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Originally posted by autumnofburnoutcommie67
Much of the problem really is just plain discrimination, or maybe even the failure to discriminate in an appropriate and constructive manner.
Originally posted by chissler
Please do elaborate on this point, and offer an insight to exactly what you are referring to. If I were to discriminate against a man of disability, just how would I go about it in an appropriate manner?
Originally posted by autumnofburnoutcommie67
..."External political pressure can result, apparently, in the inclusion of a diagnostic category. For example, PTSD was included in the DSM-III as a result of massive lobbying on its behalf by Vietnam vets and their supporters. Prior to that, PTSD sufferers were routinely diagnosed with character disorders."
Originally posted by GradyPhilpott
When a person's physical or mental condition is not relevant to the job, then there would be no justification for choosing a less qualified "normal" person over one with a "disability."
Originally posted by GradyPhilpott
In any case, a person should be looked at not in terms of weakness, but in terms of strengths. Not that the weaknesses aren't real, but because going with a person's strengths gives the person something upon which to build and the wherewithal, and a starting point, to overcome weakness.
Originally posted by GradyPhilpott
This is one of the reasons I don't like the idea of creating a minority class of disabled people.
Originally posted by GradyPhilpott
I hate to keep harping on this theme, but it is a far more productive approach than the one I see being made here.
More at Source: Mania!
The shocking link between psychiatric drugs, suicide, violence and mass murder
From Columbine to Virginia Tech, every time another headline-making mass murderer is discovered to have taken antidepressants or other psychiatric drugs, rumors and speculation abound regarding the possible connection between the medications and the violence.
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To begin with, many of the most notorious mass killers in recent memory have been on, or just coming off, prescription mood-altering drugs.
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All very interesting, you may be thinking, but what do the drug companies say in their defense?
One of the most widely prescribed antidepressants today is Paxil, manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline.
Paxil's known "adverse drug reactions" – according to the drug's own 2001 FDA-approved label – include "mania," "insomnia," "anxiety," "agitation," "confusion," "amnesia," "depression," "paranoid reaction," "psychosis," "hostility," "delirium," "hallucinations," "abnormal thinking," "depersonalization" and "lack of emotion," among others.
With a rap sheet like that, no wonder pharmaceutical companies are nervous about liability lawsuits over the "rare adverse effects" of their medications. In 1998, for example, GlaxoSmithKline was ordered to pay $6.4 million to Donald Schnell's surviving family members after the 60-year-old man, just two days after taking Paxil, murdered his wife, daughter and granddaughter in a fit of rage.
1 a : to mark or perceive the distinguishing or peculiar features of b : DISTINGUISH, DIFFERENTIATE
2 : to distinguish by discerning or exposing differences; especially : to distinguish from another like object
intransitive verb
1 a : to make a distinction b : to use good judgment
www.merriam-webster.com...
intransitive verb
2 : to make a difference in treatment or favor on a basis other than individual merit
discriminate in favor of your friends
; discriminate against a certain nationality
[emphasis mine]
www.merriam-webster.com...
Originally posted by chissler
Originally posted by autumnofburnoutcommie67
Much of the problem really is just plain discrimination, or maybe even the failure to discriminate in an appropriate and constructive manner.
Failure to discriminate in a appropriate and/or constructive manner?
Please do elaborate on this point, and offer an insight to exactly what you are referring to. If I were to discriminate against a man of disability, just how would I go about it in an appropriate manner?
Originally posted by GradyPhilpott
I know a little about mental health issues and more than a little about PTSD.
While it is true that there was pressure placed on the APA to include PTSD as a diagnostic entity, it was not done in the absence of data to support such an inclusion.
Contrary to the implication of the person you cite without any commentary of your own, PTSD was not included purely on the basis of politics...
[edit on 2007/7/13 by GradyPhilpott]
From Abstract:
...This theory approaches the problem from a new radical viewpoint. Instead of approaching autism as a disorder, brain defect or the result of poor socialization or parenting, it claims that autistics are fully functional.
All the areas that are central to autism are related to species-typical adaptations that vary widely between species. These include nonverbal signals, social organization, sensory acuteness, motor skills, general preferences, sexuality, physical traits and biological adaptations. Some of this diversity in autistics is poorly understood and virtually unresearched and therefore is not published in peer-reviewed journals. Because of this lack of research, Aspie-quiz, an online questionnary, is heavily referenced for these traits.
Recent genetic research have demonstrated that the Out-of-Africa (OoA) model with no interbreeding fails to explain nuclear DNA diversity in Eurasia. Several models of interbreeding that do explain this diversity exists today. It therefore is quite likely that Neanderthals contributed to the Caucasian genome. Aspie-quiz have demonstrated in a large survey in the US population that Afroamericans have only 1/6 of the autism prevalence of Caucasians. The same survey also indicates that Asians and American Indians have about 1/2 of the autism prevalence of Caucasians...
Originally posted by MidnightDStroyer
I just ran across an article that's posted just today in the World Net Daily online newspaper (link to specific article is in the External Source). Besides the problems facing those with mental disabilities that manifest as emotional problems, there's another added danger involved: A danger not only to the disabled, but to those around them!