Rob’s sad conclusion: “The data tends to make practitoners in aggregate, and the involuntary commitment system as a whole, seem prejudicial, classist, racist, sanist, and abusive.” shows that our society still has a very long way to go. Thank you, Rob.
The combination of boomers using social security, Medicare and Medicaid and decades of wealth accumulation ($138 trillion dollars, USA run by Department of Defense) and younger generations going no contact is a huge invisible population being involuntarily committed.
Younger generations are learning the art of sending mom into the psych prison system and living off guardianship and life insurance. Psych prison for elderly is assured death from torture treatments.
Behavioral managers (Military, police, social workers, nurses, doctors, insurance brokers, judicial predators) depend upon legal bully trafficking of vulnerable people as their source of income and pathological insatiable desire for abuse and violence.
Military and churches in America seem to be working in tandem to trafficking vulnerable elderly and fleeing them of their life savings, homes, and assets.
When all the vulnerable are dead and the predators prey upon one another maybe these psychopaths will realize their pathology.
Unfortunately, billions are being legally murdered worldwide in a mass culling of anyone not participating in the multi dimensional trafficking of humans by any means from which they can profit.
Imagine the societal transformation that could take place if we simply assessed the social/economic needs of the distressed and gave them the money, rather than the coercive system! Most of the so-called psychiatric problems would likely take care of themselves. For the same or far less costs. Sadly, we will never do that.
Yes -- I know some organizations of course do great, important work helping people, but the exploitative "poverty industry" is also real, and coercive psychiatry is often a part of it. I think a guaranteed livable income would be a good start to changing the equation.
Rob’s sad conclusion: “The data tends to make practitoners in aggregate, and the involuntary commitment system as a whole, seem prejudicial, classist, racist, sanist, and abusive.” shows that our society still has a very long way to go. Thank you, Rob.
The combination of boomers using social security, Medicare and Medicaid and decades of wealth accumulation ($138 trillion dollars, USA run by Department of Defense) and younger generations going no contact is a huge invisible population being involuntarily committed.
Younger generations are learning the art of sending mom into the psych prison system and living off guardianship and life insurance. Psych prison for elderly is assured death from torture treatments.
Behavioral managers (Military, police, social workers, nurses, doctors, insurance brokers, judicial predators) depend upon legal bully trafficking of vulnerable people as their source of income and pathological insatiable desire for abuse and violence.
Military and churches in America seem to be working in tandem to trafficking vulnerable elderly and fleeing them of their life savings, homes, and assets.
When all the vulnerable are dead and the predators prey upon one another maybe these psychopaths will realize their pathology.
Unfortunately, billions are being legally murdered worldwide in a mass culling of anyone not participating in the multi dimensional trafficking of humans by any means from which they can profit.
Imagine the societal transformation that could take place if we simply assessed the social/economic needs of the distressed and gave them the money, rather than the coercive system! Most of the so-called psychiatric problems would likely take care of themselves. For the same or far less costs. Sadly, we will never do that.
Yes -- I know some organizations of course do great, important work helping people, but the exploitative "poverty industry" is also real, and coercive psychiatry is often a part of it. I think a guaranteed livable income would be a good start to changing the equation.