DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
Tuesday June 23, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
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I am a New York-based general practitioner, medical journalist, and fiction writer. 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 three critical 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, supporting your bodily autonomy and informed consent.
Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at DrMandelNews.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.
Creative Advocacy: As an author of speculative fiction short stories, I explore these complexities through narrative. My writing serves as a series of cautionary fables, using imaginative storytelling to examine the consequences of institutional overreach and the enduring importance of the human spirit.

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Dr. Elias Rourke never intended to become a symbol. He intended to become a psychiatrist — the kind who listened first, prescribed last, and believed that healing was still possible in a system that had forgotten how to heal.
At Whitmore College in Ashford, Pennsylvania, he graduated Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude, a perfect 4.0 in psycho
Dr. Elias Rourke never intended to become a symbol. He intended to become a psychiatrist — the kind who listened first, prescribed last, and believed that healing was still possible in a system that had forgotten how to heal.
At Whitmore College in Ashford, Pennsylvania, he graduated Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude, a perfect 4.0 in psychology. At Mercer Medical College in Philadelphia, he ranked at the top of his psychiatry exams and earned glowing evaluations on every rotation, including a sought‑after elective in Child Psychiatry at the University of Oahu School of Medicine.
By 28, with a New York medical license in hand and an internship behind him, Elias was poised for a career defined by compassion and reform. So when an email arrived from Galveston, Texas — an invitation to meet “forward‑thinking leaders in humane mental health care” — he believed it. He believed in people. He believed in systems. He believed in change.
He never made it to the meeting.
The Ambush
The dawn flight from Philadelphia landed in a quiet terminal. Elias stepped into the fluorescent stillness, rolling his carry‑on behind him. Two men in dark jackets approached with the casual confidence of people who never hear “no.”
State Agent Reeves & State Agent Morales
“Dr. Rourke?”
He opened his mouth to answer. A sting hit the back of his neck. The floor tilted. His vision folded inward. The last thing he heard clearly was Morales’s voice, low and amused:
“Giddy up, boy.”
He woke cuffed in the back of a state vehicle, head pounding, mouth dry. No emergency room. No evaluation. No explanation. The car cut through industrial sprawl and stopped at Blackwater Behavioral Center — 1400 Magnolia Ward.
The attending physician was Dr. Marius Kessler — South African, sharp‑featured, with an accent that sliced every syllable. He didn’t examine Elias. He didn’t ask a question. He simply looked him over like a rancher assessing livestock.
“Another American who thinks he’s too good for discipline,” Kessler said to the orderly. “Process him.”
Blackwater ran like a hunting lodge for human quarry. Restraints first. Questions never. Compliance charted like cage checks. When Elias asked why he hadn’t been medically cleared, Kessler didn’t bother to look up.
“You people always think you’re the exception,” he said. “You’re late for court.”
The Hearing That Wasn’t
The “courtroom” was a converted office with a folding table and a sweating judge. No jury. No gallery. No due process.
Judge Halford presided, robe askew. Dr. Holt Brenner, a radiologist who worked with psychiatrists to crush dissent, delivered ninety seconds of unsworn testimony.
Elias’s court‑appointed lawyer, Marcus Delaney, tried to object.
“My client was lured here, assaulted, drugged—”
“This is a civil matter,” Halford interrupted. “We don’t do juries for your own good, son.”
When Elias called the proceeding a disgrace, Halford banged a gavel he shouldn’t have had.
“Ninety days outpatient treatment. Next case.”
As guards dragged Elias out, Delaney leaned close.
“Leave Texas the second you can,” he whispered. “Or this will haunt them for decades.”
Elias didn’t leave.
He was terrified that if he crossed the state line, the same men who ambushed him once would come after him again. He imagined Reeves and Morales showing up in another airport, another parking lot, another quiet hallway, grabbing him off the street and dragging him back to Blackwater. He feared that leaving Texas would mark him as a loose end — and loose ends get tied up.
So he stayed, not out of courage and certainly not out of respect for such barbarism, but out of a deeper dread: that running would make him easier to hunt.
For ninety days he lived in a Galveston efficiency apartment, chemically restrained, checking in daily at Blackwater. He swallowed the pills because Kessler’s staff stood over him, and the alternative was the locked ward where “noncompliance” was logged like a trophy kill.
The Blacklist
When the ninety days ended, Elias returned to the world — but the world no longer returned his calls.
Residency programs and other good career options he was well qualified for all now saw the same red flag:
Civil commitment on record.
Years later, he walked into an FBI field office in Las Vegas to report kidnapping, forced drugging, and judicial fraud. Agent Carson skimmed his file and shrugged.
“Says here you had your day in court, Dr. Rourke.”
But Elias knew the truth:
It wasn’t a day in court.
It was a message.
A career execution carried out under color of law.
Independent physicians and attorneys who later reviewed his case agreed: Elias had never met criteria for bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, or major depression. He had no history of violence, instability, or impairment. He was a quiet, conservative, law‑abiding doctor with a spotless record.
The diagnoses, he came to believe, were tools — labels used to neutralize reformers and whistleblowers while the system protected itself.
The Reckoning
Elias stopped trying to re‑enter the mainstream. Instead, he joined the Committee for Ethical Treatment in Psychiatry, where he met Dr. Anton Weber — a 94‑year‑old psychiatrist who had walked away from the profession decades earlier out of conscience.
“This is bigger than you think,” Weber told him. “It’s not medicine. It’s money, politics, and control in a white coat.”
The harassment didn’t stop. Elias began documenting what he called neuro‑intrusion — targeted interference with sleep, mood, and cognition. A decade ago, people dismissed such claims as paranoia. Now, in a world where every device tracks, listens, and predicts, more people understood the principle:
If technology can influence a phone, why not a person?
Weber died at 96. His last words to Elias were simple:
“Tell it. All of it. Before they call you a file number.”
The Film
Today, Elias practices independently, focusing on natural mental health care and human rights advocacy via Telehealth.
But his story isn’t finished.
He’s developing The Texas Torture Case for the screen — and he intends to play himself. No actor felt the needle. No actor lived the ninety days. No actor stood before Kessler like a specimen.
The goal isn’t revenge.
It’s exposure.
To show what happens when a healer becomes a target.
To ask the question Elias now asks every audience:
If the state could do this to a licensed physician with honors on his wall, who is safe?
The system didn’t just try to break Elias Rourke.
It tried to erase him.
He refused to disappear.
Speculative Fiction
Based on a True Story
Names Changed
By Dr. Harold Mandel
DrHaroldMandel.org

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Across the United States, a shadow legal system operates in plain sight—one where judges sign away a person’s liberty in minutes, where testimony goes unchallenged, where the accused cannot meaningfully defend themselves, and where the state’s power is absolute. It is called civil psychiatric court, but let’s stop sanitizing it. These are
Across the United States, a shadow legal system operates in plain sight—one where judges sign away a person’s liberty in minutes, where testimony goes unchallenged, where the accused cannot meaningfully defend themselves, and where the state’s power is absolute. It is called civil psychiatric court, but let’s stop sanitizing it. These are kangaroo proceedings that would be unthinkable in any other domain of American law.
And they are destroying lives.
A System Built on Subjectivity, Rubber‑Stamped by the State
Psychiatry already rests on interpretations that vary wildly from clinician to clinician. But when that subjectivity becomes the basis for state‑sanctioned confinement and forced drugging, it crosses a moral line. People who once sought help voluntarily often describe feeling misled, pressured, or dismissed—told their distress was a “chemical imbalance” or a “disorder” rather than a human response to trauma, injustice, or life itself.
But coercive psychiatry goes further. It weaponizes that subjectivity. It turns it into legal authority. And it does so without the constitutional protections Americans are taught to believe are their birthright.
No Crime, No Trial, No Rights—Yet Total Loss of Freedom
In these civil courts, a person can be detained, medicated, surveilled, and stripped of autonomy without committing a crime. No jury. No cross‑examination. No meaningful defense. No public record. No accountability.
This is not care.
This is not safety.
This is state power without due process.
The United States would never tolerate this in criminal court. Yet under the banner of “mental health,” the Constitution is treated as optional.
The Human Toll: Silenced Voices, Shattered Lives
People who endure this system describe the same pattern:
Their story is ignored.
Their credibility is dismissed.
Their objections are pathologized.
Their trauma is reframed as “lack of insight.”
It is a perfect trap: the more you defend yourself, the more the system insists you are “ill.”
Meanwhile, the fallout is catastrophic. Careers derailed. Reputations destroyed. Families torn apart. Estates drained. A single civil commitment can follow someone for years, poisoning background checks and social standing.
All without a crime.
All without a trial.
All without justice.
Power Without Oversight Is Abuse Waiting to Happen
When a system allows the state to override a person’s will with minimal scrutiny, it invites misuse. It invites shortcuts. It invites the quiet normalization of coercion. And it creates an environment where institutional convenience can outweigh human dignity.
Critics have long warned that financial incentives, professional authority, and bureaucratic momentum can combine into a machine that prioritizes compliance over compassion, control over autonomy, and speed over truth.
This Is a Civil‑Rights Fight—Not a Medical Debate
The core issue is whether the state should have the power to forcibly impose psychiatry through opaque, accelerated legal processes that would be unconstitutional anywhere else.
Forced treatment without crime is not a medical question.
It is a civil‑rights emergency.
And it is long past time to say so.
America Must Confront What It Has Allowed
A nation that claims to value liberty cannot keep looking away from a system that strips people of freedom based on subjective impressions and unchecked authority. If due process means anything, it must apply to everyone—including those targeted by psychiatric intervention.
The fight is not against care.
The fight is against coercion masquerading as care.
Against courts that operate without justice.
Against a system that punishes people not for what they’ve done, but for how they are inappropriately perceived.
This is not the America we are promised.
And it will not change until people are willing to call it what it is:
a disgrace, a violation, and a betrayal of the Constitution itself.

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