DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Wednesday May 20, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare and
Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Independent Holistic Healthcare and
Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
Your Donation Empowers Wellness
Your Contribution Defends Human Rights


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 of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

Transform your life at Rythmia, Costa Rica! Enjoy Ayahuasca ceremonies, organic farm-to-table food, volcanic mud baths, and luxury wellness at the world’s first medically-licensed plant medicine center. 🌿✨ Click this link to learn more about Rythmia and to schedule a free info session>>> Rythmia: World's First Medically Licensed Ayahuasca Retreat

A glass of pure apple juice offers more than sweetness — it delivers a quiet, steady nourishment that supports both physical vitality and mental clarity. Its blend of natural antioxidants, hydration, and plant compounds makes it a simple wellness ritual with meaningful benefits.
Apple juice is a reminder that nourishment doesn’t need to be complicated. A small glass can refresh the body, brighten the mind, and reconnect you to a sense of natural balance.





John didn’t climb out of poverty; he clawed out of it, leaving skin and teeth in the gutter. Now a jet-setting, hard-drinking Wall Street broker, he cleared more in a single fiscal quarter than the President did in a year. Yet, every morning, he still woke up tasting the rust and boiled cabbage of the North Philly walk-up he grew up in. H
John didn’t climb out of poverty; he clawed out of it, leaving skin and teeth in the gutter. Now a jet-setting, hard-drinking Wall Street broker, he cleared more in a single fiscal quarter than the President did in a year. Yet, every morning, he still woke up tasting the rust and boiled cabbage of the North Philly walk-up he grew up in. He would have sold his soul to the Devil to never taste it again. By forty, he was close enough that Satan was taking his calls on the first ring.
His son, Devon, was the opposite problem.
Living in the manicured Philadelphia suburbs—where the family resided on the run from John’s escalating reputation—Devon was a golden child. Grade-school teachers had already flagged him as the kind of boy who makes high school valedictorian look like an afterthought. He was clean where John was chaotic, soft-spoken where John was loud, and he loved his mother, Jackie, with a ferocious, protective loyalty.
Jackie had come up poor, too. Now, she set the dinner table each night wearing diamond rings that could compete with Elizabeth Taylor’s, while John spent his evenings in a luxury penthouse a few blocks away with a bookmaker's girl. She never filed for divorce. She was too terrified of the poverty line, paralyzed by the wealth that had finally stopped her lifelong panic.
John watched his family’s domestic perfection and saw only one thing: currency.
The crooked cops, federal agents, and backroom operators John drank with after market close didn't admire money alone. They were bored by simple wealth. What they truly craved, what made their mouths water, was hypocrisy. They loved the "good family man" archetype—a guy who could preach about his son becoming a physician while quietly laying six-figure bets on fixed college football games; a pillar of the community who shook hands with La Cosa Nostra on Tuesday and chaired a children's hospital charity board on Wednesday. John knew what the monsters wanted, and he was happy to feed them.
So, he pushed Devon toward medicine. Not out of paternal pride, but by calculated design.
"Beat the hell out of my lifestyle, kid. Do something worthwhile," John would growl, pouring his third scotch, knowing exactly how lucrative and easily weaponized the psychiatric system could be when you had the right judges and superintendents in your pocket. The long game was beautiful in its patience: build Devon up into a medical prodigy, then hand him over to the asylum system for total liquidation. For John and his associates, the pleasure was never just the payoff. It was the sport of the hunt. It was the slow, meticulous laying of the trap over a decade.
Devon made the setup effortless because he was so goddamn vibrant.
At sixteen, he was captaining the family’s sportfishing boat through heavy Atlantic swells and driving his first Camaro off the lot. He lived for the outdoors—for deep-sea fishing at dawn, snorkeling the pristine Pacific reefs off Honolulu, and the weightless, amniotic quiet of a deep dive. He fell madly in love with Susie, a girl he met in the islands, carrying her Polaroid in his dive bag like an amulet against the dark. He had immense privilege, and he used it to stay whole, bright, and untouched by his father's shadow.
John cataloged every ounce of his son's health as a personal threat. Wellness was Devon’s armor, so John decided to strip it off piece by piece.
He began whispering to his inner circle that Devon was too cocky, too clean, too uncontrollable to ever be trusted. The more he offered his son up as a sacrificial lamb, the deeper John was invited into the true underworld. Bigger clients, higher stakes, untraceable money greenlit from behind the curtain. John was finally playing ball with the apex predators of the street—the ones recognized as genuinely cruel and insane—and Devon was the ticket that bought his way into the VIP lounge.
The ambush came like Pearl Harbor. No warning, no declaration of war, executed with maximum shock to instantly break the target’s psyche.
It happened late in a crowded Honolulu nightclub. The bass was thumping, strobe lights slicing through the sweat and smoke. The men John had paid were waiting in the blind spots. Devon was hit with a stun gun in the middle of the dance floor, collapsed into the crowd, and by sunrise, he was gone. He wasn't in a hotel, he wasn't on the boat, and he wasn't with Susie. He was being railroaded down the fluorescent, bleach-scented corridors of a private psychiatric facility. The paperwork was already signed; the narrative of a "sudden psychotic break" was already stamped in triplicate.
Everything that made him vibrant evaporated in a flash. The sea, the reefs, the Camaro, Susie, the medical school acceptance letters, the crisp white coat he hadn't even had the chance to try on. All gone. His career was ruined before it ever began.
He survived, though he never fully understood how the machinery failed to crush him completely. Maybe it was the stubborn, somatic memory of clean ocean water and deep breaths; maybe it was a quiet commitment to holistic healing that he clung to while the heavy antipsychotics and fabricated diagnoses tried to rewrite his brain.
The aftermath was a slow bleed. The family estate was devoured by the legal leeches, corrupt doctors, and fixers who had circled the operation. The wealth evaporated in silent settlements and midnight payoffs.
Today, Devon lives alone in a small, drafty rented house in upstate New York. He never went back to medicine. Instead, he works as a fiction writer under a pen name that no one in Philadelphia or Wall Street would ever recognize. He publishes sparse, haunting fables in obscure literary magazines and self-printed chapbooks.
Every single story is about the exact same thing, just dressed in different clothes: fathers who trade their sons for status, institutional systems that manufacture madness for profit, and sudden, devastating strikes meant to break a human being in a single night.
His readers often write to tell him that his horror feels too precise to be invented, as if he is documenting humanity's darkest impulses from memory rather than imagination. He never corrects them. He just lets them think it, and keeps writing.
Speculative Fiction
by Dr Harold Mandel

.





The historical narrative taught in classrooms often wraps the American Civil War in a neat, morally comforting bow: a righteous North marching south to eradicate the sin of human bondage. But a deeper dive into the mechanics of power suggests a far more cynical reality. The war was less a sudden awakening of Northern altruism and more a b
The historical narrative taught in classrooms often wraps the American Civil War in a neat, morally comforting bow: a righteous North marching south to eradicate the sin of human bondage. But a deeper dive into the mechanics of power suggests a far more cynical reality. The war was less a sudden awakening of Northern altruism and more a brutal clash of economic empires and political dominance.
More unsettling still is the realization that the underlying architecture of that era—exploiting human lives for centralized power and profit—did not vanish at Appomattox. It simply evolved, rebranding itself within the revered institutions of modern healthcare and corporate capitalism.
The Geopolitics of Emancipation
To understand the true catalyst of the Civil War, one must look at the shifting balance of power in 19th-century America. The agrarian South and the industrializing North were locked in a desperate struggle for control of the federal government and the western territories.
While the moral horror of slavery is absolute, the Union’s pivot toward abolition was deeply tied to wartime strategy and global public relations. Abraham Lincoln himself famously stated in his 1862 letter to Horace Greeley:
"If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it..."
The Emancipation Proclamation was a brilliant geopolitical masterstroke. By framing the conflict around abolition, the North successfully boxed out European powers like Great Britain and France, who were economically tempted to support the Confederacy but politically unable to align with a slave-holding state once the war became a moral crusade.
Institutional Confinement and Chemical Bondage
If the Civil War was fought to secure absolute human autonomy, the systems built in its wake tell a vastly different story. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the evolution of modern institutional psychiatry, heavily backed by academic centers and state authority.
Under the guise of "mental healthcare," systems were built that closely mimic the dynamics of traditional bondage:
The Stripping of Rights: Involuntary commitment legally strips an individual of their bodily autonomy, freedom of movement, and right to self-determination.
Chemical Restraint: The aggressive, institutionalized reliance on heavy psychiatric drugging often serves to sedate and subjugate rather than heal, acting as a modern, invisible set of shackles.
Power Asymmetry: The absolute authority of the institution over the captive individual turns human suffering into a highly profitable, self-perpetuating academic and clinical industry.
The Corporate Plantation: Survival as Coercion
The corporate architecture of America reflects a similar paradigm shift—moving from the explicit ownership of people to the systemic rental of human lives under the threat of destitution.
Modern corporate structures have perfected a refined form of economic servitude:
The Illusion of Choice: While workers are technically free to quit, the alternative in a system with threadbare social safety nets is predatory: starvation, homelessness, or institutionalization.
Wealth Extraction: Those at the absolute apex of the corporate hierarchy amass unimaginable fortunes derived directly from the physical exhaustion and mental burnout of a low-wage workforce.
The Culture of Abuse: Overwork, erratic scheduling, and toxic management are normalized as "market efficiency," driving wealth upward while discarding the human components when they wear out.
The Myth of the Brilliant Elitist
Society continues to place the architects of these oppressive systems on the covers of glossy magazines, celebrating billionaires, corporate raiders, and institutional heads as the pinnacle of human achievement.
But celebrating the "brilliance" of a system designed to extract wealth from human misery is no different than romanticizing the aristocratic efficiency of Jefferson Davis and the Confederate planter class. True brilliance elevates humanity; it does not find more sophisticated, legally protected ways to institutionalize human bondage.

.








We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.