DSM – ILANA MERCER https://www.ilanamercer.com Fri, 19 Dec 2025 21:40:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 School Shootings: A Moral-Health, Not Mental-Health, Problem https://www.ilanamercer.com/2018/05/school-shootings-a-moral-health-not-mental-health-problem/ Fri, 25 May 2018 02:44:23 +0000 http://imarticles.ilanamercer.com/?p=2106 The tele-experts assert that to do what he did—kill 10 and maim 13, at Santa Fe High School, in Texas—Dimitrios Pagourtzis had to be insane. Likewise, Nikolas Cruz—killer of 17 in Parkland, Florida—and many shooters before him: All were victims of mental disorder. Or, so say the experts. Come to think of it, the structure [...Read On]

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The tele-experts assert that to do what he did—kill 10 and maim 13, at Santa Fe High School, in Texas—Dimitrios Pagourtzis had to be insane.

Likewise, Nikolas Cruz—killer of 17 in Parkland, Florida—and many shooters before him: All were victims of mental disorder. Or, so say the experts.

Come to think of it, the structure of argument coming from conservative and progressive corners is the same:

Conservatives blame mental health.

Progressives blame the National Rifle Association.

Both factions see the locus of responsibility for these murder sprees as beyond the reach and bailiwick of the individual and of what were once formative and corrective institutions: the church, for example.

As the language deployed in the culture might suggest, crimes aren’t committed, but are caused. Perpetrators don’t do the crime, but are driven to do their deeds by a confluence of uncontrollable factors.

The paradox at the heart of the disease theory of delinquency is that causal theoretical explanations are invoked only after bad deeds have been committed. Good deeds, however extravagant, are in no need of extenuation.

The evidence our tele-therapists advance for a killer’s “madness” is … the murder or murders he has committed.

Whatever the logical fallacy the psychiatrists commit—circular reasoning or backward reasoning—thinking people can agree: This is bad logic.

Fact: When they suggest a shooter is sick, they do so based on the fact that he committed murder.

Let’s run with this “logic”: The reductio ad absurdum of what the mental-health mavens are saying is that to kill, an individual must be deranged.

Does that not imply that the default condition of humanity is goodness?

Indeed, evil has been cast as a symptom of illness. It’s certainly so if to judge by the language used by the experts.

This is dangerous, because evil responds to punishment, not to kid gloves, which is what medicalizing misbehavior amounts to.

The more we medicalize dysfunctional conduct, the more of it we will get.

Why? Because the therapist’s couch—the chaise longue sofa in the movies—or his hallucinogens are a lot more pleasant than the hard work involved in reforming conduct and character.

Pleasant is a reward. Reward evil and you’ll get more of it.

That’s where the disease theory of delinquency leads. It rules out evil and brings us closer to marginalizing goodness.

By all means, scan the brains of shooters in search of significant pathology. You’ll find none—not when variables like drug-taking are controlled for, and when the absence of baseline measurements for comparison purposes is factored-in.

Moreover, most individuals classified as mentally ill do not murder.

See, evil is part of the human condition, always has been, always will be. Evil can’t be wished away, treated away, medicated away or legislated away. Evil is here to stay.

Bad people—little Damiens included—do bad things. All the more so when barriers to bad behavior are removed across the board, and when everything goes.

The infamous Nikolas Cruz was a feral boy bereft of family, friends, faith and church affiliation. Cruz was loosely attached to a sprawling, impersonal, school system that taught him and his peers about safe sex, but shielded them from the Ten Commandments.

His example of systemic institutional failure typifies instances of school shootings across America.

Failure of state institutions—FBI, education and social services—and failure of familial and faith-based institutions came together to dreadful effect. The latter, in particular, are no longer there for bad boys in the forceful, firm way they need.

Ultimately, the disease theory of delinquency is as morally fraught as it is logically wrong. You will never solve pervasive problems of character and morality, personal and societal, by medicalizing them.

©2018 By ILANA MERCER
Quarterly Review
, The Unz Review, WND.com,

The Ludwig von Mises Centre for Property & Freedom,
Constitution.com

May 24

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Your Government’s Jihadi Protection Program https://www.ilanamercer.com/2009/11/governments-jihadi-protection-program/ Sat, 14 Nov 2009 07:13:14 +0000 http://imarticles.ilanamercer.com/?p=334 To claim you correspond with an al Qaida recruiter for purposes of “research” is like saying you read Playboy Magazine for the articles. The Jihadi who committed fratricide at Fort Hood would never have advanced such fatuities. Leave such deception to the nation’s military and intelligence establishment: Last December, no less than two Joint Terrorism [...Read On]

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To claim you correspond with an al Qaida recruiter for purposes of “research” is like saying you read Playboy Magazine for the articles.

The Jihadi who committed fratricide at Fort Hood would never have advanced such fatuities. Leave such deception to the nation’s military and intelligence establishment: Last December, no less than two Joint Terrorism Task Forces finessed Major Nidal Malik Hasan’s extensive correspondence with the infamous radical cleric Anwar al-Aulaqi as an innocent exchange.

The Muslim-American who murdered 13 people and maimed 31 on a United States Army post had been straightforward about his sympathies throughout his military career. Honest Hasan took every opportunity to inform his colleagues and classmates that he was a Muslim first, an American and an officer second, and that Islamic law usurped the Constitution. That minor tidbit failed to rattle the military.

During his secure career as a psychiatrist in the Army Medical Corps, Major Nidal, as he was known, openly proselytize for his faith. Preaching Islam to already traumatized patients did not hinder his rise through the ranks.

Since the Army was indifferent to Hasan’s place of worship─”a mosque led by a radical imam said to be a ‘spiritual adviser’ to three of the hijackers who attacked America on Sept 11, 2001″─it should come as no surprise that the FBI was equally unexercised about the man’s internet postings back in May of this year. On the Scribd.com website, user name “NidalHasan” compared “the actions of an American soldier who threw himself on a grenade in Iraq with those of Islamist suicide bombers.”

Hasan’s poor powers of reasoning─the analogy doesn’t work!─did not arise in a vacuum. Those “abilities” were hothoused in the military’s Jihadi-hospitable hospitals. Before unleashing Hasan at Fort Hood, his higher-ups had him practice his anti-kafir “craft” on damaged soldiers in the venerated VA system, the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, to be precise. A mother whose son was left to the mercies of the Major described him as scary, inappropriate and without empathy.

Instructed to “make a presentation on a medical topic of his choosing as a culminating exercise of the residency program,” Hasan came up with this: “The Koranic World View As It Relates To Muslims In The U.S. Military.” The Washington Post tells of how the man “stood before his supervisors and about 25 other mental health staff members and lectured on Islam, suicide bombers and threats the military could encounter from Muslims conflicted about fighting in the Muslim countries of Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Would that his supervisors had at least failed this incompetent for his curricular creativity. As witnesses now crawling out of the woodwork attest, the products of the Major’s lazy, one-track mind drew no more than “really upset looks.” Substandard professional performance would get one purged from the private sector. It did nothing to undermine Hasan’s employment status, rank, six-figure income, and secret security clearance in the military.

Major Nidal Malik Hasan’s calling card advertised his commitment. Besides typos, the card features the SoA acronym which stands for “Soldiers of Allah.” Perhaps his superiors thought Hasan was a fan of a Muslim rap group that goes by that moniker.

If you doubt that psychiatry is quackery, read on. In mulling over Hasan’s devotional zeal, Army psychiatrists concluded that while he might be delusional, he was not dangerous. As an antidote to his preoccupation with Islam, Hasan was prescribed, wait for this, a course of lectures on Islam, the Middle East and terrorism.

The Diversity Doxology is clearly instantiated in the umpteenth iteration of the psychiatric Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Duly, the Army’s voodooists accepted Hasan’s “areas of interest” as merely “different.” Difference, as you know, is to be cherished.

From YouTube footage we glean that the military minded not a bit that Hasan breezed about the base in his Jihadi jumpsuit. The wise monkeys of the military saw no evil, heard no evil, and most certainly spoke no evil of Holy Hasan. A Muslim driven by devotion─a potential murderer to the men around him; a martyr to his ilk─Hasan was being Hasan.

As an extension of government, I submit to you that so too was the military being true to itself. When Republicans and conservatives cavil about the gargantuan growth of government, they target the state’s welfare apparatus and spare its war machine. Unbeknown to these factions, the military is government. The military works like government; is financed like government, and sports many of the same inherent malignancies of government. Like government, it must be kept small.

Conservatives can’t coherently preach against the evils of big government, while excluding the military mammoth.

For all its faults and infractions, it is inconceivable that Blackwater Worldwide would, as a matter of policy, expose its warriors to a man like Major Nidal. No private security firm would subordinate the safety of its prized assets to the missions of left-liberalism.

Leave that to Lieutenant General Robert W. Cone, commander of III Corps at Fort Hood.

Manacled by multiculturalism, Cone was, moreover, careful to keep his grunts defenseless. “As a matter of practice, we don’t carry weapons here, this is our home,” he bragged about the “no-guns” policies on base. It remained for the victims at Fort Hood to wait for civilian police officers to rescue them from a lone gunman.

For 13 of the fragged men and women it was too late.

Grunts are not the only Americans who’ll soon be at the mercy of a dhimmi, DC-dominated, Jihadi protection program. Hasan was a medicine man─a “healer”─ in a system governed by codified laws of non-discrimination and political correctness. Rest assured that B. Hussein’s hulking healthcare ministry will hot-house more such Jihad-prone practitioners.

©By ILANA MERCER
WorldNetDaily.com

November 13, 2009

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ADHD: Unresearched Diagnoses Vulnerable To Misuse https://www.ilanamercer.com/2000/01/adhd-unresearched-diagnoses-vulnerable-to-misuse/ Thu, 13 Jan 2000 19:59:16 +0000 http://imarticles.ilanamercer.com/?p=634 ©2000 BY ILANA MERCER The love and concern for our children is one of the most powerful things in the lives of parents. We want them to succeed in what is an increasingly competitive world. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) touches on our fears and aspirations for our children. It also puts to the test [...Read On]

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©2000 BY ILANA MERCER

The love and concern for our children is one of the most powerful things in the lives of parents. We want them to succeed in what is an increasingly competitive world. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) touches on our fears and aspirations for our children. It also puts to the test the manner in which we accept their imperfections and the effect of those imperfections on us. This is why understandably the topic of ADHD causes such distress to parents.

When I queried this catch-all diagnosis, giving voice, incidentally, to a robust and ongoing debate underway in the scientific community, readers objected. I was accused of neglecting to do “research,” although talking to ADHD stakeholders was usually how readers defined research. Let me say that while the human story is emotionally powerful and makes for good copy, in isolation, it is an anecdote with little research validity beyond that of a case study. I would hope, however, that people use their critical faculties to question orthodoxy. Arguments must ultimately be judged on their merit, not by the authority or the qualifications of those who make them.

In 1997, Robert Sternberg, a prominent Yale professor of psychology told The New Republic magazine there was no medical evidence to support the view that children who are labeled learning-disabled have an immutable neurological disability in learning. A year later the flagship American National Institutes of Health (NIH), confirmed his pronouncement. In a Consensus Statement on the Diagnosis and Treatment of ADHD, prepared by a non-advocate, non-Federal panel of experts, the NIH cautioned that there exists “no independent valid test” for ADHD, adding that “further research is necessary to establish ADHD as a brain disorder”. This paper offers a distillation of the relevant research to date in the field.

There are persistent concerns in the research and clinical communities regarding the psychiatric Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) from which the ADHD and many other fashionable diagnoses are culled. The latest critical examination of the manual is entitled Making Us Crazy DSM: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorder.

Written by two American academics, it received a nod from no less than the august British Times Literary Supplement (TLS), whose reviewer ventured that the DSM is an American invention, unique to that culture. The DSM, wrote American reviewer and social psychologist Carol Tavris, represents a “brilliant orchestration of pseudo-science, marketing and promotion,” which has “succeeded in transforming the normal difficulties of life into mental disorders.”

The book points not only to the shabbiness of scientific evidence inherent in the DSM, but to the hundreds of diagnoses created which are vulnerable to misuse. Conditions like “Oppositional Defiant Disorder,” or “Conduct Disorder” harbor Orwellian possibilities. Such diagnoses were likely the bailiwick of the mental health professionals in the former Soviet Union, when they needed to dispose of dissidents.

For real double-bind value, look no further than a DSM condition called “Non-Compliance with Treatment.” Disagree with the medical demiurge, and he slaps you with a diagnosis. Safer not to risk that second opinion. Not only are “most of the DSM labels circular,” avers the TLS reviewer, but they “confuse labels with explanations”. Ultimately, they aim to give the public a psychiatric explanation for the pain in their lives, and hope that a pill can eradicate it.

There are now approximately 5-6 million children on Ritalin in North America, up from 1 million in 1990. Most of the children being medicated are boys, with minority boys 11 times more likely to be on this stimulant. Ninety percent of Ritalin, which is supposed to help children focus, is marketed in the US. One can’t help but wonder why American and Canadian children don’t score very well on international scholastic tests. Maybe there isn’t enough Ritalin going around? On the other hand, maybe the schools are failing children. Either way, it doesn’t really matter: As long as Ritalin is making kids happier, who cares? Certainly not the pharmaceutical companies who are making merry with between $30 to $60 a month per medicated child.

By masking the pain of living with a pill, mental health professionals are abnegating their responsibility and traditional mandate to explore and improve the many psycho-social factors that influence a life. In the process, vital interventions are overlooked, and we whittle down control over and responsibility for our lives to the inaction and resignation inherent in a biological determinism.

Finally, by allowing emotional life to be homogenized through pharmacology, we are passing up on what it means to be human.

©2000 Ilana Mercer
The Calgary Herald
January 13

 

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Attention Deficit Disorder Is all In the Head https://www.ilanamercer.com/1999/12/attention-deficit-disorder-head/ Wed, 29 Dec 1999 02:23:15 +0000 http://imarticles.ilanamercer.com/?p=622 Disease labels are now being slapped on an ever-wider range of behavior. Members of the psychiatric and medical professions and their patients have all taken to the idiom of disease like ducks to water. The twin evils of reductionism and the pathologizing of everyday behavior are at work here. Complex behavior, once considered the function [...Read On]

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Disease labels are now being slapped on an ever-wider range of behavior. Members of the psychiatric and medical professions and their patients have all taken to the idiom of disease like ducks to water. The twin evils of reductionism and the pathologizing of everyday behavior are at work here. Complex behavior, once considered the function of morals, choices and yes, character, is now routinely reduced to the basic components of genetics and biochemistry and outsourced to the ‘expert’. Thus the thief is a kleptomaniac; the arsonist a pyromaniac; and the promiscuous a sex addict. This is both poor scientific practice as well as morally and intellectually impoverished.

It has not stopped Dr. John Ratey, a Harvard associate professor and a well-respected, prominent psychiatrist from claiming in his 1997 book Shadow Syndromes that quirky behaviors are actually mild mental illnesses resulting from brain dysfunction.

The lout who is appropriately obsequious with the boss because he knows where his bread is buttered, but who is less dainty with the wife, even thumping her occasionally, would be a candidate for compassion. He is after all doing battle with what Dr. Ratey terms “Intermittent Rage Disorder”. And the dad who dotes on his children while they are with him, but fails to mail them child support money as soon as they are out of sight, is simply afflicted with “Environmental Dependency Disorder”: He remembers his kids only when they are around. Is there proof for these sub-rosa disease categories? None whatsoever, although this has not prevented Ratey and many like him from coating their pronouncements with a patina of scientific respectability—and then cashing in.

If Ratey is up the creek without a paddle, then he is up there with the best of company. The Psychiatric Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV), the Rosetta Stone of the profession, has grown since its inception in the 1950s from 60 categories of abnormal behavior to about 410 diagnostic labels today and counting. Many of the disorders described in it are a matter of trend and niche. One of the diagnoses Dr. Ratey is particularly fond of is Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). So fond is he of this chimera that he diagnosed himself with it. The reason this seemingly competent person decided he had a learning disorder is because he was unable to free associate during psychoanalysis!

Indeed, ADHD is the focus of a growing industry. The Canadian ADD Foundation says this learning disorder is likely genetically transmitted, affecting six to seven per-cent of the population. There are pervasive efforts underway to pronounce ADHD a disorder of the brain, although the evidence for this is scant. Driven by advocates and special interests, among them former U.S. Vice President Al Gore’s wife Tipper and a slew of medical professionals and peddlers of pharmaceuticals, U.S. legislation has pronounced ADHD a brain-based disorder. This is most curious because the flagship American National Institutes of Health (NIH), led by a panel of independent scientists, concluded that there is as yet “no independent valid test” for ADHD, and that “further research is necessary to establish ADHD as a brain disorder”.

The treatment protocol for ADHD is another aspect of this controversial diagnosis that gives the NIH pause. Children with ADHD are often given powerful psychostimulants. Yet there are no long-term studies of either stimulants or psychosocial treatments, and certainly “no information on the long-term outcomes of medication-treated ADHD individuals in terms of educational and occupational achievements, involvement with the police, or other areas of social functioning”. But what must surely put the advocates to shame is the NIH’s consistent findings that treatment for ADHD yields little improvement in academic achievement and social skills. Treatment, it seems, doesn’t do what it is supposed to do.

If nothing else, it is an interesting exercise to scrutinize the DSM-IV-based ADHD diagnostic criteria. Who doesn’t know a child who “has difficulty sustaining attention, doesn’t seem to listen when spoken to directly, loses things necessary for tasks, fidgets, or is on the go constantly”? Come to think of it, most adults at some point or another answer to such a description. Couple such subjective diagnostic criteria with the fact boys outnumber girls with the condition by nine to one, and ask yourself whether the ADHD-diagnosis is not inadvertently targeting typical male exuberance.

The ADHD-experts claim that children who take these drugs are better liked by other children and experience less punishment for their actions, which in turn improves their self-image. Considering that the adverse effects from the prolonged use of medications for ADHD can range from cardiac arrhythmia through to seizures and liver damage, this is some price to pay for popularity.

©1999 Ilana Mercer
  The Calgary Herald
  December 28

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