For patients rights, an end to civil, criminal, and psychiatric abuses perpetuated by the psychiatric industry, government, not-for-profits, and the professional comunities.
IN CONTRAST:
The psychiatric system extremes in the US represented by Jeffery Dahmer on one hand, and innocent homeless psychiatruc victims on the other hand.
Innocents abused on a daily basis by the psychiaric government industrial complex typifies what is wrong in America.
Dahmer was ajudged sane not merely to be tried, found guilty for his crimes (murdering 17 young men, canibalizing them) to have him murdered, but as the basis of policy rationale systemically depriving all Americans the social services and health care they should be entitled to in an industrial country.
As even madmen have logic Dahmer should not have been viewed as normal except as he was by a system without a direction gone mad that some worsen by their reactionary focus not on right and wrong but self interest. On basis of logical rationales requiring the ill to be completely helpless inorder to receive assistance, treatment and care, or to be evicted, made homeless, forced into adversal relations with well represented legal guns, fend for themselves, society in its industrial age as it goes from one extreme to another, is even more brutal than primitaive society.
Recognized the issue is not health care, institutionalization, forced hospitalization, but of social policy, society, culture and patients rights, which have been systemically abused, and violated by industry and government alike as once criminalized the ill are systemically precluded from what was allegedly designed to help the needy such as them.
Senator Patrick Moynihan quoted New York Times (July 12, 1999)Writer Fox Butterfield that "jails and prisons have become the nation's new mental hospitals." much like almost two years ago in Bedlam England.
ORIGNAL ARTICLE
http://www.mplf.org/text1/deinstitutionalization-S8296-001.htm
|