Sunday, 12 June 2011

Could there be a medical industry focused on changing society to accept mental illness?

This is the shit. It's all about the money.

Doctors morals are worth a price. Sociohealth economics. It's cheap and easy for doctors to subjiugate the mentally ill and reduce their life expectancy. Double bonus because of reduced ultra long healthcare costs and pensions.

They're too dumb to see just how much changing of society is required. It was the mental health charities, not the doctors, who incieved and got funded the largest antistigma programme of its kind in the world.

I think most doctors still don't get it though. They're educated to think biomedically. I fight tooth and nail to open a small crack in that thinking but I might as well be speaking hexadecimal.

They're taught to treat individuals, not societies. But psychiatry is a totally different kettle of fish.

There is a multibillion pound international legal narcotics industry. The drugs prescribed are as psychoactive as the illegal ones.

They are used to prevent phenotypes expressing. They are used to subjugate behaviour and human type using the paradigm of disease.

And these drugs also cause addictions as well as phyical illness, reduced life expectancy and death.

The alternative is changing society to accept mental illness. But where's the money?

Doctors are cash hungry. They won't buy their own pens. Cash is a motivator but there's none for this area of what is now dealt with by the medical profession. The time to change programme wasn't funded by the nhs nor the government directly. So the change in society is stuck.

But this is totally the future of psychiatry. It has to be. They pathologise people who are normal. They callthe vagries of the human condition an illness. They main, kill and torture those who are different. Their treatments cause illness and death and make the social problem worse, by which I mean they allow more normal human behaviour to be pathologised and removed from existence by drugs which kill those people.

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We It comes in part from an appreciation that no one can truly sign their own work. Everything is many influences coming together to the one moment where a work exists. The other is a begrudging acceptance that my work was never my own. There is another consciousness or non-corporeal entity that helps and harms me in everything I do. I am not I because of this force or entity. I am "we"