bars for the last time.

The Illinois testing, which began during the summer, is the latest chapter in a story that began when Sheriff Tom Dart exhumed the remains of unknown victims of Gacy to create DNA profiles that could be compared with the DNA of people whose loved ones went missing in the 1970s, when Gacy was killing young men.

That effort, which led to the identification of one Gacy victim, caused Dart to wonder if the technology could help answer a question that has been out there for decades: Did Gacy kill anyone besides those young men whose bodies were stashed under his house or tossed in a river?

"He traveled a lot," Moran said of Gacy. "Even though we don't have any information he committed crimes elsewhere, the sheriff asked if you could put it past such an evil person."

After unexpectedly finding three vials of Gacy's blood stored with other Gacy evidence, Moran learned the state would only accept the blood in the crime database if it came from a coroner or medical examiner.

Moran thought he was out of luck. But then Will County Coroner Patrick O'Neil surprised him with this revelation: In his office freezer were blood samples from Gacy and at least three other executed inmates. The reason they were there is because after the death penalty was reinstated in Illinois in the 1970s, executions were carried out in Will County ? all between 1990 and 1999, a year before then-Gov. George Ryan established a moratorium on the death penalty. So it was O'Neil's office that conducted the autopsies and collected the blood samples.

But there was bigger obstacle.

While the state does send to the FBI's Combined DNA Index System the profiles of homicide victims no matter when they were killed, it will only send the profiles of known felons if they were convicted since a new state law was enacted about a decade ago that allowed them to be included, Moran said.

That meant the profile of Gacy, who received a lethal injection in 1994, and the profiles of other executed inmates could not qualify for the database under the felon provision. They could, however, qualify as people who died by homicide.

"They're homicides because the state intended to take the inmate's life," O'Neil said.

Last year, authorities in Florida created a DNA profile from the blood of executed serial killer Ted Bundy in an attempt to link him to other murders. But officials there, where the law allows profiles of convicted felons be uploaded into the database as well as the phase-in of profiles of people arrested on felony charges, don't know of any law enforcement agency reaching back into history the way Cook County's sheriff's office is.

"We haven't had any initiative where we are going back to executed offenders and asking for their samples," said David Coffman, director of Florida Department of Law Enforcement's laboratory system. "I think it's an innovative approach."

O'Neil said he is still looking for blood samples of the rest of the 12 condemned inmates executed between 1977 when Illinois reinstated the death penalty and 2000 when then-Gov. George Ryan established a moratorium. So far, DNA profiles have been done on the blood of Gacy and two others; the profile of the fourth inmate has not yet been done.

Among the other executed inmates whose blood was submitted for testing was Lloyd Wayne Hampton, a drifter executed in 1998 for his crimes. Not only did Hampton's long list of crimes include crimes outside the state ? one conviction was for the torture of a woman in California ? but shortly before he was put to death, he claimed to have committed other murders but never provided details.

So far, no computer hits have linked Gacy or the others to any other crimes. But Moran and O'Neil suspect there are investigators who are holding DNA evidence that could help solve them.

That is exactly what happened during the investigation into the 1993 slayings of seven people at a suburban Chicago restaurant, during which an evidence technician collected a half-eaten chicken dinner even though there was no way to test it for DNA at the time.

When the technology did become available, the dinner was tested and it revealed the identity of one of two men ultimately convicted in the slayings.

Moran says he wants investigators in other states to know that Gacy's blood is now open for analysis in their unsolved murders. He hopes those jurisdictions will, in turn, submit DNA profiles of their own executed inmates.

"That is part of the DNA system that's not being tapped into," he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-12-03-Gacy's%20Blood/id-59d464be306842dd9119baa9860f4732

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Monday, December 3, 2012

Anti-climate change business groups demand Obama fixes climate change problems (Americablog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

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Option Trends: AK Steel And US Steel - Minyanville

Speculative investors have set their sights on commodity stocks AK Steel Holding Corporation (NYSE:AKS) and United States Steel Corporation (NYSE:X), according to volume data from the major options exchanges. Calls have emerged as the options of choice on AKS, while puts are dominating the action on X. Here's a closer look at the latest trends in the options pits for these two hot stocks.

Beginning with AKS, options traders on the International Securities Exchange (ISE) and Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) have bought to open 3,376 calls during the past five sessions, compared to only 100 puts. In other words, speculators have snapped up 33.76 times more calls than puts over the course of the last week.

From a slightly broader view, AKS sports a 10-day call/put volume ratio of 7.75 on the ISE, CBOE, and NASDAQ OMX PHLX (PHLX). This ratio registers in the 82nd percentile of its annual range, suggesting that speculative players have bought to open calls over puts at a faster clip only 18% of the time during the past year.

However, it's worth noting that 32.2% of the equity's float is sold short, which raises the possibility that traders have been buying calls to hedge their shorted shares, rather than to bet bullishly on AKS. On the charts, the stock has dropped 51.5% year-to-date, and it's currently staring up at familiar resistance from its 10-month moving average.

As for sector peer X, traders have taken a shine to the stock's put options. Over the past five days, speculators on the ISE have bought to open 12,271 puts, compared to only 2,451 calls. The resulting five-day put/call volume ratio of 5.01 highlights a distinct preference for bearishly oriented options. Likewise, X's 10-day ISE/CBOE/PHLX put/call volume ratio checks in at 1.57, in the 98th percentile of its annual range. This elevated rank reveals that traders have shown a greater preference for puts over calls just 2% of the time during the past year.

Similar to AKS, the shares of X have also attracted a substantial following among short sellers. Short interest accounts for 25.7% of the stock's float, or 4.2 times X's average daily trading volume. Technically speaking, though, X has held up somewhat better than AKS in 2012, down just 18.5% since the start of the year.

This article by Elizabeth Harrow was originally published on Schaeffer's Investment Research.

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No positions in stocks mentioned.

Source: http://www.minyanville.com/trading-and-investing/commodities/articles/Option-Trends-AK-Steel-and-US/12/3/2012/id/46315

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