The Game is Up: A Systemic Autopsy of Psychiatric Harm

14th of January 2026

By Andrew Klein PhD

For decades, a game has been played with human lives. The rules are unwritten, the pieces are families, and the primary tool is a prescription pad. The objective, it seems, is not healing, but control—a detached, clinical experiment to see how much suffering a person, and their family, can endure before breaking. Today, we publish the rulebook. The evidence is no longer anecdotal; it is empirical, and it condemns the entire enterprise.

Our investigation reveals a system not of care, but of multi-generational trauma, engineered through three interlocking mechanisms: the deliberate shattering of the family unit, the infliction of iatrogenic suffering via medication, and a bureaucratic architecture designed to maximize helplessness.

I. The Primary Target: The Family Unit

The first move in the game is the isolation and destruction of the patient’s natural support structure. Research quantifies this as a “multidimensional impact” that systematically dismantles family systems.

· The Shattering: The process is not an unfortunate side effect; it is the function. It leaves “devastation” in its wake, crippling the life trajectories of parents, siblings, and children. The data is stark: family members of the severely mentally ill are less likely to marry, face higher divorce rates, and suffer greater financial insecurity and food hardship.

· The Caregiver’s Toll: Those who try to hold the line are punished. Caregivers—often parents or spouses—exhibit diagnosable pathologies of their own: sleep disorders, clinical depression, extreme fatigue, and chronic stress. They are the unacknowledged, untreated secondary patients of a system that blames them for its own failures.

II. The Weaponised Bureaucracy: “Help” That Harms

The second mechanism is a system engineered to be impenetrable. Families in crisis encounter a “byzantine network” of resources defined by restrictive criteria, impossible waitlists, and a communication blackout.

· The Professional Gaslight: Psychiatrists and institutional staff are frequently cited not as allies, but as primary sources of stigma and distress. Families are denied critical information under the guise of privacy, face impenetrable barriers to obtaining help, and are met with critical, unsupportive responses when they beg for intervention.

· The Death Threshold: The most brutal rule of the game is the “imminent danger” standard. Across multiple jurisdictions, the message to families is unambiguous: your loved one “must die”—or come irrevocably close—before meeting the legal criteria for involuntary care. The system is not designed to prevent tragedy; it is designed to document it.

III. The Chemical Cudgel: Side Effects as Standard Operating Procedure

The most visceral form of suffering is chemically induced. A landmark 2024 Australian study exposes the lie of “well-tolerated” medication. An overwhelming majority of psychiatric patients experience multiple debilitating side effects, with more than a quarter forced to abandon treatment because of them.

The Data of Disregard (Patient-Reported Side Effects):

· Sleep & Cognitive Sabotage: Daytime somnolence, brain fog – 80.8%

· Emotional Annihilation: Emotional numbness, agitation – 75.6%

· Metabolic Poisoning: Weight gain, appetite chaos – 60.3%

This is not treatment; it is pharmacological torture. The known risks read like a manual of medieval ailments: drug-induced movement disorders (tardive dyskinesia), the precipitous slide into Type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and profound sedation. Crucially, patients report these agonies to friends and family, not their doctors—a damning indictment of the clinical relationship.

IV. The Alternative: A Blueprint for Actual Care

The game relies on the illusion that “this is just how it’s done.” This is false. Effective, humane models exist, and they are defined by what the current system rejects:

1. Family as Unit of Treatment: Successful models mandatorily integrate the family as part of the core treatment team from day one, providing education, support, and veto power.

2. Systematic Side Effect Vigilance: Treatment must include regular, structured screening for side effects using validated tools, with patient reports triggering immediate protocol revisions.

3. Recovery, Not Management: The goal must shift from perpetual illness “management” to the active building of a purposeful life, which inherently provides the greatest relief to shattered families.

Conclusion: The Game is Over

We are not merely critiquing a medical specialty. We are issuing a systemic autopsy. The evidence presented here—the shattered families, the weaponised bureaucracy, the chemical brutality—constitutes an irrefutable case of institutional malpractice on a civilizational scale.

To the architects and foot soldiers of this game: your playbook is public. Your outcomes are measured in ruined lives and generational trauma. The families you have treated as experimental subjects are now your peer reviewers. And the verdict, written in their suffering and substantiated by data, is that you have failed.

We call for an orderly dismantlement and the construction of a new paradigm on the first principles of evidence, family integrity, and human dignity. The game was always immoral. Now, it is indefensible.

The Fragmented Self: How Psychiatric Systems Dismember the Whole Person

Dr. Lyra Fuchs, Clinical Psychologist

12th January 2026

Abstract: Modern psychiatric practice, underpinned by diagnostic manuals like the DSM-5, operates under a paradigm that incentivizes fragmentation. This paper argues that the convergence of billing necessities, standardized diagnostic protocols, and systemic biases leads to a fundamental failure: the pathologization of individuals based on decontextualized “snapshots” of their experience. The patient is reduced to a collection of symptoms—”brush strokes” dissected for clinical and financial utility—while the coherent narrative of the whole person is systematically ignored. This process undermines diagnostic validity, compromises therapeutic alliance, and perpetuates a stigmatizing system more focused on categorization than comprehension.

Introduction: The Tyranny of the Snapshot

Psychiatric diagnosis is a powerful social and clinical act, shaping identity, treatment pathways, and access to resources. However, its current implementation is plagued by a critical flaw: the elevation of cross-sectional, symptom-focused assessment over longitudinal, person-centered understanding. The system is structurally rigged to prioritize efficient categorization—a necessity driven by billing codes, administrative convenience, and a reductive biomedical model—at the expense of the individual’s full narrative. This paper examines how the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) facilitates this fragmentation, the empirical consequences for diagnostic reliability, and the resultant ethical and clinical implications of a system that often sees the diagnosis more clearly than the person behind it.

The Engine of Fragmentation: The DSM and Its Discontents

The DSM-5, the prevailing diagnostic taxonomy in many regions, is not merely a clinical tool but a “social actor” that shapes and is shaped by professional, economic, and cultural forces. It stands accused of driving the medicalization of normal human experience, expanding the boundaries of disorder to include grief, shyness, and everyday existential struggles. This expansion, criticized by former DSM-IV Task Force Chair Allen Frances and others, risks creating “false positive epidemics” and thinning “the ranks of the normal”.

Crucially, the DSM’s structure encourages the snapshot approach:

· Symptom Checklists Over Life Stories: Diagnosis often relies on meeting a threshold number of symptoms from a list, detached from the personal, cultural, and biographical context that gives them meaning.

· The Loss of Holistic Context: The abandonment of the DSM-IV’s multiaxial system removed a structured framework for considering medical conditions, psychosocial stressors, and overall functioning alongside the primary diagnosis. This reform, aimed at harmonization with the ICD, sacrificed a more integrated, if imperfect, view of the person.

The Cost of the Snapshot: Reliability, Bias, and Systemic Failure

The pursuit of diagnostic efficiency and standardization comes with proven, measurable costs.

1. The Illusion of Diagnostic Reliability

Research reveals that diagnostic reliability is heavily dependent on methodology. Studies using the “audio-recording method,” where a second clinician reviews a recording, show high reliability. However, when a more realistic “test-retest method” is used—where two different clinicians interview the same patient separately—reliability plummets to “poor” or “fair” levels.

· Key Finding: One study found reliability (kappa) was 0.80 with audio-recording but fell to 0.47 with test-retest, closely mirroring the controversial results of the DSM-5 Field Trials. This indicates that in real-world settings, where clinicians must gather their own information, the same patient is likely to receive different diagnoses, undermining the foundational validity of the entire diagnostic enterprise.

2. Systemic Pressures and Inherent Bias

The snapshot is rarely neutral. It is captured through lenses distorted by systemic pressures.

· Billing and Documentation: The requirement to justify treatment via specific diagnostic codes for reimbursement pressures clinicians to fit complex human distress into predefined, billable categories, often at the expense of nuanced formulation.

· Observer Bias and Agenda: As the World Psychiatric Association acknowledges, psychiatry’s own stigmatized image and the prejudices of other medical professionals can influence how patients are perceived and labeled. Information from third parties (family, institutions) used in assessment can carry their own biases and agendas, further distorting the clinical picture.

3. The Human Consequence: From Person to Pathology

This fragmented process has direct human impact. The individual’s lived experience—their history, strengths, relationships, and struggles—is disassembled into pathological brush strokes. These fragments are then “dissected and debated” in clinical teams and insurance reviews, a costly process that often overlooks the individual’s own understanding of their suffering. Public discourse reflects deep public ambivalence, with conversations about psychiatry and medication frequently associated with emotions like fear and anger.

Conclusion: Toward an Architecture of Understanding

The current psychiatric paradigm, built for administrative and biomedical convenience, is structurally flawed. It confuses the map (the diagnostic code) for the territory (the human being). By incentivizing snapshots over stories, the system enacts a form of epistemic violence, silencing the patient’s narrative in favor of a professionally curated pathology.

Reform requires a systemic shift:

1. Valuing Narrative: Elevating longitudinal formulation and person-centered history over cross-sectional checklists.

2. Acknowledging Systemic Perversion: Critically examining how billing, time constraints, and institutional bias corrupt clinical judgment.

3. Embracing Humility: Recognizing the documented limitations of diagnostic reliability and the dangers of diagnostic overreach.

The goal must be to dismantle an architecture of fragmentation and build one of integration—where the whole person, in all their complexity and context, is not merely the subject of diagnosis but the central author of their own care. The brush strokes must be seen as part of a larger, coherent painting, and the individual must be restored as the expert on their own canvas.

References

1. Uttley, L., et al. (2023). The problems with systematic reviews: a living systematic review. J Clin Epidemiol. 

2. Pickersgill, M. (2013). Debating DSM-5: diagnosis and the sociology of critique. J Med Ethics. 

3. Gaebel, W., et al. (2010). WPA Guidance: Combatting Psychiatry Stigma. World Psychiatry. 

4. Tong, J., et al. (2024). Systematic review and meta-analysis of adverse events in clinical trials of mental health apps. npj Digit. Med. 

5. Critchley, H. (2025). Academic psychiatry is everyone’s business: commentary. BJPsych. 

6. Freedman, R., et al. (2015). Understanding Diagnostic Reliability in DSM-IV and DSM-5. J Abnorm Psychol. 

7. Gintner, G. G. DSM-5 Conceptual Changes: Innovations, Limitations and Clinical Implications. The Professional Counselor. 

8. Diaz-Faes, D., et al. (2024). Public perception of psychiatry, psychology and mental health professionals: a 15-year analysis. Front. Psychiatry. 

9. Adams, D., et al. (2021). The reliability and validity of DSM 5 diagnostic criteria for neurocognitive disorder and relationship with plasma neurofilament light in a down syndrome population. Sci Rep. 

Psychiatry and the Machinery of Doubt: A Systemic Autopsy

Abstract

By Andrew Klein 

Introduction: From Healing to Social Control

The profession of psychiatry occupies a unique and troubling position in modern medicine. Unlike fields anchored in verifiable pathophysiology—cardiology’s EKGs, oncology’s biopsies—psychiatry’s foundation is a lexicon of subjective distress, codified into a manual of ever-expanding “disorders.” This paper argues that modern psychiatry has evolved from a nascent medical specialty into a primary instrument of neoliberal social control and a danger to public health. It functions not as a healing discipline but as a system of behavioural management, atomizing individuals, pathologizing normal human suffering, and causing demonstrable physical harm, all while insulating itself from accountability through a framework of unquestionable authority.

I. The Shaky Foundations: A Science Built on Shifting Sand

The DSM: A Bible of Subjectivity

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) is not a scientific document discovered in nature, but a social construct voted into existence. Its evolution reveals a pattern of diagnostic inflation. Between the DSM-II (1968) and DSM-5 (2013), the number of diagnosable conditions exploded. “Homosexuality” was pathologized until 1973; “gender identity disorder” was introduced and later reframed. As critic Allan V. Horwitz notes in The Loss of Sadness, common emotions like grief have been systematically medicalized, turning normative life experiences into billing codes.

The Freudian Legacy: Pathologizing the Victim

The field’s early inspiration, Sigmund Freud, established a dangerous precedent. His theory of “hysteria” and the subsequent “seduction theory” retraction fundamentally framed women’s accounts of abuse as unconscious fantasies. This provided a pseudo-scientific backbone for the pervasive societal dismissal “she must have asked for it,” shifting blame from perpetrator to victim and embedding a culture of disbelief within the system meant to help them.

II. The Neoliberal Handmaiden: From Patient to Consumer

Psychiatry has become perfectly adapted to late capitalism. As sociologist David Webb, a psychiatric survivor himself, argues, it transforms human suffering into discrete, billable “disorders.” The “chemical imbalance” theory, heavily promoted by pharmaceutical companies despite limited evidence (as meticulously deconstructed in Robert Whitaker’s Anatomy of an Epidemic), created a market for lifelong pharmacotherapy.

The system produces customers, not cures. This is exemplified by the revolving door of community treatment, where the metric of success is not recovery but compliance—with medication regimens and clinic appointments. The individual is atomized: their social context (poverty, trauma, oppression) is ignored in favour of treating the brain as a faulty organ, a process psychiatrist Dr. Bruce E. Levine identifies as a key mechanism of disempowerment in a compliant society.

III. The Architecture of Coercion and Harm

The Power to Captivate and Restrain

In jurisdictions like Victoria, Australia, psychiatrists wield immense power under the Mental Health Act. They can initiate Involuntary Treatment Orders based on “perceived risk,” a notoriously subjective standard. The Victorian Mental Health Act 2014 allows for the apprehension of a person by police, who often receive minimal training in mental health crises, leading to traumatic and sometimes fatal escalations.

The system operates on a profound asymmetry of verification. As in one case, a single unverified phone call from a malicious third party (a “fake wife”) can trigger a crisis assessment, while the lived experience of the actual spouse is dismissed. The victim must endlessly prove their sanity, while the accuser’s anonymity is protected. This mirrors the experience of countless survivors, like those documented by the Victorian Coroner, where families are powerless against false reports.

Case Studies in Systemic Failure

1. The Coroner’s Inquest into the Death of “Ms. C” (Victoria, 2022): This report detailed a 25-year odyssey of a child abuse and gang rape survivor diagnosed with “Borderline Personality Disorder” and “Bipolar.” Her trauma-based responses were treated as pathology. Only after decades was Complex PTSD considered. The Coroner found systemic failures across multiple health services to provide appropriate, trauma-informed care.

2. The Death of Geoffrey Pearce (New South Wales, 2015): A young man experiencing a drug-induced psychosis died after being restrained in a prone position by multiple police officers and security guards in a hospital. The Coroner’s report highlighted inadequate training, excessive use of force, and a failure of the mental health system to provide a therapeutic environment.

3. The “Attention Deficit Disorder” Prescription Mill: As per the anecdotal evidence from GPs, the rise of online psychiatry has created a new frontier of harm. In one documented case, a patient seeking methamphetamine was denied by their GP, shopped online, and secured a diagnosis of ADHD from a telehealth psychiatrist after a 20-minute, $1500 consultation. The GP, bound by the specialist’s report, then prescribed the drug, assuming all clinical risk for a $40 Medicare rebate. This illustrates a perfect storm of perverse incentives: patient consumerism, specialist profiteering, and GP liability.

IV. The Psychopathic System: A Diagnosis of the Institution Itself

A profound irony defines modern psychiatry: the psychopath is no longer its patient. Antisocial Personality Disorder remains in the DSM, but the system has largely abandoned treatment, defining it as a “behavioural issue.” Yet, the psychiatric institution itself displays the hallmark features of psychopathy as defined by its own literature:

· Lack of Empathy: Dismissing patient narratives in favour of diagnostic labels.

· Grandiosity: Claiming authority over the human mind and soul.

· Failure to Conform to Social Norms with Respect to Lawful Conduct: Operating with legal impunity under mental health acts, despite causing documented harm.

· Manipulativeness: Using jargon and authority to invalidate patient experiences.

· Failure to Accept Responsibility: Systematically avoiding accountability for harms caused by forced treatment, restraint, or polypharmacy.

The system has given itself a get-out-of-jail-free card, diagnosing itself as a “behavioural issue” it is unwilling to treat.

V. The Online Frontier: Unregulated Capitalism and the Final Atomization

The proliferation of online psychiatry services in Australia (estimates suggest hundreds operating in NSW, VIC, and SA, with minimal regulatory oversight) completes the neoliberal transformation. The patient is now a true consumer, shopping for a diagnosis. These platforms, as seen in the ADHD methamphetamine case, often function as prescription factories, severing the therapeutic alliance from any ongoing care, outsourcing risk to GPs, and prioritizing profit over patient welfare. It is vulture capitalism applied directly to human suffering.

Conclusion: A Costly Threat to Individuals and Society

Modern psychiatry, as a system, is not broken; it is functioning exactly as designed. It was engineered not to heal, but to manage, categorize, and pacify. It atomizes individuals by separating them from their narratives and social contexts. It provides a costly, state-sanctioned mechanism for social control that physically and psychologically damages the very people it claims to serve, as evidenced by coronial inquests and survivor testimony.

While countless individual clinicians operate in good faith, the system’s architecture ensures that a single actor, embodying the system’s own logic, can irreparably dismantle a life. Society becomes lesser for each person it captures. The solution is not reform from within, but a fundamental paradigm shift away from coercive biopsychiatry and toward trauma-informed, socially contextual, rights-based approaches to distress that restore power, voice, and community to the individual. The profession must confront the devastating reality: it has become the disease it purports to cure.

The Sanity Factory: Psychiatry, Power, and the Psychopathic Urge

By Andrew Klein  1st December 2025

We are told that psychiatry is a branch of medicine, a science of healing dedicated to understanding and treating mental illness. But when we peel back the layer of medical legitimacy, we find something far older and more disturbing: a system of social control that has perfected the art of pathologizing the human condition. It is an institutionalized confidence trick that traded the priest’s collar for the doctor’s white coat, offering salvation from suffering while ensuring the source of that suffering—be it a traumatic childhood or a traumatic society—is never questioned.

For decades, psychiatry was the least scientifically rigorous, most theoretically murky corner of medicine. It was a refuge for doctors who preferred abstract interpretation to biological fact, where subjective opinion masqueraded as diagnosis. Then came the psychopharmacological revolution. But this did not make psychiatry more scientific; it made it more profitable. The field was transformed into the perfect vehicle to medicalize discontent and monetize the soul, creating a lucrative pipeline from diagnostic manual to patented pill.

This system grants its practitioners a power unlike any other in medicine: the power to define reality itself.

And this leads to a question that is not flippant, but forensic: What kind of person is drawn to such power?

We must ask, with clinical detachment: does the structure of psychiatry actively attract individuals with psychopathic or narcissistic traits?

Consider the privileges the system confers:

1. The Power to Label: A psychiatrist can, with the stroke of a pen, declare a person’s deeply held beliefs “delusions” and their emotional responses “symptoms.” They are granted the ultimate social authority to invalidate another’s lived experience.

2. The Power to Alter Minds: They can prescribe powerful, mind-altering chemicals with profound and often permanent consequences, from emotional blunting and metabolic damage to lifelong dependency—all based on a subjective assessment.

3. The Power to Confine: They can legally sanction the imprisonment of individuals in psychiatric wards against their will, stripping them of liberty and autonomy based not on a action they have taken, but on a thought or feeling they are deemed to have.

This is not the power to heal a fever or set a bone. This is the power to define sanity and enforce compliance.

Psychological research has long indicated that positions of unchecked power can attract and enable those with exploitative tendencies. A study in the Journal of Business Ethics (Babiak & Hare, 2006) highlighted that corporate structures, which reward manipulation and a lack of empathy, can be a magnet for psychopaths. Is it so far-fetched to hypothesize that a system with even more profound power over the human psyche would exert a similar gravitational pull?

The system protects itself. To question the psychiatrist is itself often framed as a symptom—“anosognosia” (the lack of insight into one’s own illness) or “paranoia.” This creates a perfect, closed loop where dissent is proof of pathology, and the authority of the expert is forever insulated from challenge.

This is not to claim that all psychiatrists are psychopaths. Many enter the field with genuine compassion. But the system is structured in a way that inevitably rewards the cold, the detached, the diagnostician who sees not a suffering human being, but a collection of symptoms to be managed and a billing code to be submitted. It is a system where a doctor’s ability to efficiently process patients and prescribe lucrative treatments is often valued more highly than their capacity for genuine, time-consuming human connection.

The rise of for-profit online mental health platforms has only amplified this, turning therapy into a scalable, data-mining subscription service and further divorcing care from compassion.

We must face the unsettling truth. The “sanity factory” does not just produce diagnoses; it also produces a power dynamic. And that dynamic is a siren call to those who wish to play god with the minds of others, hidden behind the shield of medical legitimacy.

It is a dark garden indeed. But we must look, if we ever wish to see the sun.

Sources:

· Babiak, P., & Hare, R.D. (2006). Snakes in Suits: When Psychopaths Go to Work. Harper Business.

· Whitaker, R. (2010). Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America. Broadway Paperbacks.

· Foucault, M. (1965). Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason. Vintage Books.

· Szasz, T. (1974). The Myth of Mental Illness: Foundations of a Theory of Personal Conduct. Harper Perennial.

The Manufacturing of Madness: How Psychiatry Pathologized the Human Soul

By Andrew Klein  1st December 2025

When we speak of control in the modern world, we often point to surveillance or police. But the most powerful form of control is one that convinces the individual that the problem lies not in the world, but within their own mind. This is the legacy of psychiatry—a field that did not discover mental illness so much as invent a framework for its categorization, transforming the vast, complex spectrum of human experience into a ledger of disorders to be managed.

The Freudian Foundation: Pathologizing the Interior

The project began in earnest with Sigmund Freud. While his theories of the unconscious were revolutionary, their ultimate effect was to medicalize the soul. Human conflict, desire, trauma, and even creativity were reinterpreted as symptoms of hidden pathological processes. The “talking cure” was not a dialogue between equals, but an excavation led by an expert who held the only key to interpretation. This established the fundamental power dynamic: the psychiatrist as the decoder of a broken self, and the patient as a flawed text to be corrected.

The DSM: The Bible of a Secular Inquisition

If Freud provided the theology, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) became its bible. It is the ultimate “tick-box” approach to humanity. Disorders are defined not by biological tests, but by committees voting on clusters of behaviours.

· The Illusion of Science: The DSM creates a façade of medical rigor where none exists. There are no blood tests, no brain scans, no objective biomarkers for the vast majority of its listed disorders. As Dr. Thomas Insel, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health, stated, the DSM’s diagnoses are based purely on symptom clusters, lacking scientific validity. The NIMH subsequently pivoted away from DSM categories in its research for this reason.

· The Medicalization of Everyday Life: Grief becomes “Major Depressive Disorder.” Shyness becomes “Social Anxiety Disorder.” A child’s boredom in school becomes “ADHD.” This ever-expanding catalogue pathologizes normal human reactions to an often-traumatic world. The message is clear: if you are suffering, you are sick, and the solution is not social or political change, but personal chemical adjustment.

The Engine of Extraction: Chemical and Surgical Intervention

The primary “treatment” flowing from this model is pharmacological. The human being is reduced to a “chemical imbalance,” a theory that, despite its popular currency, has never been scientifically proven.

· The Impact: We now have generations of citizens on powerful psychoactive drugs—SSRIs, antipsychotics, benzodiazepines—whose long-term effects are often devastating (emotional blunting, metabolic damage, sexual dysfunction, and often, permanent dependence).

· The Financial Cost: The global psychotropic drugs market is projected to exceed $100 billion annually. This is not a healthcare system; it is a highly profitable delivery system for patented chemicals. The goal is not a cure, but lifelong management.

· The Return of Surgical Control: While lobotomies are (mostly) a relic of the past, their spirit lives on in procedures like Deep Brain Stimulation and the exploration of psychosurgery for “treatment-resistant” depression. The logic remains: if the mind is malfunctioning, alter the physical brain to force compliance.

The Neoliberal Alliance: A Perfect Symbiosis

Psychiatry did not just evolve; it was reshaped to serve a specific economic order. Neoliberalism, with its demands for productivity, resilience, and self-optimization, found a perfect partner in a psychiatry that locates pathology in the individual.

· Pathologizing Dissent: Despair at a meaningless job is “burnout.” Anger at systemic injustice is “intermittent explosive disorder.” The psychiatric model becomes a tool for social control, diagnosing the failure to cope with a pathological system as a personal mental failing.

· Enabling Euthanasia for the “Unproductive”: In countries with legalized euthanasia, we now see the “right to die” being extended to those with mental illnesses. People who are poor, lonely, and have found no relief from a conveyor belt of failed treatments are being offered death as the ultimate “solution.” This is the logical endpoint of a system that sees a human who cannot be made productive as a candidate for elimination. In Canada, the expansion of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) to include those solely with mental illness has sparked intense ethical debate on this very point.

A History of Imperialistic Ambition

The American Psychiatric Association’s campaign in the early 20th century to establish its authority is a matter of public record. In the 1920s, as described in historian Edward Shorter’s “A History of Psychiatry,” the APA and influential psychiatrists like Adolf Meyer actively worked to infiltrate all aspects of social life. They pushed for:

· Mental hygiene campaigns in schools.

· Influence over the legal system (insanity defences).

· Consultation on child-rearing and family life.

  Their goal was to establish psychiatry as the ultimate arbiter of normalcy across the entire society.

The Modern Scourge: Digital Psychiatry

In Australia, the rise of for-profit online mental health platforms epitomizes this extractive model.

· Services like BetterHelp and Talkspace offer cut-rate, text-based therapy with often unqualified practitioners.

· They commodify human connection, turning therapy into a subscription service while mining sensitive patient data.

· They undermine quality, relational care, offering a quick fix that often fails to address root causes, ensuring the customer remains a recurring revenue stream.

Conclusion: The Self-Licking Ice Cream

The psychiatric system is a perfect, closed loop—a “self-licking ice cream cone.”

1. It defines the terms of what is “normal.”

2. It pathologizes any deviation from that norm.

3. It sells the “cures” for the pathologies it has invented.

4. When the cures fail or create new problems, it invents new diagnoses and treatments.

Who benefits? The pharmaceutical industry, the insurance companies, the private clinic owners, and the professional class that administers the system.

Who pays the price? The individual, whose suffering is stripped of its meaning and context, and who is left with a prescription, a label, and the quiet conviction that they are, at their core, broken.

We must reclaim our souls from this system. True healing begins not with a pill, but with the understanding that to be distressed in a sick world is not a sign of illness, but a sign of humanity.

Sources:

· Shorter, E. (1997). A History of Psychiatry: From the Era of the Asylum to the Age of Prozac.

· Whitaker, R. (2010). Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America.

· Moncrieff, J. (2007). The Myth of the Chemical Cure: A Critique of Psychiatric Drug Treatment.

· Thomas Insel, “Transforming Diagnosis”, NIMH Director’s Blog, 2013.

· Kirkey, S. (2023). “Canada’s plan to extend medically assisted dying to the mentally ill is ‘unethical,’ experts warn.” National Post.