DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Sunday May 10, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare and
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DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
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Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
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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 of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

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Depression is a serious and often debilitating condition that affects millions of people worldwide, impacting emotional wellbeing, physical health, relationships, and quality of life. It should never be dismissed or minimized—but how we choose to address it matters deeply.
While psychiatric medications are commonly prescribed, they carry s
Depression is a serious and often debilitating condition that affects millions of people worldwide, impacting emotional wellbeing, physical health, relationships, and quality of life. It should never be dismissed or minimized—but how we choose to address it matters deeply.
While psychiatric medications are commonly prescribed, they carry significant risks, including dependency, emotional blunting, withdrawal syndromes, and other serious side effects. For many individuals, these drugs may not address what the underlying causes of the emotional suffering are and often create additional serious health burdens.
A more empowering path often begins with natural, holistic interventions—approaches that support the whole person: mind, body, and spirit. These may include nutrient-dense nutrition, regular exercise, restorative sleep, sunlight exposure, mindfulness practices, counseling, meaningful social connection, reducing toxic stress, and targeted nutritional supplementation when appropriate.
True healing from depression often requires more than symptom suppression—it calls for understanding root causes, building resilience, and restoring balance. With compassionate holistic support, many people can reduce suffering, regain hope, and move toward lasting wellness—naturally.
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The atmosphere on Planet XVR didn’t exist, which was exactly how Dwarvian liked it. There was no wind to carry the scent of ozone, no birds to interrupt his focus—only the rhythmic, metallic thrum of a world repurposed into a forge.
Dwarvian sat in his observation spire, a glass needle piercing the vacuum. For forty-two years, his life had
The atmosphere on Planet XVR didn’t exist, which was exactly how Dwarvian liked it. There was no wind to carry the scent of ozone, no birds to interrupt his focus—only the rhythmic, metallic thrum of a world repurposed into a forge.
Dwarvian sat in his observation spire, a glass needle piercing the vacuum. For forty-two years, his life had been a singular equation of revenge. Most men would have sought therapy or a new hobby after losing their high school sweetheart. Not Dwarvian. When Arthur—that smug, back-slapping "friend" from Interstellar Works—had eloped with Elena, Dwarvian hadn’t cried. He had calculated.
He had stolen a seed-ship, a handful of self-replicating nanites, and a grudge that burned hotter than a dying star.
The Legion of the Scorned
Below him, the plains of XVR were no longer rock and dust. They were a shimmering sea of polished chrome.
• The Sentinels: Seven-foot tall, multi-limbed automatons programmed with a singular tactical doctrine: total erasure.
• The Swarm: Billions of micro-drones capable of stripping a city to its rebar in minutes.
• The Deliverance: A battery of hypersonic silos, their muzzles aimed precisely at a blue marble 4.2 light-years away.
"Arthur always said I lacked 'the big picture,'" Dwarvian whispered to the empty room. "I think he’ll find this picture quite expansive."
Sunday Morning Silence
On Earth, it was a particularly beautiful May morning. In the suburbs of Virginia, the pews were full. In the squares of Rome, the bells were ringing. It was the kind of peaceful, sleepy Sunday that made the world feel permanent.
Then, the sky cracked.
The XVR warheads didn't enter the atmosphere with a slow burn; they arrived as tears in reality. Traveling at Mach 25, they were invisible to standard radar until the moment of impact. Dwarvian hadn't targeted military bases. He had targeted the nerve endings of the superpowers.
A strike on a silo in North Dakota. A simultaneous hit on a submarine base in Vladivostok. A surgical strike near Beijing.
The Great Misunderstanding
The beauty of Dwarvian’s plan lay in human nature. He didn't need to destroy the world himself; he just needed to give it a nudge.
• 09:14 AM: Washington detects multiple nuclear signatures. They assume a first strike from the East.
• 09:15 AM: Moscow sees the counter-launch and assumes a desperate gamble by the West.
• 09:17 AM: The "Dead Hand" systems engage.
The sky filled with the crisscrossing trails of thousands of ICBMs. It was a masterpiece of kinetic fury. Humanity, in its final moments, did exactly what Dwarvian had predicted: it blamed its neighbor.
The Last Celebration
Back on XVR, a console chimed. A series of high-resolution feeds—delayed by the speed of light but crystalline in their clarity—began to play across Dwarvian’s monitors.
He watched the blossoms of fire erupt across the continents. He watched the blue marble turn a sickly, bruised grey as the dust kicked up into the stratosphere. He pulled a dusty bottle of vintage synthesized wine from a rack and poured a glass.
"To Arthur," Dwarvian toasted, his reflection in the glass twisted and thin. "I hope you and Elena enjoyed the brunch."
He sat alone in the silence of his perfect, mechanical kingdom. He had won. He had erased the man who stole his heart by erasing the very ground the man stood upon.
As the last light of Earth faded into a smoldering cinder, Dwarvian realized something. He had spent forty years building a war machine to settle a four-year-old grudge. Now, he was the only living soul in the universe, sitting on a planet of robots, with absolutely no one left to tell how clever he was.
He took a sip of the wine. It tasted like copper and old dust.
Speculative Fiction by Dr Harold Mandel

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Psychiatry does not merely fail people. It wastes them, deliberately and across every sphere where a life could have grown.
The victims are not who the profession claims to treat. Time and again they are intelligent, well educated, creative, ambitious, compassionate and peace loving people. They arrive with the raw capacity to thrive in ca
Psychiatry does not merely fail people. It wastes them, deliberately and across every sphere where a life could have grown.
The victims are not who the profession claims to treat. Time and again they are intelligent, well educated, creative, ambitious, compassionate and peace loving people. They arrive with the raw capacity to thrive in careers, to build financial stability, to sustain deep friendships, to love and raise families, to make something lasting in the world. What they get in return is not cultivation but demolition.
Instead of being nurtured to get the most out of themselves and out of life, they are processed. They are labeled, diminished, and managed until every aspect of their potential is crushed. The psychiatrist does not strengthen ambition, he pathologizes it. He does not protect creativity, he sedates it. He does not honor compassion, he calls it instability. By the time the intervention is finished, a person who could have risen toward the top in anything they chose is left functioning like a juvenile delinquent or a high school dropout, not because of any original defect, but because the treatment itself stripped away confidence, skill, reputation, and time.
The economic destruction is the most visible part. Once marked as a psychiatric patient, doors close. Employers pull back, colleagues distance themselves, opportunities evaporate. Unless that innocent victim can secure a decent family inheritance from wealthy and generous relatives, or is simply given decent amounts of money as gifts from compassionate members of society, they are generally destined to the most horrible lives imaginable in extreme poverty. It is a cruel inversion: people born with the inner resources to create abundance are forced into destitution by the very system that claimed it would help them.
And for what? In the vast majority of cases, what was actually needed was never a diagnosis or a drug. It was rest. It was relaxation. It was good food, wholesome companionship with worthwhile people, the steady presence of a nice dog or cat, and some regular exercise. It was time away from pressure and a chance to breathe. That is what restores a healthy human being.
What psychiatry offers instead is the opposite: beatings by restraint and forced treatment, degradation in locked wards, humiliation in front of families, stigmatization that follows a person for decades, and toxic druggings that dull the mind and wreck the body. None of that builds a life. All of it wastes one.
The tragedy is not that these people lacked potential. The tragedy is that they had it in abundance, and psychiatrists made it their business to crush it.

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