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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.

Healthy snacks play a vital role in supporting children’s growth, learning, and emotional balance. Kids move through their days with remarkable speed—thinking, exploring, and developing in ways that demand steady nourishment. When long stretches pass between meals, their energy wanes, their mood becomes fragile, and their ability to conce
Healthy snacks play a vital role in supporting children’s growth, learning, and emotional balance. Kids move through their days with remarkable speed—thinking, exploring, and developing in ways that demand steady nourishment. When long stretches pass between meals, their energy wanes, their mood becomes fragile, and their ability to concentrate slips. Thoughtful snacking fills these gaps with gentle, sustaining fuel that helps children stay steady and engaged.
Children’s blood‑sugar levels rise and fall more quickly than those of adults. A nutrient‑dense snack can smooth out those fluctuations, preventing the fatigue and irritability that often appear when hunger sets in. This is especially important during school hours, when focus, memory, and emotional regulation are essential. A child who enjoys a wholesome snack is far more likely to participate confidently and absorb new information with clarity.
Healthy snacking also shapes lifelong habits. When children learn to reach for fruits, nuts, yogurt, or whole‑grain foods instead of sugary or ultra‑processed options, they build a foundation for wellness that extends into adulthood. These early choices influence metabolism, weight stability, and even long‑term emotional resilience. A child who grows up enjoying nourishing foods is more likely to maintain those preferences throughout life.
Parents often wonder what qualifies as a “healthy” snack. The answer is refreshingly straightforward: choose foods that offer real nourishment. Fresh fruit provides natural sweetness along with fiber and antioxidants. A small handful of mixed nuts delivers healthy fats and protein that keep hunger at bay. Yogurt offers probiotics and calcium for growing bones. Whole‑grain crackers paired with hummus or nut butter create a satisfying balance of complex carbohydrates and plant‑based protein. Even vegetables become appealing when served with a flavorful dip or arranged in colorful shapes that spark curiosity.
Snacking can also become a moment of connection. Preparing small portions together, exploring new flavors, or arranging foods in playful patterns turns nutrition into a shared experience rather than a chore. Children are far more enthusiastic about eating well when they feel involved in the process, and this sense of participation strengthens their confidence and encourages mindful choices.
Healthy snacks are a simple yet powerful tool for nurturing children’s growth, learning, and emotional steadiness. With a little creativity and consistency, families can transform everyday snacking into a cornerstone of wellness that supports children in every part of their day.

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The legal framework that empowers psychiatry in the United States — woven through state statutes, federal policy, and judicial precedent — has created a system in which extraordinary authority is granted to medical institutions with minimal democratic oversight. Under the protective language of “treatment,” governments have sanctioned pra
The legal framework that empowers psychiatry in the United States — woven through state statutes, federal policy, and judicial precedent — has created a system in which extraordinary authority is granted to medical institutions with minimal democratic oversight. Under the protective language of “treatment,” governments have sanctioned practices that, in any other context, would be recognized as profound violations of civil rights: involuntary confinement, forced drugging, and the unilateral suspension of personal autonomy through legal terminology that obscures coercion behind a façade of benevolence.
This structure has normalized a form of state‑endorsed paternalism that treats nonconformity, distress, or unconventional behavior as pathology. Once labeled, individuals can be stripped of freedoms that every other citizen assumes are inviolable. Terms such as “danger to self or others,” “grave disability,” or “medical necessity” often function less as objective standards and more as flexible legal instruments that allow institutions to justify extreme interventions without meaningful accountability.
The consequences are stark. Vulnerable people — including creative, sensitive, or simply misunderstood individuals — can be swept into a system that prioritizes institutional convenience and economic incentives over human dignity. The rise of for‑profit psychiatric hospitals, pharmaceutical interests, and insurance‑driven models of care has intensified concerns that coercive practices are not merely tolerated but financially rewarded. When confinement becomes a revenue stream and compliance becomes a metric, the moral foundation of care is compromised.
Civil‑rights advocates note that this dynamic echoes historical patterns in which marginalized groups were controlled under the guise of public safety or social order. The rhetoric may be modern, but the underlying logic is familiar: classify, contain, and medicate those who fall outside sanctioned norms. The legal system’s endorsement of these powers — often with limited scrutiny — raises urgent questions about whether the state has effectively legalized a form of structural violence against its own citizens.
A society committed to freedom must confront the uncomfortable reality that coercive psychiatric authority, when left unchecked, can drift far from its therapeutic mission. The challenge is not to abolish care, but to demand a system in which autonomy, informed consent, and human rights are foundational — and where the law protects individuals rather than insulating institutions.

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Dr. Jefferson had always believed that medicine was meant to liberate, not control. A holistic physician with a razor‑sharp legal mind, he spent decades exposing the hidden injustices buried in psychiatric law — the clauses that allowed confinement under the guise of care, the jargon that turned compassion into coercion. His lectures drew
Dr. Jefferson had always believed that medicine was meant to liberate, not control. A holistic physician with a razor‑sharp legal mind, he spent decades exposing the hidden injustices buried in psychiatric law — the clauses that allowed confinement under the guise of care, the jargon that turned compassion into coercion. His lectures drew crowds; his essays unsettled institutions. Law schools courted him, but he preferred the front lines, where reform was more than theory.
Then the system struck back.
A complaint appeared, accusing him of “paranoid opposition to accepted psychiatric practice.” The phrase was bureaucratic venom. Within days, Jefferson was declared “mentally unfit,” his license suspended, and his body confined to the very ward he had spent his life criticizing. They called it treatment. He knew it was punishment.
Inside the hospital, sedation blurred his thoughts, but not his resolve. He began writing again — fragments of truth scrawled on scraps of paper, hidden in pillowcases, slipped to sympathetic nurses. “They mistake silence for recovery,” he wrote. “They mistake obedience for health.” Those words became seeds of rebellion.
Outside, a young coder named Mira — one of his former students — refused to accept the official story. She uncovered sealed court orders and encrypted hospital records, tracing the machinery that had swallowed him. When she found proof of his forced confinement, she reached out to others who had worked with him: lawyers, journalists, clinicians, activists. Together they formed The Lanterns, a digital underground devoted to freeing his voice.
Using encrypted channels and anonymous servers, The Lanterns smuggled Jefferson’s writings out of the ward. Nurses hid flash drives in medical supply boxes; Mira decrypted and uploaded the files to hidden forums. His essays — fierce, lucid, and poetic — spread across the web. He wrote of the “alchemy of legality,” how language could turn empathy into control. He described the ward as a “laboratory for obedience.” His words resonated with whistleblowers and reformers who had seen the same abuses.
The Lanterns built a mirror site disguised as a wellness blog. From there, Jefferson’s essays leaked into mainstream platforms. Journalists quoted him; law professors debated him; legislators whispered his name. Every time authorities shut down a server, three more appeared. His ideas had become viral — unstoppable, incorruptible.
Inside the ward, Jefferson began to sense the ripple of his own rebellion. Patients passed him notes of gratitude. Guards grew uneasy. Administrators held emergency meetings. He realized that survival was not endurance — it was transmission. His body was confined, but his words had escaped into the bloodstream of the Internet.
Months later, a federal inquiry exposed systemic abuses in involuntary psychiatry. Jefferson’s writings were cited as evidence. Under mounting pressure, the hospital released him — frail, thin, but unbroken.
Outside the gates, The Lanterns waited. Mira stepped forward, her eyes bright with defiance. “Your words kept us alive,” she said.
Jefferson looked at the crowd — students, activists, ordinary citizens — all carrying the light he had sparked. He spoke softly, his voice steady despite the months of sedation.
“They tried to erase me with chemicals and law,” he said. “But truth, once shared, cannot be confined.”
The Lanterns bowed their heads, not in reverence but in solidarity. Their movement had begun in secrecy, but now it burned openly — a beacon against coercion, a testament to the power of conscience.
And though Jefferson’s body bore the marks of captivity, his spirit had already escaped.
The Lanterns’ light would never go out.
Fiction by Dr Harold Mandel













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