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Medical Heretic & Holistic Physician
I am a New York-based virtual holistic physician, medical journalist, and author dedicated to defending individual rights in healthcare. 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 four complementary 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 while supporting bodily autonomy and informed decision-making.
Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at MandelNews.com, I investigate and report on issues involving psychiatry, healthcare, and human rights. My goal is to encourage thoughtful discussion and ensure that human rights remain at the forefront of medical discourse.
Creative Advocacy: Through speculative fiction short stories, I explore questions of ethics, freedom, institutional power, and the resilience of the human spirit. These imaginative narratives invite readers to reflect on complex social and medical issues from new perspectives.
Children's Literature: I also write original children's short stories that celebrate kindness, curiosity, imagination, compassion, and a love of learning. These uplifting tales are designed to entertain young readers while encouraging positive values and creativity.

Buddhism has endured for more than 2,500 years not because it demands belief, but because it offers a practical, compassionate way to live. At its heart is a simple promise: when we understand our minds, we suffer less, and when we suffer less, we naturally bring more peace and goodwill into the world. In an age marked by anxiety, distrac
Buddhism has endured for more than 2,500 years not because it demands belief, but because it offers a practical, compassionate way to live. At its heart is a simple promise: when we understand our minds, we suffer less, and when we suffer less, we naturally bring more peace and goodwill into the world. In an age marked by anxiety, distraction, and social fragmentation, the Buddhist path feels less like a religion and more like a form of mental hygiene—one that strengthens emotional resilience, clarity, and kindness.
The foundation of Buddhist peace begins with the recognition that the mind is trainable. Thoughts, emotions, and impulses are not fixed traits; they are passing events. This insight alone loosens the grip of stress. When people learn to observe their inner world without judgment, they stop being overwhelmed by it. Mindfulness—central to all Buddhist traditions—creates a gentle space between stimulus and response. In that space, peace becomes possible. Neuroscience now echoes what monks have taught for centuries: regular meditation reduces activity in the brain’s fear centers and strengthens regions associated with emotional regulation.
Goodwill arises naturally from this inner stability. Buddhism teaches that every person seeks happiness and struggles with suffering. When we see this clearly, compassion becomes instinctive rather than effortful. Practices such as metta, or loving‑kindness meditation, deliberately cultivate warm regard for oneself and others. Over time, this softens anger, dissolves resentment, and expands empathy. People who engage in metta often report feeling more connected, less lonely, and more patient with the imperfections of daily life. Goodwill is not a moral command in Buddhism—it is a psychological outcome of understanding our shared humanity.
Mental health is strengthened through Buddhism’s emphasis on non‑attachment. This does not mean indifference; it means refusing to cling to what inevitably changes. Much of modern distress comes from trying to control the uncontrollable: other people’s opinions, the future, the past, or the shifting circumstances of life. Non‑attachment teaches a healthier posture—engagement without desperation, hope without rigidity, love without fear of loss. This mindset reduces anxiety and fosters emotional flexibility, allowing people to adapt gracefully to life’s uncertainties.
Equally important is Buddhism’s encouragement of ethical living. The Five Precepts—non‑harm, honesty, respect for relationships, mindful consumption, and sobriety—are not commandments but guidelines for reducing avoidable suffering. When people live with integrity, they experience less guilt, fewer interpersonal conflicts, and a deeper sense of self‑respect. Ethical clarity is profoundly stabilizing for mental health. It aligns one’s actions with one’s values, creating a steady inner coherence that modern psychology recognizes as essential for well‑being.
Finally, Buddhism nurtures peace and mental resilience through community. The sangha, or spiritual community, offers companionship, shared practice, and mutual support. In a world where isolation is a growing public health crisis, the Buddhist emphasis on belonging provides emotional nourishment. People heal more quickly when they feel seen, supported, and connected.
Buddhism does not promise perfection; it promises progress. It invites people to cultivate peace one breath at a time, to extend goodwill one interaction at a time, and to strengthen mental health through steady, compassionate awareness. Its teachings remain timeless because they address the universal human condition with gentleness and clarity. In a fractured world, Buddhism offers a path not of escape but of engagement—rooted in wisdom, guided by compassion, and sustained by the quiet courage to meet life as it is.

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Timothy had once been the kind of reporter who made editors nervous. He didn’t chase gossip or celebrity fluff; he chased corruption. He had written about the invisible wars being waged through code — the way power could hide behind algorithms, the way surveillance could masquerade as “security.”
When his exposé on alleged digital harassme
Timothy had once been the kind of reporter who made editors nervous. He didn’t chase gossip or celebrity fluff; he chased corruption. He had written about the invisible wars being waged through code — the way power could hide behind algorithms, the way surveillance could masquerade as “security.”
When his exposé on alleged digital harassment of activists hit syndication, the establishment struck back. His press credentials were revoked. His contract was “restructured.” His name became radioactive.
He was told he was “unstable.” “Conspiratorial.” “Unfit for newsroom work.”
So he did what every blacklisted journalist does when the world closes its doors — he started driving.
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The Descent into the Gig Economy
The drivers app became his newsroom. The dashboard his editor. The passengers his sources.
Every night, he drove through the neon arteries of the city, watching the system from the inside. He noticed patterns — sudden verification prompts, strange freezes, phantom apps appearing on his phone.
Then came the thefts.
His earnings vanished. His credit cards lit up with concert charges he never made. His Chase account showed withdrawals he couldn’t trace.
When he reported it, the response was chillingly familiar: “You’re imagining things, Timothy.”
The same institutional voice that had silenced his reporting now called him delusional.
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The Digital Crucifixion
He realized this wasn’t just about him. It was about control — the slow suffocation of dissent through technology. The same forces he had exposed were now using the very tools he had warned about.
His phone became a battlefield.
His car, a cage.
His identity, a glitch in the system.
He began documenting everything — screenshots, timestamps, transaction logs — building a new story from the wreckage of his own life.
But no outlet would publish it.
No editor would touch it.
No lawyer would take the case.
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The Last Broadcast
One night, parked under a flickering streetlight, Timothy recorded his final message. His voice was steady, but his eyes burned with the fury of a man betrayed by his own country.
“They’ve turned the economy into a weapon. They’ve turned technology into a leash. And they’ve turned truth into a crime.”
He uploaded the video to MandelNews.com. Within hours, it was flagged, throttled, and buried under algorithmic noise.
But somewhere, in the underground channels of activists and whistleblowers, the file lived on — copied, shared, encrypted, immortal.
Timothy disappeared soon after. Some say he fled overseas. Others say he was silenced.
What remains is his story — a warning written in the language of loss.
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Epilogue: The Outsider’s Legacy
In the years that followed, his name became a symbol.
Not of madness, but of moral clarity.
Not of paranoia, but of prophecy.
He had seen the machinery of oppression before anyone else did — and he had paid the price for telling the truth.
And somewhere, in the glow of a rideshare dashboard, another driver scrolls through his phone, waiting for the next verification prompt, wondering if the same fate awaits them.
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Fiction by Dr Harold Mandel






In the shadows of America’s gig economy, a disturbing pattern has emerged from the accounts of targeted activists and rideshare drivers. They describe a sequence of events so precise, so invasive, and so economically devastating that it has shaken their faith in the very institutions meant to protect them.
The reports begin the same way:
In the shadows of America’s gig economy, a disturbing pattern has emerged from the accounts of targeted activists and rideshare drivers. They describe a sequence of events so precise, so invasive, and so economically devastating that it has shaken their faith in the very institutions meant to protect them.
The reports begin the same way: a sudden, unexplained forced photo‑verification prompt claiming to be from Uber. No warning. No context. Just an abrupt demand for facial confirmation that freezes the driver’s workflow and seizes their attention.
And then the real damage begins.
Drivers recount that immediately after the verification screen appears, their phones behave as if they’ve been compromised. Phishing apps materialize. Settings shift. Banking alerts erupt. Unauthorized charges begin firing across their American Express, Citi, and Chase accounts. Earnings vanish before they can be cashed out. Concert tickets — Jay‑Z, Beyoncé, major arena events — appear on statements the drivers never saw, never requested, never approved.
By the time the driver realizes what’s happening, the financial wreckage is already complete.
The Second Blow: Gaslighting as a Weapon
What follows, according to these accounts, is a form of institutional gaslighting that cuts deeper than the fraud itself. When drivers report the unauthorized activity, they say they are met with accusations that they are the perpetrators. They are told they are “lying,” “mentally ill,” “trying to scam the system.”
For activists who already feel targeted by psychiatric labeling and institutional retaliation, this is not merely dismissive — it is strategic erasure. A way to delegitimize their testimony before it can even be heard. A way to turn victims into suspects. A way to silence critics of the system by painting them as unstable.
Many of these activists turned to rideshare work precisely because they had already been pushed out of traditional employment. They were already living in the margins created by political punishment, medical blacklisting, and economic exclusion. Now even that fragile foothold feels unsafe.
A Nation in Institutional Freefall
These accounts do not describe isolated incidents. They describe a collapse of trust — a sense that the United States has entered a period of institutional decay so deep that ordinary people, especially dissenters, no longer feel protected by law, technology, or financial infrastructure.
The fear expressed in these narratives is not just about hacked phones or stolen earnings. It is about a country where:
• digital exploitation is met with denial,
• financial sabotage is met with blame,
• and institutional retaliation is disguised as “mental health evaluation.”
For those who have the means, the conclusion is bleak but rational: leave. Remove yourself from a system that no longer guarantees even the basic security of your earnings, your devices, or your identity. Escape a nation that feels increasingly hostile to its own people.
But for those who cannot leave — those trapped behind what they describe as an Iron Curtain of socioeconomic oppression — the situation feels existential. They describe living in a state of constant retaliation, constant vulnerability, constant fear that the next digital strike will wipe out what little stability they have left.
Their message is not subtle: they feel tortured by a country they once trusted.
The Human Cost of Institutional Failure
The United States has long prided itself on being a beacon of freedom, opportunity, and justice. But these accounts force us to confront a darker possibility: that the nation’s institutions have grown so fractured, so unaccountable, and so hostile to dissent that innocent people can be economically destroyed without recourse.
The question now is not whether fraud occurred — that will be for investigators, auditors, and cybersecurity experts to hopefully investigate. The question is why so many Americans feel unprotected, unheard, and unsafe.
What happens to a nation when its own citizens no longer believe it is capable of safeguarding their most basic rights?
What happens when the digital infrastructure that powers the modern economy becomes a vector for exploitation?
What happens when the institutions meant to protect the vulnerable instead leave them exposed?
These are not abstract questions. They are the lived reality of the drivers and activists whose accounts form the backbone of this report.
And unless the country confronts these failures head‑on, the erosion of trust will soon become irreversible.

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