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OrphanApology
Also in regard to schizophrenia, don't forget the shooter was 34. It is actually very RARE for a someone over the age of 30 to begin developing symptoms of this disease. Most of it happens from 15-30 with 18-25 being most common age range. It is also as the above author stated, a very obvious disease for people who speak to someone with schizophrenia. That no one noticed any real symptoms far before the incident is extremely fishy.
Also in regard to taking away the rights of people who are deemed mentally ill by the establishment, that's fine as long as they are in an institution. Taking away constitutional rights from someone before they have even committed a crime is not allowed. If someone is so crazy that they cannot have a gun or buy one, they should be either A. In a nuthouse or B. Under direct supervision. If someone is consistently doing crazy things and have trouble functioning normally, then that's a failure of a system to allow families and friends to report and get help for people.
It's kind of how I 100% believe that anyone who is not physically in prison should have their constitutional rights returned. If someone is such a danger that they cannot handle access to guns and voting, they should be in prison. There is a whole class of people who can no longer vote or protect themselves. Probation is just a funny little creation set out to ensure that tax paying citizens who aren't currently incarcerated are second class to the point of being able to vote in elections.
WarminIndy
reply to post by OrphanApology
I know what you mean by over-diagnosed. I see people all the time say they are Bipolar, and yet never exhibit the mania that comes with it. So I question that. They don't know that it used to be called Manic Depressive. I think if someone gets a diagnosis, they really should investigate what it is instead of just taking someone's word for it.
I have seen these same people tell me they won't take the lithium for it, but rather would be prescribed the psychoactive drugs they then sell.
Public safety should be the number one concern and the laws should be created to treat people effectively without making them feel marginalized. The families themselves fall under the same scrutiny and marginalization, how many people do you know that can openly say they have a family member that is Schizophrenic without being ridiculed? Or even Schizophrenics themselves, they are very ridiculed for something they have no control over and then their families are forced to hide the condition.
I think that without the stigma and ridicule, more Schizophrenics would be treated. You haven't marginalized or ridiculed me for having a family member that is Schizophrenics, which I appreciate, but you can find forums full of it. And the media doesn't help when overexposing an individual. But at the same time, the media helps to cover up crimes of certain individuals who do have mental illnesses. It's like people feel they have to walk on eggshells in this country when it comes to mental illness.
I would imagine that this guy probably exhibited symptoms for a long time, but he most likely wasn't near any family who might recognize it. He sought treatment himself, so that means he probably was aware of what was going on. At 34 years-old, that's not late to be in the full grasp of Schizophrenia, and he probably was in a full blown episode at this time.
These people who believe in mind control probably never spent a day with a Schizophrenic who tells you constantly that he can hear your thoughts and that the walls are full of devices that will inform him who is his enemy. And they probably never had to spend hours and hours and hours in the same room with someone who believes that you and your siblings are conspiring against him if you leave the room. This is life with a Schizophrenic father.
So yep, mind control believers of MK Ultra, I've heard it all. As far as Schizophrenics are concerned, we are the enemy who is trying to control them and we are sending the vibrations into them. The voices told them we are the enemy. I hope people understand just what Schizophrenia is.
Despite every indication that Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis was on SSRI drugs that have been linked to dozens of previous mass shootings, the mainstream media has once again avoided all discussion of the issue, preferring instead to blame the tragedy on a non-existent AR-15 that the gunman didn’t even use.
OrphanApology
WarminIndy
reply to post by OrphanApology
I know what you mean by over-diagnosis. I was diagnosed as "bipolar" when I was younger and going through some difficult life events. What helped me was that I had no insurance so the doctor recommended me to the free clinic in the city for mental health issues. After sitting in that waiting room for eight hours I realized that I really wasn't bipolar but just going through hard times because of my parents. I was diagnosed by a schizophrenic who was there to pick up his medicine and a TRUE manic depressive who just happened to be on a high that day so felt like chiming in. Needless to say, I researched the issue and started working to quit alcohol, run, eat better, and be realistic in regard to my own ups and downs.
Most people aren't smart enough to not ridicule groups they deem different than themselves. People need to feel superior and so anything that moves them up slightly on the totem of totalitarianism makes them feel amazing. It's not just mental health that takes the blunt of the problem, it's everything. That's why I posted that link to psychohistory.com because it outlines how child abuse and war isn't a coincidental relationship.
OrphanApology
reply to post by squarehead666
Drug induced psychotic episode indeed. I think this is used far more than people realize. Not to mention that there could be hybrid drugs that have an effect of making people angry, aggressive, violent, and hallucinate at the same time. Think of the angriest alcoholic you can think of mixed with a meth addict and throw in a nice '___' trip, hand the guy a gun and well...you get what I'm saying.
Drugs would be the easiest because if it was an unknown/experimental (not street drug) it would never show in a autopsy/investigation.edit on 17-9-2013 by OrphanApology because: edit
pennylemon
OrphanApology
reply to post by squarehead666
Drug induced psychotic episode indeed. I think this is used far more than people realize. Not to mention that there could be hybrid drugs that have an effect of making people angry, aggressive, violent, and hallucinate at the same time. Think of the angriest alcoholic you can think of mixed with a meth addict and throw in a nice '___' trip, hand the guy a gun and well...you get what I'm saying.
Drugs would be the easiest because if it was an unknown/experimental (not street drug) it would never show in a autopsy/investigation.edit on 17-9-2013 by OrphanApology because: edit
Reading through the conversations on the various threads that come up when this kind of seemingly "unexplained" rage and aggression takes place, it is surprising to me that no one mentions Prednisone and/or the combination of Hydrocortisone & Florinef.
www.medscape.com...
Side affects of these drugs include intense rage and at times extreme psychological changes that are grossly, IMO, underestimated by the medical community at large. In the article from the link above it states that Prednisone and it's equivalent are becoming dangerously over prescribed and that the side effects should not be taken lightly.
I am speaking from personal experience as I have been married to a man who struggles with these side effects and the dismissive attitude of the medical community when it comes to the psychological aspects of long term steroid use.
Penny
pennylemon
reply to post by OneManArmy
Indeed OneManArmy,
I unfortunately would have to agree with you here as far as suppression goes. I suppose I am speaking from a more personal standpoint, and wanted to point out the fact that the families and/or loved ones are essentially alone to subdue, counsel and basically keep, my husband in this instance, from hurting themselves or others.
My point here is that as soon as it's stated that the suspect was complaining of hearing voices many immediately think schizophrenia. Maybe it is the fact that I have been living with a person that has had many severe breaks with "reality" throughout the fifteen years we have been married that leads me to wonder why it's never mentioned.
Penny
pennylemon
reply to post by OneManArmy
Indeed OneManArmy,
I unfortunately would have to agree with you here as far as suppression goes. I suppose I am speaking from a more personal standpoint, and wanted to point out the fact that the families and/or loved ones are essentially alone to subdue, counsel and basically keep, my husband in this instance, from hurting themselves or others.
My point here is that as soon as it's stated that the suspect was complaining of hearing voices many immediately think schizophrenia. Maybe it is the fact that I have been living with a person that has had many severe breaks with "reality" throughout the fifteen years we have been married that leads me to wonder why it's never mentioned.
Penny
unphased
Funny, CNN seemed to know more about electromagnetic mind control in 1985 than they do now...
unphased
Police: D.C. shooter said last month an individual sent three people to "keep him awake and send vibrations into his body."
Aaron Alexis -- the man authorities say is responsible for killing 12 people at the Washington Navy Yard -- told Newport, Rhode Island, police last month that an individual "had sent three people to follow him and to talk, keep him awake and send vibrations into his body," according to a police report.
Ok this is a little weird... However reading further, he allegedly goes into more detail.
According to that report, which is related to an investigation into a harassment complaint at a Marriott hotel in Newport, Alexis said he first heard the people "talking to him through a wall" at a Residence Inn in Middletown, Rhode Island, where he'd been staying. He packed up and went to an unidentified hotel on a Navy base in Newport where he heard the same voices talking to him.
He moved to a third hotel, the Marriott, according to the police report. There, Alexis first told authorities that the three individuals spoke to him through the floor and then the ceiling. Alexis said the individuals were using "some sort of microwave machine" that sent "vibrations through the ceiling, penetrating his body so he cannot fall asleep."
Has anybody ever heard a claim like this? Could this be the first real MSM reference to some sort of mind control program?
unphased
reply to post by OrphanApology
Check out the video in the OP, and look how far along this technology was almost 30 years ago.