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Health & Wellness

Has American Society Gone Insane?

By Bruce E. Levine, AlterNet. Posted September 11, 2008.


America's mental health problems may be more than a matter of some "unadjusted" individuals. The entire culture might well need adjusting.
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For many Americans who gain their information solely from television, all critics of psychiatry are Scientologists, exemplified by Tom Cruise spewing at Matt Lauer, "You don't know the history of psychiatry. ... Matt, you're so glib." The mass media has been highly successful in convincing Americans to associate criticism of psychiatry with anti-drug zealots from the Church of Scientology, the lucrative invention of science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard.

However, Americans who gain their information outside of television and beyond the mass media may be aware of a secular, progressive tradition that is critical of how psychiatry has diverted us from examining societal sources of our malaise. This secular, humanistic concern was articulated, perhaps most famously, by the psychoanalyst Erich Fromm (1900-1980).

In The Sane Society (1955), Fromm wrote, "Yet many psychiatrists and psychologists refuse to entertain the idea that society as a whole may be lacking in sanity. They hold that the problem of mental health in a society is only that of the number of 'unadjusted' individuals, and not of a possible unadjustment of the culture itself."

Is American society a healthy one, and are those having difficulties adjusting to it mentally ill? Or is American society an unhealthy one, and are many Americans with emotional difficulties simply alienated rather than ill? For Fromm, "An unhealthy society is one which creates mutual hostility (and) distrust, which transforms man into an instrument of use and exploitation for others, which deprives him of a sense of self, except inasmuch as he submits to others or becomes an automaton." Fromm viewed American society as an increasingly unhealthy one, in which people routinely experience painful alienation that fuels emotional and behavioral difficulties.

Unlike Tom Cruise, Fromm would not have been terribly upset that actress Brooke Shields found happiness in antidepressants. No genuinely humanistic critic of psychiatry believes that adults who choose prescription psychotropic drugs should be mocked or shamed, or prohibited from using them. Rather, humanist critics of establishment psychiatry advocate for informed choice about all treatments.

The essential confrontation for Fromm is not about psychiatric drugs per se (though he would be sad that so many Americans nowadays, especially children, are prescribed psychotropic drugs in order to fit into inhospitable environments). His essential confrontation was directed at all mental health professionals -- including non-prescribers such as psychologists, social workers and counselors -- who merely assist their patients to adjust but neglect to validate their patients' alienation from society.

Those comfortably atop societal hierarchies have difficulty recognizing that many American institutions promote helplessness, passivity, boredom, fear, isolation, alienation and dehumanization for those not at the top. One-size-fits-all schools, the corporate workplace, government bureaucracies and other giant, impersonal institutions routinely promote manipulative relationships rather than respectful ones, machine efficiency rather than human pride, authoritarian hierarchies rather than participatory democracy, disconnectedness rather than community, and helplessness rather than empowerment.

In The Sane Society, Fromm warned, "Today the function of psychiatry, psychology and psychoanalysis threatens to become the tool in the manipulation of man. The specialists in this field tell you what the 'normal' person is, and, correspondingly, what is wrong with you; they devise the methods to help you adjust, be happy, be normal."

In the "adjust and be happy" sense, there is commonality between establishment mental health professionals and Scientologists. Neither Dr. Phil nor Tom Cruise are exactly rebels against the economic status quo; and their competing self-help programs, though different, are similar in that they instruct people on how to adjust, be happy and be normal within our economic system.

The source of the mutual hostility between psychiatry and the Church of Scientology, as depicted by the mass media, centers around psychotropic drug use; but my sense is that the root cause of their feud is a fierce competition between them. Both establishment psychiatry and Scientology are competing for the same people -- those more comfortable with authority, dogma and insider jargon than with critical thinking.


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See more stories tagged with: health, mental health, dr. phil, scientology, tom cruise, establishment psychiatry

Bruce E. Levine, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and author of Surviving America's Depression Epidemic: How to Find Morale, Energy, and Community in a World Gone Crazy (Chelsea Green, 2007).

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That's right - you've got it exactly.
Posted by: nzo on Sep 11, 2008 12:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The whole culture is insane. A worldwide ranking of insane cultures would not go amiss. American culture would be somewhere in the top 25%.

Various observers of insane societies have noted that they are predominantly built on a foundation of 'reasonable insanity' - the kind of socially sanctioned insanity no-one notices because everyone is embedded in it. It's the insanity of the everyday: how we live, what we do, what we say, how we treat each other, what we think.

The gradient between 'reasonably insane' and 'pathologically insane' is fuzzy. The more rooted in acquisition, greed and power, the more things move in the direction of pathologically insanity.

From the Little Hitlers inhabiting small government, to the upper echelons of grasped power, this is the domain of presidents, dictators, fundamentalists, judiciary, militarists, money-junkies and the gamut of politicians and social manipulators who follow them like a gaggle of turkeys utterly convinced that they, and only they, are right.

One of the hallmarks of the pathologically insane is that their way is always the right way.

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What a load of bullshit!
Posted by: VetAgainst McCain on Sep 11, 2008 1:33 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No real "critical thinker" would make such a gross generalization -- that the U.S. is insane!

Mental illness is a tragedy that afflicts millions of Americans. Successful treatments vary with the individual, but they all have one thing in common -- love and compassion for the victims, which this article cold-heartedly ignores, even after mentioning Eric Fromm, who authored one of my favorite books, The Art of Loving."

Vet against McCain
To find out why, click on the links below
VietnamVeteransAgainstJohnMcCain.com
VoteVets.org

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» lets face it... Posted by: undrgrndgirl
Stress!
Posted by: aussidawg on Sep 11, 2008 2:05 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The entire society insane? Not likely. But, since growing up in the 60's and 70's, I have seen a great increase in the occurrance of both depression and bi-polar disorder. I have also seen stress levels on all levels and classes of people increase many fold. I believe that these are related,. Further, as has been pointed out in numerous articles, the distribution of wealth has charged dramatically since the 1960's-70's. With these stressors, I am not surprized in the least to see an increase in depression and other stress related mental illnessess.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Stress! Posted by: annekarina
» RE: Stress! Posted by: emmas
» RE: Stress! Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: Stress! Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Stress! Posted by: gzuckier
» RE: Stress! Posted by: davy
» RE: Stress! Posted by:
» RE: Stress! Posted by: QuestionAuthority
One More Time?
Posted by: Last Chance on Sep 11, 2008 3:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any man or woman who believes that Jesus will come back to save them and recreate the Earth after they have destroyed it in a nuclear holocaust must be insane, because that is so obviously a completely crazy idea, that God would reward them for destroying His creation. Yet, such a man has occupied the White House for nearly 8 years, during which time he has done everything he could to destabilize World peace in favor of his delusions of Apocalypse and Armageddon from the Bible's Book of Revelations, a clearly psychotic betrayal of his Constitutional oath of office.

Now another such crazy person is trying to wheedle her way into the White House. So, are the American people so deluded they will let it happen again? If so, they will reap exactly what they have sown: human self-extinction on a dead planet, after which the Earth will look very much like Mars. Is that what the American people want?

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» RE: One More Time? Posted by: helenahanbasquet
» RE: One More Time? Posted by: Lilykins
» RE: One More Time? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: One More Time? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: One More Time? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: One More Time? Posted by: Lilykins
» RE: One More Time? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: BTW.... Posted by: Marlena
» RE: BTW.... Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: BTW.... Posted by: annekarina
» More like Venus Posted by: ScottP
corporate bootlickers and suck-ups.
Posted by: blogoffanddie on Sep 11, 2008 4:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This should only take a minute, I have to get back to my TV. America's Next Superstar and America's Next Liposuction are on.

After years of bombardment from the mainstream media, the American populace has been dumbed-down and programmed to ignore the substance and the issues that affect their quality of life, and focus on the peripheral, pointless and more often than not, irrelevant sideshows created by a news media full of corporate bootlickers and suck-ups.

America has become a friggin' circus and a nation of voyeurs and peeping Toms. America is devolving into a mindless freak show that millions of simpletons watch every night on their TV's.

http://blogoffanddie.wordpress.com

the mark of 'the beast' is just a bad haircut

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the mark of 'the beast' is just a bad haircut
Posted by: blogoffanddie on Sep 11, 2008 4:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This should only take a minute, I have to get back to my TV. America's Next Superstar and America's Next Liposuction are on.

After years of bombardment from the mainstream media, the American populace has been dumbed-down and programmed to ignore the substance and the issues that affect their quality of life, and focus on the peripheral, pointless and more often than not, irrelevant sideshows created by a news media full of corporate bootlickers and suck-ups.

America has become a friggin' circus and a nation of voyeurs and peeping Toms. America is devolving into a mindless freak show that millions of simpletons watch every night on their TV's.

http://blogoffanddie.wordpress.com

the mark of 'the beast' is just a bad haircut

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TWO REASONS WHY -YES-WE ARE INSANE
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 11, 2008 4:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-The early childhood mind poison of organized religions (note plural)is coming home to roost.

-The excesses (note word excesses) of the legal profession has completely destroyed any semblance commom sense

My solutions-

- implement healthy early childhhod education immediately- devoid of toxic organized religion neuro-tapes

- immediately shut down 1/3rd of US law schools

Thanks!

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
ralippin@aol.com

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» RE: TWO REASONS WHY -YES-WE ARE INSANE Posted by: beautifulady2003
America is DYSFUNCTIONAL, PERIOD
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 11, 2008 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We the sheeple vote on "personality" bullshit more than on the issues no matter how bad the economy, environment, foreign policy failures, etc ... are. That itself says what a sick puppy nation we've become.

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» Voting for "personalities" Posted by: Cathyc
Almost Fully Agree
Posted by: raymondg on Sep 11, 2008 4:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm happy to see someone remember Erich Fromm's sage words. However, I have one bone of contention: the idea that America is becoming increasingly insane. When in its history has America not been insane? We love to look back to a time when families were intact and our entertainment needs simple. But, those were also the times when families attended lynch parties together, when a huge segment of our populace did not have the right to vote, when millions of people were killed off or displaced from their land, when the machine became more important than the human being, when the unbridled search for profit ran roughshod over the environment and human dignity, when people could not drink from the same water fountain or swim in the same pool or stay in the same hotel or or or all because of their racial categorization...and on and on. And this insanity happened after more than 200 years of the greatest form of insanity of all: the enslavement of other human beings! So, I ask: when has the US not been insane?

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» nonnsense Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: nonnsense Posted by: annekarina
» RE: nonnsense Posted by: donl51
» Ah! That sounds like, now! Posted by: mike_burns
» RE: Almost Fully Agree Posted by: Javan
And so on
Posted by: zeofredo on Sep 11, 2008 5:19 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These articles are like one extended dish on an old theme... writers act like they have figured out a new angle to a dilemma, telling us something they think we don't already know. The one worthwhile angle in this story-- that people are urged to find biographical solutions to problems created by institutions and external forces-- is eclipsed by a focus on Scientology. While I can appreciate the sensationalism in that, I find that many of us remain untouched by the superstar lives of its practitioners and are therefore not captivated by this prognosis alone.

The REAL insane characteristic of our time is more universal: that money has become the measure of all things, and that we are pressured to conform to a lofty ideal of individualism that, in practice, is counter-intuitive and socially disintegrating. The West is in a trend of attacking social cohesion, but these days are also showing signs of being short-lived...

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You Lost Me
Posted by: Urstrly on Sep 11, 2008 5:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You had me until you turned on mainstream psychiatry, which hardly ranks up there with Scientology, seems to me.

What makes me angriest are the media, which even as I write, are grinding out some hokey story about Sarah Palin and whether she's being unfairly attacked. She'd be still attending PTA meetings if her blend of nuttiness and looks did not serve the oil companies and other corporate interests.

I blame the media for not questioning the 9/11-Saddam Hussein connection, for relentlessly beating the drums for this hideous war in Iraq, for not pointing out that there is NO substance in McCain's promise of change, for promoting plastic surgery when people are dying for lack of health care, for taking money (and this includes PBS) from companies that are destroying the air we breathe and the water we drink...That we are buying pollution-causing flat screen TVs at an insane rate to watch sports and "reality" shows and perhaps a little faux news just shows how the very media we escape to are addicting.

No, we are not a healthy society.

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Common Sense
Posted by: JohnnyM on Sep 11, 2008 5:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well said!

It is clear that the West (not just America) has lost its common sense. You or Fromm may label this as insane, but I would say what's been lost is simply common sense.

Common sense is first of all common, secondly it's sensible. There IS a right and wrong way to do or look at things, and it's inherent in us all.

We are subject to a bombardment of media (TV, News, Blogosphere, radio, etc) and are overloaded with noise. There are 500 million different opinions on this subject alone, so how can I think "critically" with all this noise? How do we re-tap this inherent sense and get back to the basics?

Shut up and listen. Not to the so-called experts but to your common sense. Once you're tapped into it things become easy. You see clearly, think critically, and best of all need no pharmaceuticals for anything.

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Free market insanity
Posted by: Quasar on Sep 11, 2008 6:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would go so far as to say that the success of the "free market" is based on the insanity of limitless consumption.

A state of eternal discontent.

Or, just take a look at the presidential campaign. How fucked up is that?

Call me crazy. . .

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» RE: Free market insanity Posted by: Duncable
» RE: Free market insanity Posted by: songbird1268
» You're Not crazy. Good point. Posted by: snideelf
Here we go again.......Environment vs Genetics
Posted by: nfamous on Sep 11, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just because America is an unhealthy society, and it is, does not mean that individual human beings do not possess biological factors that make them more susceptible to the effects of these societal imbalances and miscues. In other words people have a genetic and an environmental factor. The same is argument is made with homosexuality.

The truth is that genetics and environment have varying degrees of influence depending of each person's DNA. There is no way known to predict how much influence our debased society will have on any particular individual but we know it has some effect. What gene would we be looking for in that case? Is there a gene that makes people value life and love more than money and fame? Who the hell knows? Humans are stupid in the scope of the entire universe. We don't even understand much about the planet or the human brain. We should call ourselves hubrans instead for humans + hubris.

What we do know is that people feel better when they are connected to meaningful relationships in life. The absence of that should be a top concern for all of us. Medicating our way out of depression by creating a zombie-lie stupor is the stuff of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers".

Oh and Tom Cruise is a cultish, moronic freak plain and simple but I would not dismiss the remote possibility that this planet has been visited by aliens. If it had and our government knew that they wouldn't tell us. They would use that knowledge to benefit the elite and let the rest of us die. That is what people that are bored with money do. They focus on power and control.

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And you call me crazy...
Posted by: leTerrassier on Sep 11, 2008 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an actual crazy person, I find it astonishing how sane I am compared to the average American. You people honestly scare me. Get help.

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» RE: And you call me crazy... Posted by: dayenta
culture
Posted by: Dboy on Sep 11, 2008 7:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think that to get to the point of this article you need to think of a culture as a single organism rather than a collection of random minds averages together. Defined on that basis, I don't see how any diagnosis other than insanity could be justified.

dboy

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» RE: culture Posted by: Zeugitai
10 Hallmarks of Insanity
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Sep 11, 2008 7:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Television: brainwave alteration used for mind control.
2. Right wing radio combined with stressful commutes: the perfect propaganda vehicle.
3. Fluoridated water: used to make population passive and retarded.
4. Vaccines tainted with mercury: used to dumb down the public.
5. Massive lead pollution: used to encourage violent and aggressive tendencies in minorities.
6. Big pharma mental health "solutions" (prozac, etc): used to make people into zombies and vegetables and never address the real symptoms.
7. Sugar and corn syrup: used to overload the pancreas and spread the highly profitable diabetes.
8. Aspartame: Approved despite open and admitted and well documented dangers.
9. Genetically modified crops: huge risks both known and unknown. Small, questionable gains.
10. Ocean dead zones and massive floating fields of plastic and garbage: no outrage, no concern, no nothing. Total insanity.

This is just 10 things that is totally off the wall insane. I'm sure there's another list of 10 somewhere that's just as bad.
I didnt mention cancer...
cell phones and brain damage...
the liquidation of all public assets to pay for cops to go around tazing people...

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» RE: 10 Hallmarks of Insanity Posted by: Duncable
» RE: 10 Hallmarks of Insanity Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: 10 Hallmarks of Insanity Posted by: sallyride
Conditioning
Posted by: ClassAct on Sep 11, 2008 7:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any hope for the US becoming a sane society is limited by the fact that we are innundated by media and its evil twin, advertising. These have been designed to be conditioning industries by the same means that have validated psychological studies of all sorts. What is impossible to prove is whether continuous exposure to “public relations” itself affects the mind, undermining its capacity for critical judgment in the long term because of the exposure to faux experiences.

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If you people really want to know more about this insanity,
Posted by: GrantBurkeVT on Sep 11, 2008 7:30 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
there are plenty of articles to read on www.moderateindependent.com that give great insights on the long term insanity this country has gone through. Thanks maxpayne for the site as you have posted in some posts of yours. I think we're all in the Age of Quarrel so it's going to be a bumpy ride.

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Takes One to Know One
Posted by: stellabloo on Sep 11, 2008 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My step-sister is a shrink. This isn't meant to be a personal attack; I hardly know the woman. She didn't even come to her own father's funeral. I only met her once, when we were both in our twenties. My biggest memory is of her sitting there with a cigarette and a drink, lecturing me on the evils of marijuana.

Now here's the scary part: this woman is stationed up north in an area where about half the population is native. Alcoholism and the accompanying problems are rampant. However, shrink school teaches ABSOLUTELY NOTHING about AA or how it works. Not to mention Al-Anon or ACOA.

That's right, the psychiatric society neither knows or cares about the only non-profit institution that has ever had any success with treating drunks. And yet, and especially in my stepsister's case, many of the patients are scarred by alcoholism.

Does booze make you crazy? Imho absolutely. Not as quickly as meth or crack, but there it is - and the pain inflicted on any hapless innocents involved persists for generations.

This is never a popular opinion, I know. I'm only saying this because, hey - every other crackpot conspiracist is on here whining about the Owners and their plans to control the sheeple (thanks max!). Yet I remain convinced that it's no coincidence that the heiress to Anheuser-Busch is poised to become the next First Lady :.(

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» RE: Takes One to Know One Posted by: Urstrly
» RE: Takes One to Know One Posted by: drich
My two cents worth......
Posted by: Basenjis on Sep 11, 2008 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I, for one, keep hoping I will wake up soon, all sane and coherent, to discover this latest phase of human evolution or devolution, insanity or whatever--is only one of those disjointed dreams turned nightmare.

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» RE: My two cents worth...... Posted by: Zeugitai
And the Solution...
Posted by: ranchero42 on Sep 11, 2008 7:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
more drugs? One big happy pill, no charge for side effects.

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» RE: And the Solution... Posted by: Zeugitai
Look at Bush/Palin/McCain and Yes We are Nuts!
Posted by: Shankari46 on Sep 11, 2008 8:11 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any society who would repeatedly elect a psychopath is insane. Then as if we haven't had enough of psychopaths we get one who is delusional as well believing that God will build a pipeline or god will clean up after us like spoiled children who refuse to clean up our own toys. God is not going to clean up. We have to do that. We have to take responsibility for our own actions. Because we live in a fantasy land where we think everyone loves us and we are always right and god will clean up after us, we are insane.

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some truth, some generalization
Posted by: slfiore on Sep 11, 2008 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree that we have a sick society. Whether it's the search for happiness through material acquisition and obsession with celebrity, or fundamentalist paranoia and delusion, the continuum is heavy at both ends, and the sane, common-sense middle is ever-diminishing.

However, the author paints all mental health professionals, especially psychiatrists, with the same brush. I am not a mental health professional, and there are none among my family and friends, so this isn't a defense of tribe. I know personally only two psychiatrists, and both agree that our society as a whole is sick and that people who are anxious and unhappy about the state of affairs have good cause to be.

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» ...and some truth generalized Posted by: logansafi
Excellent Point About Both Psychiatry and Scientology
Posted by: Koondog on Sep 11, 2008 8:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But the one aspect this article misses is that these large impersonal institutions are created, organized, staffed and run by individual people. The nutty policies they operate on were thought up by individuals and now they just sort of run on automatic. An individual who didn't like people, who was afraid of people, who felt threatened by people would naturally devise an organizational set up that was impersonal, alienating, etc. Not everyone who is insane is the stereotypical gibbering, staitjacketed "nut." Some insane people can rise to high positions of power, examples of whom are in the current administration and heads of some other governments. Granted, operating in a position of power in an institution that was already set up to be insane could tend to make one act insane. The problem I don't see addressed in this otherwise excellent article is how to locate the truly insane people in the society. A start would be to google the article "The Antisocial Personality," which gives characteristics of the people who have made American society what it has become today.

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Apples and oranges
Posted by: rhondabourne on Sep 11, 2008 8:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Individuals in our society have mental illness, which is separate and distinct from the concerns we have that our society is way our of balance. There is interesection where the use of medication has increased because we have become a society intolerant of the experience of pain. We call too many things, which are very different, by the same name, for example depression. Clinical depression is not the sadness, boredom and lack of motivstion thast many people in our society experience because society has worn them down. Clinical depression is a significant debilitating illness with profound symptoms. That many doctors, most often internists, medicate sadness does not discredit the field of psychiatry or the legitimacy of psychiatric diagnosis. Thomas Szas did a far better job than this article arguing that mental illness is a societal construct.

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» Good post. However, Posted by: PaulC
» RE: Apples and oranges Posted by: Dboy
At last!
Posted by: Pirate1 on Sep 11, 2008 8:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Something from someone with enough stature and respect to not be dismissed as a fringe radical. I applaud you, Alternet for including this. I don't feel like such a voice in the wilderness now when I alude to such things as the basic wrongheadedness of the American group mind that thinks itself better than anyone from any other country, entitled to first pick and the largest share of everything simply by virtue of having been born in a land their fore fathers brutally stole from the natives..

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If I were well-adjusted (something no one who knows me would suggest)
Posted by: tommy_slothrop on Sep 11, 2008 9:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in a country like this I wouldn't admit it.

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Societal dysfunction and psychiatric pseudo-science
Posted by: tomkara on Sep 11, 2008 9:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There can be no question that our society, whether one wants to label it "insane" or not, has become highly dysfunctional. The author lists several examples at the end of the piece. We live in a rich country that cannot provide health care for all, which has a media controlled by corporations that refuses to deal in-depth with pressing social, environmental and political issues, a population that is becoming morbidly obese at the same time that it is undernourished by junk food, and political institutions which have failed to address basic human rights like adequate housing, job security and a reasonably equitable distribution of wealth. The critique of psychiatry is relevant to this because psychiatry pathologizes the inability to adapt to circumstances even if these circumstances are grossly out of sync with human needs. For example - our society is highly sexualized yet very sexually repressed at the same time. This was a cardinal theme in the best selling book of the 1950s "Generation of Vipers" by Phillip Weiley, who noted that a society which creates such massive psychological conflicts within the individuals who are part of it cannot continue to thrive. Workers who become suicidal because they cannot support their loved ones are treated as though they have a mental disorder, even though their distress is a perfectly natural response to circumstances. People are often urged to use religious beliefs or belief in the irrational as a means of coping with their hopelessness, rather than being made to recognize that they can deal rationally with both personal and social and environmental problems. I don't know where we are headed as a society, but it may be irrelevant when the planet dies.

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NORMAL HAS A VERY NARROW DEFINITION THESE DAYS
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 11, 2008 9:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Groupthink has taken over and individual thoughts and ideas are seen as symptoms and arouse suspicion. Bush sold his war because not enough people were willing to disagree. I know because I was one of the objectors. I wish I had a dollar for everytime I heard that I was crazy. Nobody said "you're wrong and here's why". I was just crazy. So minus all the science the general public has chosen to use this as an alternative to a healthy argument. The result is that we are all aliented from each other. Everybody is not crazy. Just afraid to think oustide the box which gets smaller everyday. Thanks, ANNA

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Let me try to sum things up
Posted by: PaulC on Sep 11, 2008 9:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wrote this late last night and it precisely fits this thread. Apologies as it is a reposting, but oh well -

Idiot Nation! - Nation of Idiots!

Embarrassment and laughing stock to the world
Nation of morons
Brainless clueless self-absorbed jerks
In their Monster Trucks Built Ram Tough
Zoom! Zoom! Zoom! - marketed to adults
As to children - there is no difference
In a Nation of Idiots!
Living, working, breeding, breathing
Just not thinking
In this brain-dead
Idiot Nation!

Turd Blossom
laughing smiling dancing sings
Found his place
In a Nation of Idiots

He brought us The Decider
A mean drunk illiterate
"Compassionate Conservative"
Lying SOB
Sold us down the river
In a brutal war without end
Shredded our Constitution
Tortures us all
Idiot Nation!

Apparently no one noticed
Was it on Entertainment Tonight?
Don't fret little ones
Sassy sexy Palin
Will make it alright!

Heartless killer
Religious zealot
Sassy sexy lies
Panders to oil and money
Oh, show us your thighs!
Who cares about truth
When it feels so right!
Idiot Nation!

Nation of Idiots
Nation of sheep
Our kindly CEO shepherds
Sold us out to
The Communist Chinese!

Now it is the financial wizards
Circling the carcass
Stripping the meat
It's all so confusing
Give me reality TV!
In a Nation of Idiots
Idiot Nation!


peace,
Paul

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My two cents worth...
Posted by: bambic on Sep 11, 2008 9:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...or maybe two dollars worth due to inflation, is that the word "insane" is a legal term, not a medical one. I think what the planet is becoming is "psychotic", possibly "neurotic", but then I've been diagnosed as depressed, suffering from PTSD and severe anxiety so what do I know...
Maybe there's something in the water? Air? Moonrocks?

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Thanks, Bruce...
Posted by: songbird1268 on Sep 11, 2008 9:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...for a very thoughtful and well-written article. As a highly intelligent and queer person who has been "Othered" more times than I care to tell by this society, I can confirm that you've absolutely hit the nail on the head regarding the alienation and isolation so many are experiencing in this broken, egocentric, and xenophobic society.

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» RE: Thanks, Bruce... Posted by: DaBear
Hello, my fellow sane...........
Posted by: ava1984 on Sep 11, 2008 10:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
citizens. I'd like to ask if this has ever happened to you?

You log in and write a lengthy, well thought out comment; and, poof when you try to preview it, your post disappears and you are asked to log in!

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» Yes, it's infuriating Posted by: truthlover
» No way!! Posted by: Drclaw
Prosecution for Mental Abuse/Exploitation
Posted by: Purple Girl on Sep 11, 2008 10:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This admin has committed many High crimes..but getting them prosecuted can be a monumental task- and require years of investigation andlitigation to untangle the web.
But One Crime they could be easily prosecuted for is related to mental abuse related to Exploitation.
Consider the similarity in tactics used by child predators/ sexual abusers.
They lure the child in with a lie (9/11 was an unforeseeable event- BS), they twist reality (Iraq involved with 9/11), They use fear or threats to maintain silence or captivity ( 'Vote Dem and the terrorist will get you'). Constantly repeat the 'horror' thus digging the mental hole deeper( replaying the 9/11 videos). And you have a terrified compliant captive. Klein's 'Shock Doctrine' was Right- which has led to collective 'Post Traumatic stress Syndrome'
Data alone on theincrease of prescriptions for psychotropic medications since 9/11 is hard evidence within itself. Doctors don't want to say they have been dispensing these meds needlessly. The Pharms don't want to admit they have only be producing the various varieties of anti depresssant & anti anxiety meds for no real reason- We'd be on their shit for not working on meds for ailments which are on the increase! which we are already ( Nice toe nails there in your Coffin!)
And God forbid the Neo Cons don't want to admit 9/11 has no real barring on this election- we must be afraid for them to win the national Security battle- thus the WH in Nov!
so hasn't this admin and their Corp sponsors perpetuated this Fear. Are they not employing the same tactics as a sexual predator?Hoping to elicit the same response/ results- Fear & compliance?
Wasn't their Coded 'Threat levels'a visual Threat (reinforcement) of emminent danger? Isn't 'Vote for a Dem and you will not be safe' basically a mental booby trapped Exit threat (You'll die)? Threat of reprocussions for not complying (Your family or friends will die)?
Is this Predatory mentality Not at the heart of their other crimes?
Do we not have clear, well documented and volumous evidence to support such a Prosecution?
The Republican convention speeches, videos and Police Actions support such comparisons and thus legal applications.

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Evidence?
Posted by: DaBear on Sep 11, 2008 10:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While Scientology can claim auditing adherents, and psychiatry can claim even more antidepressant advocates, neither treatment has been shown to be consistently superior to a placebo. And rather than validating their treatments with legitimate science performed by independent, financially unbiased scientists, both Scientology and psychiatry rely on what amounts to a well-funded public relations apparatus.

Evidence to support the claim that "neither treatment has been shown..."? I'd be especially interested in reading that, just thinking aloud as a critical thinker, doc. I don't doubt you, kinda, I just wanna see the evidence.

It's interesting that Levine sweeps up the good with the bad... brings to mind that thing about babies and bathwater. It's true when my 8 year old with ADHD wiring is out in the mountains, away from the Prussian authoritaria he does just fine, mostly. But when he has to live in a world run by the most authoritarian of the "normals" he requires that Concerta to stay clear of the legal-penal system.

So, as a critical thinker, I often question the motives and the assumptions of those that tend to chuck out the perfectly good "fixes" with the trash.

When it comes to Bi-Polar and other Attention difference spectrum "disorders" I also question the efficacy of Big Pharma's marketing based approach, dressing up the same compounds as "new" drugs... so effectively marketed that people actually believe that the deep depression and mania cycles are completely manageable... until you go on Crazyboards.com or other bi-polar forums and notice that 90% of the discussion activity revolves around the shot-gun style pharma cocktails that are rife with disturbing side effects and virtually no efficacy in controlling what's really going on. There's a huge problem with the medical-problem model for "mental illness" but that doesn't change the reality of MI's existence in the population. Disbelieving the problem and conflating that disbelief with a flawed treatment apparatus is a dangerous and harmful attitude to take, especially for a shrink like the author.

As a critical thinker, that makes me wonder about the good doc's motives as well... Just saying.

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» RE: good journalism Posted by: Lisa B
» (Pitt continued) Posted by: Lisa B
» 2nd page of Pitt continued Posted by: Lisa B
Take the Red Pill
Posted by: Elise on Sep 11, 2008 10:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In my opinion, the only way out is to take the Red Pill and go through the pain of seeing things without the "normal" illusion over it all. Neo had to go back into the matrix multiple times, during which he forgot that he could see everything for what it was without buying into it. He finally got it that the bullets coming at him were not real..... It takes great detachment to be able to do that.

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OM AH BROTHER
Posted by: caru on Sep 11, 2008 11:11 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i do not even have to read this to agree.

we all need some yogic and shamanic healing.

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Liberalism
Posted by: dockboy on Sep 11, 2008 11:22 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Liberalism results from insanity. Progressives are liberals by another name.

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» RE: Liberalism Posted by: kegbot1
» RE: Liam on the Left Posted by: Liam
ba
Posted by: mnstra on Sep 11, 2008 11:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a nice and studious article.
To say that the US is an insane culture is being too understanding and nice. If we could have a diagnosis of why the country is committing such heinous acts as have been committed since the end or WW2; it would fit the description of psychopathic criminal behavior/The majority of the country the neocons, the military, the finance industry, the medical establishment, the oil companies and all the ruling elite should be behind bars.

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consequences
Posted by: carolcsme on Sep 11, 2008 11:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Comment posted by ba at 11:34 am: I ask you to read it carefully. Our careless floundering has serious consequences, and "ba" sounds very sane, sane and with an agenda.

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I going to sell my house
Posted by: Jacquie420 on Sep 11, 2008 12:16 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Okay, thats it. I'm ready to drop out of society. I'm going to sell my house, move to the wilderness and live with the bears, coyotes, birds and insects.

Crazy?

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» RE: I going to sell my house Posted by: songbird1268
» Re: I going to sell my house Posted by: GrantBurkeVT
» RE: I going to sell my house Posted by: kungfuma
» RE: I going to sell my house Posted by: phatkhat
» My Kinda Crazy! Posted by: Dr O
Cultural Insanity
Posted by: Urgelt on Sep 11, 2008 12:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fascinating article. Alternet is at its best when it challenges its readers to think outside of the box, and this article does that in spades.

One problem I see is with choice of terms. "Insanity" itself is a relative term - one is "insane" only by comparison to what is accepted as "sane." There are no standards in psychology (or elsewhere) for comparing cultures or judging their relative sanity. Sociologists don't even try; instead, they rely on a possibly more useful term: functionality.

A society is a cooperative entity. To the extent that collective needs are satisfied through cooperative effort, it is functional. To the degree that those needs are not met, it is dysfunctional.

That axis, of course, begs the question: what do people need?

Although very potent thinkers like Maslow have addressed themselves to this question, need and motivation remain difficult to explain in the contemporary social sciences. Very likely one reason for this gap is a poor understanding of the biological component; e.g. the bio-electro-chemical functioning of the human brain. We can observe behaviors, but as yet, we cannot connect behaviors to the physical brain very well.

Very likely, this will change. Pharmacological treatment of mood disorders (which need not be termed insanity at all, but rather states of pain, anguish, or self-destruction) is, while still primitive, advancing. There is a good chance that, in a number of years, drugs may be discovered which are capable of weakening or strengthening cooperative behaviors, empathy, and social functioning. Likewise, advances in genetics may give us important clues as to how genes affect these functions.

Our own society is, like all societies that humanity has thus far known, a mixture of the functional and dysfunctional. Dr. Levine provides several important examples of serious dysfunction; many, many others exist. It's very important to have a deep discussion of societal dysfunction, because we are entering an age in which potent new tools will emerge for managing it, both in the individual and in the society at large. Those tools will have great potential for both harm and benefit, depending on who decides how they will be used, for what purpose, and to whose advantage.

The potential for abuse is already a concern. Psychiatrists today serve as enforcers for the status quo, strategizers for commercial advertising, instruments of a brutal criminal justice system, and, in some instances, facilitators of torture. The profession is, arguably, as dysfunctional as the society in which it is embedded.

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» All well said Posted by: PaulC
» RE: Cultural Insanity Posted by: VZEQICVA
Going Nuts?? Thank the coal industry
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Sep 11, 2008 12:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the byproducts of coal is MERCURY.
Millions of years worth. Mercury in the human body does a great many harmful things. Chief of these is developmental disabilities in embryos. It don't stop there. As it falls from the sky,in millions of tons,it gets into the water we drink and works the same on adults.
So if mental troubles are in your family or you,thank those heartless bastards in the coal industry. It's this kind of broadcast contamination from all the grandfathered coal burners that are the very reason I've always said the government 'owes us' Healthcare. It was their allowing of coal burning and the reduced air quality standards that have made us,our parents,grandparents and the great grandchildren we'll never know, to develop most of the mental disabilities we have now. It don't stop there either. Coal brought us lupis,fibromyalgia and aneurisms. Neither party will do much to change this. Clean coal is a joke because it's only the sulfurdioxide they are looking at,not mercury.
As for me...I'd rather have rotting lawn furniture and be sane than be a blithering idiot and great yard toys.
The true alternative....Wind and solar,and not the 400foot tall pieces of crap. There are a great many wind generators that produce more energy than the giant turbines and at less than half the cost in both building them and maintaining them. Where are they...the Netherlands and they crank it out at 250 watts!! Retrofit all the tall buildings with these babies and we shut down half the coal burners in America. It's time we took control of our lives away from the idiots that should'nt have it...THE CONGRESS

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America suffers from unconsciousness
Posted by: bodhidude on Sep 11, 2008 12:24 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I liked this article a great deal and agree with much of what the writer has to say I just wouldn't call it insane although its really a question of ones choice of words. Mental illness, insanity and neurosis are nothing more than labels. They represent what a group of people consider to be a problem that needs to be treated in some way. They are a collection of symptoms that are thought to be problematic. However often the label itself takes on a life of its own and becomes the problem.

In my view the point is that America is unhealthy as a society. Its unhealthy because the society does not promote health and it doesn't support it. Instead it promotes profit, power and distraction. People's true needs such as education, health care, community, healthy food and a clean environment are considered low priority or not important while the society puts most of its resources into creating wealth and power for a small group at the expense of the larger group. You get exploiting corporations out of that and you get repressive war mongering government out of that. Our society is fueled by man's base emotions of greed, fear and aggression. These low level emotions create separation, conflict and disease when they are maintained over a long period of time and the problem is compounded when they are created and maintained on a mass scale.

The only way I see our society surviving in the long term is through a shift in consciousness where what really nurtures and sustains us is placed at the top of the priority list and we put our effort, attention and resources into it. A healthy society doesn't thrive greed, isn't ruled by fear and doesn't mistake what is unhealthy for what is healthy. Only by radically restructuring our society can we create the healthy human beings that Fromm spoke of.

I believe we can do by starting with ourselves and our communities.

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» Some people are greedy Posted by: blogbooks
at least three problems here...
Posted by: inverse_agonist on Sep 11, 2008 12:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, the data on the effectiveness of antidepressants is much more complicated than "they aren't consistently superior to placebo." People with more severe depression are more likely to respond to them than people with milder depression, and talk therapy is about equally effective as medication therapy, with a combination of the two being most effective. This is complicated by the fact that chronic, mild depression (dysthymia) is better treated by medication than by talk therapy. All medications aren't effective for all people. It is often necessary to try several before finding the one that has the best effectiveness/side effects ratio for someone. Furthermore, the term "antidepressants" covers many classes of drugs with partly overlapping mechanisms: MAOIs, TCAs, SSRIs, SNRIs, DNRIs, etc. Is the author asserting that none of these are consistently superior to placebo? Does he even realize that "antidepressants" is not a pharmacological category?

Second, the following is an absurd statement:

"But psychiatry is no more scientifically relevant, as its trendy chemical-imbalance theories of mental illness have shelf-lives of about a decade, with establishment psychiatry most recently having retreated from both its serotonin-deficiency theory of depression and the excessive-dopamine theory of schizophrenia."

The POINT of science is that it's self-correcting, and that inadequate theories are revised or replaced when the evidence isn't consistent with them. If researchers in the mental illness field can abandon a once-dominant theory within a decade, isn't that evidence that the field is flexible and undogmatic?

Furthermore, everybody has known for a long time that a simple serotonin-deficiency account of depression isn't adequate, but a role for serotonin in depression is undisputed. Serotonin depletions achieved via reserpine or tryptophan-deficient diets can make some people more depressed, interactions between stress and serotonin-related genes (5-HTT) on depression have been described, and many antidepressants have some kind of serotonergic effect. What nobody knows is what happens AFTER the medication elevates serotonin levels that helps with depression. Current thinking is that it's related to levels of something called brain-derived neurotrophic factor, but that "trend" may change if someone comes up with a more plausible explanation to test.

Current thinking about schizophrenia is that it's marked by excess dopamine in the basal ganglia and insufficient dopamine in the cortex, which is one of the reasons it's difficult to treat. Lots of non-dopamine-related genes have also been linked to schizophrenia, as well.

Explanations have become more complex as our understanding of the brain advances, but that's more an argument in favor of psychiatry than against it. Is Fromm's 1955 book the last word on the subject for the author?

Third, the author sets up a false dilemma between addressing psychiatric problems and addressing cultural problems. The fact that I take an antidepressant every morning doesn't prevent me from seeing the same problems with the media, the health care system, the education system, and the war that the author sees.

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» The Real Problem Posted by: Dr O
"According to the Media, Citizens of the State of Oklahoma, are:
Posted by: One American Lady on Sep 11, 2008 1:36 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
25% (& higher %, increasing every day) OF THE TOTAL NUMBER OF (LEGAL) CITIZENS, OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA ... ARE *MENTALLY ILL*.
Nothing is said, about the mentally ill Behaviors... just that this number of people, are Mentally Ill.
Between the time, this surfaced, into the Media, many people "Are Wondering Which Side of *Sanity* to which they... should / do Belong".
(As with me, many individuals, are Intolerant, to Mental Health Meds... they Worsen the Symptoms of Dysfunctional Behaviors).
Also, Many U.S. Soldiers / Veterans & Disabled Offspring of these Individuals... ARE *INTOLERANT TO MENTAL HEALTH MEDS*... as most of the PTSD, is Caused by Toxic Chemical Substances... which cause Adverse Reaction to the Central Nervous System... when the Soldier / Veteran, is Exposed to Hazardous Material.
Believe it or not, When the Meat of the Body, has a Lighter Color... (inside the body)... the Higher the Chance, that the Soldier / Veteran / Individual... will be, to Contracting Respiratory Infections / Migraine Headaches / Degeneration of the Vital Organs of the Body... which have to do with the Flow of the Fluids of the Body...
No Wonder, so many of the Soldiers are Committing Suicide... from the Real True Pain... of the Reaction to Toxicity from Exposure to Hazardous Materials... that cause the Nervous System to Malfunction.. Mild to Severe Attacks... PTSD Symptoms, which begin with a symptom of allergy... but Anti-histimines, Don't Resolve the Issue...
It takes a Med to Counteract the Toxicity.. to which the Person, has been Exposed.
One American Lady.

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» Almost Posted by: Dr O
Good article. This is what keeps me coming back to Alternet.
Posted by: blogbooks on Sep 11, 2008 3:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Erich Fromm is one of the most significant figures of the 20th century - or at least he would be if Americans read books. He was as much a philosopher as he was a psychologist. Fromm was my first exposure to his level of thinking and writing at the tender age of 12. I made extremely heavy use of my dictionary just getting through the first 100 pages of "To Have or To Be?"

Ultimately it was a life changing experience and has shaped my philosophical outlook and academic interests ever since.

From the article:
"how to adjust, be happy and be normal within our economic system."

We are not free. We are only free in the playground/sandbox environment that is America in the 21st century. Free to work, free to be exploited, free to spend our money. But never mistake that for real freedom.

Freedom within a framework determined by someone else is ultimately superficial and unfulfilling for certain segments of society.

This society is designed by the average for the average. Anyone at the extreme ends of the "norm" is alienated and marginalized.

I think it's time to re-read Fromm's "The Sane Society."

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Change is coming to America and the world!
Posted by: thinkverybig on Sep 11, 2008 4:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our goal is to get this somehow on TV and hopefully recited at Obama's inauguration.

Your help is needed. If you're ready for change, please share this video with all of your family and friends.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EM58nqX1ehE

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The Concept of 'Mental Illness'
Posted by: artie on Sep 11, 2008 4:37 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rather than Fromm, I would argue that Thomas Szasz provides a better critique of the psychiatric community's "witchcraft," and it is one that appeals to 'logical' assessment rather than a humanistic 'sociological' assessment. Using the tools of analytical philosophy, Szasz compellingly argues that the very concept of "mental illness" is itself logically incoherent or is predicated on logical incoherence, and that it is from this incoherence that pharmaceutical prescriptions are issued as therapeutic or construed as such. Basically, folks, unlike physical illness, such as influenza, STDs, measles, etc. - which can be treated chemically - a conceptual lexicon of "mental illness" is fabricated and secured against attack without question. What is it that is supposed to be ill in such cases (in the physical case we have a body or body parts)? Having specific thoughts, or certain collections of opinion, or suffering some variety of feelings is NOT constitutive of some scientific/naturalistic state called "mentally healthy." But we already know this: such thoughts, opinions, feelings, etc., are a matter of our embedding socio-cultural webbing, and not of some 'objectively' characterizable state of our "Mind" (whatever / wherever that is (it is not the Brain - that is another piece of the metaphysical witchcraft!!!!)).
So, read Thomas Szasz, folks: The Myth of Mental Illness, The Manufacture of Madness (a similar title of Foucault's), and Ideology and Insanity...., then, be happy, don't worry, ...., and take your Reggae regularly...

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Brilliant and well said
Posted by: kegbot1 on Sep 11, 2008 4:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It took a long time and a good deal of psychology and anti-deps before I came to the revelation that has ruled my life since. The single greatest determining factor of depression in this country is intelligence. The more intelligent, rational and aware of your circumstances (plus if you have too much of a human heart) the more you will tend to be miserable in American society. You will also, in almost every case, politically liberal.

I wholeheartedly agree with the author - American society is insane. Not even a little - a lot. American society and its particularly predatory form of market capitalism deforms the human spirit and generally makes intelligent and sensitive people miserable to be a part of this insane system.

The problem is, even if you realize that's it's not YOU that's insane, it's American society, unless you're wealthy enough to emigrate, you're stuck here having to deal with it. The coping with this insanity is what is needed in terms of treatment that helps people, NOT in being focused with what's wrong with you. I realize there are some people who may indeed be chemically imbalanced. But for many, many people downing the pills and wasting money on the shrinks, the most liberating thing is to know that it's not you.

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» I absolutely agree Posted by: Artemis3
For the Philosophically and Psychoanalytically Inclined
Posted by: pdxjoe on Sep 11, 2008 5:49 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, I have great respect for Erich Fromm and other Frankfurt-school Freudo-Marxists. However, the great critic of American psychology/psychiatry/psychoanalysis, before Fromm, Foucault and Deleuze even, was Jacques Lacan. You see it in his writings prior to the 1950s, but his first seminar in 1952-53 was precisely a critique of how American ego-psychology, which has strongly shaped American psychology since then. Those mildly swayed by this article should look into it, which contrary to popular gab is not nearly as impenetrable as his writings.

Secondly, a contemporary book that in many ways takes the concerns of this article as its starting point and develops it into an all out critique of how late capitalism creates these "insane" conditions. It's called "The Art of Shrinking Heads: On the New Servitude of the Liberated in the Age of Total Capitalism," by Dany Robert Dufour. From the back-cover:

"After the hell of the Nazis and the terror of Communism, it is possible that a new catastrophe has appeared on the horizon: this time it is neoliberalism that wants to create its own 'new man."

"For two centuries, Kant's critical subject and Freud's neurotic subject provided us with philosophical templates for modernity, but today modern capitalism is systematically destroying these two subjects and replacing them with something new. The two subjects of modernity both presupposed some reference to a higher value or power (like Reason) which provided a symbolic guarantor, but neoliberalism, by emphasizing the exchange of commodities in the marketplace, destroyes all transcendental references of this kind. Now human beings no longer look beyond themselves and no longer have to agree about symbolic values: they only have to get on with the circulation and consumption of goods. Deprived of his faculty of judgement and urged to enjoy himself without restraint, the 'new man' of neoliberalism takes centre stage in the era of global capitalism.

"In this biting critique of our contemporary condition Dufour shows that the radical transformation of the subject brought about by neoliberalism -- what he calls 'the art of shrinking heads' -- has far-reaching consequences for our ways of living together" (Publisher's Description).

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broaden the definition
Posted by: sirios on Sep 11, 2008 6:08 PM   
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People who conciously choose relative indentity ie; mind, ego ,body, senses, over their own unbounded essence, must surely be insane. This is analogous to searching under the sofa cushions for change to buy a loaf of bread, while 100 million sits in a forgotten bank account. what i am saying is so far removed even from concept, that the average American would call me insane for even suggesting that in essence they are an unrealized ocean of love , compassion, kindness and beauty. No personal or religious comparisons intented, but did we [humans] not already kill someone in the past when he simply suggested such a thing? Americans have not cornered the market on insanity, we just seem to be the world leaders on the subject.

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It's a Game
Posted by: radical53 on Sep 11, 2008 6:30 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Insane" is way over the top.

To me the scary thing about the 2004 election and, potentially, the 2008 election is the idea that people will vote for someone just because he or she is "one of us".

In 2004 people seemed to be saying, "Bush is a lousy President, but he's our lousy President. We're not about to vote for the other guy."

This year the choice is even clearer. Usually the choice is between the "lesser of two evils" (although "evil" is also over the top). This year we actually have a very positive choice. Still, McCain has taken the lead in the polls, just by picking a right-winger from Alaska.

I'll probably never understand it. I know I'll never accept it.

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Liam on the Left
Posted by: Liam on Sep 11, 2008 6:57 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For years I worked for service organizations. I came out of the anti-war (Vietnam) movement and the McGovern Campaign. The people I worked for were self-centered and awful managers but never made mistakes because they were always right because they managed using the approved American business methods (and read Steve Covey!). Management methods based on bottom line and a 24 hour cycle. Money means EVERYTHING! It created a nutty work environment and one that produced little and ran most people out the door in a short time. It created alienated workers who lost any interest or pride in what they were doing. This is the situation in 100% of the economy and the American workplace - and in Amerika - what you do is who you are.

We are a crazy culture that produces crazy people who become alienated and in the extreme pick up guns and kill (usually) the innocent. I would suggest anyone who can't see this connection read a short little piece by Marx called "On Money" - it is the U.S. in 2008 and shows why we are on our way to a 2nd tier nation (if Bush hasn't put us there already - $24 billion debt to China just last month alone!!!)

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We are all living within the King of Hearts...
Posted by: lexicon on Sep 11, 2008 10:26 PM   
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The movie, King of Hearts (in french, "Le Roi de Cœur", 1966) was a movie about a WWI soldier who entered a town in which the inhabitants had all fled, leaving the occupants of the local insane asylum to populate the town.

In a nutshell, it became difficult for the scottish soldier to decide which is more insane, the world of the "lunatics," or the world of the war.

In other words, "insanity" is really about context, and there's no real absolutes about it.

In truth, I wonder who is the more insane, a man who feels compelled by inner daemons to cut himself and bleed, or a man who votes for republicans who then pillage his way of life...

...if you take the view that "insanity" is acting in a way that is self-injurious,it then just becomes a matter of degree, eh?

lexicon

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oxheadone
Posted by: oxheadone on Sep 12, 2008 2:27 AM   
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A country that could reelect George Bush as president in 2004 is ipso facto insane (defined as repeated behavior that obviously is failing).If the republicans are reelected in 2008 that insanity will have further proof. Some of the insanity has explainable bases: religious bigotry - especially evangelical and catholic. Some involves racial bigotry which is particularly strong among the less educated and poorer segments of society. It is very, very difficult to operate a functioning democratic society with a substantial segment of the society being insane. It may be that the US is moving to severe non-functioning and/or fascism to survive.

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lost our moral compass
Posted by: ugotstahwonder on Sep 12, 2008 3:27 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think what makes us in the U.S. arguably "insane" is really rooted in our loss of a moral compass. There is a growing scientific conclusion that there is a moral imperative at our basic cellular level. When we depart from any sense of morality, we invite our inevitable falling apart. I'm not preaching, I just don't think it's an intellectual problem at the root of the problem identified.

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Religion and Logic
Posted by: mike_burns on Sep 12, 2008 5:58 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have sacrificed Logic for Religion. Faith based economics will not work. Faith based anything will not work. Faith based foreign policy, failure.
Not all psychology is faith based.
Religion is the source of insanity and world hatred, from history to the present. The media pushes faith based idealisms. We can't even teach science, anymore. We are a faith based nation, running on faith based philosophies We are doomed!
God is so great, that when he took a dump, Life sprang from the fertilizer. Yes, God gives a shit!
There is your religion you can go by!

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Not a bad diagnosis, but...
Posted by: Socioecologist on Sep 12, 2008 6:59 PM   
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Why are you quoting a psychologist to diagnose a society? Wouldn't a sociologist's opinion be more appropriate here?

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» RE: Not a bad diagnosis, but... Posted by: sallyride
Depends what you mean by insane.
Posted by: wisegalah on Sep 13, 2008 1:32 AM   
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A person is adjudged mad or insane if they have lost contact with any form of objective reality and are lost in a private inner world.

In other words are unable to reconcile their inner world with the outside world or even to recognise that there is an outer world.

By that standard America has long been a mad society.
Driven by internal concerns about maintaining the American way and standard of living, concerns about security, the desire to inflict its values upon the rest of the world, America has always failed to have any realistic appreciation and understanding of the interests, rights and responsibilities of non-Americans.
This is why America has had no hesitation in intervening in the affairs of other nations ands waging bloody and vindictive campaigns against them.
Two pieces of evidence of this American psychosis.
1. Bush's statement that "the American way of life is not negotiable". This is insanity pure and simple in that it shows a position of total blindness to the realities of the planet. Still you cannot expect a sensible or sane statement from many politicians, especially a psychpathic dimwit like Bush.
What is really not negotiable are the limits of the world's resources. The American way is an aberation which like all diseased societies will pass into history at some time hopefully before it has managed to destroy the everything.

2. I have found that most Americans are flabbergasted to know that the overwhelming majority of people outside America regard their country with amazement, fear and contempt. This amazement is an expression of America's primary narcissism. They think that they are the centre of the world just as every child does in infancy.
On one occasion I was with a group of Americans and in the discussion about my country there was some criticism of some of the ways we do things. I had no difficulty in discussing these issues. When however I made criticism of things American then there was shocked silence and a sulky childish withdrawal. I could not get a rational comment.

My lecturer of over forty years ago who described America as the greatest example of mass immaturity the world has known was seemingly close to the truth.

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Environmentally Ill
Posted by: beautifulady2003 on Sep 13, 2008 5:45 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the writer is on to something, definitely...These days you can tell your family doctor that you've got the blues and walk out of his or her office with a prescription for an antidepressant. No therapy, no recommendations for lifestyle change, no nothing. Just take a pill, you'll feel better.

I spent over 10 years working in a job that I hated. My bosses harassed me, threatened me, sabotaged my work and treated me like dirt. I spent the last 4 years of that job on antidepressants until one day I realized that it was not I who was sick; I stopped the antidepressants and quit the job. This was almost 5 years ago. I have never felt better in my life as I do now. Even when suffering extreme personal hardship and tragedy, I have not felt depressed.

Sometimes there is an external cause making us ill. Remove the cause, and the illness cures itself. We have a pharmaceutical industry that is allowed to advertise directly to consumers, which makes no sense at all. People diagnose themselves, go to their doctor and insist on being given a prescription for the drug they saw on TV. Antidepressants are big sellers for the drug industry because they have encouraged people to believe they should be happy all the time and never feel sad, and even worse, they make people believe they can't solve their problems on their own. Of all the people out there taking antidepressants, maybe one in 10 suffers from authentic clinical depression.

The same scenario applies to the diagnosis of bipolar disorder. It seems to be a hang tag diagnosis; it is so amazingly overused, and it is a convenient name to hang on some (not all) children with behavior problems, and on moody adults. My sister is bipolar. She was diagnosed many years ago. On the other hand, my daughter was incorrectly diagnosed five years ago when she went to a neurologist for headaches, and as a result, her exhusband has custody of her children and she can't go to court to challenge this because her ex always brings up her "illness." My daughter presently takes no medications and is mentally healthy, has given birth to a third child by her second husband.

I think we need to stop this obsession with feeling good all the time and look at what is making us such a miserable society in the first place.

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» RE: nvironmentally Ill Posted by: strange_trp
this is not a new idea
Posted by: strange_trp on Sep 13, 2008 6:42 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the idea that clients receiving mental health services might actually have a more realistic understanding and representation of the current status of our society in general. Arno Gruen published a similar book titled The Insanity of Normalcy. As a behavioral science professional, i see very little use in diagnoses- although they may help insurance companies justify denying payment, they essentially give the client ownership of the label chosen for them- even worse, physicians (especially primary care MD in managed care setting) use a diagnostic term and numeric code essentially as a clinical justification to prescribe potentially harmful chemicals made by the pharmaceutical companies and marketed directly to the clients themselves- a way of skirting accepted understanding of the principle elements of a disorder and writing Paxil for a divorce. Guess what? Divorce is not a disease. Furthermore, these prescriptions are seen as acceptable treatment of a disease that the client does not even meet the diagnostic criteria for- in this instance, a major depressive episode (major depressive mood disorder) CANNOT be justified when the dysphoric symptoms occur solely in reaction to life stressors that are significant to threaten our sense of basic security. You may feel sad, but feeling sad in itself does not justify leaving 5HT in post- synaptic receptor sites as long as it would like to stay there. Rather a diagnosis of adjustment disorder or dysphoric disorder NOS would be more appropriate and the condition in this example is likely better to respond to the anxiolytic benzodiazepines rather than serotonin/ norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors.

But that doesn't matter to the client anymore because when serotonin stays at unusually high levels after release, relative to GABA and dopamine in the prefrontal cortex and other areas of the brain that like the neurotransmitter equalization left up to the body and not a foreign substance. It doesn't matter because the effect of that particular class of meds (SSRI, SNRI) make you not care about things that used to matter while at the same time the doctor is making suggestions to the client, essentially forming the client's new self with the help of Prozac.

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Left out one thing about Scientology
Posted by: greenknight on Sep 14, 2008 2:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
L. Ron Hubbard didn't start calling his system a religion until he got in trouble for practicing psychiatry without a license. He considered psychiatry a huge, very lucrative scam - and he wanted a piece of the action. No wonder the two systems resemble each other, Hubbard's is a knock off!

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In a Nut-Shell.
Posted by: talkville on Sep 14, 2008 4:29 AM   
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"An unhealthy society is one which creates mutual hostility (and) distrust, which transforms man into an instrument of use and exploitation for others, which deprives him of a sense of self, except inasmuch as he submits to others or becomes an automaton."

Pretty much, this quote from Fromm puts it squarely. If one attends to the general MSM and even other institutional outlets, we are all being subjected to a kind of "Group Therapy" (and have for quite a few years now!), which seems to have as a goal to achieve precisely the kind of citizen above described: one who "submits to others and becomes an automaton". Not only in journalistic 'human-interest'-type stories, but in programming generally, one finds an immense effort to emphasize a complete reliance on 'experts', on civil and criminal 'authorities' and authority-figures and on all kinds of 'managed care' by agents of the Corporate-State. "Keep Your Nose Clean, Do As You're Told and Obey -- We Know."

A mere glance at the ways-and-means that were evident at the Republican Convention with respect to the demonstrations there ought to be evidence enough of what happens to those who happen to disagree and who, despite all odds, still manage to have a "sense of self" as the Fromm quote mentions.

The "Group Therapy" is working. The problem is, that it is directed not to make society more civilized or healthier; it is directed to the sole purpose of Social Control. General indications tend to show that it's working beyond the wildest dreams of this Pentagon-led bunch of Prussianizers and usurpers of a government 'of the people, for the people and by the people.

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Capitalism is the problem
Posted by: susan rosenthal1 on Sep 14, 2008 6:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A society based on exploitation and oppression must portray those who protest as sick or deviant.

During slavery days, experts argued that Black people were psychologically suited for a life of slavery, so there must be something wrong with those who rebelled.

Today, those who rebel are considered to be sick or deviant and in need of “treatment” or punishment.

What’s missing from this article is a real diagnosis:

We can't be healthy in a sick world. A global capitalist system that enriches the few at the expense of the many is sick and must be replaced.

Mental Illness or Social Sickness?

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No...
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on Sep 14, 2008 9:02 AM   
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...it just got more religious...which could be argued to be one in the same.

When times are hard, people usually turn to things that make them feel good with the least effort. Religion very nicely provides that outlet.

For example in this society to describe a person as "God fearing" is to somehow bestow upon them admiration. Admiration that they did not have to earn in any other way. When in reality it is either a sign of mental illness or a front for other things to be fearful of invisible beings.

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Insane? No, Just Arrogant and Stupid
Posted by: MYungbluth on Sep 14, 2008 10:12 AM   
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No one could read Andrew Bacevich's brilliant book - The Limits of Power, The End of American Exceptionalism - without understanding the proof of who we are as a people: a nation of consumers dedicated to the proposition that we are primarily noble, superior, and ENTITLED to all the oil, credit, and cheap goods we can get our hands on. We think we can and SHOULD change the world in our image, and spread "freedom" by use of military force to the entire planet - whether nations want it or not. Some may infer that this is insane; I believe it's the ACCEPTED philosophy of the American way of life. Believing we are superior to everyone, that we can control the world in ways acceptable to the U.S., and that we should never have to worry about paying the bill - as individuals and as a nation - COULD be considered insane, but SHOULD be considered the arrogance, greed and hubris that will lead to our own undoing.

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Has American Society Gone Insane?
Posted by: Bearzerker on Sep 14, 2008 2:05 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You elected Bush43 not once but twice.

First we need to define insanity;
1.)Schizophrenia:
a split from reality, not a split personality
2.)Psychosis:
a psyche unable to feel empathy or harm inflicted on others

Does the US fall into this category?
IMHO I think so on both counts!
Monsters are mostly Psychotics trying to feel... something...
while others are living a Schizophrenic fantasy through there MSN controlled Boxes

the truly scary thing about all this is the amount of weapons people in the US own and have!
any reasonable people will acknowledge that you don't give guns to crazy people, so why are we arming training and sending our gifted children off to kill, maim and return to us as pill popping zombies filled with an enbittered entitlement to the America they thought they fought and died for?

Insanity is usually a definition limited to an individual but this article lends itself to the nationalistic fervor gripping the nation for the past 2 decades...
Religious fervor and zeal are not solely owned by the US, but other nations such as Saudi Arabia, Israel, Palestine Pakistan, Afghanistan, India have staked claims into this fertile mentality too...
End world and Armageddon hopefuls are fanning the flames of destruction worldwide consuming multiple peoples and faiths in their end world preachings..

the list is endless and the causes sublime but traceable to religious fundamentalism and the extremes they pursue!

The US has been as insane a nation as any leading religious force on the planet.

the real tell tale of the US's insanity is;
ALLOWING A POLITICAL PROCESS THE LEEWAY TO DECLARE AN OPEN ENDED WAR ON CONCEPTS!

we're not at war people...
we are engaged world wide, on a policing action!... time to recognize it as such!

WAR... DECLARED OR UNDECLARED... THAT'S THE REAL INSANITY

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I wonder...
Posted by: John Ludi on Sep 14, 2008 4:17 PM   
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what Fromm would have made of Paris Hilton.

I have long thought of Western culture as a form of mass psychosis, especially American hyper-materialism, so I really appreciated your article. Thanks!

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The most substantial books on this subject
Posted by: rickiey on Sep 15, 2008 8:22 AM   
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had to be written as fiction.

Check out the Mission Earth series by L.Ron Hubbard.

It is an interesting read, even if you disagree with the satirical points made about our civilization.

(plot summary: A "combat engineer" comes to earth to save the planet from the human race so it can be invaded later)

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speaking of our current president
Posted by: ugotstahwonder on Sep 15, 2008 3:56 PM   
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. . . am I the only one who noticed a resemblence to Bush in the recent interview of Charles Manson?

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Col Hackworths take on J Mccain
Posted by: pangea on Sep 15, 2008 6:29 PM   
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Maybe, just maybe John has some sort of MP as a result of his torture. Google this
vietnamveteransagainstjohnmccain.com

I hope not.

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The author is 99% ignorant about Scientology
Posted by: stewart on Sep 22, 2008 5:09 AM   
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Almost any Scientologist would agree with the author that Western society is nuts, and getting nuttier by the week.
But it is also clear to any student of Scientology that the author of this article has no genuine knowledge of the subject. His statements on Scientology are unrepresentative and false. He should at least read (and understand) the book Dianetics before making such sweeping statements.
The intention of Scientology, with regard to the individual, are to restore him to true self-determinism: for him to be at cause over his own mind and life - not to "adjust" him to society. The author got it so diametrically wrong that it's almost insulting.
Students of Scientology are expected to think and evaluate for themselves the truth of any of Scientology. The only way to really evaluate Scientology (or any subject actually) is by doing it and observing for oneself - not by reading 3rd-hand material on the internet. After all, it is an intensely practical subject.
Also, it has been repeatedly independently validated, over and over, for its ability to (for example) increase intelligence.
Stewart
[I am an ordinary Scientologist, living in London, UK]

"You possibly have said to yourself or somebody has said to you, 'There is something terribly wrong with me because I want to help my fellow man.' Hardly - —I think there is probably hardly a person here who hasn't had that question in his mind. 'What is the matter with me that I want to help all the stray dogs? What is the matter with me that every time I see this guy at work getting a headache or something like that, that I want to give him some help? What's the matter with me, I'm always sticking my chin out? Yeah, what's the matter with me?'
"As long as you have some desire to help your fellow man, you're probably well and when you lose it you're sick. It should be translated every time in, 'What's the matter with me that I no longer wish to help my fellow man?' That is the make-break point of a case!" - L. Ron Hubbard, 29 December 1957

"... the biggest right there is, is not the right to vote, is not the right to freedom of speech, or press, or religion or anything else. The biggest right there is in human rights is the right to help [others]!" - L. Ron Hubbard, 5 July 1958.

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