DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
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I am a New York-based general practitioner, medical journalist, and fiction writer. 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 three critical 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, supporting your bodily autonomy and informed consent.
Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at DrMandelNews.com, I primarily investigate and expose psychiatric abuses. My mission is to give a voice to the silenced and to ensure that human rights remain at the forefront of medical discourse. Through MandelNews.com Breaking News Alerts and Daily News Coverage, I provide timely updates on developing human rights stories.
Creative Advocacy: As an author of speculative fiction short stories, I explore these complexities through narrative. My writing serves as a series of cautionary fables, using imaginative storytelling to examine the consequences of institutional overreach and the enduring importance of the human spirit.

MOSCOW — In a stark escalation of rhetoric, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that Western nations are openly preparing for a direct military conflict with Russia. Speaking before a gathering of elite military academy and security university graduates at the Kremlin, Putin accused NATO and European leaders of using the narrative of
MOSCOW — In a stark escalation of rhetoric, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that Western nations are openly preparing for a direct military conflict with Russia. Speaking before a gathering of elite military academy and security university graduates at the Kremlin, Putin accused NATO and European leaders of using the narrative of a "Russian threat" to aggressively ramp up defense budgets and fast-track military modernization.
During his address, the Russian leader drew parallels between the current geopolitical standoff and the existential crisis faced by the Soviet Union during World War II. Putin emphasized that while the West pours massive military support and drone technology into Ukraine, European nations have thus far refrained from launching attacks directly from their own territories out of a clear fear of an immediate, devastating retaliatory strike from Moscow.
He reassured the newly commissioned officers that Russia remains prepared to "react to any external and internal threats in a timely and adequate manner," highlighting the ongoing modernization of Russia's strategic nuclear triad and the successful combat-testing of over 1,000 advanced weapon systems.Source: RT (Russia Today)
https://www.rt.com/.../642018-west-gearing-war-russia-putin/

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In the rhythm of modern life, few things restore balance like sports in the open air. Whether it’s boating across calm waters, casting a fishing line under the morning sun, or swimming through the cool embrace of a lake, these activities reconnect us to the primal pulse of nature — the same pulse that sustains both body and mind.
🌞 Sunshi
In the rhythm of modern life, few things restore balance like sports in the open air. Whether it’s boating across calm waters, casting a fishing line under the morning sun, or swimming through the cool embrace of a lake, these activities reconnect us to the primal pulse of nature — the same pulse that sustains both body and mind.
🌞 Sunshine and Circulation
Outdoor movement under natural light stimulates the body’s production of vitamin D, a cornerstone of immune strength and mood regulation. The warmth of the sun enhances circulation, oxygenates tissues, and helps release endorphins — the body’s natural antidepressants. It’s not just exercise; it’s solar therapy.
🌊 Water as Medicine
Boating and swimming immerse us in the element that makes up most of our bodies. The rhythmic motion of waves calms the nervous system, while the resistance of water strengthens muscles without strain. Fishing adds mindfulness — a meditative patience that lowers stress hormones and steadies the heartbeat.
🌿 Freedom and Mental Clarity
Outdoor sports dissolve the walls that confine daily life. The horizon becomes a teacher of perspective. The act of steering a boat, hiking a trail, or diving beneath the surface reminds us that freedom is not a luxury — it’s a biological necessity. Nature’s vastness restores mental clarity and creativity, helping the mind reset from digital overload.
⚓ Community and Connection
Shared outdoor experiences build bonds that transcend competition. Families, friends, and even strangers find common ground in the simple joy of movement. These connections nurture emotional resilience — a vital ingredient in holistic health.
🌅 The Holistic Pulse
To live well is to move freely, breathe deeply, and feel sunlight on your skin. Outdoor sports are not indulgences; they are prescriptions for vitality. They remind us that health is not confined to clinics or gyms — it thrives wherever wind, water, and willpower meet.

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In a future America where poverty is engineered and psychiatry is weaponized, one young doctor dares to resist — and pays the ultimate price.
By Dr. Harold Mandel
The Price of Idealism: The Fall of Dr. Howy
By 2042, the United States had perfected a quiet, clinical form of domination. Poverty was no longer a social problem — it was a managed
In a future America where poverty is engineered and psychiatry is weaponized, one young doctor dares to resist — and pays the ultimate price.
By Dr. Harold Mandel
The Price of Idealism: The Fall of Dr. Howy
By 2042, the United States had perfected a quiet, clinical form of domination. Poverty was no longer a social problem — it was a managed asset. The psychiatric‑industrial complex depended on it, fed on it, and legislated around it. Diagnoses were currency. Compliance was survival. And dissent was a pathology.
Dr. Howy Mandelson had been born on the winning side of the American equation. His childhood unfolded on sports fishing boats, in beachfront condos, and in the leather seats of Cadillacs and sports cars. His father, Artie Mandelson, was a courtroom powerhouse — a lawyer whose voice could tilt juries and whose clients included the architects of the new psychiatric order.
But Howy’s eyes were open. Growing up in Philadelphia, he saw the stark contrast between his world and the one just a few blocks away — hunger crouching beside marble mansions, children scavenging for food in the shadows of elite hospitals, and entire neighborhoods written off as “behavioral risk zones.”
In college, he discovered a forbidden text: The Economics of Poverty. It argued that poverty was engineered — a deliberate mechanism to keep the psychiatric system supplied with “patients.” The poor were raw material. The “mentally ill” were the finished product. And the medical profession was the gatekeeper.
Howy vowed to fight back.
He joined underground activist networks exposing the collusion between psychiatry, law enforcement, and pharmaceutical conglomerates. He wrote essays, spoke at rallies, and refused to play the game of silence. His father warned him: “You’re humiliating me. You’re attacking the very system that built your life.”
The breaking point came one Christmas. Howy arrived with Susie, an outspoken Chinese activist who had survived forced institutionalization under the new Preventive Psychiatry Act. She was brilliant, fearless, and unafraid to challenge the empire of diagnosis.
Artie’s fury was volcanic. He demanded to know if his son was “sleeping with that thing” and whether he intended to marry her. When Howy said yes, Artie declared war.
Within days, the privileges vanished — the keys to the condos, the boats, the cars. His accounts were frozen. His residency offers evaporated. And then came the whisper campaign.
Artie, leveraging his network of psychiatrists and judges, began feeding them stories — that his son was unstable, erratic, sexually deviant. He fabricated reports of “bipolar disorder” and “atypical schizophrenia,” citing Howy’s relationship with Susie as evidence of “cross‑cultural delusional attachment.”
The system listened. It always did when money spoke.
Howy was detained under the Mental Stability Preservation Act, a law his father had helped draft. He was medicated, monitored, and released into a world that no longer recognized him. His credentials were revoked. His name was flagged in the National Psychiatric Registry. Every job application triggered an alert: Potential instability risk.
Susie tried to fight for him, but she vanished after a protest raid in Chinatown. Her name was erased from public databases. Howy’s grief hollowed him out.
He wandered the streets of North Philadelphia — the same streets where he once dreamed of healing the world — now patrolled by psychiatric drones and biometric scanners. He died there, from exposure and starvation, beneath the neon glow of the teaching hospital that had once promised him a future.
His death was recorded as “self‑neglect due to untreated schizophrenia.”
His father’s firm billed the state for legal consultation on the case.
But in the encrypted archives of the resistance, Howy’s name lived on — not as a diagnosis, not as a patient, but as a symbol.
The doctor who tried to cure a nation addicted to control.
DrHaroldMandel.org






Let’s stop pretending.
In America, money is freedom — and the people running what I call the American Psychiatric Abuse Cliques know it. They know it so well that they weaponize it. These networks of psychiatrists, compliant physicians, law‑enforcement partners, and the judges who never met a psychiatric affidavit they didn’t love have pe
Let’s stop pretending.
In America, money is freedom — and the people running what I call the American Psychiatric Abuse Cliques know it. They know it so well that they weaponize it. These networks of psychiatrists, compliant physicians, law‑enforcement partners, and the judges who never met a psychiatric affidavit they didn’t love have perfected a strategy: destroy a person’s financial stability, then call the collapse a mental illness.
This is not care.
This is not medicine.
This is economic warfare disguised as psychiatry.
For activists, whistleblowers, and anyone who refuses to bow to institutional power, the pattern is unmistakable. Careers are quietly sabotaged. Licenses are threatened. Income streams are disrupted. Professional reputations are smeared with coded psychiatric language. The goal is simple: push a person into financial precarity so they can be declared “mentally unwell” for struggling under the weight of engineered hardship.
And then comes the insult — the claim that stripping a person of joy, autonomy, and opportunity is somehow “in their best interest.”
According to these cliques, the very activities that keep a person grounded — boating, fishing, traveling, relaxing by the ocean, dining out, attending concerts, exploring the world — are suddenly “dangerous” or “symptomatic.” They insist that the targeted individual must be cut off from the life they built, the life that stabilizes them, the life that proves they are functioning, capable, and free.
It’s a psychological sleight of hand:
Take away the things that make someone healthy, then blame them for the decline.
Once the person is destabilized, the next phase begins — the psychiatric labels, the forced “evaluations,” the toxic drug regimens that dull cognition, flatten emotion, and make it harder to work or advocate for oneself. The decline caused by the drugs is then held up as proof of “chronic illness.” The system manufactures the very symptoms it claims to diagnose.
This is not a treatment plan.
It is a pipeline.
A pipeline that turns dissenters into patients.
A pipeline that turns autonomy into pathology.
A pipeline that turns financial sabotage into “clinical evidence.”
And the final twist?
The long-term damage — the lost income, the broken career, the forced dependency — is used to justify even more psychiatric intervention. The system creates the crisis, then claims authority over the crisis it engineered.
This is why the critique must be loud, unapologetic, and unflinching:
When a system attacks your financial wellbeing, it is attacking your freedom.
When a system removes joy from your life, it is removing your humanity.
When a system manufactures chronic illness, it is not practicing medicine — it is practicing control.
This is not mental health care.
This is a regime of coercion, and it thrives on silence.
Your voice breaks that silence.

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