Perhaps law enforcement officers who are suppose to be physically fit could get training similar to psychologists who work in "dangerous" environments in terms of four point restraint. Seems like there are better ways of dealing with behavioral problems than tasers. Before you know it, we'll have another Kent State.
On Sep 19, 2007, at 6:08 AM, Michael Sylvester wrote: > The University of Florida student who got tased probably got what he > deserved.Students should show some degree of civility in a public > discussion forum. > > Michael Sylvester,PhD > Daytona Beach,Florida > > > --- > To make changes to your subscription go to: > http://acsun.frostburg.edu/cgi-bin/lyris.pl? > enter=tips&text_mode=0〈=english > > ======================================================== Steven M. Specht, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Psychology Utica College Utica, NY 13502 (315) 792-3171 "Mice may be called large or small, and so may elephants, and it is quite understandable when someone says it was a large mouse that ran up the trunk of a small elephant" (S. S. Stevens, 1958) ---
