
TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,956
If involuntary commitment for self-harm and danger to oneself was done away with (with some exceptions for those that are truly mentally ill or a danger to others), then I believe that there will be more people actually seeking help and less afraid to open up to medical professionals and people in the healthcare field.
It is rather ironic that society wishes to de-stigmatize suicide and mental illness by these raising awareness and prevention campaigns, yet fail to realize that one of the main reasons that people do not want to open up nor be honest with mental health professionals, authority figures (law enforcement, educators, and what not), and other mandated reporters, etc. is that they can take their freedom away on a whim (while having committed no real crimes) with no real due process. Also, it doesn't help that the way people are being treated as a problem rather than a rational, logical response to the irrational, cold, unjust world.
If said suicidal people are truly a threat to society and a danger to others, then they should deal with the criminal justice system instead (such as threatening harm on others, doing things to harm others) of the mental health system (unless they already have some underlying condition that caused them to commit said crime). I don't believe that a lot of people are really mentally ill; this isn't to say that there aren't any mentally ill people (as there are), but the numbers and figures are just overblown and inaccurate. I think most people who fall into the mental health system are just people who have a realistic view on the world itself, the conditions in which they live in, and their response to the failed system and unjust world. That in and of itself, is not a mental illness. Therapy is also bullshit, (see reasons here), but that's another story/topic altogether.
Let me know what you guys think. If you agree or disagree or have some other point of view that isn't mentioned here.
It is rather ironic that society wishes to de-stigmatize suicide and mental illness by these raising awareness and prevention campaigns, yet fail to realize that one of the main reasons that people do not want to open up nor be honest with mental health professionals, authority figures (law enforcement, educators, and what not), and other mandated reporters, etc. is that they can take their freedom away on a whim (while having committed no real crimes) with no real due process. Also, it doesn't help that the way people are being treated as a problem rather than a rational, logical response to the irrational, cold, unjust world.
If said suicidal people are truly a threat to society and a danger to others, then they should deal with the criminal justice system instead (such as threatening harm on others, doing things to harm others) of the mental health system (unless they already have some underlying condition that caused them to commit said crime). I don't believe that a lot of people are really mentally ill; this isn't to say that there aren't any mentally ill people (as there are), but the numbers and figures are just overblown and inaccurate. I think most people who fall into the mental health system are just people who have a realistic view on the world itself, the conditions in which they live in, and their response to the failed system and unjust world. That in and of itself, is not a mental illness. Therapy is also bullshit, (see reasons here), but that's another story/topic altogether.
Let me know what you guys think. If you agree or disagree or have some other point of view that isn't mentioned here.