theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
Should this be at least partially discoverable by looking at crime rates and recidivism rates and seeing if they're higher in Sweden?
Not really, no.
Should this be at least partially discoverable by looking at crime rates and recidivism rates and seeing if they're higher in Sweden?
I know I get wrapped up in minutiae sometimes, but I still marvel that the subject matter of a thread about a guy who took advantage of hundreds of girls and young women, and used his reputation to cover it up, turns to the question of how his sentence is calculated, and whether or not he will be raped in prison.
Oh, well. Different people are interested in different things I suppose. For my part, I'm more interested in what this says about how we trust doctors, "experts", and authority figures, what price we are willing to pay for fame and success, and what impact this might have on some very prominent programs.
I initially thought this too, but went in a different direction. The athletes were predominately very young, and we do tell children to trust authority to some extent. I'm sure a young woman is shocked at her first gynecological treatment. Young guys in the States, when getting a physical to participate in high school sports, have a doctor cup their testicles while they cough (I remember thinking the doc must have lost a bet with his buddies to get that gig).
...snip...

Really?![]()
The doc's checking for hernias.
Really?![]()
Really?![]()
Played school sports for 6 years in high school, had a physical every year. I've had physicals as well now that I am older.
Never once have I been told to turn my head and cough.
It's a stereotype of a physical, but I don't know how much it actually occurs in reality.
Played school sports for 6 years in high school, had a physical every year. I've had physicals as well now that I am older.
Never once have I been told to turn my head and cough.
It's a stereotype of a physical, but I don't know how much it actually occurs in reality.
Yep. As Belz... said, they claim to be checking for hernias. Done for decades here.
It's not just a claim. Coughing often causes hernias in that area to expand or move and the doc can detect that. It's pretty much the easiest way to spot them.
Played school sports for 6 years in high school, had a physical every year. I've had physicals as well now that I am older.
Never once have I been told to turn my head and cough.
It's a stereotype of a physical, but I don't know how much it actually occurs in reality.
I'm curious. Is there even one peer reviewed article that suggests that pain can be relieved by fingers being put in a girl's or woman's vagina? It's not something I had ever heard of before this case came up, and the fact that he also had child pornography in his possession certainly supports the notion that pain relief was not his only motivation, if it figured into his motivation at all.
I really don't by his claims, and even if there was any therapeutic value to what he was doing, the way he was doing it was very wrong, but I am curious as to whether there is any trace of medical justification, such that he may have somehow convinced himself that he was doing therapy rather than just molesting girls under the cover of medical treatment.
Maybe we need a different thread for a discussion of sentencing and prisons in general, since it has compltly derailed the topic this thread was started to discuss.
In NJ USA, 1980's, we had to do it every year. I'll ask my kids if the guys still have to do it now.
When I applied to join the Air Force, I had that happen in my entrance medical exam. My dad even pre-warned me it would happen. I was in the mob for 20 years, and we had an annual physical. That technique was used many but not every time.
Are you calling the Air Force "the mob?" That's interesting. How come?
Played school sports for 6 years in high school, had a physical every year. I've had physicals as well now that I am older.
Never once have I been told to turn my head and cough.
It's a stereotype of a physical, but I don't know how much it actually occurs in reality.
Common terminology, I just use it without thinking about it.
I think it comes from "mobilisation". When an airman, soldier or sailor leaves the service, he/she is often said to have "demobbed"
Have a look through this forum page and search the word "mob" and you'll see how its used
http://rnzaf.proboards.com/thread/17262?page=4