Talk:Alcoholics Anonymous/Archive 4
This is an archive of past discussions about Alcoholics Anonymous. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 | Archive 6 | → | Archive 10 |
Gap in history section
If anyone gets a chance to fill it, there is a 4-year gap between "A new program for recovery" and "The "Big Book" sections—about the break from the Oxford group and early recovery meetings. — DavidMack 16:47, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
I've attempted to plug the gap, rather hasty, but we can build on it. Mr Miles 21:52, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
Created New Archive and Reminder
I have create a third archive page per 3O recommendation. I have also added {{calm talk}} and {{Off topic warning}} templates to the beginning of the article. I believe it is important that we all follow WP:FORUM and WP:TALK guidelines on the talk page as distractions and heated discussion will prevent us from doing useful work on the article. Looking through the talk pages archives I see a lot of discussion not about the article, rather about pro- and anti-AA debate. This talk page is not the place for that. Lets do are best to keep things on topic. If there are disagreements among editors, they maybe more appropriately addressed in the editor's talk pages or through a request for comment and/or arbitration. — Craigtalbert 16:20, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
- Hi craig. Strange use of the archiveing facility (to remove comments one does not like....). I suggest we do it when debates are fully "thrashed out" and the page is getting full. Seems to be the norm, but I can't find any wiki guidance on this. 82.19.66.37 15:53, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Like I said archiving was recommended in response to the request for a third opinion. I generally agree with you that talk pages should be archived when discussion is "thrashed out." But we also need to keep with WP:TALK and not let discussion on the talk page devolve in to personal attacks against other editors, and to prevent it from being used like a forum, which I believe it was. Either way, I will stop removing comments I think are disruptive and will either refactor them or use them as evidence against editors that are generally off topic, disruptive, and uncivil. I would also advise editors who feel that they are being attacked, treated uncivilly, or provoked, not to feed the trolls. Those of you who edit anonymously should consider the benefits of having a username. Now, lets get back to making this a good encyclopedic article on Alcoholics Anonymous. — Craigtalbert 22:45, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
"Accusations of Cult Practice" section
User 82.19.66.37, thanks for the material. Do you think you could add some pros to your cons to create a Neutral point of view? — DavidMack 20:54, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
- Will look into it. Reliable sources are more difficult to find stating the opposite, but I will do google "AA not a cult" and see what I can come up with. 213.235.24.138 08:53, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
- ??? I don't understand your apparent sarcasm. Neutrality is a core policy. Both sides of an issue need to be represented. — DavidMack 04:18, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
No sarcasm intended at all. I genuinely meant that to sound genuine. I will state that I am somewhat limited in the research that I can do - restricted to the WWW really. Took me ages to get reliable info on AA being a cult (you should see the amount of people who say it is - loads - not many of them reliable. Trying to find anyone who says the opposite, especially when AA as an organisation won't answer the question, is more difficult. Actually, I know that Rick Ross is a well known cult expert who doesn't view AA as a cult. Will trawl his (massive) site when I have a bit of time.
As a side point, I did mean to put the cult bit in a criticism section, which would obviously put the emphasis on criticising AA. If we have to have complete neutrality in that section, then it may mean that we have to provide alternative POVs on other sections (such as the disease bit..) How do people feel about this? 213.235.24.138 08:39, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
- The section is entitled "Criticism and controversy", and every entry needs to have a neutral point of view, e.g. "AA has been criticized for this ..." (with reference), however "AA or other researchers say this ..." (with reference). — DavidMack 21:16, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
I looked at the archive for this discussion (I think it's useful to check occasionally in case we find ourselves reinventing the wheel), DavidMack wrote: "I removed the link to "Cult Busting by Schaler". It is an academically-framed piece of very poor quality. For example, the author visited an AA meeting and claims that the angry refusal of members to consider moderated drinking is evidence that AA is a cult." I read the Schaler article from the in the article and think the same - have removed that part of the 'cult' section. This section of the AA article needs to be very carefully written to avoid POV. It's not successful at the moment. Mr Miles 21:36, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
Interesting, David schaler PhD is a professor at The American University in DC, the recipiant of “The 1999 Thomas S. Szasz Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Cause of Civil Liberties” and author of several books. On what basis are you criticising the author? Presumably not on grounds of lack of qualifications?
That artcile was published in PsychNews, a prominent online resource, widely used by mental health professionals. Sorry if you don't like what it says, but it is a fairly respected resource. Until you can find some good quality PUBLSIHED criticism of the author and what he has said (and that would be on grounds of academic prominence, not disagreement with his opinions) then I think it should stay. Step13thirteen 15:46, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yeah, I did originally remove the link to that article. I do still believe it's poor quality, but if someone wants to include in the text with citations then so be it. We just need to balance out the "Cult" section with some pros and cons. — DavidMack 18:46, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
I do actually agree with that last point. I honestly can't find anything. The only place I could find a "recognised authority" on cults stating that he didn't believe AA was was on Rick Ross's forum, and that was him arguing with Orange et al. Not sure that qualifies as a proper "source"? 82.19.66.37 20:18, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- Ill be adding material within a month if no one else does. — DavidMack 21:50, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
I didn't mention Schaler's qualifications, just agreed that his writing was of low quality. I have rewritten the Schaler part adding in his actual conclusion from the link supplied rather than Agent Orange's interpretation that was copied from OP. Mr Miles 23:02, 21 August 2007 (UTC) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs).
I copied nothing from OP. I personally summarised the information from the Schaler article, which uses a number of secondary sources itself. Step13thirteen 14:44, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- re latest change, the conclusion does not make any sense without the rest of the article summarized within it. This information are some of the headings from the rest of the article, and are categorically not POV. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 82.19.66.37 (talk)
Schaler's states that his essay is a "commentary based principally on the his personal (rather than clinical) experiences". That's POV then, no? I've adjusted the paragraph to include these points and retained your parenthesis. This section needs attention as it is very POV. Mr Miles 22:06, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
I've made a stab at a balancing intro to this section. Based on Mitchell K's intelligent comment on AA as a religion. Mr Miles 22:40, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
Please site your sources. Step13thirteen 11:30, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Someone moved the citation needed tag away from Mitchell K's "intelligent analysis". They also moved the reference from the Arthur H Cain quote, and added in a Citation needed tag. This is pretty childish. don't know who did it, and cant be bothered to look. I think I will remove the Mitchell K stuff very soon, unless someone is planning some really good referencing of this material. 82.19.66.37 17:41, 10 September 2007 (UTC)
- Have removed this material, as someone removed the citation needed tag again. Honestly, if you look for it, I understand that there are definately recoginised experts with a lot to say about AA not being a cult. I think that Margaret Thaler Singer believed this (according to Orange, who pretty much adores her!). Please, if there are reference-able sources out there, go look for them. I have to, for everything that I try to put into this article, so I guess the door should swing both ways? 82.19.66.37 22:06, 12 September 2007 (UTC)
Schaler states that his essay is a "commentary based principally on the his personal (rather than clinical) experiences". Unless an editor can explain why this man's personal experience should be included in an encyclopedia, we should remove it. Mr Miles 19:56, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
The fact that his essay sites other sources and is published on an established online journal about psychology? Seriously, I don't mind Mitchell Ks stuff being there, just would like a source sited. I think it should perhaps come below the other text, as well? Step13thirteen
Dr. George Valliant
Someone has edited the section I added on Dr. George Valliant. They have added a lot superfluous information and they have deleted the most important which was the study's success rate. As such I have changed back the section to what it was originally. Considering it is the only known study of AA's success rate conducted by AA I think it should stay as I have put it. The section is now under the heading of "AA's success rate" as it originally was. I would ask kindly that it not be changed. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 69.158.106.114 (talk • contribs).
- User 69.158.106.114, I have removed your recent changes. I'm not sure which material you originally added on Vaillant, but this article may have evolved a bit since then. Your cited source was not the book itself, but a selective interpretation of the material from an unreliable source. Especially in a controversial topic like this one, please add material only from reliable sources — academic papers, etc. Thanks. — DavidMack 04:14, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
Hi there 69.158.106.114. If you want a "reliable source" (wiki definition) which may provide some balance to the Valliant contribution, look at http://www.peele.net/lib/vaillant.html which is a review by Dr Stanton Peele of the book. Dr Peele is a well known critic of AA and one of the foremost experts on addiction treatment in the world. 213.235.24.138 08:29, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
The study done by Dr George Valliant has been documented by many sources and is readily available by AA Intergroup in New York. I was the person who first added the section on Dr George Valliant. I have also seen the study with my own eyes. As such I am returning the section as I originally posted it. As another user here has stated Dr. Peele has also documented this study and is another reliable source. With three sources I would ask you not to change it. The specific numbers are found in A.A.'s Triennial Surveys, New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services,
- Right now the article contains the original material on Vaillant (the first paragraph, which begins with "Dr. George Valliant is a board member...") and the material that has been added over the last few months. The first paragraph has some gaps. It says "He compiled 40 years of clinical studies..." but does not say what those studies concluded and does not give a reference to a reliable source. The paragraph also states "95% of alcoholics who reach AA fail to stay sober", also without a reference to Vaillant's book or to a reliable source. Orange Papers is not a reliable source — it's a personal website. To improve this article, we need references to sources, otherwise the material can't be left there. It's not enough to say you've seen the study with your own eyes, you have to read the material — all of it, not just the pages that Agent Orange gets upset about, and preferably the more recent edition. Then you can say where your material comes from. If there is relevant and reliable Peele material, then put in a sentence about what Peele says, with a reference. For better or for worse, Wikipedia does not care how many people have written personal blogs about AA, it only cares what is written in reliable sources. — DavidMack 21:12, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
David I have referenced the exact AA material that states the 95% failure rate. AA's own material should qualify as a credible source. I have also attempted to balance the article a little more. Valliant makes conclusions that are totally at odds with his own research. I think it is important to state this. John --74.100.143.100 18:27, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- There is still a citation needed. The AA material is not the same as Vaillant's study. Also, Agent Orange says that 95% of people coming to AA are gone within a year. That means that if someone goes to an AA meeting and decides not to continue, or decides they don't need AA, Agent Orange claims a "failure". Can you see how Orange might be a wee bit biased, and maybe not the best source of material? Imagine saying "95% of people going to gyms are gone within a year, therefore exercise is not healthy." — DavidMack 19:01, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- (some off topic - revert if you must...) I like that gym analogy. I genuinely think you should write to orange with that specific question. So many AA's write to him with pure abuse, barely attempting to read, let alone analyse, what he has said. Would be interested to hear his response to that. However, having read the Orange analysis (and, admitedly, not the original...), it seems that Valliant does indeed state that AA had "completely failed to alter the natural history of alcoholism". I do think this warrants inclusion in the article. Unfortunately, I have never read the study, which (by wiki guidelines) prohibits me from quoting from a secondary source (unless that source is "reliable"...). But if anyone can dig out the original.... 82.19.66.37 21:27, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for putting in the references. I will read the material you referenced, if I can find it. Out of curiosity, did you read the material, or did you rely on Agent Orange's interpretations? — DavidMack 18:37, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
The AA material I referenced is a commentary on Valliant's study, it specifically stated Valliant's figure of 5% success rate. I have read the material I referenced. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 69.158.115.215 (talk • contribs).
- After a bit of hunting, I finally found a copy of the document "Comments on A.A.'s Triennial Surveys" (1990) at The Arid Site (PDF here, 2 MB). There is no mention of Vaillant in it, so please remove the reference. Did you make a mistake, or were you being dishonest? — DavidMack 22:15, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
My understanding is that Vaillant conducted the 1989 survey and the compilations of the other surveys that the pamphlet refers to (see figure C-1), despite the fact there is no mention of his name. Vaillant is an AA board member. Perhaps a call to Vaillant or AA General Service Office in New York would clarify things. I will make the call when I return from vacation. I will leave the reference for now until I can confirm it. I resent the question about lying. Thank you for the link to the pamphlet. Andy--74.100.143.100 21:31, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
- OK. sorry. — DavidMack 22:14, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
- In the meantime, I have removed the fictitious reference, since Vaillant's work on his test population are completely separate from AA internal surveys. I am doing some more close reading of Vaillant and hope to make some improvements to this section eventually. — DavidMack 14:34, 31 July 2007 (UTC)
News flash on Vaillant
People may like to know that Vaillant's 400+ page book Natural History of Alcoholism Revisited, actually has a summary chapter at the end that references the key graphs and data. So you can understand the book without having to slave over it for a month and without having to take Agent Orange's word for it! I'll be adding and clarifying Vaillant material as time goes on. — DavidMack 17:02, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
That's great, it will be valuable to the NPOV of the article to have an independent overview of Vaillant's research/conclusions, rather that AOrange's selects. Why, for example, does Vaillant state effacacy of 5% yet still supports AA strongly? Also what was the nature of the study group that returned the 95% relapse rate - were they just AA attendees or were they addicts who progressed through and completed all 12 steps of the AA program? Mr Miles 16:11, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Vaillant was reporting the disappointing results from his clinic in The Natural History of Alcoholism: 95% of his tracked patients relapsed at least once during the 8 years after treatment. By reporting this result he was using very stringent criteria by reporting improved drinkers as failures; i.e. he was being both honest and tough on himself. Research studies usually pay attention to how many drinkers improve, but the point of this closing chapter was to face the hard fact that clinical treament for alcoholism helps, but doesn't cure. The study was of his "multi-modal" clinic -- hospital, detox, AA follow-up, and more -- so the results were not really applicable to AA alone. He cites other studies that suggest that this failure rate is typical of clinical treatment for alcoholism. (See also the statement in Newsweek: "A year after completing a rehab program, about a third of alcoholics are sober, an additional 40 percent are substantially improved but still drink heavily on occasion, and a quarter have completely relapsed." -- and this was after only one year.) In other words, there still is no "cure". This leads to a discussion of what can we do to help? There is a ton of discussion and many tables in the book on AA and what it did and didn't do for people, it's just that AOrange et al. like to focus on the negative results. Anyway, I believe most anti-Vaillant entries are from people who have not read the material, and I'm continuing my reading. — DavidMack 15:08, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
Seems to me that a study that shows that alcoholics anonymous, an abstinance based programm, "works" would not consider people who were not abstaining to be successes. Very "honest" of Vailliant... Haven't read it, and have no intention of doing so, but will add some of the peele comments on it, when I get the time. 82.19.66.37 20:43, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, I think if you read the book you'd likely agree that Vaillant's analysis is objective, transparent, and fair. How come you'd rather trust Peele than read the actual book? — DavidMack 00:31, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
Well, not that I would rather trust peele than the book, but more that I can't be bothered to hunt it down and then read it. My own statisical analysis abilities are somewhat limited, and my understanding is that some of it is extremely heavy on the stats. Secondly, I have read enough about it to have a reasonable understanding of the conclusions (here, OP and Peeles, surprisingly neutral, critique). I guess it just comes down to time and energy. And I don't doubt the honesty of the study, I just don't think that is something that should be overly commended. If you're doing an academic study, you really should go in with open eyes. If it prooves your hypothesis wrong, then so be it. If it prooves it half wrong, then that is what you should report. I guess I was being a tad sarcastic. 82.19.66.37 19:51, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
"Well, not that I would rather trust peele than the book, but more that I can't be bothered to hunt it down and then read it". Well, no problem then as Davidmack has taken the time and trouble to obtain the book and read it. We can add his none-partisan overview of the Vaillant research and remove the biased content from OP/Peele. Mr Miles 21:13, 20 August 2007 (UTC) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs).
== Is AA considered a Religion == A friend made a comment that he felt AA is a religion of some kind. Any comments
- AA has been defined as a religion by the US supreme court. This is
alluded to in the coercive section of the "controversy" part of the article. Personally, I think it should be a section of its own. What does anyone else think? Should be easy to reference from both sides... Step13thirteen 08:51, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, we should get the religion/non-religion issue in. It was
attempted in the past, but degenerated into an edit war. However this article is getting more balanced as time passes. I can get to it within a month, unless anyone else can do it sooner. — DavidMack 14:38, 30 July 2007 (UTC) The courts have stated that AA is religious in nature and not in and of iteself a religion. People should also be specific as to whether or not they are talking about AA the Fellowship, AA the Program of Recovery (as outlined in the AA "Big Book,") or AA the business entity and incorporated boards and publishing company. There are different "AA's" out there and should not be viewed as one entity or practice. As to the so-called cult question - Many AA members do exhibit cult-like behaviors and attitudes but reviewing the literature, Traditions and other practices, the Fellowship and practice of the way of life as outlined in AA's "Big Book" does not meet the cult criteria. Putting all of AA's various practices, literature, members and other distinctly different aspects can be dangerous and misleading (unless that is the intended agenda). There are cultural, geographical, ethnic, social and a myriad of other differences which can be found in AA members and practices globally and AA itself cannot be characterized as a single entity or practice. Again, depending upon one's agenda that is very misleading. (PS - I too like the gym analogy).... Mitchell K.
- Assuming that all of the various elements of the AA "movement" cited above include the mandate to surrender oneself to a supreme being and deny that one has any control over one's own addiction (and arguably, by extension, one's own life), yeah, a cultic analogy is a fair one. 209.77.79.7 18:24, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
DavidMack, excellent article on Vaillant, I appreciate your hard work. Mr Miles 09:08, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
Will you have time to rewrite the Vaillant section with corrected citation on this article? Thanks. --Mr Miles 23:34, 5 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
New Thought and the Emmanuel Movement
Are there any objections to the information added to this article? Links to sources have been included.24.168.224.213 18:22, 1 August 2007 (UTC).
- Fine material, but I believe it is irrelevant to AA and should be removed. — DavidMack 19:56, 1 August 2007 (UTC)
I have no problem with removing that specific bit (perhaps the author might like to make a specific page about that organisation?), but I do think an overall picture of temperance movements should be included in the history section is to include a "pre-AA understanding of alcoholism" section. Know nothing about them, myself, except that they existed. Step13thirteen 12:00, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
- So that there should be no objections,the material that was recently deleted now includes sources which directly link the Emmanuel Movement with the development of AA.24.31.114.168 18:10, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- The material found at the website God, Drugs, and Hope states: "It is important to note three of the highly influential lay therapists for alcoholics in the United States, Courtenay Baylor, Richard Peabody and Samuel Crocker were all products of the Emmanuel Movement. All three individuals were involved in or influenced the development of Alcoholics Anonymous in the early 20thcentury and the innovative accompanying 12-steps program." Including this information provides a clear and more accurate account of the development of the AA program and the influence of spiritual based counseling in the United States.24.31.114.168 11:30, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- This material is, at best, peripheral to Alcoholics Anonymous. no direct correlation is established between the advent of AA and New Thought's influence. The source seems a bit weak. The information is in none of AA's extensive history books, as far as I am aware. Seriously, it's not that I don't like the work, it is just that it doesn't belong here. There are several other temperamence groups that could be mentioned here, with roots going to the mid-1800's. I would have no problem with New Thought and the emmanuel movement being mentioned with the others, and if a more direct link could be established between the two then this would be good information to put in (with more emphasis on said influence, rather than an emphasis on background of New Thought.
- I hope those are helpful suggestions? Step13thirteen
- In the opening paragraph regarding "Pre-AA understanding of alcoholism", mention is made of Richard Peabody, who along with Elwood Worcester, Courtenay Baylor, and Samuel Crocker were involved in the Emmanuel Movement. The link to Peabody and AA is established in the following statement: "A little known book, however, by Richard Peabody titled "The Common Sense of Drinking" first proffered the alcoholic could "train his mind" so that he would no longer want to drink. (It was this book where the phrase "halfway measures are of no avail" originally appeared, and Bill Wilson borrowed from it heavily in composing Alcoholics Anonymous.)" To disregard the roots of the Emmanuel Movement seems to be indicative of suppression. Perhaps you should investigate why this information causes you so much distress.24.31.114.168 15:39, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Because this is an article about AA, not the Emmanuel movement. — DavidMack 22:06, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- This may be worth investigating:
- Dubiel, R. M. (2004) The Road to Fellowship: The Role of the Emmanuel Movement and the Jacoby Club in the Development of Alcoholics Anonymous. New York: iUniverse. 191 pp.
- Sample pages at http://www.iuniverse.com/bookstore/book_detail.asp?isbn=059530740X
- -- Hipgnostic 03:28, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
- I'm completely in favour of including all the fringe influences (for example, Moral Re-Armament and the Emmanuel Movement). For amateur historians, these provide excellent links ("rabbit holes") to other sources. There's no space limit in Wikipedia, and we're free to indulge ourselves with endless threads on a topic. That's the big bonus of Wikipedia over other search tools - it goes on and on (as long as contributors don't intentionally cut it short). Hoserjoe 05:02, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
"The length of a given Wikipedia entry tends to grow as people add information to it. This cannot go on forever: very long entries would cause problems. So we must move information out of entries periodically. This information should not be removed from Wikipedia: that would defeat the purpose of the contributions. So we must create new entries to hold the excised information." From Wikipedia:Summary style
I am totally in favour of having a fairly detailed (1 paragraph?) section on the Oxford Group, as countless AA texts and other sources make clear the evolution from one to the other. The Emmanuel Movement is not a so well documented link. I would not be that bothered if it were not mentioned at all, but would go with the flow on a brief allusion, as featured in the article right now. 82.19.66.37 12:00, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- Moral Re-Armament, The Emmanuel Movement, and the First Century Christian Fellowship are all described and credited in "Pass It On" by Bill W. Although they may be lesser influences, they're still part of AA's history. Leaving them out diminishes the Christian roots of AA (which will be applauded by the atheists :-) Hoserjoe 07:14, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
Peele and Project Match
As Peele is a well known authority who has written much about many of the various facets of AA, I don't see any reason why we should restrict his opinions to just the disease section. If an important expert has doubts about the scientific validity of a study such as MATCH, surely this is worth mentioning? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Step13thirteen (talk • contribs).
- It would be good to make a factual statement about what Peele actually said about MATCH, instead of saying what an important guy he is and how political MATCH was etc. — DavidMack 15:15, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
"The study has been criticised by renowned addiction expert and vocal AA critic Dr Stanton Peele as unscientific and politically motivated. Dr Peele stated that the outcomes of the study were at odds with abstinence based programs, as Project MATCH defined a "successful outcome" as a reduction (as opposed to cesation) of alcohol use." Thats what he said. Thats what was in the article. Someone removed it. Wasn't sure why. Thought they might like to discuss it here. Step13thirteen 16:02, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- My comments and questions would be:
- Remove the word "renowned". An expert is an expert. Stay neutral.
- MATCH's objective was to compare different treatments, so how is their definition of improvement relevant to this article?
- Peele commented that there was no control group, and hence no basis for stating that "treatment works." This sounds valid, so that's likely why the article does not say that MATCH proved that AA works.
- Rather than stating Peele's accusations of political motives, maybe just stick to the actual scientific issues that Peele brought up. That might be more relevant, and neutral.
- Perhaps there are comments by Peele on MATCH that are more relevant to the AA article.
- — DavidMack 01:54, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Agree with the "renouned" thing - will remove that shortly
- Not sure what your second point was about. If it was related to the abstinance thing, then surely this is relevant? Match is included in this article to show the success rate of AA (whether that be that it shows that AA works or that it doesn't...). If it actually shows the successes as something different to the AA definition of a "success" (as mentioned earlier in the article with "AA teaches that an alcoholic, in order to recover, should abstain completely from alcohol on a daily basis") then this should be highlighted in regards to the validity of the study as a proper measure of AA success?
- I don't know about the political motives thing. I actually really like that, but admit that this may be personal bias. I can't see any specific reason why not, as it is a sourced statement, but would be "ok" with it being removed. I'll leave that one to others...
- I'd be more than happy for you to find comments by peele on Match that you think are more relevant. I simply looked at the article where he discussed it and added in some of his criticisms. 82.19.66.37 19:44, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
The inclusion of Peele was already discussed and consensus decided that he should be given one mention (in the section on Disease Theory). Why include more of his opinion? Are we going to give Stanton Peele's opinion on every aspect of Alcoholics Anonymous? Mr Miles 21:15, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- Peele is one of the most prominent academics discussing AA. His work covers many aspects of AA, so it is useful to give his opinion in order to achieve NPOV. Consensus is where everybody agrees. We clearly do not have "consensus" about this. 82.19.66.37 13:21, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- NB, info on wiki concensus from the relevant policy page "A small group of editors can reach a consensual decision, but when the article gains wider attention, others may then disagree. The original group should not block further change on grounds that they already have made a decision. No one person, and no (limited) group of people, can unilaterally declare that community consensus has changed, or that it is fixed and determined." 82.19.66.37 15:06, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
Consensus means general agreement often through compromise, not total agreement. The discussion around Peele was between those that wanted lots of links to his website (you) and those that didn't want him mentioned at all (me), we compromised around the general feeling of the other editors that for balance he should be mentioned only once as he is a maverick whos views do not generally represent those of the academic community. Looking at the quote from Wiki; "A small group of editors can reach a consensual decision, but when the article gains wider attention, others may then disagree. The original group should not block further change on grounds that they already have made a decision." This article hasn't gained "wider attention", and you were in the original group debating the inclusion of Peele. What has actually happened is the original group have visited the page less frequently of late and you have reneged on the spirit of the original decision and taken every opportunity to add links Stanton Peele because it fits your none-neutral POV. On who's authority is Stanton Peele regarded as "one of the most prominent academics discussing AA"? Mr Miles 20:59, 20 August 2007 (UTC) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs).
More from wiki consensus policy: "Consensus is not immutable. It is reasonable, and sometimes necessary, for the community to change its mind. A small group making a decision does so on behalf of the community as a whole, at a point in time. If the community disagrees, the decision was badly founded, or views change, then the updated consensus replaces the old one."
The discussion was around wanting a link to his website in the external links section. I never formally agreed, simply was threatened with banning if I continued an edit war, despite the fact that I was "in the right" re wiki policy on external links. This is very far from even your (rather skewed) understanding of consensus (trust me as someone who has worked a lot in groups that use consensus based decision making). I was "shut up" because none of you would agree to any "anti-AA" link, and because I couldn't be bothered to continue with a distracting edit war. Well done, you won that one - very true to the principles of wiki.
This is a completely new issue. Somebody suggested that we incorporate material from Peeles site into the article. Clearly you don't like this material. It certainly gives people a greater understanding of some of the problems with Project MATCH. This IS NPOV - giving both sides of the story. Please don't claim to be perfectly in the middle on this issue. It insults my intelligence.
"Dr. Peele's work has influenced my professional work and changed my personal life for the better." —Anne M. Fletcher, MS, RD, LD. Author, Sober for Good
http://www2.potsdam.edu/hansondj/Controversies/1053972711.html on peele 'Stanton Peele is a leading figure in the field of alcoholism and addiction. He is the author of, among other works, "Love and Addiction," "The Meaning of Addiction," "Diseasing of America," and "The Truth About Addiction and Recovery." Dr. Peele has received the Mark Keller Award from the Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies and the Drug Policy Foundation.'
Also look at this review page on stantons site, which has reviews of his book "diseasing of america", about 12 step issues from other prominent academics http://www.peele.net/bookstore/diseasing.html
I'm sure I could find more with 5 minutes research. Step13thirteen 15:23, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
As we previously discussed - "For balance he should be mentioned only once as he is a maverick who's views do not generally represent those of the academic community". Listing a few names and quotes from Peele's own website don't alter the fact that Peele's opinion is minority - and he is also conflict of interest (he promotes his own recovery programme).
Showing both sides of the story is useful for NPOV, which is why the inclusion of Dr. Mark Willenbring's counter viewpoint balances that section and makes unnecessary the Peele entry anyway (read it again). I've removed the quote another time, hope you don't feel the need to get into another edit war (with me this time).
I certainly don't want to insult your intelligence, you're clearly a bright guy, it's a shame you don't seem to be approaching this opportunity to learn more about Alcoholics Anonymous with as open a mind as you could. Try avoiding OP for a while, remember, Agent Orange is a sixty year old man who only got sober aged fifty-five, he only went to a few AA meetings yet seems to hold very strong views and to be very bitter for no logical reason (that he gives). I've learned a lot over the last few months of visiting this site, and shifted my opinion on several points relating to AA, but I'm not in the middle nor claim to be - I don't know enough to be in the middle. Mr Miles 22:36, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- I don't agree with the idea that his views don't generally represent the views of the academic community. Peeles analysis of Project MATCH was, for example, agreed with by Science Now magazine. I'm not sure there are many people who state that peele is incorrect on much. Won't bother with any more links, given your attitude. Would be grateful if you could show me some that state Peele is a maveric who is at odds with the rest of the academic community.
- The disease theory is not the pre-eminenet addiction theory in the whole world. In England, where I am from, it is limited specifically to AA and Rehabs. Methadone clincs and other advocates of harm reduction treatments never use the disease theory. WHO don't use it. DSM doesn't use it. Peele is outspoken on the "recovery industry" (which I intend to discuss in a future section on this article), but that is due to the amount of people with a financial interest in keeping 12 step treatment prominent in the US. Peele is a useful resource on many issues to do with AA, and I shall continue to site him.
- I have read the article. Dr MWs opinion is a strict analysis of the results of project match. It makes no comments on the efficacy or validity of the study as a whole.
- As for AA, I was a member for 2 years, attending meetings every day for a large proportion of that. Have read much on the history. Oranges analysis (which I first read 2 years ago) fits in directly with my own experiences of the organisation. Indeed, I had to leave the day after I read it. Orange seems to have attended a "whole lot" of those meetings, as stated in the below link. He also seems to have read A LOT. He seems to have a variety of pretty good reasons to want to expose AA as a harmful cult. The fact that I agree with some of what he says does not mean that all I have written comes from his page. Influenced, yes. Acting as a mouth piece for him, no. I have read a fair bit of other stuff, including much of the more-revealed site, much of peele, the old AA-deprogramming site. Lots of stuff in my research for this site.
http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-intro.html
Step13thirteen 15:24, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for writing your experience of AA. I'm curious to know why you went from attending meetings every day for a large proportion of 2 years. That frequency is quiet a commitment for which I presume you must have felt you were receiving something in return, particularly as there is no obligation to attend in any set way (except a suggestion at some meetings that a first timer goes once-a-day for 90 days). And curious to know why you felt the need to "leave", quiet a dramatic word in this context, when there is no expectation on you to attend in any particular pattern. Personally, I know people who only go every few months or so. Was your AA experience in a small community? I've only ever been to meetings in large cities, mainly London and Amsterdam (NL), so perhaps my experience is very different. Mr Miles 21:53, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- I was attending daily meetings. I always struggled with "the steps" and some of the more spiritual/religious aspects of the program. I was aware of the fact that some people considered it a cult, as I had started reading "Cult or Cure" three months before, and had to put it down as it seemed so spot on and threatened my world-view (ie, AA, NA and the 12 steps are the best thing ever, etc) at the time. One night I mentioned to a friend who I had introduced to NA about the cult thing, and she expressed doubt. I said that I would look it up on the net and show her at the next meeting that we attended. I came across the orange papers that night and, quite simply, found myself having a moment of clarity. Every inconsistency he highlighted, every snidey tactic for brainwashing the newcomer, every smear against detractors, I had personally witnessed. All the negative stuff about AA/NA that I had pushed to the back of my mind and not really thought about was now in the forefront with clarity. How could I go back?
- Yes, I did get something out of AA. I got companionship, support, a "safe place to be" in those lonely early days. I also saw countless people attend and fail. The "it works if you work it" lie was exposed. The fact that it doesn't work (evidenced by the randomised controlled studies into the organisation, as well as my own experience) was the final nail in the coffin.
- I live in a large town in berkshire, 40 miles from london. We have daily (sometimes twice daily) AA meetings. There were 4 NA meetings a week also. I attended meetings in London semi-regularly. It was always roughly the same. There were some people who attended infrequently, generally old-timers. The regular attendees were always at the same meetings week in week out, spouting the same stuff about how "nobody can retire from AA" and "you complete your program when you die" and "no one graduates".
- Looking on the net, it seems that many people experience roughly the same things in meetings. Go to any AA forum and you will here the same stuff that I heard in meetings.
- By the way, I am considering my response to the deleted stanton peele material on Match. I really don't want a further edit war, but I do think we need to reach consensus (which we have not done). How do you suggest we do this? I guess it will take compromise from both sides. Step13thirteen 15:31, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
Step13thirteen, thanks for your objective and cool-headed response. You inspired me to do some reading of Peele over my lunch hour. Here are my rough notes on Peele's MATCH article, which I found a tough read. According to Stanton Peele: Item 1. invalid to select treatment based on type of alcoholic: need the alcoholics to select their own. Item 2. it's not the diagnosis and type of treatment that matters, it's the person, their environment, and how they interact with the therapists (Item 3.) that matters. The sample was not representative:
- eliminated dual users of alc & drugs
- subjects were volunteers, not coerced -- unlike forced treatment programs
- people with residential instability, legal or probation problems were filtered out – hence sample was of stable and motivated people
Item 4. Their conclusion "the good news is that treatment works" is invalid because there was no untreated control group for comparison. Item 5. The results indicate that the Twelve Step model, . . . the most widely practiced . . . in the US, is beneficial." Also not a valid statement because there was no untreated control group. In fact other studies show that 12-step is not effective. Item 6. The 12-step therapists were highly trained and monitored, whereas regular 12-step therapists tend to be directive to the point of abuse. Item 7. Brief interventions are more effective and were not studied in MATCH, except that the MET therapy was often shortened when patients left early. Item 8. studies show that most alcoholics recover on their own without elaborate treatment. Item 9. Studies show that most recovered alcoholics can return to controlled drinking. NIAA and others recommend abstention. However effectiveness in the study was measured by reduction in the frequency and intensity of drinking, which is a contradiction. Item 10. This contradiction could be resolved if the subjects were inadvertently rated alcoholic when they were not or in remission when they were not. Or, maybe the DSM criteria for alcohol abuse is too stringent and rules out some abusers. Likely many abusers are ruled out because US researchers are biased and don't want to classify social drinkers as recovered.
On this basis I tried to represent concisely the main criticisms by Peele that were relevant to the AA article. What do you think? — DavidMack 19:25, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
I am more than happy with the amendments. Good edits, and fair summary of peeles points. nice one! Step13thirteen 12:42, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for your response to my questions Step13thirteen.
Who made the Decision that Peele is a maverick! Peeles views hold wieght, he has won awards, his works have been cited.
I remember watching a documentary on another so called "maverick" a doctorin Austrialia who determined that stomach ulcers were caused by a bacteria and were treatable with the use of anti biotics. Many in the U.S. refused this viewpoint. It took a number of years before it was accepted by the Medical Community. Now what was Maverick is standard treatment. One of the major problems was the industry that was selling off the shelf stomach ulcer treatment and the multitude of products. http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/2005/1474064.htm
It appears to me that there is a strong pro AA contingent on this board who will do what it must to perserve a certain viewpoint and nex anyone who suggests otherwise. User: Fred September 11, 2007 12:30
AA - cult or cure, continued
For the record here is mine. A few years ago, it became obvious my drinking was out of control, most of my adult life was spent drinking too much and I got progressively worse until I was regularly taking time off from work to binge drink 24hrs-a-day. A friend suggested I try AA and I went along to one meeting. I got the usual warm reception and heard for the first time that Alcoholism was an illness not a 'moral failure' (what I actually heard was someone saying they weren't a "bad person who needed to get better, but rather a sick person who needed to get well), that helped my low self esteem. However, I didn't stick around and drank in the same way and worse for another eighteen months, trying psychotherapy during that time, which didn't work although I managed to not drink for three weeks which was a record for me at that time. After a particularly bad binge, I decided to try AA again and this time went every day for the first few months, got a sponsor and did what he (and others) suggested. Basically, to pray in the morning (to whatever), make a gratitude list, telephone someone else from AA once a day and go to meetings regularly and help out there (washing up/making tea etc). I did those things and stayed sober, I worked through the 12-steps, which took some time but was not really difficult and I've not drunk for three and half years, naturally I attribute that to AA.
During those three and half years, I lived in Amsterdam for over a year and attended meetings there which were English speaking and pretty much the same as London. From this experience I have an interesting observation for you. AA in Amsterdam is small, around eighty people (not counting the many tourists who pass through). The locals I got to know well, then returned to London. I went back to work in Amsterdam for a few weeks last year, after being away for a year and during those weeks caught up with everyone from before. They were all still sober. Not one had drunk during my year-long absence (they said, and I believe them, they all seemed so well), around eighty people with sobriety dates of over a year to twenty odd years.
AA in London is harder to track as there are so many meeting and people move around. I go to around two meetings a week now and see many of the same people at my 'home' group in the West End one night. Many of those people have sobriety longer than mine and many with less. Some of the ones with less I have seen change over the months/years they've come to meetings and have witnessed their recovery which manifests itself consistently as hugely increased confidence and self-assurance. People have said the same of me. I've never heard: "nobody can retire from AA" and "you complete your program when you die" and "no one graduates" in any meeting here. I did once hear someone say "this (meaning AA) is the only show in town", but of course that's not true. Nobody has ever told me what to do in an AA meeting or tried control - I would run a mile if they did, as would most people I imagine. I have heard "AA is a bridge to normal living", from the literature I think, which I always take as encouragement not to hang around in AA meetings all the time, but to get on with life.
A few months back someone asked me to take them through the steps, which I agreed to. Guess that makes me one of the 'brainwashers', although I don't feel like one. I am actually just describing to this guy what I did during my sobriety and I answer to phone to him when he wants to talk, that's it. I've no interest in whether he does what I did, nor do I feel responsible for his sobriety - although I hope, of course, that he doesn't drink as his drinking was brutal.
That is my experience of AA, very different from yours and I don't understand why. My friend who suggested I go hasn't been to a meeting in nine years but hasn't had a drink in ten years (he does some kind of therapy to stay sober). He's an atheist and didn't like AA's use of the word God, but said "I'm glad AA is there, just in case".
What were the snidey tactics for brainwashing the newcomer and smears against detractors that you personally heard? Mr Miles 19:18, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
- (Thanks for sharing, Mr Miles.—DavidMack 18:10, 29 August 2007 (UTC))
I will respond to this properly later, but here are a list of "musts" from this "suggested" program of recovery, in response to the idea that AA does not try to control people (all from the main section of the big book). Ever hear an oldtimer quote stuff like this from the big book? You can surely see how these might be interpreted as something more like requirements than advice....
- We are not cured of alcoholism. What we have is a daily reprieve contingent on the maintenance of our spiritual condition. Every day is a day when we must carry the vision of God's will into all of our daily activities.
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Into Action, page 85.
- I must turn in all things to the Father of Light who presides over us all.
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Chapter 1, Bill's Story, page 14.
- But after a while we had to face the fact that we must find a spiritual basis of life or else.
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Chapter 4, We Agnostics, page 44.
- Above everything, we alcoholics must be rid of this selfishness. We must, or it kills us!
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, How It Works, Chapter 5, page 62.
- Whatever our ideal turns out to be, we must be willing to grow toward it. We must be willing to make amends where we have done harm, provided that we do not bring about still more harm in so doing.
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Chapter 5, How It Works, page 69.
- We must be entirely honest with somebody if we expect to live long or happily in this world. Rightly and naturally, we think well before we choose the person or persons with whom to take this intimate and confidential step. Those of us belonging to a religious denomination which requires confession must, and of course, will want to go to the properly appointed authority whose duty it is to receive it.
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Chapter 6, Into Action, pages 73-74.
- To some extent we have become God-conscious. We have begun to develop this vital sixth sense. But we must go further and that means more action. Step Eleven suggests prayer and meditation. ...
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Chapter 6, Into Action, page 85.
- To be vital, faith must be accompanied by self sacrifice and unselfish, constructive action.
- The Big Book, 3rd edition, William G. Wilson, Chapter 7, Working With Others, page 93.
—Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.235.24.138 (talk) 09:41, August 29, 2007 (UTC)
- The word 'must' may indicate manipulation, or not. "You must erase all negative thoughts about our leader." (manipulative) "If your boat sinks at sea you must find something to float on." (emphasis) Personal experiences should always be respected, however Wikipedia is a summary of reliable sources. — DavidMack 17:18, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
No, indeed. TBH, I was thinking that we were so far off of the topic of the article that such things would not really need to be stated. I am well aware that my own personal experience of AA would not really be relevant to the article, but I do think that it would help the regular editors of this article to reach concensus in the future if we were able to discuss, understand and respect each others opinions on AA. So, Mr Miles, thanks for sharing from me, also.
I shall try not to use this talk page to score points against AA (as I was trying to earlier with the list of "musts", if I am honest with myself). For the moment, I will just put it down to differing subjective experiences and hope we can get along....(!) 82.19.66.37 20:08, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
DavidMack, you make a good point about interpretation of 'must', one which Agent Orange hasn't considered in his list repeated above. It's true Wikipedia is a summary of reliable sources, but which reliable sources to include is a decision made by editors with opinions formed by personal experience. Ideally, a spectrum of opinion would be represented editorially. Personally, I find it a little depressing that so much Orange Papers' dogma is regurgitated on this Wiki without critical engagement of the material by the people adding it, is that cult behavior too?! Still, on a positive note, the article is getting better and I think the controversy section idea works well.
I was happy to write my experience. I agree 82.19.66.37 that it would be helpful (and interesting) to understand each others opinions of AA, so what were the snidey tactics for brainwashing the newcomer and smears against detractors that you personally heard? Mr Miles 10:25, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
No, I understand that the AA musts are suggestions, but I believe the expression is "it is suggested in the same way that it is suggested that you weara parachute when you jump out of a plane". This is, of course, not a suggestion, it's a manipulation due to the fact that it comepletely fails to take into account the huge amount of poeple who can and do get sober without the AA program.
I accept that the anti-AA brigade can be just as dogmatic in their opinions as the pro. But I find it a little depressing that much of this page reads like an AA-approved peace of lit, so I guess we're all going to have to compromise?
OK, manipulations, double-standards etc that I saw in the program, which were brought into focus by AO et al: "Shifting objectives: First the goal is to quit drinking, and then the goal is to "acquire faith" and "come to believe" in Bill Wilson's religion" I attend meetings and am told that I need to do the program to get clean (not true, but fair enough, if that's what you believe). Then people start talking about how AA is the only way to achieve spirituality, and about how it is a solution to all of the worlds problems.
"First, Bill Wilson declared that Alcoholics Anonymous was only one of many ways to achieve sobriety, then he declared that it was The Only Way." Seriously, the amount of people who talk about dry drunks (anyone not doing AA) or about how if you don't do the steps you WILL relapse. But this doesn't come straight away. See the "suggested v list of musts" thing above. At the very least, you can understand how this is a very mixed message?
"First, they will tell you that you can "Take what you want, and leave the rest." Then they will tell you that you can't ever leave." Saw this - specifically, someone saying that a person who had died had "completed his program"
"First, they will tell you that you can "Take what you want, and leave the rest." Then they will tell you that you must follow the formula exactly, or else it won't work." EG, when someone relapses after working the steps, it being suggested that they never fully "got" step one. Seen that.
"First, they will tell you to see a doctor, and say that "we know only a little", but then it's "We know more than doctors", "We are the experts on addictions", and "Don't take medications." " Certainly seen aspects of this, especially in NA, where I was informed upon mentioning that I was taking anti-depressants that the other person would not consider himself clean if he was on them (interestingly, this person was actually a doctor, but one who was letting the 12 steps cloud his judgement on medical issues)
There are plenty more examples of things from Orange Papers that I realised I had witnessed after reading that website. But it is saturday and I don't want to take up too much time. 82.19.66.37 11:27, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
A must is a must, it is not a suggestion.
A section looking at the mixed messages and contradictions that exist within the AA program would be valuable section to this article.
Also under the Big Book , A section on the big book, the financials beginnings, and who stayed and who left would be valuable knowlegde.
Also , I suggest A section that outlines the differences between Christianity and the AA doctrine.
When reviewing the list of musts it becomes very clear, the only way one can recover in AA is by Establishing a relationship with the supernatural. In this case "the Father of Light".
Hence , I can now understand the Court Decisions that have ruled AA a religion.
User Fred 1:00 , September 11, 2007 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.232.97.13 (talk) 19:52, 11 September 2007 (UTC)
AA influence on US addiction treatment
Could be a new section. Think it would add to the article. With 95% of US rehabs being 12 step based, this could hardly be underestimated. Being me, I would like some sort of neutrality in the section, if anyone else decides to do it. If and when I get the time, I may do it myself. What do people think? 82.19.66.37 19:55, 14 August 2007 (UTC) (AKA: step13thirteen)
Personally, I think that's a good idea. I would suggest:
- Make clear the distinction between the US and the rest of the world
- emphasis on alcohol rehab
- Include reasons why the decision was made to base rehab on 12 steps (or did it just happen Lassez-faire manner)
- Keep the section small, the article is about AA, not addiction treatment generally
Mr Miles 11:34, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
AA in popular culture
I'm sure some of you have noticed WP:TRIVIA and the templates that keep getting dumped on some pages. Do you think it would be good to ditch the popular culture section completely? 82.19.66.37 20:00, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
Did it myself. 82.19.66.37 13:32, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- A "popular culture" section can be interesting if it is written as a commentary that focuses on key examples. E.g. see Alcoholism: Stereotypes. — DavidMack 00:35, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
What is this doing under the heading about moderation vs. abstinance?
As Nancy Shute wrote in U.S. News & World Report, "When AA works, it works extraordinarily well: The testimonies of lives saved by AA are legion. But it's not for everyone."[65]
This is irrelevent to the topic. 66.120.181.218 20:10, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
Occasions of abuse at meetings
Is abuse worse in AA than anywhere?
Qualitative Research of occasions of abuse at meetings: http://www.morerevealed.com/library/rfhorror/rfhorror.jsp A reference is required for statements that are likely to be contested, hence the citation needed tag. 82.19.66.37 11:09, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Sorry, I don't understand. Are you saying that the statement that "No research has been undertaken to determine if Alcoholics Anonymous carries more or less risk of abuse" is likely to be contested? If so, please explain why. Mr Miles 12:02, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
I'm saying that I contest it, as there has been research and suggestion that AA does carry a high risk of abuse. 82.19.66.37 12:10, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Then remove my line and put the research in! Obviously with a citation to a reliable source. Mr Miles 12:14, 1 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
Will do, when I can get the time to summarise Ms. Fransways book. In the meantime, do you accept that it is contested? 82.19.66.37 12:26, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Is Fransway's book reliable?
No. Fransway's book is published by Sharp Press and is not a reliable source. See discussion [http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/Talk:Alcoholics_Anonymous/Archive_2#Regarding_bias_in_Removing_the_Link__Ken_Ragges__online_library_which_allows_direct_access_to_read_the_books%7C archive]. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles ([[User talk:Mr Miles|talk]] • contribs) 12:35, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Ok, the arguments against See Sharp from the archived discussion
- Wiki insists that all sources should be published by reputable (and
preferable academic) houses. Sharp Press, who have only published a few books in small numbers and of deliberately radical content, I believe fall foul of this guideline. What Wiki actually says about verifiable sources is that they should be "peer-reviewed journals and books published in university presses; university-level textbooks; magazines, journals, and books published by respected publishing houses; and mainstream newspapers." Now, as far as I know, See Sharp would come under the heading of "respected publishing house". If you can find any source which questions their reputation for editorial oversight or fact checking, then we can re-visit this question.
- Additionally, on their website (www.seesharppress.com), the publisher
describes itself thus: 'Sharp Press is a "cause-driven" small press. Our mission is to make available radical books and pamphlets that would otherwise not be published, especially in the areas of anarchism and atheism.' Wiki defines unreliable sources as: 'Claims not supported or claims that are contradicted by the prevailing view in the relevant academic community. Be particularly careful when proponents say there is a conspiracy to silence them.' Sharp's mission of publishing material that 'would otherwise not be published' clearly contradicts the prevailing view of the academic community, and therefore contravenes Wiki's policy. Many of the sources referenced in the article (such as the Dick B ones or the Hazledon ones, and certainly all of the AA ones) would be described as "cause driven", and on these grounds, a lot of it would need to be removed/resourced (all of the contentious, non-factual bits). Because a publishing house makes available POV's that would not be published because of commercial reasons, as opposed to not being published because they make outrageous claims, this does not mean to suggest that there is a supposed "conspiracy to silence them". In terms of them contradicting the prevailing view of the academic community (and there is no one prevailing view...) Stanton Peele has written for them, and writes intros to many of their books. As a person directly involved in the anarchist movement within the UK, I take exception to the idea that just because a view is not the only one, or has a small (that is not to say insignificant) minority supporting its perspective, that this view is automatically considered unimportant and not worthy of recording. Certainly, Wiki does not state this. It talks of giving proportional representation to POV matters, when there are two contradicting views on the subject. The large amount of support the anti AA camp gets (as well as the fact that it is already included in the article) would go to show that it is certainly a view that is worth recording.
- Also note that Wikipedia says to be "careful" of a source that says there must be a conspiracy to silence them. They do NOT say this constitutes a criterion for rejection immediately. Publishing radical material is no reason to be excluded: Right or wrong, the organization may publish and feature well-written works that deserves to be taken carefully. ArekExcelsior 19:03, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Finally, on neutrality, Wiki states: 'Please be clear that the
Wikipedia neutrality policy certainly does not state, or imply, that we must "give equal validity" to minority views.' As discussed above, the anti-AA camp is not so marginalised that it should not be discussed. It simply must receive proportional coverage in the article to the amount of "coverage" it gets in the real world. 82.19.66.37 15:56, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
- I agree with a lot of the previous users' commentary (unsurprising, I
guess, given my own anarchist convictions). I would say that AA can be quite valuable for many people. My concern is that the existing article's section on abuse is clearly a pro-AA hatchet job. The argument, for example, that any few alcoholics can call themselves an AA chapter is irrelevant, just as much as the fact that an individual conservative organization in some small town might be anti-industry doesn't disprove that the Republican party is pro-industry. Some argue that AA does abuse some of its members and marginalize people who leave, and a rulebook can't be used to that claim, true or false. ArekExcelsior 06:42, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Dick B's reference is to a non-controversial statement (a tiny bit of history), but yes, that should be removed too. References to AA's own literature/website is to support a description of it's position/aims, I doubt you find that description controversial (in it's accuracy). Fransway's book is not research, for example there is no counter to the claim that she selected the interviewee's to match her POV, or that their testimony is true rather than invented/exaggerated (for example, Police reports to support a rape claim). There are thousands of non-academic books written by individuals helped by AA, shall we add material from them also?!
- I actually don't know how she selected interviews, but this is probably a fair criticism. However, it doesn't deny that those stories are true, police reports notwithstanding. Indeed, as the AA response on the Wiki points out, one should EXPECT to see a lot of people who allege abuse or have a bone to pick with any organization as large as AA. 209.77.79.7 18:21, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Of course I respect your right to hold Anarchist views but this is a mainstream encyclopedia, material from Fransway's book wouldn't get anywhere near a conventional encyclopedia. As you well know. Perhaps it would help if you stated your aims for how you would like this Wiki to develop. If your wish is to make a political statement against Alcoholics Anonymous then you may as well be open about that. Mr Miles 10:32, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Except that Fransway isn't the only source for allegations of abuse. Most of the allegations of cultishness, for example, also imply the potential abuse. And the piece Penn and Teller did on the movement alone is enough to note that criticism is mainstream and noteworthy. 209.77.79.7 18:21, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Additionally, Fransway's book is not published by Sharp Press or anyone. Mr Miles 10:41, 3 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • [[Special:Contributions/Mr Miles|contribs]])
Quite frankly, I am not actually looking to make a political statement. I make no attempt to hide the fact that I am in the "anti-AA" camp, but am simply trying to rebalance the POV of this article, which I have said before reads like an advert for AA (controversies section aside). Wiki is in the top 10 hits on any respectable search engine results for "alcoholics anonymous" and people come here looking for an unbiased opinion. Surely it is the "duty" of any wiki editor to try and present the facts as clearly as possible? well, I guess we just "perceive" the facts differntly. Personally, I would like someone who is completely neutral to come in and help clean up this article... Fransways book certainly does qualify as qualitative research, which tends to be focused and designed to examine a specific group to support a thesis. Given the nature of her study (anonymous, which would be used in any study, qualitative of quantitive), the is no surprise that none of the information can be crosschecked. How can we be sure Valliant did not make up his study? This is not a valid argument. Rebecca Fransway is a publsihed poet, who has written a book with fore-words by noted addiction experts. I think this rises her work above your average Hazledon piece. Add what you want from anybody. We can discuss those when we come to them. Note from this link that Fransways work was published by SeeSharpPress and appears on More Revealed with their permission. http://www.morerevealed.com/library/rfhorror/rfhorror.jsp Step13thirteen —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.235.24.138 ([[User talk:213.235.24.138|talk]]) 12:15, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
The current edit of this section is not pro-AA - A pro-AA article wouldn't mention abuse! It currently describes two articles of alleged abuse from the national press of two countries, correctly cited. What has Jonestown, a site of mass murder-and-suicide, to do with AA?! That is exactly the kind of hysterical and inaccurate comparison an encyclopedia should avoid.
Fransway's book WAS published by Sharp Press an anarchist publisher of a few books, but is now out of print - is it possible to get any more fringe than that? Circular affirmation on Orangepapers/morerevealed/peele.net does not add any authority to her writing, nor does her poet status - that just proves she's good at making things up!
One should certainly expect to see a lot of people who allege abuse or have a bone to pick with any organization as large as AA. If AA is any more abusive than any other organization of it's size, then there should be authoritative and reliable sources which can be cited here.
Sorry ArekExcelsior I don't know which individual accounts you're referring to (the discussion pages don't count as encyclopedic, if that's what you mean), there are no individual accounts in the article. Mr Miles 09:36, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
- A pro-AA article would attempt to underplay the well known and documented amount of abuse that happens within the organisation. I'll look up some of the stuff on Straight, Incorporated and other similar organisations later, anyway. Brings home just how close to a real live cult some 12 step organisations can be. Comparisons with Jonestown etc should not be completely discounted in light of information like that.
- Actually, affirmation on peele.net does add authority to her work. Peele (as I keep having to point out) is a published, respected acamdemic and vocal opponent of 12step treatment. You haven't given me any grounds to discount anything he says, and I would take his word of reccomendation about the book above your refusal to acknowledge it as a serious work.
- Once again, is there something wrong with a publisher specialising in Anarchist theory and practice? Would you discount their books in the anarchy section? Why? They are specialists in that area... Also, again, See Sharp have publsihed work by Peele, which sort of seals their accreditation in the area of "opposition to alcoholics anonymous".
- Strange, I don't see anyone picking bones with, for example, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. They've been around for 100s of years, with a similar mission in helping their target organisation to AA. No one accuses them of trying to cover up disgusting abuses of power against the millions of animals that they help each year. Similar with most other charitable organisations. Why AA? 213.235.24.138 12:00, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
A quick 30 second Google threw up a whole host of links about RSPCA abuse. Yet none of that stuff appears on the Wiki article about the RSPCA - it must be a cult cover-up.
You asked why books like Fransway's are written if abuse is not endemic in AA? In his book The Natural History of Alcoholism Revisited Vaillant asserts that "Alcoholics are expert forgetters," have inaccurate memories, and give persuasive denials. For example, Agent Orange claims over-and-over that AA doesn't work, yet he himself got sober through AA. Denial takes many forms.
Mr Miles 18:27, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
LOL at the RSPCA conspiracy - perhaps there should be a controversy article on the wiki article, but referring to the perverting the course of justice? But I don't see any allegations of abuse against animals, minus the humane culling of the over-populated kangaroo and certainly none about the rape, torture, brainwashing etc of any animals (even the evil kangaroo!). C'mon, you can do better than that!
Valliants claims that alcoholics are "experts in forggetting and have inaccurate memories" sounds like a combination of incorrect, outdated belief on the longterm effects of alcoholism (the short and long term memory actually improves quite quickly after a period of abstinance - you will remember things that happen in meetings, given that you would be sober by this time...) and standard "alky hating" that has been proffered in AA from the big book onwards about the manipulative nature of people with "the disease of alcoholism". If this was the case, anyway, there would be even more books about Alcoholics anonymous and plenty more court cases, newspaper articles etc.
Interesting that you would attribute someone's, who was forced to attend AA against his own will, sobriety to AA, especially as he never worked the program and constantly questioned it. You are correct that denial takes many forms. Actually, Orange raises the point that he would be counted as an AA success at some-point, and then systematically describes why this is inaccurate.213.235.24.138 11:43, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
- Note that the memory improves after a period of abstinence. Anyway, I don't think AO's personal history is relevant here.
- There are two decent references to news articles on abuse in AA that seem to make the point. For those who want Fransway to be included, why? And if you need more material on abuse, couldn't you find a more reliable, academic source? — DavidMack 17:57, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
I didn't bring up AO's history. As for Fransways book, if I could find a better source, I would. But there isn't one. And I initially brought it up as a counter to the idea that there has been no research done on AA abuse, as I consider it to be just that. No, it's not the most "academic" of sources, but I don't see anything in wiki guidelines that says it's a "no-no", nor could I find anything (anywhere) to say that it isn't reliable. I just don't see many other charities with books like this written and published about them, hence the significance. Anyway, am gonna try to work on the straight inc thing first. This topic is "to be continued". 82.19.66.37 23:15, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
This needs to be in the article. A program, working the steps of AA, (which no doubt included AA meetings) with that much abuse BELONGS in this article, as well as the Straight article. I should probably mention Synanon (the precursor to straight, started by an AA member and based on AA) and all the straight off-shoots as well. In fact, when I get the time to research properly, I will. 213.235.24.138 11:43, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
- I don't believe this is relevant to an article on AA. It's like criticizing Britain for US policy because the US originally 'came from' Britain. — DavidMack 17:57, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
Interesting though. I searched the site www.thestraights.com (linked from the site set up to help victims of alleged abuse by Straight) for info about AA, not a mention. However, the site is critical about Straight's assistant director, Dr Miller Newton, who wrote one of their manuals. It claims one of his influences to be the book Love and Addiction, published in 1975, by Stanton Peele. Guess that means that Stanton Peele is responsible for the alleged abuse. Mr Miles 22:43, 5 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
I would be happy for you to stick that in the stanton peele article (in fact SURELY that article needs a controversy section?). But yes, I have also looked throught the straights and found nothing. Took me a while to find something with a reference (that wasn't Agent Orange). But my understanding is that it was very much based on the 12 steps. Tell you what, I will try to do some proper research (going to the library and everything!) and see what I come up with. If I get any other sources that confirm it, it goes in? If you want to remove it if I can't find any after that (I assume you already have, but havent actually checked the main article yet) then fine. If I can, then it stays. Fair?
I really don't think that any rehab program based on the 12 steps that commits attrocities like this should be excluded, and that is the truth. A similar comparison: it's like saying that Taliban-controlled Afghanistan could be a valid criticism of Muslim theology - it could!82.19.66.37 23:09, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
If you can correctly cite reliable sources that state AA sanctioned the actions of Straight during the alleged abuse, that is certainly of interest to this article. Mr Miles 23:44, 5 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
For the record, I don't actually believe Peele was responsible for Straight's alleged abuse. That was a (probably) inappropriate joke. --Mr Miles 23:46, 5 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
Don't worry, I get the jokes. Personally, I think that sort of comment breaksdown tension, especially in a controversial subject like this.
I don't see that AA have to sanction the abuse (did AA sanction Midtowns activities?). I do think it is worth including on the facts that are in the article already. I also don't think the abuse was alleged (in that it did happen). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.19.66.37 (talk) 06:54, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
- I read some web material on Straight Inc. and can't see any relevance to AA. Straight Inc. apparently used forced incarceration, for months at a time for some individuals. It is a fascinating and horrifying story, but belongs maybe under cults or abuse or fascist groups or something. With all due respect, I am removing that material (or would if it hadn't already been removed). — DavidMack 19:37, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
Allegations of pro-Christian bias
I've moved the New York Court of Appeals 1999 ruling and United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruling to this section because although they are the result of court mandate, they actually relate more to this section - kind of. It's very messy and needs citation, particularly the Bill W quote, is that made up? I've heard that some AA meetings in the US end with a recital of the Lords Prayer, probably worth mentioning. Personally, I think the title of this section doesn't sound encyclopedic. Mr Miles 12:02, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
I don't particularly like this section. I think that it overstates this alleged christian bias. It is clear that AA has some sort of Christian founding, but I prefer the OP view that it has evolved beyond this and is now not in keeping with any widely practiced form of christianity (as evidenced by the Oxford group being "cast out" of the catholic church). Personally, I think that "AA as a religion" should be it's own section ("Spiritual or Religious"?). I would prefer the Court of Appeals thing to be kept in the other section(as it has nothing to do with Christianity, but is a direct result of coercive AA recruitment), but will leave it as per your changes for the moment. Would appreciate another viewpoint. 82.19.66.37 12:24, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- As a non-christian having sat through meetings and attended one meeting of Alateen (my mother self-identifies as an alcoholic), I can assure you, it's very christian. The idea of surrender to God in all things, of passivly waiting for God to take over your life, is very much Abrahamic; My religion dictates that I work myself to solve problems, with support from my gods, but Christianity and (even more so) Islam dictate that you "surrender" to God in all things because (and this is why I left those religions) the human being is flawed, diseased, perverted, what have you, and therefore anything we do ourselves is sinful, therefore we must become helpless little babies begging some grand creator for salvation. That's the ENTIRE concept behind AA, as well. However, it's probably more like an Abrahamic Cult; can we find a source that's done this comparison or must I get a paper published myself?
- As a side-note, I shouldn't and won't edit this article, because clearly I'm incredibly biased against AA, mostly because I can't stand to watch my mother enslaved to some doctrine; three meetings a week when she's working fulltime means that much less time to spend with us (practically none when you consider the "only an hour" meetings usually have at least an hour and a half of chatting after), plus she found it difficult to quit smoking because everyone would stand around after a meeting to smoke (how healthy, moving from an unhealthy addiction to a socially sanctioned one). Kuronue | Talk 14:03, 27 September 2007 (UTC)
- I think Griffith writes on the underlying protestantism. I'll put that in when I get a chance. I think most religions lead you to abandon, or surrender, your ego, which is in line with AA. Sorry to hear about your mother; maybe it's a comfort that her meetings keep her from the drink? Unfortunately it's very common to leave one dependency and take up another (see Vaillant). I believe the number of non-smoking AA groups is increasing, slowly. — DavidMack 15:16, 27 September 2007 (UTC)
Court-mandated AA attendance
I think that the NY Court of Appeals bit should go back to the court-mandated AA attendence section, because it fits there much better than where it is now. That paragraph has everything to do with forced attendance and nothing to do with Christianity. I agree with 82.19.66.37 that, at least as far as what is published, AA does not adhere to any typeical Christian denomination, but I am the last person to write a section about that--any theologists out there? And yes, interestingly, many AA meetings end with The Lord's Prayer. Sorry, that bit above was me Desoto10 03:16, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
Okay that's fine by me. This Court Mandate bit is not particularly very controversial really is it?! The bit about breaking tradition 3 should also be removed if all court mandates are sent to 'open meetings' - the tradition 3 rule doesn't apply to 'open meetings' Mr Miles 10:06, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Well, court mandated AA is actually really controversial. Stanton Peele has written exstensively on coerced AA treatment and how to fight it. As someone who works in drug treatment in the UK (which is currently going very much in the direction of coercion, but not towards 12 steps), I can assure you that there are some very real ethical issues before you even factor in the "spiritual/religious" aspect. These are "external controversies". There are also people who would say that it certainly does fly in the face of trad 3, could affect AA as a whole (and thus extends beyond individual meeting autonomy), tries to carry a message to people who may not be or don't admit to being alcoholic, lends the AA name to outside organisations, is certainly not based on the idea of "attraction rather than promotion" and does not lend itself to anonymity. Certainly these were the arguments I put forward when we had a group conscience about it in my home-group 2 years ago. 213.235.24.138 15:57, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
I meant the court mandated section of this article is not very controversial. However, with regard to ethics, it is worth bearing in mind that court mandated individuals are often criminals, to whom AA is offered as a soft alternative to prison. Mr Miles 08:21, 4 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/524628.stm
"And any large scale expansion of mandatory drug testing of suspects, no matter what the circumstances, would not only be wrong but highly unworkable."
While head of the civil rights campaign group Liberty John Wadham said, "any proposals for a blanket approach to drug testing must be resisted at all costs.
"Empowering the police to forcibly test anyone they've arrested for any offence to find out whether they've taken drugs would raise some serious questions about what kind of society we want to create."
http://www.drinkanddrugs.net/features/march2706/notes_from_the_alliance.pdf
"In his 1972 book Folk Devils and Moral Panics, Stanley Cohen talked of how the emergence of highly visible, deviant groups can result in a campaign of media stereotyping and political manoeuvring that establishes these individuals as a threat to society and allows our moral guardians the space to spout solutions to curb this rising problem. Sadly, this is usually achieved via the systematic demonisation, dehumanisation and even destruction of individuals, their circumstances and needs, choosing instead to lump everyone into a homogenous body of evil. In short, it’s 2006 and drug users are the new asylum seekers. I started to dwell on this when I first read about Tough Choices (Englands coercive drug testing and treatment program), and the very real possibility that users could be arrested for spurious reasons and sentenced to a community drug programme, despite no other charges subsequently being brought against them."
http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-gulags.html
(the quotes from others at the top raise some more of the ethical issues)
You see, it is kind of someones right to worry about their own problems. Using prison as a leaverage to get people into treatment can, some people argue, simply serve to further criminalise activities and lifestyles. I'm undecided on the issue, but their are definately some who hate coerced treatment. And just because someone is a criminal, does not mean their human rights go out of the window (as demonstrated by the AA cases)213.235.24.138 14:26, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
Cases listed under "Court mandated AA attendance"
The information on the case Grandberg v. Ashland County is unverifiable. I have access to two legal databases, and could not only not find the case in the Seventh Circuit, but could not find it in any published federal or state court nationwide. A search for the quote provided similarly yielded no results. Can someone please provide the correct citation for this, or in the alternative simply delete the reference and "quote"? Islavin2001 14:39, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
Fine with me. Can only find it on blogs, wiki, RR etc. There seem to be lots of other cases we can add having just done 20 mins of googling looking for AA related cases. 82.19.66.37 18:47, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
This section needs writing properly, at the moment it's just a list of cases and makes no coherent point. I'm still not sure what the controversies are either.
1. Forced attendance of meetings is a contradition of Trad 3? (need to check this, if 'open' meetings fall outside of Trad 3 and all court mandated attendance is to 'open' meetings then this point is incorrect)
2. Compromises the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment
If these are the only two points, the section should, in my opinion, be smaller. Mr Miles 23:30, 18 September 2007 (UTC)
First person perspective
(Just to begin by announcing my perspective: I think AA can be a tool for people to get out of addiction, like other 12 step programs, but that we do ourselves a disservice in imagining its philosophy to be the only way. Anyways). The article has far too many lapses into first person. I'm addressing these and changing them to similar sentences written from the third person. A lot of people allege that this article is a pro-AA propaganda piece; it shouldn't amplify this sentiment by being written defensively, with anti-AA positions responded to by the abstract "voice of Wikipedia". In the future, advocates of AA should remember (and I imagine this was done innocently) to write with the voice of Wikipedia: State what AA's response would be, charitably but not glowingly, and preferably cite sources on the matter at hand. I also wonder what civil libertarians have to say about AA being in America the only place one can typically get court-mandated alcohol rehab. ArekExcelsior 06:37, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Hi Arek. Thanks for highlighting incidence of first person writing, let's continue to improve the content of this work-in-progress article. I reverted your edit of [of abuse at meetings ] to the original by DavidMack because Rebecca Fransways work, being a collection of opinion, anonymous interviews and published by Sharp Press, is not a reliable source. Additionally, your reference to www.mentalhelp.net didn't link to qualitative research on AA. Mr Miles 09:56, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- The Mental Help URL includes allegations cited by a doctor who had
written a fairly positive piece. Unfortunately, data on both sides as the Baldwin Research has noted is pretty sparse, so we do have to turn to articles with a bit less quantitative data. I don't doubt that the Fransway book is fairly extreme, but it's going to be cited, Miles, so it's time to give up on that one. The responses to Fransway's book should be noted in the article, of course. My edit was designed to charitably present her argument, because at the moment the "Occasions of abuse" descends IMMEDIATELY into a pro-AA defense without describing what people say is the abuse. That's a) making the page a pro-AA propaganda page (imagine if the page on Jonestown just leapt into a defense of the suicide and deleted a paragraph describing the poisoned Kool-Aid!) and b) dismissing the elephant in the room, which makes a shoddy and illegible article. I had to cut to the talk page to know what the abuse section actually says. I'm re-introducing a first paragraph with Fransway's allegations, but adding the responses on the talk page to her work. If we can't describe what the alleged abuse IS, then we need to eliminate the section heading - maybe take a vote on that one?
- Also: I'm adding back in the formatting that makes the individual allegations of rape and abuse separate. What I'm staggered by is that y'all don't want to include Fransway's book, but have no problem introducing just as unverified and prejudicial individual accounts, chosen just as randomly, from other sources!
- (I have also added in a response to the claim, "No studies have been done..." The claim might be narrowly true, but I think it is inherently prejudicial when put at the end of the section. I think it would be better noted as, "AA advocates argues that there have been no systemic studies of the institution as a whole that allege a system of abuse above the median for the average population or social group." That would be fair. The article I cited includes a lot of studies and is an extensive article, so I hope if it's removed in the edit wars someone at least cite the studies they do.)ArekExcelsior 18:33, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Arek, see the discussion section 'Occasions of abuse at meetings' above. Thanks. Mr Miles 09:20, 4 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
Prompted by ArekExcelsior I've hurriedly made more neutral some of the language throughout the article, run out of time before getting to 'AA's definition of alcoholism', perhaps someone else will find time to rewrite it.
Mr Miles 23:09, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
I would like to see AA literature discussed on this page, it's strong religious component, (Big Book, 12 & 12, (eg 12 & 12 Step 6, seven deadly sins, Step 7, "Of myself I am nothing, the father doeth the works"). Also, Bill Wilson and the truth. Did Bill Wilson leave AA voluntarily or was he asked to resign?75.33.202.212 20:32, 10 September 2007 (UTC)Giada
I agree AA literature needs to be discussed. As Posted above Bill W. had a list of musts one had to undertaked to secure a sober lifestyle, one most important factor was a relationship with the supernatural.
Also to note there are some good web pages that outline the differneces between AA and Christianity . Possibly the Oxford Group was simply a cult and had deviated from early Christian theology. in Ken Ragges book, More Revealed, he points out the Oxford Groupers didn't consider other Christians as God controlled.
Web Pages we can draw from: http://www.psychoheresy-aware.org/aa&bib82.html
http://www.psychoheresy-aware.org/aa&bib82.html
http://www.rapidnet.com/~jbeard/bdm/Psychology/codep/12step.htm
http://www.psychoheresy-aware.org/aaroots.html
signed user Fred September 7, 2007 9:02 p.m
AA history
The whole "pre AA understanding" section is total nonsense. POV stuff about Silkworth (published by Hazledon, no less!), combined with some nonsense about New Thought/Emmanuel. This stuff really needs to be removed. I would just remove the passages that are POV/are irrelevant, but the rest of the article makes no sense without the proper context. Unless someone cleans up this section very soon, I will simply remove it. 82.19.66.37 09:52, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
I don't think the intro is particularly POV, just badly referenced. The Silkworth section needs to stay as he was a significant contributor to AA, again, I don't think it's POV and makes clear that the opinion given is Silkworth's own (eg. "He contended", "In Silkworth's view" and "Silkworth believed"). I've added "he described" to make it even clearer. Mr Miles 14:25, 16 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
AA Logo - the circle and triangle
Circa 1991, AA discontinued use of the circle and triangle as a logo or official symbol.
Since AA has no rules, there is nothing to stop individual AA members, groups, intergroups & central offices, districts & others from using the circle and triangle. A review of the website of AA's General Service Office (the G.S.O.) website at www.aa.org will not show any version of the circle and triangle, nor will current editions of any AA World Services or G.S.O. literature.
Accordingly, I suggest the "logo" image at the top of the article should be deleted.
If necessary, I suppose I can dig up some verification, but an e-mail addressed to the CPC desk at AA -- CPC@aa.org (Cooperation with the Professional Community) is probably the most expedient and authoritative way to get the facts. Don@Karabelnikoff.net 08:13, 15 September 2007 (UTC)
Remove/Move items not relevant to "Alcoholics Anonymous"
This article contains an eclectic collection of items relating to the broad topic of alcoholism.
This article purportedly addresses Alcoholics Anonymous, a fellowship of men and women who say they have recovered from alcoholism by adopting a "design for living" that begins with by doing what is suggested in a twelve-step program of action.
I became a member and student of this fellowship more than four years ago after a long career as a professional, a consultant, and as a public servant -- on a private foundation and on several public boards and commissions. I understand the difference between reporting facts and offering opinions; I have been paid to do both.
It seems to me this article contains many relevant facts and much extraneous material best presented under a seprate topic. The prevailing view of alcoholism in the U.S. prior to the formation of the AA fellowship in June 1935 is not part of Alcoholics Anonymous. Likewise, the range of treatment modalities and scientific research are beyond the purview of AA's "singleness of purpose".
I'd be willing to collaborate with others, especially those who are knowlegable and experienced in the development and enhancement of Wikipedia.
I have research material on hand, familiarity with the subject, and a willingness to contribute to the Wikipedia project. How, then, shall we proceed?
//Don K
Anchorage, Alaska
dgk@route164.net —Preceding unsigned comment added by Don@Karabelnikoff.net (talk • contribs) 19:03, 15 September 2007 (UTC)
- The background history shows how AA introduced new concepts. The view of AA from the inside does need to be supplemented with external views from reliable sources. Is there a way you feel you can improve on the quality of the article? — DavidMack 05:29, 16 September 2007 (UTC)
Don, I've reverted the intro to the original version which has been refined for sometime by several editors. Please bear in mind the article has been criticised for not adhering to Wikipedia's NPOV and external views from reliable sources are essential to maintaining NPOV. I will certainly appreciate your collaboration. Mr Miles 14:42, 16 September 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Miles (talk • contribs)
Discussion of sources
No, no and triple no. For all the same reasons that are given against More Revealed. Not that I dispute the accuracy of Hazelden's material, and wouldn't normally mind them being there, but I think the same rules must apply in all cases. 82.19.66.37 01:15, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
- Please explain - you're being extremely cryptic. Hazelden books were used within AA for decades, so it would be nice to know what you're going on about. Hoserjoe 06:34, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
In terms of reliable sources, an exceptionally high criteria has been set for this article. Books published by "cause driven" publishers, with a poor reputation for fact checking (such as some of Hazledons more "evangelical" books) and by anonymous or otherwise unknow authors do not meet this criteria. As such, Hazledon as a reference should be taken out (preferably with alternative references found...). Please see discussions on "more revealed" as a source. 213.235.24.138 12:25, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
Good to see a high criteria is now being applied to publishers cited, we'll hear no more of See Sharp Press then. For the record, More Revealed was rejected as unreliable because it is a personal blog, not an unreliable publisher.Mr Miles 23:00, 18 September 2007 (UTC)
Mr. Miles , you have posted on this page you are a member of AA, so how can you opinions not be biased. Ken Ragge was a past member of AA and did research on AA , maybe it is not flattering to the organization, an investigation of any religion , AA included, shows that there is a distinction between myth and historical facts. Ken has done just that , investigated the history and shown the public another side to the organization.
On this wiki board entries and opinions that are in conflict with the doctrine of AA appear to be deleted on a regular basis. For example under critism and conterversy Charollettes work citing "no model of a recovered person". How could there be a model. AA doctrine states that "once and alcoholic always an alcoholic". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.232.97.13 (talk) 00:18, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
- I don't see any bias with the deletions, only that much of the anti-AA material is based on unreliable sources. — DavidMack 23:53, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Actually, I moved the Charollettes stuff to AA concept of alcoholism, as it seemed more fitting there (she is commenting on the AA definition of an alcoholic, or the interpreted lack of) and added NPOV. I am slightly in the "anti-AA" camp, though am more concerned with creating a "balanced article" than diseminating propoganda. Certainly, I never remove "anti-AA" material, however ridiculous it is (unless it is simply vandalism), though I have occasionally edited the better stuff.
As for More-Revealed, I am firmly of the opinion that it is a reliable resource (at least the book section. I am applying the same criteria that has been applied, and will look at some of the other sources later (there is a strong argument that AA aproved lit is not suitable for all claims made about the organisation), but in the future will look at Ragge, Bufe etc and again argue that they are in fact reliable sources. 213.235.24.138 09:21, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
- I agree that AA lit is not objective. However it is legitimate to say "AA's policy is THIS. Outside researches have seen THIS". So there is no problem here. — DavidMack 23:53, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Well AA approved Lit seems to leave a lot of the history out, there is far more details to the history in More Revealed. It is understandable after why would AA want a history on the financial history of the organization, the early conflicts in the organization, and how much its teachings are influenced by the Oxford Group. Good comparison that have failed to be made is how much AA theology and the Oxford group doctrine are interchangeable It conflicts with the organizations goal of "caryying the message". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.232.97.13 (talk) 22:02, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
- It's pretty much an established fact that AA was born out of conflict, between people and within their own souls, so there ain't much to hide. Likewise, similarities to the Oxford Group do not discredit AA. The facts are that AA was a spin-off of the Oxford Group; is there a problem with that? — DavidMack 23:53, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
"Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is an informal society for recovering alcoholics.[1] Members meet in local groups that vary in size from a handful to many hundreds of individuals. In 2001 there were 100,000 groups worldwide, making a global community of more than two million members[2].
The stated primary purpose of the society is "to stay sober and help other alcoholics to achieve sobriety."[3] AA teaches that an alcoholic, in order to recover, should abstain completely from alcohol on a daily basis;[4][5] the society in turn offers a community of recovering people who support each other by "sharing experience, strength and hope"[6] and often by working the suggested Twelve Steps together.
Alcoholics Anonymous was the first 12-step program and has been the model for similar recovery groups such as Nicotine Anonymous, Al-Anon/Alateen, Gamblers Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, Sexaholics Anonymous, and Overeaters Anonymous. Al-Anon and Alateen are companion programs designed to provide support for relatives and friends of alcoholics."
Should look like this then:
"Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is a society for recovering alcoholics.[1] Members meet in local groups that vary in size from a handful to many hundreds of individuals (citation needed). In 2001 there were 100,000 groups worldwide, making a global community of more than two million members[2].
The stated primary purpose of the society is "to carry its message to the alcoholic who still suffers."[cite "trad 5"] AA teaches that an alcoholic, in order to recover, should abstain completely from alcohol on a daily basis;[4][5] by working the Twelve Steps.
Alcoholics Anonymous was the first 12-step program and has been the model for similar recovery groups such as Nicotine Anonymous, Al-Anon/Alateen, Gamblers Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, Sexaholics Anonymous, Clutters Anonymous and Overeaters Anonymous."
Remarkable how the article changes when you remove the POV language
- "AA's policy is THIS. Outside researches have seen THIS".
Please see WP:SYN re using research to advance a position. Not unacceptable, but should have reliable sources and we should not use our own "logic" to assume an "outcome" not evidenced by one of the sources, which consitantly happens on this page (from both sides). 82.19.66.37 11:50, 23 September 2007 (UTC)
More Revealed re-rehashed again
More Revealed (discussed before here) is a very poor piece of work that likely would not have been published outside of the small, cause-driven presses. I argue it is unreliable for the following reasons:
- It is poor quality because Ragge did little new investigation, usually repeating material from others like Peele.
- So you're slating it because it compounded several different arguments against AA? For quoting "experts"? This is a bad thing?
- It is not research, it is polemic (one-sided, ignoring contrary evidence).
- One reviewer noted that the book said absolutely nothing positive about AA, even though it is obvious that AA has been a positive influence for many (Addiction Aug93, Vol. 88 Issue 8, p1150-1152).
- Many believe that AA is clearly a bad thing, and would argue that an organisation which makes wildly outlandish positive claims about itself needs a source like "more revealed" to offer the negative as well as the positive.
- Ragge makes unreferenced over-generalisations such as:
- "There apparently have been no controlled studies done of AA against other treatment in a non-coercive environment." (p 30) This is simply not true; there is tons of academic research on AA.
- Ragge makes unreferenced over-generalisations such as:
- OK, you have a point here.
- "Belief and environmental effects are more important than the chemical effects of alcohol." (p 42) Again, there is tons of research pro and con; Ragge ignores opposing research.
- Well, my understanding is that belief and environmental factors are more important than the chemical effects. I don't think that is doubted by many. What is doubted is that whether or not one is "born an alcoholic" or not...
- "The membership of different groups varies widely. ... In wealthier neighborhoods ... the membership is wealthier, in poor neighborhoods, poorer." There is much research on the demographics of AA that Ragge could have quoted, most of it observing the wide variation of socio-economic backgrounds within groups.
- So what you're saying is that Ragge has agreed with the research? I don't see where the discrepancy is here...
- "There are also many exclusive meetings in private homes where an invitation is necessary and “undesirables” ... are not invited." (p 98). Ragge does not quote references, sources, or methods for arriving at this conclusion. Did he do a survey? Visit AA groups for a year? More likely, he simply enjoys speaking badly of AA.
- I've seen it.
- Ragge's language is one-sided and unacademic, for example on page 31 he quotes only a small fraction of Vaillant's discussion on AA, out of context, and rather than actually discussing the issues he concludes that Vaillant must be "God-controlled". He also misquotes Vaillant's conclusions on clinic treatment as applying to AA.
- I don't think that language such as "god-controlled" would ever be misplaced in a discussion on AA.
- In conclusion, why would we want to refer to Ragge? There are excellent histories of AA out there like AA: The Story by Ernest Kurtz and balanced reviews of AA like The treatment of alcoholism by Edgar P. Nace. You just have to go to a library instead of relying only on the web. — DavidMack 23:53, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, there are some excellent sources on AA and yes I should get to a library. But I don't see why we shouldn't use "more revealed" as a source. 82.19.66.37 11:35, 23 September 2007 (UTC)
— Because it's unreliable. — DavidMack 16:49, 26 September 2007 (UTC)
For Attn of Mr Miles
several points - as the consensus changes on this article, you may find yourself becoming somewhat annoyed with some of the changes. Please keep a cool head and try to adhere to wiki guidelines. Your recent edits suggest that your commitment to creating a balanced article is somewhat slanted by your membership of alcoholics anonymous and your desire to portray that organisation in a good light. A quick rundown of some of your recent edits to show why I have come to this conclusion.
- "Commentaries on Alcoholics Anonymous have different meanings and relevancies depending on whether they refer to AA the Fellowship of individuals, AA the Program of Recovery (as outlined in the literature) or AA the business entity, incorporated boards and publishing company. A suggestion that some AA members exhibit cult-like behaviors and attitudes may or may not mean the organization as a whole meets a cult criteria."
The constant adding in of this unsourced comment is not improving the article. As per wiki verifiability policies, exceptional claims require exceptional sources. This is a completely unsourced statement, placed there in the face of overwhelming evidence to suggest that AA can and often does function as a cult (from the sources in the article through to Valiiant). If you can find someone published to add NPOV, please do. But keep your original research to yourself. That has no place in wiki.
- "Accusations of cult practice - this section shouldn't even be in an encyclopedia, if it is to stay, it needs a NPOV intro - or some reliable citations"
Why shouldn't that section be in an encyclopeida? Please explain your resoning. Please feel free to add some NPOV material that has been published. Please explain why any sources are not reliable (all published works...).
- "No model of a recovered person - unreliable source"
Please explain the problem with the source. Seems to be a PHd addiction counsellor - something wrong with this?
- "Court mandated AA attendance - please don't revert a sensible edit without giving reasons"
Seems to be a sensible piece of material to have in the article. Why remove that one? It is a true and fair summary of current US court policy towards enforced AA attendance.
- "AA's definition of alcoholism - removed unpublished opinion"
Looks like it was published by Counsellor Magazine to me. Periodicals are an established source on Wiki.
- Removing others talk page contributions
It contravenes wiki guidelines, unless that contribution is vandalism. It also is contrary to the spirit of wiki talk pages, where arguments for and against the articles content can be thrashed out, as the argumemt starts to look a bit one sided. 213.235.24.138 12:30, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
- I didn't get much out of your list of Mr Miles' contributions. Seems to me he's on the level and making positive contributions to the quality of this article. This is a talk page for discussing improvements to the article, not for personal criticisms. Unless there is more to discuss, I think we should remove this section. — DavidMack 22:28, 21 September 2007 (UTC)
Look at the bits in "quotation marks" - these correspond to the edit summaries that Mr Miles has recently done. I believe Mr Miles recent edits are tantamount to vandalism. He is being purposely obtuse and creating double standards in order for this article to read like AA literiture. I propose that we keep this section. It is not a "personal criticism" (I don't know him!), it is a comment on his recent actions in editing the article. I agree we need to keep cool heads, but that doesn't mean that bad POV edits should go completely unchallenged on the talk page. 82.19.66.37 09:32, 22 September 2007 (UTC)
Deleted text from Edwards
I put in some accurate, referenced text from Edward Griffith (editor in chief of the journal Addict) and it was erased. The comment that it was 'original research', which was not true. I'm putting the text back, and please discuss referenced material before you erase it. — DavidMack 14:47, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
- Edwards said "in other words..."? If so, I apologise for saying it is original research. Seems extraneous and unencyclopedic in tone and repeats previous sentence - why a second summary? I would reccomend it be removed. 213.235.24.138 15:54, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
It may not be obvious to the general reader what "self-sampled" is, so the clarification is important and was part of the referenced text. I will attempt to add it in again, clarified. In future, unless text is blatant vandalism, please discuss how entries can be improved before deleting them. I see this as a helpful addition because it synthesises the pros and the cons: sometimes AA works, and sometimes it doesn't. — DavidMack 16:34, 24 September 2007 (UTC)