OnlineEmployment Applicantions, and Delusional Applicants: LinkedIn to Disney!
12-08-2017
Response from: Miss. Bayo Elizabeth Cary, AA, BA, MLIS
Few symptoms are as
important to measure accurately
as delusions, which are
frequent target
symptoms for treatment
and often the basis for
diagnosing
severe psychiatric
illness. (Glazer, et., al., 1983, p. 466)
I think that in a search, for
employment, search engines, serve a limited purpose. One cannot tell, from
information shared online, is the applicant, is really qualified, or not.
People post resumes, and, there is no way to assure, that the applicant, is
qualified, without actually-speaking to the person. A conversation, is no
longer enough. In this day-and-time, an interrogation is required, deep
analysis questioning, to affirm, that a degree has actually-been earned, and
the information, was certainly learned, as reflected, by any certifications, or
diplomas.
I,
myself, have studied hard, at the university level, for over 20 years now-in
both: undergraduate, graduate, medical school, pre-legal, and PhD studies. US
police, stole all-of-my degrees, and all-of-my diplomas, my birth certificate,
and any other information, necessary to ID me-including, my: social security
card, and my passport. I have been illegally; “Blacklisted,” since: 2008-while
crazy immigrant terror, who have illegally transported to America, have been
hired, into, high level, high paying, US government jobs, and preferred work
positions-with my stolen information, and documents. Stealing a piece of paper,
in no way qualifies, anyone, for any employment, or work position-anywhere.
When a person, thinks that they qualify,
for any given employment position, and does not, and then lies, to fit the
standards required-that is called: “Delusional thinking.” “Historically, the
classification of delusions has been approached in several different ways.
DSM-III emphasizes the dominant theme of the delusions, i.e., persecutory,
grandiose” (Glazer, et., al., 1983, p. 466). Stealing someone else’s degrees,
and transcripts, and then pretending, like you help, on a homework assignment,
that you have never contributed to-is all lies, and part of: “Delusional
thinking:”
Dimensions of Delusional
Experience and Examples:
1) Conviction-the
degree to which the patient is convinced of the reality of the delusional
beliefs;
2) Extension-the
degree to which the delusional belief involves various areas of the patient’s
life;
3) Bizarreness-the
degree to which the delusional belief departs from culturally determined
consensual reality;
4) Disorganization-the
degree to which the delusional beliefs are internally consistent, logical, and
systematized;
5) Pressure-the
degree to which the patient is preoccupied and concerned with the expressed
delusional belief. (Glazer, et., al. 1983, p. 467)
Mental patients, who suffer from delusional thinking- with
strong-illogical: “convictions,” from impaired thinking, find it impossible, to
face a stark reality-such as: “You are not intelligent enough, to earn a
degree, so you stole someone else’s.” Another example: “You are not smart
enough, to be in a Master’s Degree program, you do not complete any of the
assignments, as required, and you refuse to drop out!”
References
Glazer, William, M., M.D., Kendler, Kenneth, S., M.D.,
& Morgenstern, Hal., PhD. (1983). Dimensions of Delusional Experience.
American Journal of Psychiatry. Vol. 140, Iss. 4. p. 466-469. Retrieved from https://ajp-psychiatryonline-org.library.capella.edu/doi/pdf/10.1176/ajp.140.4.466
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