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Medical Heretic & Holistic Physician
I am a New York-based virtual holistic physician, medical journalist, and author dedicated to defending individual rights in healthcare. Drawing on my medical background, my work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them.
Currently, I focus my professional efforts on four complementary pillars:
Clinical Advocacy: Through my virtual telehealth practice, I offer Holistic Lifestyle & Nutrition Coaching that nurtures good health in body, mind, and spirit. Rather than practicing traditional primary care medicine, I offer holistic wellness alternatives that prioritize the whole person over a diagnosis while supporting bodily autonomy and informed decision-making.
Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at MandelNews.com, I investigate and report on issues involving psychiatry, healthcare, and human rights. My goal is to encourage thoughtful discussion and ensure that human rights remain at the forefront of medical discourse.
Creative Advocacy: Through speculative fiction short stories, I explore questions of ethics, freedom, institutional power, and the resilience of the human spirit. These imaginative narratives invite readers to reflect on complex social and medical issues from new perspectives.
Children's Literature: I also write original children's short stories that celebrate kindness, curiosity, imagination, compassion, and a love of learning. These uplifting tales are designed to entertain young readers while encouraging positive values and creativity.

Sugar may taste comforting and familiar, yet consuming it in excess quietly undermines the body’s natural balance. When large amounts of added sugar flood the bloodstream, the pancreas must work overtime to produce insulin, and over time this strain can contribute to insulin resistance. As insulin becomes less effective, blood glucose lev
Sugar may taste comforting and familiar, yet consuming it in excess quietly undermines the body’s natural balance. When large amounts of added sugar flood the bloodstream, the pancreas must work overtime to produce insulin, and over time this strain can contribute to insulin resistance. As insulin becomes less effective, blood glucose levels rise, increasing the risk of type 2 diabetes. This metabolic disruption also encourages the storage of excess fat, particularly around the abdomen, which is closely linked to cardiovascular disease.
Beyond metabolic concerns, high sugar intake fuels chronic inflammation. This low‑grade, persistent inflammation affects blood vessels, joints, and even the brain, gradually eroding overall wellness. Many people also notice that sugary foods create rapid spikes and crashes in energy. These fluctuations can leave the mind feeling foggy, irritable, and fatigued, making it harder to maintain steady focus throughout the day.
The impact on heart health is equally significant. Diets high in added sugar raise triglyceride levels and can lower protective HDL cholesterol. Over time, this combination places stress on the cardiovascular system, increasing the likelihood of hypertension and arterial plaque buildup. Excess sugar also contributes to fatty liver disease, a condition once rare but now increasingly common due to modern dietary patterns.
Even emotional well‑being is affected. Frequent sugar highs and lows can disrupt mood stability, and emerging research suggests that chronic inflammation from high sugar intake may influence long‑term cognitive health. While the body can certainly enjoy and process small amounts of natural sugars found in fruits and vegetables, the concentrated sugars added to processed foods overwhelm these natural systems.
Choosing whole foods, staying mindful of added sugars, and embracing naturally sweet options like fresh fruit can help restore balance. By reducing excess sugar, the body and mind gain steadier energy, clearer focus, and stronger long‑term health.

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Dr. Howy never meant to become an enemy of the medical establishment. He began as a gentle, holistic physician — someone who believed healing meant listening, understanding, and restoring dignity. But over years of practice, he saw a pattern so disturbing it shattered every illusion he had been taught. Patients were not merely being harme
Dr. Howy never meant to become an enemy of the medical establishment. He began as a gentle, holistic physician — someone who believed healing meant listening, understanding, and restoring dignity. But over years of practice, he saw a pattern so disturbing it shattered every illusion he had been taught. Patients were not merely being harmed by coercive psychiatry; they were being harmed by non‑coercive psychiatry too, the entire infrastructure of mainstream mental healthcare. The pain, the suffering, the disability, the stigma, the financial ruin — none of it was accidental. It was structural. It was the system’s inherent dynamic, not a glitch but the design.
The more he looked, the clearer it became. Psychiatry had normalized devastation as a “good outcome.” A patient who lost their job, their autonomy, their credibility — this was considered proof the “treatment plan” was working. A patient who became dependent, disabled, or socially erased — this was considered progress. And the psychiatrists who inflicted this damage were celebrated as heroes of modern medicine. Dr. Howy felt sick watching it happen. He felt even sicker realizing he had once believed in it.
What horrified him even more was the judiciary. County judges across the country upheld and ordered psychiatric intervention with full knowledge of what they were doing. They knew damn well that even outpatient intervention — supposedly the “gentler” option — was catastrophic. They knew it ruined activists, poor people, and even children. They knew it destroyed reputations, careers, families, and futures. Yet they signed the orders anyway, acting like feudal lords presiding over a psychiatric fiefdom instead of a constitutional court.
Dr. Howy dove into the legal history. He read every major U.S. Supreme Court ruling on forced psychiatric care. The opinions were written like brilliant treatises for top law students — elegant, polished, intellectually dazzling. But to him, it was all trash. Why were rulings even necessary for the implementation of what he now saw as Vodoo Medicine? Why were psychiatrists treated like legitimate authorities when their discipline behaved like a cult? Why wasn’t psychiatry simply outlawed? Why weren’t the perpetrators arrested and convicted for crimes against humanity? He asked these questions out loud, and that was his mistake.
His associates — the same people who once called him a friend — turned the system against him. They whispered that he had “changed,” that he was no longer the compliant young doctor they remembered. They said he had become “radical,” “unstable,” “obsessed.” And in a swift, fixed kangaroo hearing overseen by a leading psychiatrist in New York City and a Family Medicine colleague who had once praised his compassion, they declared him unfit. It took minutes. No evidence. No testimony. Just a signature and a nod.
Dr. Howy survived the forced treatment, but it destroyed his career. His practice collapsed. His reputation was smeared. His finances were gutted. But he refused to disappear. With what money he had left, he turned to advocacy writing — exposing the system that had tried to erase him. He wrote with fire, with clarity, with the moral force of someone who had seen the machinery from the inside and lived to tell the story.
He’s still around today. Still fighting. Still writing. Still refusing to let the psychiatric establishment define reality. And every time he publishes a new piece, every time he speaks out, every time he refuses to be silent, he proves that the system failed to break him — and that the truth, once awakened, does not go back to sleep.
Fiction by Dr Harold Mandel






County‑court judges across the United States who preside over psychiatric cases have become the most corrosive force operating inside the American legal system. They no longer behave like public servants bound by constitutional limits. They behave like petty monarchs of feudal micro‑states, each ruling a private courtroom kingdom where du
County‑court judges across the United States who preside over psychiatric cases have become the most corrosive force operating inside the American legal system. They no longer behave like public servants bound by constitutional limits. They behave like petty monarchs of feudal micro‑states, each ruling a private courtroom kingdom where due process is treated as an inconvenience and human freedom is reduced to a disposable commodity.
These judges have annihilated the Constitution in practice. Activists and vulnerable individuals are seized, dragged into psychiatric hospitals, and violently drugged before they ever see a judge. Their “day in court” is a grotesque ritual lasting only minutes — a pre‑scripted performance conducted by a judge sitting beside a psychiatrist and a second doctor who works with the judge daily. There is no sworn testimony, no evidence, no jury, and no public oversight. The outcome is predetermined long before the detainee enters the room.
These hearings often take place inside or adjacent to the psychiatric hospitals themselves, turning the courtroom into an extension of the institution. Freedom is extinguished with mechanical efficiency. The judge, the psychiatrist, and the hospital form a single closed loop of power, operating without scrutiny and without restraint.
The judges who preside over these cases display a staggering ignorance of mental healthcare. They prove it every time they treat forced drugging, confinement, and coercion as legitimate “treatment.” If they understood even the basics of mental health, they would never pretend that a psychiatrist’s word is evidence or that a few minutes of scripted questioning constitutes justice. Their ignorance is not passive — it is weaponized.
These judges officiate over sham proceedings for enormous paychecks, automatic prestige, and the illusion of authority. They demand public respect while demonstrating no qualifications, no expertise, and no moral grounding. Their courtrooms function as personal comfort zones where they can coast through life, featherbed their careers, and destroy the lives of the people brought before them.
From these insulated chambers, they have quietly dismantled the core ideals the United States claims to stand for. They have discarded morality, ethics, constitutional protections, democratic principles, and the basic concept of equality under the law. They have turned the country into a patchwork of judicial fiefdoms where rights exist only on paper and where psychiatric courts operate as tools of repression, silencing activists and punishing truth‑tellers through confinement and forced medication.
This is not mental healthcare.
This is not justice.
This is not democracy.
It is the slow, silent sabotage of the American project — carried out by judges who operate in the shadows and answer to no one.

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