I do not care if you take me seriously, and I do not need to be credible. I am not running an unlicensed treatment centre, and I do not send children to unlicensed foster homes every night.
Firstly, there is no debate, and there is no confusion. AARC has no license, and Dean Vause is not a psychologist, nor a social worker. He got a mail-order PhD in 1994 from the Union Institute, the same school that gave Miller Newton his. The clinical staff at AARC are all former clients, with the exception of Vause's step-daughter, and Luciano, who apparently came from Kids. Prior to starting AARC, Vause's formal education in the realm of addictions medicine was none. His only discernible experience in this field is his time working at Kids in New Jersey. No confusion.
No one is trying to prove or disprove whether or not Vause is evil. He is an amateur posing as an expert in the field of youth addicition, and he has lied about being a psychologist in order to lend legitimacy to his program. No confusion there. One can still find Vause described as a pscyhologist in a Report Magazine article on AARC's own website. No confusion whatsoever.
AARC runs an unlicensed treatment centre, no confusion there. The host or recovery homes are not licensed foster homes, again, no confusion.
AARC does not reintigrate the clients back into their families. AARC integrates the famlies into AARC. This is why their are countless families with multiple children as clients, and some sibs who are part of AARC for years prior to becoming fullblown clients.
The parents then continue to fundraise for AARC, and some join the board.
The primary goal of a cult is not to break family and societal ties forever. The goal is to enlist as many followers as possible, and this includes whole families, in order to garner as much power for the leader as possible, be it in the form of money, sex or authority. That's AARC.
At this point you are being very disingenous, using the phrase "from what I understand" in regard to the seclusion. You have worked at AARC and were a client.
Family members attend meetings and do not interact directly with their children without other AARC clients and staff present on early stages. On Zero Club, AARC's punishment phase, there is no interaction with the family.
No one employed by AARC has any background to make any kind of determination as to the suitabilty of anybody's fitness, nor the fitness of their homes. The whole staff at AARC is made up of amateurs, Topilko being the exception, and she is complicit in having put a child through AARC.
AARC is not modelled on Kids. AARC is Kids. It opened as Kids of the Canadain West and changed it's name when Kids drew heat in New Jersey. Again, no confusion there.
Even though AARC had graduated less than twenty clients, was opened as Kids and was only a year old, Diane Mirosh undertook an effort to present AARC as a favorable solution to a problem. In order to do this, she used evidence provided by more products of the mail-order school that provided Vause and Miller Newton of Kids with their PhDs and asked for money and recognition for AARC, in the Alberta legislature. Why did M. Mirosh have such a keen interst in AARC, and why did these individuals from the Union Institute choose to contact M. Mirosh with their endorsements?
This is yet another example of a manipulation by AARC. Along with opening as a Charitable Society, but not a licensed treatment facility. Along with claiming that the Executive Director was a pschologist when he was not. Along with claiming that AARC was unique, when it was in fact the latest outpost of Kids.
Lie after manipulation after lie. Again, no confusion there.
Is it possible that the blame for the murders and suicides can be laid squarely on the shoulders of the substance abuse?
No. The blame can be laid squarely on the shoulders of people like you who perpetuate the lies about AARC.
And you are correct, there isn't much new since the inception of this forum. AARC didn't have a license then, it doesn't now. The staff were unqualified amateurs then, and they are now. Vause was not a psychologist nor social worker then, and he is not now. The host homes were unsafe and unregulated, and they are the same today.
The theory behind AARC's methods came from Charles Dederich, a total amateur like Vause, Newton, Art Barker of the Seed, and Mel Sembler of Straight, and that hasn't changed either.
Emotional ranting? That's what goes on in groups at AARC.
And guest, I have to tell you this. Country Clubs don't give you a delousing shower. They don't put you on Zero Club, where another member hands you your toilet paper and observes your bowel movements. Country Clubs let you leave when you want, and they don't keep you confined until you embrace their belief system. So AARC isn't really that much like a country club.
The recreation facilites are a very recent addition, part of AARC's desperate race to distort people's perceptions of it's true nature before it gets closed down.
Why don't you ask the Kids who played sockey on the cement floor if they thought it was a country club?