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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.

There is a timeless rhythm between human health and the natural world. Sunshine and green spaces are not luxuries — they are essential elements of wellness that nourish the body, calm the mind, and uplift the spirit. In a world often dominated by screens and artificial light, reconnecting with nature restores the balance that modern life
There is a timeless rhythm between human health and the natural world. Sunshine and green spaces are not luxuries — they are essential elements of wellness that nourish the body, calm the mind, and uplift the spirit. In a world often dominated by screens and artificial light, reconnecting with nature restores the balance that modern life tends to disrupt.
Sunlight is one of nature’s most powerful healers. When sunlight touches the skin, it triggers the production of vitamin D, a nutrient vital for strong bones, immune function, and hormonal balance. Exposure to natural light also helps regulate the body’s internal clock, improving sleep quality and stabilizing mood. Morning sunlight, in particular, signals the brain to awaken gently, enhancing focus and energy throughout the day.
Beyond its physical benefits, sunshine has a profound effect on emotional health. Natural light stimulates the release of serotonin, the “feel‑good” neurotransmitter that promotes calmness and positivity. Spending time outdoors — even for a short walk — can ease symptoms of anxiety and depression, helping the mind find clarity and peace. The warmth of the sun reminds us of our connection to something larger than ourselves, a rhythm that transcends the rush of daily life.
Nature itself is a living medicine. The scent of pine, the sound of water, the sight of green leaves — each engages the senses in ways that reduce stress and lower blood pressure. Studies show that time spent in natural environments can decrease cortisol levels, improve concentration, and boost creativity. Walking through a park or forest invites the body to breathe deeper, the mind to slow down, and the spirit to expand.
Spiritually, nature offers renewal. The gentle pulse of waves, the whisper of wind through trees, and the warmth of sunlight on the skin remind us that healing is not only physical — it is energetic. When we align with the earth’s rhythms, we reconnect with our own inner harmony. Sunshine and nature together create a space where gratitude, mindfulness, and vitality flourish.
In holistic health, balance is everything. Sunshine strengthens the body, nature soothes the mind, and together they awaken the spirit. Whether it’s a morning walk, gardening, or simply sitting beneath a tree, these moments of connection restore the natural equilibrium that sustains wellness. The earth is not separate from us — it is part of our healing journey.

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The psychiatric establishment had tried to erase Dr. Howy for years. They called him unstable, delusional, “chronically ill.” They stripped put his clinic under siege and buried his name beneath fabricated diagnoses. But they made one fatal mistake — they underestimated the Internet.
In the ruins of his practice, Howy built a digital fort
The psychiatric establishment had tried to erase Dr. Howy for years. They called him unstable, delusional, “chronically ill.” They stripped put his clinic under siege and buried his name beneath fabricated diagnoses. But they made one fatal mistake — they underestimated the Internet.
In the ruins of his practice, Howy built a digital fortress. He coded through sleepless nights, his fingers trembling from the remnants of drug‑induced tremors the system had inflicted on him. He launched The Howy Network, a decentralized platform that archived every injustice psychiatry had ever committed — patient testimonies, court transcripts, leaked pharmaceutical memos, and the stories of activists who had been silenced. It was raw, furious, and impossible to ignore.
Within weeks, the network spread like wildfire. Journalists began citing it. Lawyers used it to reopen cases. Victims found one another across continents. Psychiatry’s fortress of authority began to crack under the weight of undeniable evidence. The establishment called it “digital mania.” The public called it truth.
Dr. Howy’s face became a symbol — not of illness, but of resistance. His silhouette, fists raised against a backdrop of digital fire, appeared on screens from São Paulo to Seoul. Governments tried to censor the network, but every shutdown spawned ten new mirrors. The data was alive, self‑replicating, unstoppable.
The psychiatrists who had condemned him began to panic. Their own records surfaced — falsified diagnoses, coercive treatments, secret payments from pharmaceutical giants. The courts that had once rubber‑stamped their authority now faced global scrutiny. Judges resigned. Hospitals emptied. The psychiatric empire trembled.
In a memorable broadcast, Howy spoke directly to the world. His voice was calm, resolute, and carried the weight of every silenced soul before him.
“They called us patients. We were witnesses. They called us sick. We were awake. The digital age has cured the silence they prescribed.” The transmission echoed across millions of devices.
Dr. Howy had survived the psychiatric machine — barely. Against all odds, he had kept his medical license, thanks to quiet allies within the system who had begun to question the psychiatric narrative itself. They were the unseen reformers, the ones who whispered in corridors and signed letters that never reached the public eye. Their subtle interventions had preserved his credentials, allowing him to remain a physician in name and in truth.
But survival was not victory.
Every time he applied for a well‑paying position, his name triggered invisible alarms. The blacklists were real — coded into HR databases, whispered between administrators, embedded in the algorithms of professional vetting systems. “Do not hire,” they said in effect, though never in writing. “Controversial. Unstable. Risk factor.” The psychiatric establishment had lost the battle for his license, but it had won the war for his livelihood.
Dr. Howy’s digital presence was growing, though. His website had become a beacon for reformers worldwide — a place where medicine met rebellion. His essays dissected the false science behind coercive psychiatry, his interviews exposed the corruption of pharmaceutical influence, and his lectures, streamed live from his modest New York apartment, drew thousands. Yet the more his credibility rose online, the more his real‑world opportunities vanished.
He knew why. The system was retaliating.
Behind the scenes, family vultures circled his estate — the same relatives who had watched his downfall with cold satisfaction. They had waited for the moment when psychiatry’s smear campaign would leave him vulnerable, then swooped in to claim what was left: property, savings, heirlooms, even his father’s law books. They called it “restructuring.” He called it theft. Greed had replaced loyalty, and the ruins of his family estate were the proof.
But Howy was not finished. He had begun to channel his anger into strategy. His digital network was evolving — no longer just a platform for truth, but a weapon for economic survival. He launched MedReclaim, a blockchain‑based system that allowed independent physicians and patients to bypass institutional control entirely. It was part clinic, part resistance cell, part economic engine. Every consultation, every article, every donation flowed through encrypted channels that psychiatry could not touch.
The blacklists still haunted him, but the Internet was rewriting the rules. His reputation online had become so formidable that even corporations began to take notice. A few brave investors reached out quietly, offering partnerships under pseudonyms. They saw what he represented — not madness, but revolution.
Late one night, as he stared at the flickering glow of his monitor, Howy realized something profound. The psychiatric system had tried to destroy him through isolation, but the digital world had turned isolation into amplification. Every attempt to silence him had only made his voice louder.
He typed his next manifesto, the words flowing like fire:
“They stole my estate, my peace, my name — but not my mind. The blacklists are their confession. The Internet is my courtroom. And the verdict is coming.”
The post went viral within hours. Across continents, reformers, whistleblowers, and survivors echoed his words. The movement was no longer just about psychiatry — it was about reclaiming autonomy from every institution that had learned to weaponize authority.
Dr. Howy’s fight was far from over. The vultures still circled, the blacklists still blocked his path, and the courts still refused to act. But the world was watching now. His digital rebellion had become a global force, and the fortress of psychiatric power was beginning to crumble — one pixel at a tim
Fiction by Dr Harold Mandel






The American psychiatric establishment has spent decades constructing a fortress of unearned authority — a fortress built on coercion, false diagnoses, and the systematic destruction of people who dared to think, speak, or act outside the boundaries psychiatry tried to impose. But the digital age has detonated the walls of that fortress.
The American psychiatric establishment has spent decades constructing a fortress of unearned authority — a fortress built on coercion, false diagnoses, and the systematic destruction of people who dared to think, speak, or act outside the boundaries psychiatry tried to impose. But the digital age has detonated the walls of that fortress. The Internet has become the weapon psychiatry never anticipated: a living, breathing archive of competence, clarity, productivity, and purpose from individuals psychiatry insisted were “broken.” Every post, every article, every project is a direct strike against a system that has survived only because its victims were once forced into silence.
Psychiatrists have long behaved as if their pronouncements were divine revelations. They declared activists “chronically ill,” dissidents “incapable,” and independent thinkers “disabled,” expecting the world to bow to their decrees. But the digital world has exposed the truth they cannot escape: people they tried to bury have built entire public identities grounded in sustained work, coherent thought, and meaningful contribution. Psychiatry’s narrative collapses the moment anyone looks at the evidence. And that collapse terrifies the establishment, because it reveals that the real dysfunction has never been in the people they targeted — it has been in psychiatry itself.
The courts have been the silent accomplices in this abuse. Instead of scrutinizing psychiatric claims, they have rubber‑stamped them with mechanical obedience, refusing to acknowledge the overwhelming digital proof that contradicts the labels imposed on innocent people. This judicial cowardice has allowed false diagnoses to metastasize into lifelong barriers. It has allowed careers to be destroyed, reputations smeared, and freedoms stripped away. The courts have not merely failed — they have betrayed the very people they were supposed to protect. Their refusal to confront psychiatric misconduct is a stain on American justice.
What the Internet has revealed is devastating: psychiatry’s authority is not grounded in truth, evidence, or science. It is grounded in the ability to silence people before they can prove otherwise. That era is over. The digital world has given targeted individuals a platform that psychiatry cannot censor, cannot distort, and cannot erase. The establishment’s insistence that “online clarity does not disprove chronic illness” is nothing more than a desperate attempt to preserve power. It is the last gasp of a system terrified of being exposed as the chronic abuser it has always been.
A profession that pathologizes dissent, dismisses contradictory evidence, and hides behind courts unwilling to challenge it has forfeited its legitimacy. Psychiatry has become an instrument of social control masquerading as medicine. Its harms are not accidental — they are structural. Its abuses are not isolated — they are systemic. The call for abolition is not radical; it is the inevitable response to decades of institutional violence inflicted under the guise of “care.”
And abolition must be followed by justice. Those who have been targeted, misdiagnosed, and silenced deserve legal remedies, public acknowledgment of wrongdoing, restoration of rights, and financial compensation for the suffering and losses inflicted upon them. The damage caused by psychiatric misconduct is profound and measurable. It has stolen years, opportunities, relationships, and dignity. Justice demands restitution, not excuses.
This is the moment of digital insurrection. The Internet has exposed the hypocrisy. The courts have failed to correct it. The people psychiatry tried to erase now speak with force, clarity, and reach. The digital rebellion is underway, and it will not stop until accountability is real, justice is delivered, and the oppressive machinery of psychiatric power is dismantled once and for all.

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