DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
Sunday April 19, 2026
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DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
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I am a New York-based physician, medical journalist, and fiction writer. My work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems and corporate influence. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

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When the world feels heavy, raising your voice can be the light that lifts you. Advocacy is not only a call for justice—it is a form of self‑care. In standing peacefully for human rights, we heal both the world and ourselves. The act of protest transforms despair into purpose, isolation into belonging, and silence into strength.
When the world feels heavy, raising your voice can be the light that lifts you. Advocacy is not only a call for justice—it is a form of self‑care. In standing peacefully for human rights, we heal both the world and ourselves. The act of protest transforms despair into purpose, isolation into belonging, and silence into strength.
Helplessness corrodes the spirit. Peaceful protest reverses that erosion. Each step, signature, or conversation reclaims your agency. You move from passive witness to active participant in history, rebuilding the inner architecture of resilience—the belief that your actions matter.
In solitude, sorrow can echo endlessly. Advocacy creates a chorus. Among others who share your values, you find validation and connection. Shared purpose releases oxytocin—the bonding hormone—reminding us that healing is communal, not solitary.
Anger, when buried, becomes exhaustion. When expressed through peaceful protest, it becomes fuel for transformation. Moral injury turns into moral action. The energy that once wounded now builds.
To stand for something greater than yourself is to touch transcendence. Knowing you acted with integrity—on the right side of history—anchors self‑respect and inner peace. Advocacy aligns values with action, creating harmony between conscience and conduct.
Healing through activism requires balance. Rest is not retreat—it is renewal. Sustainable advocacy honors both the cause and the advocate.
By raising your voice for yourself and others, you strengthen your own spirit while helping to shape a more humane world. In the pursuit of justice, we often discover the peace we were seeking all along.

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Dr. Robert Jennings, a dedicated holistic physician from New York, found himself captivated by the vibrant energy of Rosylyn, a rising K-Pop star. Their paths converged at a Global Citizen concert in New York City, an unlikely meeting that sparked an immediate and profound connection. Despite the decades separating them, their mutual attr
Dr. Robert Jennings, a dedicated holistic physician from New York, found himself captivated by the vibrant energy of Rosylyn, a rising K-Pop star. Their paths converged at a Global Citizen concert in New York City, an unlikely meeting that sparked an immediate and profound connection. Despite the decades separating them, their mutual attraction transcended societal norms, blossoming into an undeniable bond.
For years, Robert had been an ardent admirer of Rosylyn's performances, following her meteoric rise to fame and fortune in the K-Pop world with a sense of awe. He had never encountered a woman quite like her, and her image, much like a scene from a Hollywood romance, lingered persistently in his thoughts. He harbored a quiet wonder, however, if their affections would truly be reciprocated should they ever meet. The disparities in their ages and financial standings—Rosylyn's immense wealth contrasting with Robert's more conservative financial situation—were concerns that weighed on his mind. Yet, his unwavering commitment to holistic medicine had, in his belief, granted him a biological age far younger than his chronological one. He also mused that perhaps, coming from a country like Korea, Rosylyn might appreciate a dedicated professional who prioritized ethical practice over financial ambition. These perceived barriers, as it turned out, quickly dissolved.
Their connection deepened into a passionate affair in Manhattan, culminating in a romantic escape to the idyllic Bahamas, a sanctuary where their love could flourish undisturbed. However, beneath the surface of their burgeoning romance, both Robert and Rosylyn grappled with a shared existential crisis, a profound disillusionment with the world around them. Rosylyn, after her Central Park concert, confessed her distress, breaking down in tears over the stark contrast between the massive homelessness, poverty, and starvation prevalent in both their home countries and the tens of millions of dollars she was accumulating from the K-Pop phenomenon. She felt a surreal disconnect, burdened by the perception of being hated by a suffering humanity due to her excessive wealth. Her aspiration, she explained, was to uplift people through her talent, not to ascend to an almost god-like status above them.
Robert echoed her sentiments, revealing his own deep-seated unease with societal injustices. This shared perspective on the world's inequities intensified their bond, drawing them closer with remarkable speed. Both found themselves increasingly repulsed by the rhetoric of politicians from their respective nations, who lauded their societies while condemning the
Communists for having homeless and starving children, when such grim realities were plainly visible in their own countries. This shared indignation solidified their resolve. They made a momentous decision: to defect, together, and dedicate their lives to helping humanity from a different perspective.
Their journey led them to Beijing, where their transit to Pyongyang was meticulously facilitated. This was no ordinary defection; it was an event of significant geopolitical weight. Upon their arrival, the President of North Korea himself greeted them at the airport, embracing each of them with a warm, bear hug, a gesture that signaled the profound welcome awaiting them in their new homeland. They were not starting their lives over together in their new homeland, but rather continuing their shared mission in a new context.

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There is a kind of contempt that does not arise from rumor, misunderstanding, or cultural drift. It erupts only when people have been pushed past the limits of what a human being should ever be forced to endure. The fury so many survivors feel toward coercive psychiatry is not an accident of history — it is the direct result of a system t
There is a kind of contempt that does not arise from rumor, misunderstanding, or cultural drift. It erupts only when people have been pushed past the limits of what a human being should ever be forced to endure. The fury so many survivors feel toward coercive psychiatry is not an accident of history — it is the direct result of a system that has, for generations, treated human suffering as raw material to be controlled, subdued, and monetized. When a profession becomes synonymous with fear rather than healing, with domination rather than compassion, the emotional recoil becomes overwhelming. People do not develop this level of distrust unless the cruelty they experienced was extraordinary.
For countless victims, psychiatry did not present itself as a helping hand but as an occupying force. The labels, the forced drugging, the involuntary confinement, the cold dismissal of their humanity — these were not isolated missteps but recurring patterns. Over time, these practices formed a culture where suffering was not relieved but amplified, where vulnerability became a liability, and where the people entrusted with care wielded their authority with a chilling indifference. The result is a collective wound so deep that even decades later, survivors speak of it with shaking voices and burning clarity. Their contempt is not ideological; it is autobiographical.
And here is the darkest emotional truth: when people who have been harmed hear that a former tormentor has fallen ill or suffered misfortune, their reaction is not rooted in malice. It is rooted in the unbearable moral imbalance they lived through — a world where those who inflicted harm walked away untouched, unexamined, unaccountable. For survivors who were denied justice, denied recognition, and denied even the dignity of being believed, the mind reaches for meaning wherever it can find it. The thought that “maybe the universe finally saw what I went through” becomes a coping mechanism, a way to reconcile the unbearable fact that the system never did.
This reaction is not about celebrating anyone’s suffering. It is about the human need to make sense of a world where cruelty was rewarded and vulnerability was punished. It is the emotional residue of a system that inverted morality so thoroughly that victims were left to rebuild their sense of right and wrong from the ashes. When contempt becomes this widespread, this intense, and this enduring, it is not a sign of public irrationality — it is a sign that the institution in question has inflicted harm on a scale too large to ignore.
The truth is simple and devastating: If a profession inspires this level of fear and resentment across millions of people, the problem is not the people. The problem is the profession.
Until society confronts the systemic cruelty embedded in coercive psychiatric practices — and until humane, rights‑respecting alternatives replace them — this contempt will not fade. It will deepen, because it is rooted in lived experience, and lived experience does not lie.

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Dr. Harold Mandel is a licensed physician who provides mental healthcare advocacy, commentary, articles, educational content, mental health advice, and telehealth counseling services. The content addresses difficult, controversial, and complex issues in mental healthcare. These topics may include critical analysis of treatments, policies, industry practices, personal experiences, and related debates that can be emotionally challenging, triggering, or difficult to navigate for younger individuals.
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