During my year in Iraq training their civil police I was stationed at the Baghdad Police College, where I served as a team leader to the American instructors and Arabic language translators. We knew that the security procedures in place needed a total revamp, mostly due to the corruption that was (is) prevalent in their society.
We required that everyone trying to access the campus identify themselves with an ID card we issued. Unfortunately, just about anyone could get in by slipping a bribe to one of the guards. We knew we were ripe for an attack, however our boss refused to take any kind of action. We, the other team leaders and I, pleaded with him to no avail.
On December 6, 2005 two al Qaida homicide vest bombers infiltrated the college grounds, and 47 brave police cadets and officers were horribly murdered. Another 85 were sent to area hospitals with severe wounds and injuries.
I brought home the nagging feeling that I (and the other team leaders) should have done more to convince our boss to take action to prevent the attack. This resulted in my developing severe PTSD from the incident.
Fortunately, the University of Texas at Dallas’s Center for Brain Health had programs to treat PTSD in veterans and peace officers, and they accepted me into their care. A yearlong course of cognitive behavior therapy, coupled with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation - and a bunch of journaling in my part - helped me overcome my grief at not doing more to prevent this tragedy.
A few months later I attended a Post Critical Incident seminar at the Law Enforcement Management Institute of Texas at Sam Houston State University, where I was exposed to a session of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). Through this session I was able to replace the sight I always first saw in my mind, one of my female police officers taking her final breaths, with the image of her smiling face. I still remember the rest of that awful day, but I'm no longer vexed with the sight of seeing the blood running down her face as my initial memory.
So yes. My guilt over not being able to convince my boss to do more to protect us has indeed resolved.
Answer:
this is the answer
Explanation:
I gathered with the entire student body of Wyoming Catholic College on Sept. 17, 2019, for a mandatory celebration of Constitution Day. We began with the Pledge of Allegiance, witnessed a lively panel discussion between professors on the history and modern relevance of America’s founding principles, and concluded by singing patriotic songs.
If you are a student at a typical American university, that description probably sounds foreign to anything you have experienced. Anti-Americanism has spread across college campuses like a wildfire, igniting rage and resentment against anything perceived as oppressive — even the American flag. As a result, most universities would likely shy away from a celebration of our nation’s founding in favor of more “inclusive” events.
If your options are:
<span>A.</span>The drive for aggression is a basic instinct
that promotes survival.
<span>B.</span>Some people are genetically predisposed to have
hostile temperaments and engage in aggressive acts.
<span>C.</span>Testosterone
is linked to aggressive behavior.
<span>D. </span>All of these options have been supported by
biological research
I believe the
correct answer is: D. All of these options have been supported by biological
research.
For a long time
philosophers and researches have argued over the innate aggressive tendencies
of human beings which is consistent with the principles of evolutionary
psychology. Biological research has found that humans have innate aggressive tendencies
as a basic instinct in order to survive, but the fact that humans can aggress,
doesn’t mean that they will.
However, there is
no doubt that aggression is in part genetically determined. This is relevant
for both animals and humans. The proof for that is the fact that animals can be
bred to be aggressive by breeding the most aggressive offspring with each
other, and that children who are aggressive as infants also are aggressive when
they are adults. Therefore, some people are genetically predisposed to have
hostile temperaments and engage in aggressive acts.
As for the testosterone,
the latest studies have shown that testosterone increases brains threat response.
Men with high levels of testosterone are more inclined to be wild and unruly.
Therefore, the testosterone is linked to aggressive behavior.
Answer:
i can help if you explain in the comment/response section if you tell me how you are ment to answer it. sorry if I am of no help.
Answer:
Why are you getting banned? Omg?