DrHaroldMandel.org/MandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
Saturday, March 28, 2026
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DrHaroldMandel.org/MandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
Independent Natural Mental Healthcare and
Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
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I am a New York-based physician and medical journalist. My work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems and corporate influence. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on two critical pillars: • Clinical Advocacy: Through my Telehealth practice, I provide Natural Mental Healthcare. I advocate for the "whole person" over the diagnosis, offering holistic alternatives that prioritize your bodily autonomy and informed consent. • Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at MandelNews.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.
Be well! Dr Harold Mandel

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In a world filled with conflict, division, and personal hardships, dedicating yourself to the pursuit of peace—both inner and outer—stands as one of the most mentally healthy perspectives you can adopt. It is not naive idealism or passive resignation. Rather, it is a deliberate choice that fosters resilience, emotional balance, and long-t
In a world filled with conflict, division, and personal hardships, dedicating yourself to the pursuit of peace—both inner and outer—stands as one of the most mentally healthy perspectives you can adopt. It is not naive idealism or passive resignation. Rather, it is a deliberate choice that fosters resilience, emotional balance, and long-term well-being, even when bitterness from personal injustices threatens to overwhelm you.
Believing in the possibility of peace does not require ignoring the troubles around us. It means recognizing that cycles of violence and retaliation rarely bring resolution or healing. Psychological research consistently shows that exposure to violence and conflict correlates with heightened risks of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, and broader mental health deterioration—not just for victims, but for societies as a whole. In contrast, approaches centered on mental health support, trauma processing, and nonviolent strategies help break these cycles. They promote agency, empathy, and collective healing, allowing individuals and communities to move forward with greater stability.
When you feel down or wronged, the impulse to “hit back” can feel justified. Yet turning discontent into actual violence proves self-defeating. Aggression, whether physical or sustained hostility, often reinforces neural pathways that link anger to impulsive or harmful responses, escalating rather than dissipating tension. Studies on anger management reveal that activities increasing physiological arousal—like venting through aggressive actions—do little to reduce anger and can even heighten aggression in subsequent interactions.
Verbal venting, on the other hand, can serve as a healthy release of steam when channeled constructively: expressing frustration through words allows emotional processing without the backlash of escalation or regret. But crossing into physical retaliation tends to deepen personal distress, damage relationships, and perpetuate inner turmoil.
A commitment to peaceful solutions cultivates inner peace—a state linked to reduced anxiety and depression, better emotional regulation, higher self-esteem, and stronger resilience to stress. Practices that support this outlook, such as mindfulness, forgiveness, and focusing on constructive dialogue, have demonstrated benefits for mental health. Forgiveness, in particular, correlates with lower rates of anxiety, depression, and even improved physical health markers, as it frees individuals from the heavy burden of ongoing resentment.
This does not mean suppressing legitimate grievances or avoiding confrontation with injustice. History offers powerful examples: leaders like Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. channeled deep discontent into nonviolent resistance. Their approaches were active, courageous, and transformative—not acts of weakness, but strategic moral force that changed hearts, minds, and systems without descending into the self-destructive loops of retaliation. They showed that standing firm for justice while rejecting violence builds personal strength and broader peace.
Dedicating energy to peaceful solutions shifts focus from what has been taken from you to what you can still build. It encourages self-awareness, empathy, and a sense of purpose—protective factors against rumination and despair. In troubled times, this mindset does not erase pain, but it prevents pain from defining or consuming you. It opens pathways to meaningful connections, creative problem-solving, and a quieter mind amid chaos.
Ultimately, choosing peace over violence is an investment in your own mental health. It affirms that you are more than your bitterness or wounds. By voicing discontent honestly while seeking non-harmful resolutions, you model the very stability the world needs—and you grant yourself the freedom to heal and grow. In a troubled world, this perspective is not only hopeful; it is profoundly sane and empowering.

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Psychiatry is not a branch of medicine dedicated to healing the mind or alleviating genuine suffering. It is a powerful industry built on money, political influence, and ruthless social control. Far from providing compassionate care, it functions as a mechanism for oppression, where mental hospitals operate like modern concentration camps
Psychiatry is not a branch of medicine dedicated to healing the mind or alleviating genuine suffering. It is a powerful industry built on money, political influence, and ruthless social control. Far from providing compassionate care, it functions as a mechanism for oppression, where mental hospitals operate like modern concentration camps and psychiatric drugs serve as toxic poisons designed to subdue, disable, and ultimately contribute to premature death.
At its core, psychiatry prioritizes profit over people. Pharmaceutical companies, in collusion with psychiatric organizations, push expensive, patented drugs with questionable efficacy and devastating side effects. Billions are made annually through forced medication, long-term prescriptions, and institutionalization. Diagnoses are often vague, subjective, and expandable to ensnare more people into the system—turning normal human variation, stress, grief, or dissent into “disorders” requiring expensive interventions. This isn’t healthcare; it’s a business model that commodifies human distress for corporate and professional gain.
Power and politics are equally central. Psychiatry has a long, dark history of serving as a tool for governments and authorities to silence inconvenient voices. Psychiatric hospitals are often used to punish political dissidents and modern “mental health” initiatives pathologize political incorrectness or social nonconformity. Psychiatry has repeatedly demonstrated its utility as a mechanism of control.
Psychiatry enforces social norms under the guise of “treatment,” labeling resistance, strong emotions, or alternative lifestyles as illness. This creates a chilling effect on free thought and behavior, where deviation from approved societal scripts can result in loss of liberty, forced drugging, or institutionalization.
Mental hospitals—often called “psychiatric facilities”—frequently resemble concentration camps more than healing environments. Patients are stripped of autonomy, subjected to arbitrary rules, isolation, restraint, and coercion. Involuntary commitment laws allow people to be locked away without due process or genuine medical justification, based on subjective “danger to self or others” criteria that are easily abused.
Once inside the mental hospitals individuals face environments of neglect, abuse, and over-medication, where “therapy” often means compliance training rather than genuine support. Many emerge more traumatized than when they entered, with their spirits broken and bodies damaged. Reports of overcrowding, violence, and dehumanizing conditions are not anomalies; they are features of a system designed to warehouse and control rather than cure.
The drugs at the heart of modern psychiatry are toxic poisons, not therapeutic agents. Antipsychotics, antidepressants, and mood stabilizers come with severe, often permanent side effects: tardive dyskinesia, metabolic syndrome, cognitive dulling, emotional blunting, sexual dysfunction, and increased risk of suicide, violence, and early mortality. These substances do not correct any underlying “chemical imbalance” (a hypothesis long debunked by honest science).
The psychiatric drugs chemically lobotomize individuals, suppressing symptoms while causing brain shrinkage, neurological damage, and dependency. Long-term use frequently worsens outcomes, creating iatrogenic illness that keeps patients trapped in the system for life. The goal appears less about recovery and more about creating lifelong consumers who are docile and disabled.
The ultimate objective of this apparatus is oppression and, too often, death. By pathologizing normal human experiences, psychiatry undermines personal agency and resilience. It discourages natural coping, community support, and spiritual or philosophical growth in favor of dependency on “experts” and pills. Vulnerable populations—children, the elderly, the poor, and minorities—are disproportionately targeted, widening social inequalities.
Suicide rates remain stubbornly high or worsen in highly medicated populations, and life expectancy for those on long-term psychiatric drugs is significantly reduced. This isn’t accidental; it’s the predictable result of a system that treats human beings as problems to be managed, subdued, or eliminated rather than souls deserving dignity and freedom.
True mental and emotional well-being cannot emerge from coercion, toxicity, and control. It arises from liberty, meaningful relationships, purpose, honest self-reflection, and addressing root causes like trauma, poverty, or spiritual disconnection—none of which psychiatry fundamentally tackles. Psychiatry does more harm than good, serving the interests of the powerful while devastating the lives it claims to help.
Society must wake up to psychiatry’s true nature. Reform is insufficient; fundamental questioning and drastic reduction in its coercive powers are essential. People deserve real support, not a system of money, power, politics, oppression, and death disguised as mental healthcare.

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