DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Thursday June 11, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
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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 of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

Drinking plenty of fresh water every day is one of the simplest and most powerful ways to support whole‑person wellness, and it sits at the heart of natural healthcare. Fresh water fuels nearly every biological process. It keeps digestion smooth, helps the kidneys clear waste, supports steady circulation, and ensures oxygen and nutrients
Drinking plenty of fresh water every day is one of the simplest and most powerful ways to support whole‑person wellness, and it sits at the heart of natural healthcare. Fresh water fuels nearly every biological process. It keeps digestion smooth, helps the kidneys clear waste, supports steady circulation, and ensures oxygen and nutrients reach every cell. Because joints, muscles, and connective tissues rely on fluid balance, hydration also keeps the body moving comfortably and reduces strain. Even temperature regulation depends on adequate water intake, allowing the body to cool itself naturally and maintain internal stability.
Hydration is just as essential for the mind. The brain is highly sensitive to even mild dehydration, which can cloud concentration, slow processing, and drain energy. Drinking water throughout the day helps maintain mental clarity, steadier mood, and emotional resilience. Many common headaches are linked to low fluid levels, and restoring hydration often brings relief. Proper water intake also supports hormonal balance and helps maintain a healthy sleep–wake rhythm, strengthening overall mental well‑being.
Making fresh water a daily ritual is a gentle but transformative act of self‑care. Each glass nourishes your organs, sharpens your thinking, and supports emotional balance. Choosing water consistently—keeping it nearby, sipping often, and favoring it over sugary drinks—builds a foundation for long‑term health in both body and mind. This simple habit remains one of the most accessible, natural tools for whole‑person wellness.

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Howy Bennett never expected journalism to make him rich. By the time he reached his forties, he had long ago accepted that independent reporting was a lonely profession. While former classmates occupied prestigious newsroom offices and appeared on cable television panels, Howy worked alone from a modest apartment crowded with filing cabin
Howy Bennett never expected journalism to make him rich. By the time he reached his forties, he had long ago accepted that independent reporting was a lonely profession. While former classmates occupied prestigious newsroom offices and appeared on cable television panels, Howy worked alone from a modest apartment crowded with filing cabinets, notebooks, and aging computer equipment. What kept him going was a stubborn belief that ordinary people deserved to have their stories heard, especially when powerful institutions preferred silence.
Over the years, he became known among activists, whistleblowers, and marginalized communities as someone willing to listen. His inbox filled with messages from people who claimed they had been mistreated by systems that were supposed to protect them. Some described encounters with police that left them physically injured and emotionally shattered. Others spoke of involuntary psychiatric commitments they believed were unjustified. There were stories of careers abruptly destroyed, housing applications mysteriously denied, and opportunities disappearing without explanation. Many of the claims sounded extraordinary. Some seemed improbable. Yet enough of them shared common themes that Howy found himself unable to dismiss them outright.
Unlike many of his critics, he approached these allegations cautiously. He understood that personal testimony was not proof. Every claim required documentation, witnesses, and corroboration. Months often passed between an initial interview and publication. He spent countless hours reviewing public records, court filings, medical policies, and administrative procedures. The deeper he dug, the more he encountered gaps that were difficult to explain. Records appeared incomplete. Complaints vanished into bureaucratic dead ends. Requests for clarification went unanswered. Patterns emerged that suggested something larger than isolated mistakes.
His most ambitious investigation began with a package that arrived without a return address. Inside was a flash drive containing spreadsheets, correspondence, and fragments of internal reports. The documents appeared unrelated at first glance, but as Howy studied them, he noticed recurring names and institutions. Individuals who had challenged government agencies, filed misconduct complaints, or publicly criticized powerful organizations seemed to appear repeatedly throughout the records. Many had later experienced psychiatric evaluations, emergency interventions, professional setbacks, or prolonged legal disputes.
Howy spent nearly a year attempting to verify what he was seeing. Every answer generated new questions. Sources who initially agreed to speak later withdrew without explanation. Meetings were canceled at the last minute. One whistleblower abruptly severed contact after months of cooperation. Another warned him during a brief phone call that he was attracting attention from people who preferred his investigation remain unfinished.
For the first time in his career, Howy began to feel uneasy.
The feeling intensified when he returned home one evening to discover that someone had entered his apartment. Nothing appeared to be missing. His laptop remained on the desk. The television was untouched. Cash in a kitchen drawer sat exactly where he had left it. Yet one thing had changed. A thick folder containing notes from his current investigation had been removed from a locked cabinet and placed neatly in the center of his desk.
No message accompanied it.
No explanation was offered.
The gesture felt deliberate.
It was as though someone wanted him to know they had been there.
Friends urged him to stop. Several suggested publishing what he had already gathered and moving on to safer subjects. Howy considered their advice seriously. For several weeks he worked little and slept poorly. Yet every attempt to abandon the project left him feeling complicit in the very silence he had spent his career opposing.
Then, on a gray autumn morning, everything changed.
Police officers arrived at his apartment responding to reports that he was experiencing a mental health crisis. The complaint had been filed anonymously. According to the report, he was exhibiting paranoid behavior and posed a danger to himself.
Howy protested immediately. He explained who he was, showed identification, and attempted to describe the investigation he had been conducting. The more he spoke, however, the less effective his defense seemed to become. His agitation was interpreted as instability. His insistence that he was being targeted was viewed as evidence supporting the original complaint.
Within an hour, he found himself inside an ambulance headed toward a psychiatric facility.
He assumed the misunderstanding would be resolved quickly.
Instead, it marked the beginning of a nightmare from which he would never emerge.
The institution stood behind high fences on the outskirts of the city. Upon arrival, Howy was stripped of his belongings, his phone, and access to the notes he had spent years compiling. Interviews became evaluations. Objections became symptoms. Requests for legal assistance were delayed by administrative procedures that seemed to stretch endlessly into the future.
Days passed.
Then weeks.
The journalist who had spent years documenting allegations of institutional abuse found himself trapped inside a system where every avenue of appeal appeared to circle back to the same authorities.
His frustration grew. So did the reports describing his condition.
Medical charts recorded increasing agitation. Staff noted oppositional behavior. Treatment plans expanded. New medications were introduced. When he refused them, his refusal itself became part of the justification for further intervention.
The irony was impossible to ignore.
For years he had interviewed people who claimed they had been caught in similar cycles. He had listened carefully, always aware that their accounts might be incomplete or distorted. Now, from inside the locked ward, he began to understand the profound helplessness many had tried to describe.
The realization arrived too late.
As the months wore on, Howy's physical health deteriorated. Powerful sedatives left him exhausted and disoriented. His memory became unreliable. Some days he struggled to distinguish dreams from waking life. The investigation that had once consumed him faded into fragments.
Yet one conviction remained.
If institutions could operate without transparency, they could rewrite reality itself.
And once they controlled reality, resistance became almost impossible.
Speculative Fiction
by Dr Harold Mandel

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Governments run on trust. Strip away transparency, and what remains is doubt — doubt about motives, about methods, and about every story told from a podium. In the United States, that doubt has been building for years, fed by a pattern citizens cannot ignore: the quiet use of psychiatry as a tool of control, reports of police brutality th
Governments run on trust. Strip away transparency, and what remains is doubt — doubt about motives, about methods, and about every story told from a podium. In the United States, that doubt has been building for years, fed by a pattern citizens cannot ignore: the quiet use of psychiatry as a tool of control, reports of police brutality that end in sealed files, unofficial blacklists that lock people out of work and housing, and widening financial gaps that feel engineered rather than accidental. Add to this the growing allegations of so-called neuroweapons being tested or deployed on Americans who have committed no crime, and the credibility gap becomes a chasm.
The domestic mirror
A country’s foreign policy is always a reflection of how it treats its own. When whistleblowers, patients, protesters, or simply inconvenient people describe being forcibly medicated, misdiagnosed, or swept into psychiatric holds without due process, the public is asked to look away. When those same people detail excessive force, destroyed records, or exclusion lists that follow them across state lines, the official response is often silence or denial. When entire communities see wealth extracted while their basic needs are priced out, the word "inequity" feels too polite.
Each case by itself could be written off as error or overreach. Taken together, they form a question no press release can erase: if a state will quietly detain, drug, impoverish, or surveil its own peaceful citizens without transparent cause, what restraint can foreigners expect?
Neuroweapons and the trust deficit
The term "neuroweapon" sounds like science fiction until you hear firsthand accounts: directed energy claims and behavioral influence programs. Whether every account is accurate is almost beside the point now, because the government’s refusal to address the topic in open, verifiable detail creates the vacuum where fear grows. Lack of transparency turns anecdote into doctrine and converts skeptics into believers. A state that will not open its files on domestic programs cannot credibly claim clean hands abroad.
From Main Street to foreign policy
This is why debates about overseas militarism stall. Officials argue necessity, security, and humanitarian aims. But citizens who have watched neighbors lose careers to a blacklist, or who have seen family members cycled through forced psychiatric care, hear those arguments differently. They ask a simple, human question: if you would do this to us — the people you’re sworn to protect — why would you act differently toward strangers in another country?
Credibility is not rebuilt with slogans. It is rebuilt with records opened, independent audits, legal redress, and an end to policies that operate in shadows. Financial inequity must be confronted with data, not platitudes. Police and psychiatric powers need real civilian oversight, not internal review. Allegations of neuroweapons and covert targeting require sunlight, expert panels, and, where wrongdoing occurred, accountability.
The bottom line
A nation can survive policy mistakes. What it cannot survive is the belief that it secretly wages war on its own people. Until the US federal and state governments choose radical transparency about psychiatry, policing, blacklists, economic exclusion, and emerging weapons programs, their statements on foreign conflict will be met with the same response: "Why should we believe you?"
Trust is earned in public, or it is lost in private.

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