DrHaroldMandel.org/MandelNews.com Antipsychiatry Medical Heretic
Saturday April 4, 2026
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DrHaroldMandel.org/MandelNews.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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Vegetables are one of the simplest, most reliable ways to nourish the body — and they do far more than keep us physically healthy. Their vibrant colors signal a spectrum of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants that support immunity, digestion, heart health, and long‑term vitality. Leafy greens deliver iron and folate, orange vegetables of
Vegetables are one of the simplest, most reliable ways to nourish the body — and they do far more than keep us physically healthy. Their vibrant colors signal a spectrum of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants that support immunity, digestion, heart health, and long‑term vitality. Leafy greens deliver iron and folate, orange vegetables offer beta‑carotene for cellular repair, and cruciferous vegetables help the body detoxify naturally. When people talk about “eating the rainbow,” this is what they mean: each color brings its own protective benefits.
But vegetables also play a quiet, powerful role in brain health. Their antioxidants help shield brain cells from oxidative stress, a process linked to cognitive decline and mood imbalance. Many vegetables — especially leafy greens — contain nutrients like vitamin K, lutein, and folate, which support memory, focus, and long‑term cognitive resilience. Their fiber helps stabilize blood sugar, preventing the energy crashes that can cloud thinking or heighten irritability. Even the act of preparing fresh vegetables can be grounding, reconnecting people with the rhythms of nature and mindful nourishment.
In a world full of processed distractions, vegetables remain a steady, natural ally for both body and mind — simple, colorful, and profoundly supportive of whole‑person wellness.

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Timothy had wanted to heal people for as long as he could remember. While other kids imagined themselves as astronauts or superheroes, he gravitated toward the calm, steady figures in the medical dramas his mother loved—those Hollywood physicians who listened, who cared, who made things right. He studied them the way other boys studied ba
Timothy had wanted to heal people for as long as he could remember. While other kids imagined themselves as astronauts or superheroes, he gravitated toward the calm, steady figures in the medical dramas his mother loved—those Hollywood physicians who listened, who cared, who made things right. He studied them the way other boys studied baseball cards. By middle school he was already training himself to be the kind of man who could carry someone else’s pain without flinching.
He excelled everywhere—biology, literature, philosophy, chemistry. Teachers whispered that he was the kind of student who made the profession look noble again. But Timothy knew the truth: he was an outsider. His father’s world was Wall Street, not medicine. He had no alumni uncles, no family wing named after him, no quiet assurances that a seat would be waiting.
Still, he believed in merit. He believed in the purity of hard work.
That belief didn’t survive Eddington Medical School.
From the first week, he sensed the invisible perimeter around the “insiders”—the sons and daughters of physicians, donors, trustees, and political families whose influence stretched from the statehouse to Washington. They moved through the halls with an ease he couldn’t mimic. They knew which professors to flatter, which administrators to avoid, and—most importantly—where to get the exact copies of the exams their parents had saved from decades of teaching and training.
Timothy didn’t know this at first. He only knew that for the first time in his life, he wasn’t at the top.
Confused, he sought out Dr. Reiner, the young Dean of Students. Reiner closed the office door, lowered his voice, and told Timothy the truth:
“You’re competing against students who already have the tests. That’s how it’s done here. If you want to survive, you’ll have to do what they do.”
Timothy left the office shaken. He made the mistake of confiding in Arthur, a wealthy classmate whose family practically owned a wing of the school. Arthur listened with a polite smile that didn’t reach his eyes.
The next morning, Dr. Reiner was dead. Thirty‑three years old. “Heart attack,” they said. No autopsy. No questions. No memorial service.
By afternoon, the whispers began.
Timothy is paranoid.
Timothy is unstable.
Timothy is imagining conspiracies.
Timothy is mentally ill.
The Eddington gang moved with surgical precision. They didn’t need evidence—only repetition. Soon the entire school treated him like a contagion. Professors avoided him. Students smirked when he entered a room. His evaluations plummeted. His future shrank.
Years later, even after he earned a New York medical license on his own, the stigma followed him like a shadow. Colleagues who resented his independence pushed him into a psychiatric hold, where a rushed, predetermined hearing branded him with a diagnosis he didn’t have. Once labeled, he was easy to sideline. Easy to blacklist. Easy to erase.
The collateral damage spread outward.
Shu—his brilliant, gentle girlfriend from San Francisco—had once dreamed of becoming a veterinarian. They had met in Hawaii, two idealists who believed in kindness and possibility. But the Eddington insiders pulled her into their orbit, drugged her, used her, and shattered her sense of self. Rumors later placed her in circles of wealthy traffickers. Her life ended in a fall from a high‑rise that no one bothered to investigate.
Timothy carried that grief like a second spine.
His own family turned on him next. His older brother and nephew maneuvered to seize most of the inheritance, claiming Timothy was “too unstable” to manage it. He was left with just enough to survive, but not enough to rebuild.
He fled to France, where life was gentler, slower, less suspicious. He married Juliette, a Parisian woman who loved him but could not endure the financial instability that came with his American blacklisting. They had two daughters—Elise and Camille—bright, beautiful children who became the center of his world. But even that family eventually fractured under the weight of scarcity and stigma.
Timothy never stopped being a healer. He treated neighbors, friends, strangers. He listened to people the way he once imagined those Hollywood doctors did. But the world he had trained for—the world he had believed in—had no place for him.
He lived the rest of his life in quiet exile, a man who had done everything right in a system that rewarded everything else.
And yet, in the end, there was a strange kind of triumph in his survival.
He had outlived the lies.
He had outlasted the machine.
He had remained human in a profession that had forgotten how.
LEGAL NOTICE: This story is a work of total fiction. It is a cautionary fable, set in a highly exaggerated and dark vision of the future that has no basis in current reality. The events, laws, and characters described are entirely imaginary products of the author's mind and are intended for creative exploration and entertainment only. Copyright © 2026 Dr. Harold Mandel. All Rights Reserved.

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American psychiatry didn’t quietly drift off course—it veered into a full‑blown ethical disaster. In 1995, the American Psychiatric Association didn’t simply update a definition; it rewrote reality. Overnight, the long‑recognized category of “functional mental illness” vanished, replaced by a sweeping, evidence‑thin decree that every pers
American psychiatry didn’t quietly drift off course—it veered into a full‑blown ethical disaster. In 1995, the American Psychiatric Association didn’t simply update a definition; it rewrote reality. Overnight, the long‑recognized category of “functional mental illness” vanished, replaced by a sweeping, evidence‑thin decree that every person labeled mentally ill must suffer from some invisible “structural defect” or chemical imbalance in the brain.
No proof.
No biomarkers.
No reproducible science.
Just a proclamation—wrapped in authority and sold as progress.
And the consequences have been catastrophic.
This ideological pivot has emboldened the return of interventions that should have been buried with the medical abuses of the early 20th century. Psychosurgery—once a symbol of cruelty and pseudoscience—has crept back into American practice under the banner of “innovation.” Yet the biological signatures that supposedly justify these invasive procedures remain nowhere to be found. The theories are foggy; the confidence is absolute.
Meanwhile, the people harmed by the old system have been abandoned.
Thousands of Americans once labeled “functionally mentally ill”—often through coercive court processes—have never been told that their diagnoses no longer exist. The APA hasn’t notified them. The psychiatrists who treated them haven’t notified them. The courts that forced treatment haven’t notified them. These individuals remain trapped in a diagnostic purgatory built on a framework the profession itself has discarded.
This isn’t just negligence—it looks like strategy.
By insisting that all mental illness stems from vague brain defects, American psychiatry has created a convenient shield against accountability for the neurological injuries caused by its own treatments. Tardive dyskinesia—an agonizing, irreversible movement disorder caused by neuroleptic drugs—has scarred countless lives. Lithium, another psychiatric staple, can trigger seizures and convulsions even when administered “properly” under medical and legal supervision.
Instead of confronting these harms, the profession has doubled down on a narrative that protects itself.
Patients who resist damaging treatments are recast as chronically ill.
Drug‑induced injuries are reframed as “disease progression.”
And the cycle of coercion continues.
This is not science—it is institutional self‑preservation masquerading as medicine.
And it carries a deeper national cost.
A country’s medical practices reflect its values, and the message radiating from contemporary American psychiatry is unmistakable: dissent is pathology, autonomy is negotiable, and evidence is optional when power is at stake. The world sees this. Americans see this. And the trust that once underpinned the doctor‑patient relationship is eroding under the weight of a system that refuses to confront its own damage.
If the United States wants to claim moral leadership in human rights, medical ethics, or scientific integrity, it cannot allow a profession to hide behind unproven theories while inflicting lifelong harm. The reckoning is overdue—and the people harmed by this system deserve far more than silence.

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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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