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.

Children’s play is often described as simple fun, yet it is one of the most powerful engines of emotional and cognitive development.
Children use dolls, action figures, and stuffed animals to explore the emotional landscape of daily life. Through pretend conversations and caregiving scenarios
Children’s play is often described as simple fun, yet it is one of the most powerful engines of emotional and cognitive development.
Children use dolls, action figures, and stuffed animals to explore the emotional landscape of daily life. Through pretend conversations and caregiving scenarios, they practice naming feelings, understanding others’ perspectives, and navigating relationships. These quiet rehearsals build empathy and emotional literacy — two pillars of long‑term mental resilience. When a child comforts a doll or negotiates between toy characters, they are strengthening the emotional skills that help them feel secure and confident.
Symbolic play gives children a protected space to process worries and fears. A doll visiting a doctor, a stuffed animal feeling scared, or a toy figure overcoming a challenge allows children to express difficult emotions indirectly. This gentle form of release helps restore a sense of control and reduces internal tension. Toys often become tools for self‑soothing, supporting healthy emotional regulation during transitions, bedtime, or moments of uncertainty.
Imaginative play strengthens the mind’s ability to think creatively and adaptively. Building a world for dolls or toys requires planning, sequencing, and perspective‑taking — skills that support academic readiness and mental agility. Children who engage deeply in pretend play often show stronger storytelling abilities, more flexible thinking, and greater confidence in tackling new challenges.
Narration is a natural part of play. Children talk to their dolls, create dialogue, and build stories, expanding vocabulary and expressive language. For shy or anxious children, toys serve as a bridge to more comfortable communication, allowing them to practice social interaction in a low‑pressure environment. This early confidence often carries into classroom settings and peer relationships.
Small acts — dressing a doll, organizing a pretend tea party, constructing a toy environment — give children a sense of accomplishment. These moments of mastery reinforce autonomy and build self‑esteem. When children feel capable in their play, they carry that confidence into real‑world tasks, strengthening their overall mental wellness.
Play is the child’s natural language. Dolls and toys are the instruments that help them express, explore, and understand their inner world. When children engage with toys, they are not merely entertaining themselves — they are practicing life, developing emotional strength, and building the foundations of lifelong mental health.
DrHaroldMandel.org — Whole‑Person Wellness for Every Stage of Life

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Dr. Howy had always believed that financial freedom was the quiet engine of human dignity. He’d grown up in Pennsylvania with enough comfort to know what stability felt like—boats on summer weekends, beach condos with salt‑sweet breezes, the kind of life where dreams weren’t luxuries but expectations. And he never forgot that most people
Dr. Howy had always believed that financial freedom was the quiet engine of human dignity. He’d grown up in Pennsylvania with enough comfort to know what stability felt like—boats on summer weekends, beach condos with salt‑sweet breezes, the kind of life where dreams weren’t luxuries but expectations. And he never forgot that most people never got that chance.
So when he became a holistic physician in New York, he devoted himself to fighting for those who were denied that chance—especially activists who were quietly crushed by a psychiatric system that branded them “too sick” the moment they challenged power. He saw how labels became chains, how diagnoses became economic shackles, how court orders became the modern paperwork of a new kind of servitude.
To Dr. Howy, it was a system that didn’t just silence dissent—it impoverished it.
He watched brilliant activists lose jobs because employers were warned they were “unstable.” He saw judges rubber‑stamp psychiatric interventions that followed people for life, ensuring they’d never again be considered employable. He saw how poverty itself was then used as “proof” of illness. And he saw how the public was told a lie: that these people couldn’t work, when in truth they were never allowed to.
The more he spoke out, the more he became a target.
Two psychiatrists—men who saw dissent as pathology and compliance as health—decided that Dr. Howy’s reform movement was dangerous. They labeled him, drugged him, and dismantled his career with the same tools he had been fighting to expose. The beach home he once dreamed of in Maui or Southern California slipped out of reach. His practice collapsed. His savings evaporated. His name became a warning whispered in hospital corridors.
Still, he refused to stop speaking.
But the system had time, money, and courts. He had only conviction.
When everything was gone, he bought one last plane ticket—the cheapest flight to Hawaii he could find. He told himself he’d rebuild there, that he’d find peace by the Pacific, that he’d write the book he always meant to write about financial equity and the weaponization of psychiatry.
Instead, he ended up in a thin tent on a Maui beach, the ocean he once loved now a witness to his undoing. The sun was merciless. His body, weakened by years of forced medication and stress, couldn’t keep up. Locals later said he was gentle, soft‑spoken, always trying to help others even when he had nothing left.
One morning, they found him still and quiet, the waves whispering against the shore.
The man who fought to free others from economic bondage had been pushed into the very poverty he warned the world about. Not because he failed—but because he was right.
And yet, in the end, his story didn’t vanish. It traveled. It unsettled. It inspired. Other activists picked up his message. Other physicians whispered his name with respect. And the truth he died trying to expose began to surface in places he never lived long enough to see.
Dr. Howy didn’t get his beachfront home.
But he became something far more enduring.
A lighthouse. A warning. A spark.
And sparks, once lit, are very hard to extinguish.
Speculative Fiction
by Dr Harold Mandel






Let’s stop pretending America is on the brink of some great mental‑health awakening. It isn’t. And it won’t be — not under Republicans, not under Democrats, not under any leadership class that depends on the psychiatric system to mop up the human wreckage of their own economic failures.
Both parties talk reform while quietly relying on psy
Let’s stop pretending America is on the brink of some great mental‑health awakening. It isn’t. And it won’t be — not under Republicans, not under Democrats, not under any leadership class that depends on the psychiatric system to mop up the human wreckage of their own economic failures.
Both parties talk reform while quietly relying on psychiatry as a containment strategy. It’s the perfect pressure valve: a way to disappear the casualties of inequality without ever admitting they were produced by policy choices. The more the economy abandons people, the more the psychiatric system expands to classify them as “ill,” “unstable,” “nonfunctional,” or “beyond normalcy.”
It’s not care. It’s camouflage.
Behind the polished façades of wealthy neighborhoods — the curated calm, the manicured lawns, the illusion of national health — lies a crisis so deep that the establishment needs a mechanism to hide it. Psychiatry has become that mechanism. It takes the intentionally and unintentionally disenfranchised and relabels them as medical anomalies, not political outcomes. Once labeled, they’re removed from the statistics that measure national well‑being. They become invisible by design.
And the system has no intention of helping them back up.
There is no blueprint for wellness, stability, or reintegration. There is no investment in the humanity of the people being processed. The framework is built on management, not liberation. On sedation, not empowerment. On containment, not justice.
So even when the people caught in this system are ethical, peaceful, intelligent, compassionate, law‑abiding — even when they embody every trait society claims to value — they are still kept in the same place: down, out, poor, and sick. Not because they failed, but because the establishment needs them there to maintain the illusion that everything is fine.
This is not a broken system.
This is a system working exactly as intended.

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