Pharmaceuticals were once life-savers, and in many respects
they still are. Scientific research and miracle drugs have eliminated smallpox. Other diseases -- including polio, AIDS, cancer and malaria -- have been
ameliorated and may one day disappear as well.
But something happened a few decades ago. Head shrinkers
used a public relations technique -- positioning -- to convince the public that
mental illness is a physical disease. We call mental illness
"illness" as an example of how successful the shrinks have been.
Most modern mental illnesses have been created by a majority
vote, by members of the psychiatric profession, printed in a book called the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) which has no statistics, but it sounds
good -- sort of mathematical. And that manual is ensconced on thebookshelf next
to real medical texts that address such things as anatomy, bacteria and
viruses, circulatory systems, lymph glands, tumors and other real things that
pertain to the health of the body.
Under the lie that mental health is physical, anti
depressants -- for example the "serotonin reuptake inhibitors" -- are
positioned as correcting a brain chemistry imbalance said to be in the brains
of depressed persons. No such imbalance in the brain chemistry of a mentally
ill person has ever been found, but that is a minor point to pharmaceutical
companies that managed to convince
11 percent of Americans that they are depressed and need medication, and that
many more go untreated. According to one source, depression has doubled in only
a decade, but the reasons are "unclear."
Perhaps the deliberate drugging of Americans by
psychiatrists, medical doctors, pharmacists and advertising agencies have
something to do with it. Prime time television is now largely sponsored by
pharmaceutical companies touting drug cures for those made-up illnesses voted
on by psychiatrists. Pharmaceutical companies convince Americans that feeling
low is not their fault, that it's a brain chemistry imbalance that can be cured
by a pill, several times a day, for the rest of their lives, paid for by
Medicare, Medicaid, the VA, or some other public source of funding that avoids
the nasty question of "how much is this going to cost?" Or "How
can you pay for this?"
Many of those pharmaceuticals are addictive, and many of
them create a drug high. In fact, pharmaceutical drug abuse causes more
overdose deaths than cocaine and heroin combined, and is now just about tied
with traffic deaths as the leading cause of "accidental death" in the
United States. According to the Centers for Disease Control,
enough prescription painkillers were prescribed in 2010 to medicate every
American adult around-the-clock for a month. "A big part of the problem is
non-medical use of prescription painkillers—using drugs without a prescription,"
said the CDC report, "or using drugs just for the ‘high’ they cause.”
So the prescription pad and the local pharmacy have
outstripped the corner pusher in drug-related deaths. But global pharmaceutical
sales are big business and, according to a
New York Times article, lobbying by pharmacists and drugstores have hindered
efforts to put stricter controls on even the most-abused pharmaceuticals.
Enter "medical marijuana," the final bridge
between medical and recreational drugs. It's undoubtedly much less harmful than
many other drugs, but it is an updated version of the old "alcohol for
medicinal use" joke about alcoholism. In California, anybody can get a
prescription for "medical" marijuana but communities are wising up
and trying to exclude the "dispensaries," as they are now called
rather than the more accurate "head shops" or flat out "drug dealers."
Marijuana growers have used the same technique as pharmaceutical manufacturers
-- convincing regulators and the public that getting high is good medicine.
Now, as "medical providers" weed growers have achieved super high THC
potency and semi-legitimacy. All one must do to get high legally is become a
victim of pain, a victim of "post traumatic stress disorder" a victim
of scary ideation or God knows what else a druggie can come up with: "I'm
sick," wink wink, and voila! You are legally able -- even entitled -- to
get high.
There ARE crazy people out there. Anders Behring Breivik,
for example, admitted to murdering 77 innocent people in Norway and said he
regretted not killing even more. If anyone is crazy, he is. One psychiatrist
said he was nuts, another said he was sane, then had second throughts. Perhaps
the shrinks should get together and vote on it, as they do with DSM labels.
The problem with being "mentally ill" -- from the
shrink point of view -- is that there is a "stigma" associated with
it, and normal people still have trouble deciding to be crazy and take
pharmaceuticals to fix their brain chemicals. This cuts into the big money and
stock prices of the drug companies. They see it as "the tragedy of those
needing help who are not getting it," and propose phony screenings of
veterans, schoolchildren, new mothers, etc. to recruit new drug users.
And then the trial lawyers -- which take a leaf from the
drug companies' playbook and busily convince the public that they are victims
-- sue the pharmaceutical companies for killing thousands of people with their
phony drugs that sometimes cause murderous rages or suicide. Black box warnings
on drugs depress the stock price as well as the major shareholders. Luckily
they can take anti-depressants and get high or at least numb to their troubles.
The big pharmaceutical combines that invent drugs to remedy
those voted-on illnesses make about $1 trillion per year globally on their
products, and are undoubtedly hoping to discredit Chinese folk medicine to open
up billions more people to drugs for everything from erectile dysfunction to
depression and restless legs. Asians have been traditionally resistant to
psychs and pharmaceuticals so watch for a huge push into China.
Is there a solution to crazy people? Locking them up in
Bedlam was one idea, exorcism was another. Lobotomies, electroshock and drugs
are the most recent psychiatric abominations in our history of desperate but
ineffective measures. The solution may come down to effective education, the
opportunity to work and to contribute to society, the ability to confront
problems rather than run from them, and the necessity to lock up psychos like
Breivik to protect society at large. But the solution has nothing whatsoever to
do with hooking mildly unhappy or neurotic people on pharmaceuticals at public
expense. And marijuana "dispensaries" and pharmaceutical solutions
are just another indication that illegal drug cartels and pharmaceutical giants
are alike in pursuing chemical slavery for financial benefit, and as such are
becoming an equal threat to society.
What needs to change? Outlaw ads that directly target the
public for prescription drugs, and that bypass doctors. Make it a felony for a
doctor to take free trips and other perks from drug companies in exchange for
prescribing their drugs. Return the practice of medicine to doctors of the
physical body, and relegate psychiatrists and their patent medicines to the
scrap heap of voodoo, fortune telling, phrenology, and carnival sideshows where
they rightfully belong.
Wow! You have put into specific articulation what has been making me vaguely 'nervous' about all the various threads throughout the media. You have connected the dots. I've lived long enough to see many 'quirky' children grow up to become responsible, happy adults without the 'aid' of diagnosis & medication. Now I'm seeing 'quirky' children on the front page after having killed & maimed their classmates. What has changed??? You answered it. (And excluded the very rare, true psycho.)
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