DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
Monday April 20, 2026
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DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
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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 and corporate influence. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

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In an era where global hostilities are not just headlines but constant digital companions, the weight of the world can feel physically heavy, and the “Holistic Pulse” of our shared reality often vibrates with static and strife. Yet choosing to seek peace is not an act of withdrawal; it is a deliberate strategy for psychological survival a
In an era where global hostilities are not just headlines but constant digital companions, the weight of the world can feel physically heavy, and the “Holistic Pulse” of our shared reality often vibrates with static and strife. Yet choosing to seek peace is not an act of withdrawal; it is a deliberate strategy for psychological survival and a meaningful contribution to the collective well‑being of those around you.
When external conflicts escalate, the mind can mirror that chaos, creating a form of moral injury born from witnessing or feeling powerless against systemic violence and hostility. Actively pursuing peace—through meditation, time in nature, or the Natural Mental Healthcare of grounding yourself in the present—allows you to reclaim your internal narrative and shift from being a passive recipient of global anxiety to a steward of your own tranquility.
This personal commitment radiates outward, because mental health is never a solitary journey. Hostility is contagious, but so is composure. Your calm becomes a secure base for family members who may be struggling with their own fears, a source of purpose within your community through peaceful advocacy and human rights work, and a stabilizing force in digital spaces where choosing de‑escalation over vitriol helps interrupt cycles of online hostility.
Seeking peace is also an active form of resistance. Aligning your actions with your conscience—standing against systems that cause harm and advocating for the whole person—creates a powerful harmony between internal values and external reality, a foundation essential to mental health.
And in these heightened times, sustaining your spirit matters. Rest itself becomes a form of resistance, protecting the inner architecture of resilience required for long‑term advocacy. In the pursuit of justice, we often discover the peace we were seeking all along.
By making peace a priority today, you not only strengthen yourself but also become a steady light for a world that, for the moment, has lost its way.

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Howy Harrington was never supposed to break. That was the experiment’s design — to prove that privilege could inoculate conscience.
He was seventeen the summer he traded one Corvette for another, cherry‑red, the color of fresh blood. Roy Harrington, his father, signed the papers without looking up from the racing form. “Kid’s gotta have so
Howy Harrington was never supposed to break. That was the experiment’s design — to prove that privilege could inoculate conscience.
He was seventeen the summer he traded one Corvette for another, cherry‑red, the color of fresh blood. Roy Harrington, his father, signed the papers without looking up from the racing form. “Kid’s gotta have something to show the girls,” he muttered, draining his Nembutal‑laced Scotch. Roy had built the family fortune the old‑fashioned Wall Street way: insider tips, bookie networks, and enough Valium to dull a conscience that had never been sharp. The Jersey Shore condo glittered like a movie set — white marble, ocean‑view infinity pool, a boat in the slip named Easy Money. Summers meant bluefish runs at dawn and casino floors at night, where pit bosses slipped sixteen‑year‑old Howy Manhattans without asking twice.
He knew why the prettiest girls laughed at his jokes. It wasn’t charm; it was credit. He understood the transaction and didn’t mind. Yet beneath the cynicism, something softer lived — an idealism that embarrassed his father and caught the attention of the watchers in the shadows.
Winters were Florida Keys: tarpon leaping silver under the sun, stone crab claws cracked open on the dock, Roy bragging about the “doctor in the family” he was going to buy with the same easy money that bought everything else. “Medicine,” Roy would slur, “that’s prestige. That’s something the bastards can’t take away.” Howy had heard the other stories — interns swallowing amphetamines to survive thirty‑six‑hour shifts, surgeons divorcing their third wives, residents leaping from hospital roofs. The statistics were ugly. But the boy was a prodigy; exams folded for him like paper. He let himself imagine it: the white coat, the respect, the life that looked clean even if it wasn’t.
Special Agent Marcus Travis had the entire family under long‑term surveillance. Roy’s gambling debts had brushed too close to certain bookies who brushed too close to certain unions the Bureau liked to keep tabs on. But Travis’s real interest was the son. In the late 1960s, the Agency had run quiet simulations: what happened to the best and brightest when the country they were promised began to eat its own? Vietnam body bags, Kent State, assassinations, riots. The analysts had written in classified memos that the United States could simply dissolve one day, and Moscow and Beijing were already drawing up invasion timetables for the aftermath. They needed data on loyalty — real data, not theory.
So Travis became the shadow behind Roy’s shoulder. He fed him a simple, poisonous lie: Your golden boy is going to turn on you.
A fabricated psychiatric profile. A planted informant. A whisper that Howy’s “goody‑two‑shoes streak” would make him testify against his own father the moment he had a medical license and a courtroom conscience. Roy, drunk on fear and Nembutal, believed every word.
The sabotage was surgical.
Howy had just finished his internship — New York State medical license in his wallet, residency offer from Mount Sinai in his briefcase. Then the letters arrived: confidential reports from “concerned colleagues” detailing delusions, paranoia, substance abuse. Fabricated, every one. Roy knew the psychiatric system the way a shark knows the reef; he had used it before to bury business rivals. A quiet commitment hearing, a few expert witnesses who owed him favors, and Howy was suddenly “unstable.” The license was suspended pending review. The residency evaporated. The family will was rewritten overnight; the bulk of the estate went to the older brother who had always hated him.
Overnight, the red Corvette was repossessed. The condo keys no longer worked. The girls stopped answering calls.
Howy sat on the beach that last night, barefoot in the sand, staring at the dark Atlantic. He was twenty‑five. Everything he had been promised had been taken with a pen stroke and a lie. He thought about the oath he had sworn — first, do no harm — and laughed once, a sound like breaking glass.
Travis’s team watched from a parked sedan two blocks away, cameras rolling. They wanted to see which way the fracture would run: domestic terrorism, suicide, or something more useful. A defection would be gold.
Howy bought a one‑way ticket to Moscow on a student visa that no longer existed. He simply walked through the gate. No gun. No manifesto. Just a small duffel and the clothes on his back.
In a village clinic outside Novosibirsk, he found work no American doctor would touch: delivering babies by kerosene lamp, setting bones with splints carved from birch, treating frostbite and vodka pancreatitis in patients who had never seen a stethoscope that wasn’t Soviet issue. The work was brutal and honest. The Russian winter matched the temperature inside his chest.
He met Elena in the supply room — another physician, small, fierce, eyes the color of winter wheat. She had lost her father to a gulag; she understood broken countries. They married in the village hall with two nurses as witnesses. She never asked him to explain the haunted look that never quite left his face. He never told her the whole story. Some inheritances are too heavy to share.
Back in Langley, the final report was stamped CLASSIFIED and buried: Subject H.H. exhibited no violent radicalization. No attempt to acquire firearms. No public denunciations. He simply left. Conclusion: National allegiance is not genetic. It is not purchased with summer houses or sports cars. It is cultivated daily by a nation that chooses not to betray its own children. When that cultivation fails — even among the gifted, even among the privileged — defection becomes the only rational act of self‑preservation. Recommendation: Continue monitoring domestic loyalty stressors. The next test subject may not be so quiet.
In the Siberian clinic, Howy Harrington — once the golden boy of the Jersey Shore — delivered a baby at 3 a.m. during a blizzard. The mother wept with gratitude. He wiped his hands, stepped outside, and looked up at stars that belonged to no country at all.
For the first time in years, he felt something like peace. He never went home. There was no home left to betray.

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The trajectory of American society reveals a profound and worsening sickness—not a biological contagion, but a sickness of the human soul. Over the course of its history, our nation has grown increasingly comfortable with staggering financial inequities, normalizing a landscape where millions of dollars are casually spent on a two-minute
The trajectory of American society reveals a profound and worsening sickness—not a biological contagion, but a sickness of the human soul. Over the course of its history, our nation has grown increasingly comfortable with staggering financial inequities, normalizing a landscape where millions of dollars are casually spent on a two-minute commercial while highly educated, ethical, and ambitious individuals are systematically prevented from earning even a fraction of that amount over a lifetime. This disparity is not merely an unfortunate byproduct of a "free and open marketplace," as it is so often rationalized. Rather, it is a targeted, man-made construct designed to concentrate wealth and power among a select few. What is even more insidious is how this system defends itself: when capable, intelligent people raise questions about these horrible injustices, they are frequently targeted by the destructive intrusions of psychiatry. This institution serves as a rationalization for irrational explanations, pathologizing dissent and providing a convenient excuse for why those who challenge economic oppression are kept down financially.From the top spheres of the economic spectrum, it is easy to insist that "too much emphasis is placed on money." This viewpoint, however, is a luxury afforded only to those who do not suffer the consequences of its absence. It completely fails to account for the intense psychological, emotional, physical, and spiritual pain associated with the wasted lives of economic oppression. The suffering caused by poverty, housing insecurity, and the denial of basic human dignity is profound and real. Yet, instead of addressing the systemic causes of this suffering, society increasingly turns to psychiatry to reframe these entirely rational responses to oppression as individual "mental illnesses."The claim that these inequities are simply the "beauty and curse of a free and open marketplace" is a dangerous myth. These markets are constructed by human policies and priorities. It is a deliberate choice to value a brief television advertisement at $3 million while simultaneously telling highly educated activist professionals that their vast knowledge and holistic approaches to bettering human health and well-being are worthless. When these individuals speak out against this betrayal, they are often met with psychiatric labels that invalidate their perspectives. Historically, psychiatry has functioned as a tool for social control, pathologizing those who resist or deviate from established norms. By labeling dissenters as "paranoid" or "delusional," the system effectively silences them, ensuring that their critiques of financial inequity are dismissed as the ravings of the unwell.This targeted use of psychiatry is not accidental; it is a mechanism of self-preservation for a corrupt system. It provides a pseudo-scientific justification for why certain people are marginalized, suggesting that their financial struggles are the result of personal pathology rather than systemic barriers. This narrative is incredibly damaging, as it not only obscures the reality of economic oppression but also subjects individuals to the trauma of psychiatric intervention, which often involves coercion, loss of autonomy, and the administration of powerful drugs that further hinder their ability to advocate for themselves. The mental health system, in this context, becomes yet another form of institutional oppression, working in tandem with economic structures to keep people in their designated roles.The bottom line is that the admiration for growing financial inequities is squeezing more and more Americans, and others worldwide, out of decent lives on a daily basis. The consequences of this trajectory are dire. If left unchecked, this societal sickness is heading toward the pathetic landscape of a decaying, corrupt third-world country. It is a future where the bodies of the dying and dead line the streets, while a select few drive past them in $1 million Rolls Royces to attend lavish affairs. This is not a natural disaster; it is the logical conclusion of a society that values profit over people and uses institutions like psychiatry to enforce its cruel hierarchy. To heal this sickness, we must first recognize the systemic nature of the disease and reject the pathologization of those who dare to demand a cure.

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Dr. Harold Mandel is a licensed physician who provides mental healthcare advocacy, commentary, articles, educational content, mental health advice, and telehealth counseling services. The content addresses difficult, controversial, and complex issues in mental healthcare. These topics may include critical analysis of treatments, policies, industry practices, personal experiences, and related debates that can be emotionally challenging, triggering, or difficult to navigate for younger individuals.
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